“Apple and IBM have just made it possible for enterprise developers to create rock-solid apps for iOS using Swift,” Jonny Evans writes for Computerworld.
“Reaction to the news seems to have been fairly muted, but the news will have a big impact on enterprise users engaged in digital transformation projects,” Evans writes. “There is a growing tend in which enterprises will coalesce their efforts around iOS within heterogeneous platform strategies that extend to OS X.”
“IBM’s move to make Swift available as a server-side language on IBM Cloud is one of the bigger dividends,” Evans writes. “IBM calls the move a ‘key next step in IBM and Apple’s shared journey to help enterprises advance their mobile strategy with innovative app design, analytics, process transformation and integration required for a mobile first experience.'”
Read more in the full article here.
MacDailyNews Take: The productivity increases with the enterprise moving away from Microsoft and toward Apple solutions will be dramatic.
SEE ALSO:
Apple’s open source Swift will open the door for HomeKit – December 16, 2015
Apple has hugely ambitious plans for open-sourced Swift, and hints on what’s coming to iOS – December 15, 2015
After Apple open sources it, IBM puts Swift programming in the cloud – December 4, 2015
Apple officially releases Swift programming language as open source – December 3, 2015
Apple’s open-sourced Swift programming language could change everything – November 25, 2015
Apple’s Swift programming language could soon infiltrate data centers – November 24, 2015
Developers band together to create Mandarin Chinese translation of Apple’s Swift programming language – August 6, 2015
Apple’s Swift breaks into top 20 in dev language survey; bad news for Microsoft’s Visual Basic – July 2, 2015
Apple’s Swift: The future of enterprise app development – June 10, 2015
It would benefit Microsoft, to see Apple taken a peg or two down. Having back doors on iOS devices is good for Microsoft.
Just saying.
Sorry one more thing.
Microsoft Windows NT 4.11 was documented as having Class C Top Secret clearance. Not too long after that, the terminology was removed. Silence about it since then.
I think Microsoft’s bed sheets need to be heavily examined. Where’s that luminal?
The security holes started showing up so MS went silent!
Luminol
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Luminol
That’s what I meant, but the wiki only said its for blood. I was thinking about something else, lower on the puritan scale. I did note the “o” for next time.
Huge.
This is.
Speak like Yoda.
You do.
It’s a natural move. We can already do c# on the IBM cloud. It would be a bit bizzare if Swift were never made available.
This will help Swift grow as the open source release gains traction with developers.
I see the Corporate speak hasn’t changed mind.