Showing posts with label abukai. Show all posts
Showing posts with label abukai. Show all posts

Thursday, May 5, 2011

Samsung Developer Party in San Francisco


Samsung is hosting a pre-Google IO party on Monday in San Francisco.

We will see you there! We will have a couple of key ABUKAI folks attending - from Europe and the US.

Contact us here if you like to meet up.

Wednesday, May 4, 2011

Scobleizer covers ABUKAI!


ABUKAI CEO Philipp Schloter joins the over 3,200 entrepreneurs the Scobleizer, Robert Scoble has interviewed. Watch the video here and see how ABUKAI turns lunch into the perfect demo opportunity. The biggest obstacle ABUKAI has to overcome to sell its service? Getting people to believe it actually IS as easy as we say it is. But watch the interview and see how easy it really is. Better yet. Don't take our word for it. Download it here and try it for free yourself! Then let us know what you think!

Wednesday, April 27, 2011

ABUKAI at AppNation San Francisco 2011

This year’s AppNation in San Francisco brings together leading “App-erati” and tees up the key issues that are impacting their universe. ABUKAI’s CEO, Philipp Schloter, co-anchored a discussion entitled, “Building the New Enterprise: Deploying Enterprise Apps” on Wednesday, April 27 from 2:20 PM to 2:50 PM as a part of Track 3: MACRO TRENDS ACROSS THE APP ECOSYSTEM. The session is a featured discussion led by Patrick Houston, Editorial Director, NetShelter and featuring Roger Green, Executive Editor, CIO Zone and ABUKAI’s Schloter that frames the questions CIOs are asking as they find that in 2011 their businesses need to deploy apps to stay competitive.

Recent studies show that CIOs not only understand the importance of mobile applications for their companies, but they are taking active steps in 2011 to deploy mobile applications in their businesses. There are several drivers for this trend, but the overarching reason mobile applications are becoming a top priority for CIOs is because they provide substantial cost savings to their companies. Schloter lays out the productivity and integration factors that need to be addressed to maintain and maximize those savings.