I have to agree that integration with back office systems using
various web services can be very difficult.  But in many cases using a
web service to connect to for an example a back office database is a
rather long winded approach, when the Android SDK includes full
database JDBC support.  In fact our rapid application developer tool
MobiForms (see www.mobiforms.com) supports JDBC connectivity to a
range of back office database and is ideal for database orientated
apps.  We have many customers connecting from Android straight back to
ERP and financial packages like SAP, Oracle Apps, Navision and
Dynamics.

On Apr 21, 10:03 pm, mcoderkat <cokathl...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Developers creating Android applications that connect to Java or .NET
> services can face significant integration challenges given the
> fragmentation of the Android OS. We have remoting and messaging APIs
> that will help ease your integration effort and would like to invite
> you to visit our blog and view the associated video. Some of the
> topics covered include:
>
> 1) Android talking to both Java and .NET via RTMPT
> 2) Android using pub/sub with JMS, NMS and ActiveMQ
> 3) Android exchanging data with Adobe AIR/Flex clients
> 4) How to use RTMP shared objects in Android apps
> 5) How to use code generation to assist with building Android apps
> 6) Cross platform communication between multiple client types and
> servers
>
> Here is the link to that article and 
> video:http://blog.themidnightcoders.com/index.php/2011/04/15/developing-and...

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