MobileFrontend/status

Last update on: 2011-08-01

2011-03-01
We're still in hiring mode looking for a great developer to lead our efforts. At the same time, we're also putting together a roadmap for our mobile development, and starting to coordinate research and development. We're drafting a survey now. 

2011-04-01
With User:Qgil's help, we created a portal on meta for all mobile projects. Alongside our software engineering efforts, a significant significant amount of ground research is being done on mobile strategy. Hiring is now almost done, including for the mobile site rewrite. Volunteer developer Vivek also continued to work on WikiSnaps for Android.

2011-05-01
We made good progress on a PHP MediaWiki extension to replace our Ruby-based mobile gateway. We hope to demo our first all-MediaWiki version, whose appearance is similar to the current gateway, at the Berlin hackathon.

2011-06-01
Patrick Reilly demoed the mobile extension at the Berlin hackathon and answered implementation concerns about a skin vs. extension (see the follow-up discussion on wikitech-l) approach. He also continued to develop the extension, notably by integrating functionality of the WAP platform, and by expanding the device detection list. A prototype will soon be set up, for which we'll need volunteers to help us test the new portal using their mobile devices.

2011-07-01
Tomasz Finc sent a call for testers to help test the prototype in English, Japanese and Hebrew. Feedback is now being addressed by the mobile team, who is tracking fixes and new feature requests in bugzilla. Patrick Reilly and Asher Feldman also worked together to profile the MobileFrontend extension (formerly "PatchOutputMobile") and prep it for deployment. Next steps include its integration with our Varnish and Squid caching architecture, so that we can have the advantages of the WURFL mobile device database with an acceptable performance.

2011-08-01
Patrick Reilly focused on proper caching support, as well as device detection optimization. Mobile device recognition on Wikimedia sites is now done server-side at the squid level, which results in faster redirect for mobile users, and better recognition of devices. A message and feedback page were set up to report false positives.