Newsletter | Advertise | App Shop | CONTACT | Twitter | LinkedIn
     
Monday, February 13 2012  
Welcome to SymbianOne - symbian OS, UIQ, meego, Qt, series 60 programers, S60, wireless developers, device makers, and mobile industry architects



Home arrow Articles arrow Symsource: Examining Symbian OS Developers
HomeNewsJobsArticlesApp ReviewsDirectoryMagsAboutLBSEVENTSDevices
Give SymbianOne a Like on facebook
Free IT Wireless / RCR Wireless News / Total Telecom / Symbian Search / AnyGeo Blog / Twitter
Connect

SymbianOne - symbian S60, UIQ and mobile tech news

↑ Grab this Headline Animator

E-Newsletter

Symbian newsletter
 Subscribe to the free SymbianOne Monitor Newsletter
SymbianOne in Ovi store

Site Sponsor

spatial media tech publications 

Cool Videos


Useful Stuff!

Getting Started with Internet Explorer Mobile
Getting Started with Internet Explorer Mobile


The Enterprise Goes Mobile

 

Mobile Tech Reviews

Symbian Software Reviews 

Main Menu
Home
News
Jobs
Articles
App Reviews
Directory
Mags
About
LBS
EVENTS
Devices

Social Bookmark
GISuser facebook group

gisuser on twitter 


 

 

Need A Wireless Developer?... Post Your Free Job Listing in our Career Center Today!
Symsource: Examining Symbian OS Developers Print E-mail
Written by SymbianOne   
Tuesday, 15 November 2005
At the Smartphone Show Symsource and Majinate announced that they were providing on-line examinations for the Accredited Symbian Developer Program. Richard Bloor caught up with Tim Ocock, Symsource’s founder, to find out more.

The Accredited Symbian Developer Program is a significant step, moving Symbian OS developers towards a truly recognized profession. Symsource, who were instrumental in the development of the examinations that accompany the program, is a primary reseller along with Accredited Symbian Developer program partners EMCC Software. Symsource’s web portal allows developers to take the exam at their leisure.

Tim explains that Symbian has created the developer accreditation program for two reasons. Firstly C++ development on Symbian OS is hard, at least to the extent that it is different from other C++ development environments. Secondly, because there is a lack of easily identifiable skilled developers in the Symbian ecosystem. “It is hard for companies new to Symbian OS to find a team, without having to turn to a third party such as Symsource, EMCC or others,” says Tim. “There is no objective way of assessing a candidate’s Symbian OS skills. At Symsource we have people coming for interviews who claim to have the skills and rate themselves pretty highly, but in reality they don’t have the skills. We have the Symbian OS knowledge to weed out those who think they know from those who do. Others are not so fortunate. This is where the exams will help.”

The exam is taken on-line and requires around an hour and a half to complete. On completion of the test, results are delivered via email.

So what does the examination test? Tim identifies three key areas of Symbian OS development that could have been tested, but the test only covers the two most important ones. “We don't test whether the candidate can memorize command arguments, methods and constructors. Anyone can read these from the documentation. More importantly it’s not how real developers work. They know what the right tools for the job are, they don't memorize APIs,” says Tim. “So the exam concentrates on the other two areas of theory, such as why is an active object better than a thread, and of real experience, not just the things someone could read from a text book. The experience questions ask ‘what is the best approach in this situation?’ or ‘which of the following is a valid approach when this is the problem?’. They are things that developers only know if they had done it time and time again, over a period of at least a few months developing their own projects.”

The exam has been extensively tested and calibrated using the answers of engineers from Symbian themselves as well as external companies, like Symsource. “The exam has been set to test the skill a competent developer should have acquired after about one year’s solid Symbian OS experience,” says Tim. “Anyone with that sort of grounding in Symbian OS development should be able to pass the exam.”

Symsource practices what it preaches, as all its engineering staff have taken the exam. Tim proudly notes that Symsource is the first company to have an engineering staff entirely made up of Accredited Symbian Developers. Tim does not expect to retain that exclusive status for long, as other companies realize the value of such a claim.

So what stops anyone claiming they have passed the exam? The accreditation program is administered on Symbian’s behalf by Majinate: apart from the provision of security-printed certificates. Part of the service offered by Majinate is a registration check. Accreditation details of all qualified developers are held in a secure database, which can be queried ad-hoc by third parties with the correct privileges. Additionally, the exam can be run in a reduced form as a rapid (30-minute), low-cost check of a candidate’s qualifications.

Passing or failing the exam does not have to be the end of the process. Symsource offers a training needs analysis tied to the examination, both for individuals and companies. “A company can apply the test to a particular team or whole department of engineers,” says Tim. “For each of those engineers the company would get an analysis that might say ‘they are weak in sockets but strong in data types’. Our clients have limited training budgets. We can use the exam as a way of determining who needs what training, which helps us advise our clients where we can add best value while bringing their teams up to an industry recognized, objectively measured competency standard.”

Next year the scheme is going to expand with a Professional option. This will be more advanced and allow developers to look at specialization, in areas such as multimedia or telephony. According to Tim the Professional scheme will be particularly important for companies looking for engineers to build devices.


There is more information on the Accredited Symbian Developer Program on Symbian’s Web site. Developers can register to take the examination on Symsource’s Web site at www.symsource.com/register.htm while employers and agencies can find out more about program services from Majinate’s Web site at www.majinate.com.

Last Updated ( Tuesday, 15 November 2005 )
 


Share

Submit Your Mobile Tech News




Social Media Strategies

Social Media Strategy Workbook: This Workbook will help you to define your goals and audiences and to decide on the channels that make the most sense for you. Ready to figure out what social media means for you and your own organization? This Social Media Planning Workbook will help you to define your goals and audiences and to brainstorm the channels that make the most sense for you.  

Social Media Marketing: How to Build a Socially Armed Team: It's not only the responsibility of the marketing department to engage customers anymore, it's the entire organizations responsibility, and social media has made consumers even more accessible.

Social Media Marketing: 12 Essential Tips for Success: With all the hype surrounding social media and consumer–generated content, marketers need clear and simple information to make sense of this new and powerful trend. 

Contribute to the SymbianOne Symbian Search!

SymbianOne Sponsored Links and Events

     LBSZone.com - for developers interested in mobile location-based services
    Geospatial & LBS News - Stay abreast of geospatial technologies with daily updates

    See Your Message Here

    Featured Symbian Career

    Featured Careers...

      Post your Symbian Career Ad for free at SymbianOne!



      Syndicate


      WINKsite
      add to google reader
      Subscribe in NewsGator Online
      SymbianOne Feedster
      Technocrati
      SymbianOne Bloglines
      AvantGo

      SymbianOne on AvantGo!
      Get Daily Updates!


      SymbianOne FeedBlitz

      Popular Stuff!

      Must Read Articles
    • Top Symbian Features and Spotlights at SymbianOne for 2008
    • Lightning Notes from Symbian Partner Event 08
    • Symmetric Multiprocessing A Developer Support Perspective on the Symbian Foundation
    • The Platform Promise: S60 Devices From Samsung 
    • Tools & SDKs
    • Five reasons to develop for Sony Ericsson UIQ 3-based phones
    • UIQ Tips, Tricks, and Code
    • UIQ 3 Docs and Tools
    • UIQ 3 SDK Download
    • Developer Tools in the news
    • tools and Tips for LBS developers


    • NewsFeeds


      Symbian one RSS feed Add the SymbianOne RSS feed to your reader 

      Get daily email updates:


      by FeedBurner

       


       

      Top of 

Page

      (c)2003 - 2008, SymbianOne - All rights reserved