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Join Matt Heine as he sits down with Andrew Inwood, Global CEO of CoreData, to explore the dynamic world of financial services. In this episode, Andrew delves into the critical role of financial literacy and the profound impact of intergenerational wealth transfer. He discusses the evolving responsibilities of financial planners and how technology and data are reshaping the industry. Andrew provides valuable insights into the challenges and opportunities facing financial services today, emphasising the importance of scalable solutions and strong client relationships. Listen in order to gain a deeper understanding of the future of financial planning and the strategies that can drive success.
**Descrizione del Video:**Ciao a tutti!
Andrew is the Founder at CoreData Group. He and James discuss CoreData's research on the advice industry, the challenges and opportunities for superannuation funds, international best practices, demographic shifts impacting retirement planning, consumer sentiment, and the future outlook for financial advice in Australia. Andrew Inwood LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/andrew-inwood-0207178/ CoreData Website: https://www.coredata.com.au/ moneyGPS. Discover the digital advice platform that will future proof your business: https://ensombl.com/go/20240829 Join the Ensombl platform: App Store: http://www.ensombl.com/apple Google Play: http://www.ensombl.com/google Desktop: https://www.ensombl.com/ General Disclaimer – https://www.ensombl.com/disclaimer/
In the latest episode of Actualizing Success, Actualize Consulting's Senior Manager Karen Sabia, Manager Matthieu Larrivee, and Senior Consultant Michelle Dudar dive into managing cash with effective liquidity planning. They explore the intricacies of liquidity planning, its unique aspects compared to cash flow forecasting, and its crucial relevance in the current financial environment. Their conversation also uncovers the challenges and best practices of liquidity planning, offering valuable insights and key components that must be managed. Don't miss out on this episode to gain a better understanding of effective liquidity planning and how it can significantly enhance your financial management strategies, especially in the current economic landscape. Listen to learn more about: The distinction between liquidity planning and cash flow forecasting, and its critical relevance in today's financial landscapeThe challenges, key components, and best practices associated with liquidity planningThe role of technology in crafting a robust liquidity plan and its potential to streamline financial management processesHow to align cash forecasting and liquidity planning for a streamlined process About Karen SabiaKaren is a Senior Manager at Actualize Consulting and has over 30 years of industry experience. Her strategic, creative, and innovative mindset helps drive enhancements of technology, Treasury operational transformation and process efficiencies. Karen specializes in Project Management, Global Cash Management, Treasury Management Systems, Risk Management, Business Process Engineering, and Cash Forecasting. She is a continuous learner, keeping updated on Treasury technology trends and innovations. Kyriba Module training includes, Core Data, Bank reporting, System Administration, Netting, Cash Management/ Forecasting, BAM, and BFA She received her B.A. in Finance from Western Governors University and her A.A. in Business Management from the Computer Programming Institute and has her CTP certification.Email: ksabia@actualizeconsulting.comAbout Michelle Dudar Michelle is a Senior Consultant at Actualize Consulting with extensive industry experience in Treasury and global capital markets. She has implemented international Treasury Management Systems and led or played active roles in strategic transactions including acquisitions and divestitures, equity issues and IPOs, and debt issues and redemptions. Michelle earned an MBA - Finance a BComm - Accounting from the University of Calgary.Email: mdudar@actualizeconsulting.com About Matthieu LarriveeMatthieu is a Manager at Actualize Consulting and has over 17 years of experience delivering projects in Capital Markets, Finance, Treasury, and payments processing using various solutions. Having held multiple leadership roles on the technical and functional side within projects and operations gives Matthieu a unique insight into understanding the business challenges unique to Finance departments and how to design and implement solutions that meet the requirements of every stakeholder. Email: mlarrivee@actualizeconsulting.comThanks for listening to this episode of the Actualizing Success Podcast! We hope you enjoyed the discussion and come back for more. In the meantime, don't forget to rate this episode and leave a review to let us know how you like it. Website: www.actualizeconsulting.com If you have any questions or comments, we'd love to hear from you. You can contact us at podcast@actualizeconsulting.com.
In this milestone 50th episode of Making Risk Flow, host Juan de Castro is joined by Bob James, the Chief Operating Officer of Lloyds. Bob is a seasoned senior insurance executive who has left an indelible mark on the insurance industry. He's held C-suite positions in leading U.S. and International insurers, and is member of the Board of Trustees for The Institutes, a leading provider of insurance education.During the course of their conversation, Juan and Bob delve into the evolving nature of the London insurance market. Bob shares how Lloyd's is driving transformation through initiatives like Blueprint Two, an ambitious strategy to deliver profound change through digitalisation. They also discuss reasons why insurers don't always evolve at the same speed, why the mortgage market has undergone radical digital transformation over the past 20 years whilst the commercial insurance market has not, and why core data standards might be the missing key for further transformation in the insurance industry.To discover out more about digital risk processing, click here.Our previous guests include: Bronek Masojada of PPL, Simon McGinn of Allianz, Richard Coleman of Ecclesiastical, Steven Wilkins of Hiscox, Matthew Grant of InsTech, Philippe Lutgen of Howden, Paolo Cuomo of Gallagher Re, and Thierry Daucourt of AXA.Check out the three most downloaded episodes: The Five Pillars of Data Analytics Strategy in Insurance | Craig Knightly, Inigo 20 Years as CEO of Hiscox: Personal Reflections and the Evolution of PPL | Bronek Masojada Implementing ESG in the Insurance and Underwriting Space | Simon Tighe, Chaucer, and Paul McCarney, Moody's
In this episode, I discuss a recent exploration and problem-solving situation with one of my apps that uses CloudKit to sync data across devices.CloudKit and iCloud are excellent ways to store a user's data and make it accessible across multiple devices. However, they come with some scenarios you need to account for.For example, have you coded to protect against a bad experience if the user is not logged into their account?Here are some tips in this episode with my real-world examples.Become a Patreon member and help this Podcast survivehttps://www.patreon.com/compileswiftPlease leave a review and show your supporthttps://lovethepodcast.com/compileswiftYou can also show your support by buying me a coffeehttps://peterwitham.com/bmcFollow me on Mastodonhttps://iosdev.space/@Compileswift Thanks to our monthly supporters Arclite ★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★
In questo episodio, parlo della mia nuova applicazione 'DisKontent', sviluppata per risolvere il problema di trovare cartelle e file archiviati.Condivido il processo di sviluppo, le sfide incontrate e le soluzioni implementate.Discuto anche l'ottimizzazione dell'esperienza utente e le possibili migliorie per la versione 2.0.Infine, esploro idee su come integrare ChatGPT in Transcriber.[00:08:46] Spot[00:21:11] Spot[00:25:29] Il riassunto di Sciatta GPTTechnoPillzFlusso di coscienza digitale.Vieni a chiacchierare sul riot:https://t.me/TechnoPillzRiotSono su Mastodon: @shylock74@mastodon.unoI video di The Morning Rant sul canale YouTube di Runtime:https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLgGSK_Rq9Xdh1ojZ_Qi-rCwwae_n2LmztAscoltaci live tutti i giorni 24/7 su: http://runtimeradio.itScarica l'app per iOS: https://bit.ly/runtAppContribuisci alla Causa andando su:http://runtimeradio.it/ancheio/
Wir freuen uns, dass Holger nach seiner Auszeit wieder zurück ist und von seiner Genesung nach einem Beinbruch berichtet. Er hat uns bei der Bearbeitung des Podcasts geholfen und uns über die neuen Funktionen von iOS 17 informiert, insbesondere über die Einstellungen für Stimmen und Geschwindigkeit. Wir sprechen auch über den App Store Transparency Report von Apple und die Herausforderungen bei der Nutzung von AR-Brillen. Cihat berichtet von seinen Erfahrungen bei den Labs auf der WWDC und gibt Tipps, wie man das Beste aus den Sessions herausholt. Wir diskutieren über die Nutzung von Core Data und anderen Frameworks in unseren Apps. Cihat erwähnt auch das neue Framework Tip Kit und Nico hebt OSLog hervor. Wir sprechen über die Vorteile von OSLog und die Nutzung von OpenAPI. Nico spricht auch über seine Abonnenten, die abnehmen, je mehr er ihnen bietet, und er nutzt seine Reichweite, um neue Abonnenten zu gewinnen. Er freut sich über die neuen SwiftUI-Animationsverbesserungen und plant, sie in seiner NFC-App zu verwenden. Nico erwähnt auch die Live Activities-Session von Apple und empfiehlt sie. Er hat auch ein Smart Home eingerichtet und plant, den Raum als gemeinsamen Arbeitsplatz zu nutzen. Zu seinen weiteren Fortschritten gehört die Kontaktaufnahme mit John Cohn, einem interessanten "Mad Scientist", der ihm bei seiner NFC-App geholfen hat. Nico hat auch weitere Funktionen in seiner App entwickelt, um die Kündigungsrate der Abonnenten zu reduzieren. Hinsichtlich der Geschäftsstrategie hat er einen Vertrag mit einem Stufensystem ausgearbeitet und plant, in eineinhalb bis zwei Jahren eine Partnerschaft einzugehen. Er hat auch Erfahrungen mit Marketingagenturen geteilt und plant, künftig stärker auf Social-Media-Posts zu setzen. Es wurden auch Gespräche über neue QR-Code-Modelle, die Erfahrungen mit SwiftUI und neue Funktionen für die App-Übersetzung geführt. Cihat erwähnt die Einführung eines neuen Formates namens Stream Catalogs, das die Lokalisierung und Übersetzung von Strings erleichtert. Er betont, dass die Migration einfach ist und auch mit älteren iOS-Versionen durchgeführt werden kann. Holger erwähnt seine Schwierigkeiten, die neueste Version von Xcode auf seinem älteren MacBook zu installieren, und beschwert sich über die Kosten eines Upgrades. Nico äußert seine Erleichterung über die verbesserten Übersetzungs- und Autovervollständigungsfunktionen von Stream Catalogs, hat sie jedoch noch nicht selbst gesehen. Cihat erklärt, wie mit String Catalogs fehlende Übersetzungen identifiziert und Probleme vermieden werden können, bei denen falsche Schlüssel für verschiedene Sprachen angezeigt werden. Sie diskutieren die Konsequenzen des Ignorierens dieser Probleme und des Auslieferns von Code mit unvollständigen Übersetzungen, was dazu führen könnte, dass englischer Text für den Benutzer angezeigt wird. Dann teilt Cihat Informationen über seine neue App Twotit mit, mit der Nutzer Posts für Twitter und Mastodon gestalten können. Er erwähnt die Herausforderungen des Pricings aufgrund der teuren Twitter-API und die Entscheidung, einen gewissen Preis für die App zu verlangen, der mit den Kosten der Twitter-API zusammenhängt. Es gibt auch eine Lite-Version der App für Nutzer, die kein Twitter nutzen. Holger erwähnt, dass er Twitter nicht mehr benutzt. Cihat empfiehlt die Verwendung von Extensions, um den Code übersichtlicher zu gestalten, und teilen Tipps zum Deaktivieren des Debug-Executables für schnellere App-Starts. Sie diskutieren auch das WLAN-Debugging und verschiedene Entwicklerwerkzeuge wie Stalker 2 und Fatal Error. Weiterhin berichtet Cihat über das WWDC-Notes-Projekt und verschiedene Artikel, die er geschrieben hat. Sie diskutieren auch die Framework-Auswahl für die Folge und erwähnen das Framework "Swipe Actions" von Steven Zeng. Schließlich sprechen sie über ihre Erfahrungen in großen Unternehmen wie Apple und kleinen Startups und teilen Gedanken zur Unabhängigkeit als Indie-Entwickler.
In this episode of the iOS dev podcast, we spoke with Mohammad Azam, AzamSharp, about his iOS dev journey, SwiftData, MVVM in SwiftUI, and iOS bootcamps. Audio Version: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/jason-dubon YouTube Video: https://youtu.be/1qQO_6kRR0o AzamSharp's YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCKvDySsrOVgUgRLhWHeyHJA AzamSharp's Twitter: https://twitter.com/azamsharp AzamSharp's Blog Post on SwiftUI Architecture: https://azamsharp.com/2023/02/28/building-large-scale-apps-swiftui.html NYC try! Swift conference: https://www.tryswift.co/events/2023/nyc/ Follow Jason On IG: https://www.instagram.com/thedubon/ Follow Jason On Twitter: https://twitter.com/JasonDubonYT Follow Jason on TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@thedubon 0:00 Intro 0:30 SwiftData 1:53 iOS dev journey 7:05 The biggest mistake bootcamp students make 9:12 Advice for studying new topic 10:30 Udemy course approach 14:27 Future of VisionPro & iOS development 18:40 Best cross dev platform 20:10 Indie dev: Native vs. Cross platform 21:20 Stop using MVVM 25:30 Architecture for CoreData apps 28:00 Biggest takeaway from 3 years of SwiftUI 31:45 Advice for aspiring iOS developers 32:40 Bootcamp or no bootcamp 35:04 ChatGPT & AI 38:20 Outro #iosdev #udemyswift #azamsharp
Since the beginning of the year, the Office of the National Coordinator for Health IT has rolled out several new updates to existing interoperability frameworks, including the 21st Century Cures Act, Trusted Exchange Framework and Common Agreement (TEFCA) and U.S. Core Data for Interoperability (USCDI) to improve standards that enable better health information exchange. National Coordinator for Health IT Micky Tripathi explains the latest with these frameworks and discusses the implications on areas like artificial intelligence, interoperability, health equity, data security and more.
Please Rate and Review us on your podcast app of choice!If you want to be a guest or give feedback (suggestions for topics, comments, etc.), please see hereEpisode list and links to all available episode transcripts (most interviews from #32 on) hereProvided as a free resource by Data Mesh Understanding / Scott Hirleman. Get in touch with Scott on LinkedIn if you want to chat data mesh.Transcript for this episode (link) provided by Starburst. See their Data Mesh Summit recordings here and their great data mesh resource center here. You can download their Data Mesh for Dummies e-book (info gated) here.Marcie's LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/marcie-stoetzel/DGIQ Conference (Marcie and Samia Rahman will be speaking in June; in San Diego, CA, USA): https://dgiq2023west.dataversity.net/registration-welcome.cfmSquare hole video Scott mentioned: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cvwN_O5ypTEArticle about the "leaf sheep" sea slug Marcie mentioned: https://www.bbc.com/travel/article/20210324-the-odd-sea-creature-powered-by-the-sunIn this episode, Scott interviewed Marcie Stoetzel, Principle Product Manager of Enterprise Core Data at Seagen. To be clear, she was only representing her own views on the episode.Before we jump in, Seagen might be a bit of a special case in how much the domains can leverage each other's data around a key record type. There is a lot to learn but you might not be able to find use cases that are as broadly impactful to many domains at once.Some key takeaways/thoughts from Marcie's point of view:?Controversial?: In data mesh, building a data culture focused on engagement, learning, and upskilling might be as important (more?) as doing the data work - if teams aren't willing to engage, what's the point of doing the work? Scott note: Marcie doesn't explicitly say this but it sure feels like an undercurrent. It's crucial to make your data culture something that can embrace data mesh.When going to domains, come with a target value proposition. Why would they get value from participating in your data mesh initiative? Scott note: If there isn't a value prop for the domain, you...
Luc-Olivier shares some tips on how to make more performant and reliable Core Data apps.Related LinksFU: GM plans to phase out Apple CarPlay in EVs, with Google's help | ReutersFU: GM is cutting off access to Apple CarPlay and Android Auto for its future EVs - The VergeFU: General Motors hates your iPhone – Six ColorsFU: The rules of the road are about to change | Bill GatesFU: YouTube/Digital Foundry: Gran Turismo 7 PS5 - 120Hz Patch - Four New Performance Modes TestedMaking Apps with Core Data - WWDC19 - Videos - Apple DeveloperThe link is to a specific timestamp that shows how to add the following debug flags to your project-com.apple.CoreData.ConcurrencyDebug 1-com.apple.CoreData.SQLDebug 4
More Than Just Code podcast - iOS and Swift development, news and advice
This week Jaime, Mark and Tim discuss the WWDC 2023 Lottery and what we expect to see at the June 5 WWDC 23 Keynote. The Bitcoin Whitepaper Is Hidden in Every Modern Copy of macOS. Should you enable Apple's Advanced Data Protection for iCloud. Apple Pay is now available in South Korea. Apple introduces Apple Pay Later. Apple Passwords Deserve An App. Ability to change iCloud password with only user's PIN code. Our WWDC 2023 predictions and wish list. iOS 17 Rumored to Drop Support for iPhone X, First-Generation iPad Pro, and More. Picks: 30th Anniversary Mac icons, Awesome newsletters for iOS and Swift developers in 2022, Visually learn Core Data in SwiftUI picture book, Understanding Swift Trailing Closure Syntax, Become A SwiftUI Navigation Pro, Syntax Color - How and why I present code the way I do.
AEGIS offers testing for interoperability, helping companies ensure that they have interpreted health data standards such as U.S. Core Data for Interoperability (USCDI) and FHIR properly during development, QA, integration, and ultimately at the client site. Most healthcare organizations underestimate what it takes to ensure their interoperability infrastructure is working correctly. As new software versions are released, data sharing can break. As new standards are implemented, data sharing can break. Having a way to test the wide variety of software, standards, and versions in your organization is going to be even more important as we come to rely on those data sharing efforts. Watch the video for Hyland's insights into dealing with versions of standards, putting patients in control, and making interoperability testing a community endeavor. Learn more about AEGIS: https://www.aegis.net/ Find more great health IT content: https://www.healthcareittoday.com/
More Than Just Code podcast - iOS and Swift development, news and advice
This week Tim sits down with Mark Moeykens of Big Mountain Studios. We discuss his unique visual guides to mastering SwiftUI, using ChatGPT and AI to read Apple's documentation, and Mark's upcoming book Core Data Mastery in SwiftUI Thanks to our Patrons: Greg Heo Paul Wilkinson Bevan Anderson Give us some feedback or ask questions with #askmtjc on Twitter (https://twitter.com/search?q=%23askmtjc&src=typed_query). Join our slack channel (https://itguytechno.slack.com). Special Guest: Mark Moeykens.
On this exciting episode, incremental progress has been made with PickleJarTodo! I know, you're in awe at our productivity. But, the bulk of the episode is a semi-literate discussion about the latest crop of "AI" tools and their potential impact on our discipline of software development. From the current crop of tools like ChatGPT and CoPilot to potential uses in designer/developer collaboration and even full app generation, this discussion is preliminary, but interesting, and we will surely revisit the topic in the future as we gain knowledge and experience in the space. Topics Discussed: - PickleJarTodo Update - SwiftLint for TODO warnings - Core Data model relationships - AI and Software Development - Azam testing blog post (testing is about confidence) - https://azamsharp.com/2023/02/15/testing-is-about-confidence.html - Generating code via Figma-like app - Apple and AI tools
More Than Just Code podcast - iOS and Swift development, news and advice
This week Tim sits down with Malin Sundberg and Kai Dombrowski, founders of Triple Glazed Studios, makers of Orbit: Time Based Inventory for macOS and iOS as well as makers of the Mercury Weather app. We discuss starting with Swift and publishing apps in SwiftUI, crashing into snow banks, under the edge of the Arctic Circle, all without having seen a single Star Wars movie (until recently.) Thanks to our Patrons: Greg Heo Paul Wilkinson Bevan Anderson Give us some feedback or ask questions with #askmtjc on Twitter (https://twitter.com/search?q=%23askmtjc&src=typed_query). Join our slack channel (https://itguytechno.slack.com). Special Guests: Kai Dombrowski and Malin Sundberg.
Steve's voice is back...like 95%! Tune in this week for an update about PickleJarTodo where, as usual, we quickly go off the rails into a classic Kotaro rant about JIRA! We also have some discussion about the perennial SwiftUI issue, integrating Core Data. Plus, some pros and cons we have found trying to use GitHub Projects and we end by setting some semi-realistic goals for next time! Topics Discussed: - PickleJarTodo Update - Side Projects Can Help Day Job Projects - GitHub Projects Tickets - Kotaro Rants About JIRA Slowness.
Frank journeys into Swift with a little CoreData and CloudKit. Follow Us Frank: Twitter, Blog, GitHub James: Twitter, Blog, GitHub Merge Conflict: Twitter, Facebook, Website, Chat on Discord Music : Amethyst Seer - Citrine by Adventureface ⭐⭐ Review Us (https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/merge-conflict/id1133064277?mt=2&ls=1) ⭐⭐ Machine transcription available on http://mergeconflict.fm
Building computers, running A/B tests as an indie developer, using UIKit as a layout tool for SwiftUI views, and deciding whether to use Core Data or a more simple on-disk data storage solution.
On today's episode of Trust Relations: The Podcast, hosts April and Hamish are sitting down for an in-person chat in sunny Sydney Australia! They're here to share their advice for successfully launching a sub-brand — and how to navigate constructive criticism branding clients as a part of that process. They also discuss April's plans for her working vacation in Sydney, and analyze a recent report on how global ad spend is impacting the marketing sector as we approach the new year. MARKETING CONUNDRUM: What to do when a parent company launches a sub-brand, but the messaging is too similar to their existing offering. NEWS: About the Standard Media Index's September 2022 Core Data report: https://www.marketingdive.com/news/ad-spend-declines-fourth-consecutive-month-september-report-finds/634699/ OFFER CODE: Trust Analysis: https://trustrelations.agency/landing-page-brand-workshop/ CONNECT WITH TRUST RELATIONS: Email us at trustrelationsthepodcast@gmail.com. Visit our website: https://www.trustrelations.agency Follow us on social media: https://www.linkedin.com/company/trustrelations/ https://twitter.com/trustPRelations https://www.facebook.com/trustrelations https://www.instagram.com/trustrelations/ Sound effects obtained from https://www.zapsplat.com.
Neste episódio que é quase um especial da Halloween, Rambo e Bunn batem um papo sobre Core Data
Counting down to Do iOS. At the time of this recording, I have almost two weeks to go, but it sure feels like it is happening tomorrow. Sending out messages to all attendees and speakers, making sure roll-up banners are ordered, putting together staff briefings for the Do iOS team and for the catering team, and preparing "filler" slides for when speakers are switching. Hotel bookings for team members. It is just a lot of small bits that all need to happen. I must say I feel very well organized and prepared. I think in large part that's due to my note-taking in Obsidian. Recently I showed what I have for notes to a colleague of mine and he was quite taken aback by the amount of stuff I write down. And I feel like I only capture half of all I want to capture.In this episode, I'm going to talk about:Thoughts on SwiftUI vs UIKitThree Ways to Refactor Massive SwiftUI ViewsMastering NavigationSplitView in SwiftUIHow to create NSManagedObject subsclasses for Core Data entities in XcodeRefactoring Swift: Best Practices to succeedRunwayPut your mobile releases on autopilot and keep the whole team in sync throughout. More info on runway.team Lead Software Developer Learn best practices for being a great lead software developer.Support the showPlease rate me on Apple Podcasts. Send me feedback on SpeakPipeOr contact me through twitter or Mastodon: @appforce1@mastodon.cloudBuy me a Coffee or become a member of my podcast.My book: Being a Lead Software Developer
Bringing John into his new year this week. John shares his wisdom for not only starting out a career in development but starting out at anything new, onboarding and why it’s best to make it easy for the user and the complications of the keyboard on iOS devices. Scotty shares his frustrating week with again more AppStore review complications with a client app, also some sync issues with the latest MoneyWell beta release thanks to some Core Data model issues. Ask Apple Back4App
The trio is back this week with some follow-up to Kotaro's solo episode and some spicy takes on The Verge's re-design. Steve tells the tale of how he was stymied by an obvious bug until Aaron fixed it and this leads into some discussion about the challenge in learning new mental models and the importance of having someone else read your code when you are stuck. Meanwhile, Kotaro promises he is working on the UI layouts and the big news since last episode was the new Dynamic Island feature in the iPhone 14 Pro models! We discuss in our infinite ignorance how this feature works and how we might use it for fun; Steve mentions something called "Super Sayan Aaron Mode!?" ## Topics Discussed: - Follow-Up: Kotaro's Solo Episode - The Verge vs Craigslist - RSS Never Died - PickleJarTodo Update - Steve's Core Data refactor works after Aaron fixed a bug! - SwiftUI mental models - Kotaro is building layouts - Dynamic Island Discussion - Live Activities API - Super Sayan Aaron Mode - Dynamic Island and Recent App Design Trends - How Can Our App Visit the Island? - Storing Images in Core Data Intro music: "When I Hit the Floor", © 2021 Lorne Behrman. Used with permission of the artist.
This week the trio review the PickleJarTodo journey so far before discussing the trials and tribulations of macOS betas, bringing back tasteful skeuomorphism in our app, adding playfulness via animation, and why copy is important. Aaron describes his solution to our NavigationSplitView dilemma, Steve discusses some Core Data architecture patterns, and Old Man Kotaro Story Time and a project management tools discussion result in some entertaining hot takes and rants. ## Topics Discussed: - PickleJarTodo Update - The journey so far - The trials and tribulations of macOS betas - NavigationSplitView - Skeuomorphism, Martin Style! - Digital paper notebook - The Martin System inspiration - SPS #17: Fingerpicking Good - http://phillycocoa.org/podcast/sps-17/ - Thomas Frank Video - https://youtu.be/0bxIg3M_MHY - “Martin System” Article - https://collegeinfogeek.com/paper-habit-tracker/ - Adding playfulness via animation - Side Project Saturday Design Feedback - Copy is important - NavigationSplitView & Tab Bars - Make a new layout based on device size - TabBar for iPhone - NavigationSplitView for iPad (2-pane) - Core Data architecture patterns in SwiftUI - Practical Core Data Book - https://practicalcoredata.com - Old Man Kotaro Story Time: The Objective-C Days - retain/release, provision hell, and the “bad old days” of Apple Dev. - Game Plan: - Kotaro: Flesh out core UI experiences (e.g. card view) - Steve: Core Data & Log View - Aaron: Onboarding View - September 7 Apple Event - Release candidate imminent - Project Management Tool Hot Takes - GitHub Projects - Trello - Microsoft Planner - Jira - RIP FogBugz - Bitsplitting.org: Dump FogBugz - https://bitsplitting.org/2022/07/20/dump-fogbugz/ - Basecamp - Microsoft Teams Intro music: "When I Hit the Floor", © 2021 Lorne Behrman. Used with permission of the artist.
This week, the trio is back from our first IRL meetup in two years! We provide an update on PickleJar including CoreData refactoring, architecture patterns, new UI sketches, a possible Radar-worthy bug, and we ask the big question, has Apple decided that Hamburger Menus are cool again? In the second half of the episode, we discuss the latest native vs web technology debate sparked by a Paul Hudson tweet about Notion switching to native views in their iOS app. It's quite an interesting conversation full of Kotaro anecdotes! Who doesn't love them? That's a rhetorical question, they're awesome! ## Topics Discussed: - Side Project Saturday Suburban Edition (IRL) was a success! - PickleJar app status - CoreData Refactoring Continues! - Architecture Patterns Discussion - Kotaro's SwiftUI Sketches - Hamburger Menus are cool again? - SplitView Bug Fix on iOS - Implementing UI Sketches - Notion Native Code Drama - https://twitter.com/twostraws/status/1550077375643361280 - The “Sweet Solution”? - Kotaro's Epic Mac Word Rant - Respecting the platform - Speed is a feature - What's the business value? - Ultimately, it depends - Wrap-Up Intro music: "When I Hit the Floor", © 2021 Lorne Behrman. Used with permission of the artist.
SwiftUI has made working with CoreData a lot easier and faster. The template Xcode 13 builds for you saves time and trouble. You can customize the model with just a few changes, and it just works.Support the Podcast on Patreonhttps://patreon.com/compileswiftPlease leave a review and show your support?https://lovethepodcast.com/compileswift★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★
Progress has been made on the app and as we move beyond simple prototyping into trying to make a functional MVP for other people to eventually use, how we structure our code becomes more important. This week, we discuss the MVVM architecture pattern and how well it does and doesn't get along with Core Data. Then, Kotaro leads us on a UI/UX design discussion, partially inspired by "the most satisfying checkbox." ## Topics Discussed: - PickleJar Update - Testing iCloud Sync - Multiple simulators signed into iCloud - MVVM + Core Data Discussion - CS193p - https://cs193p.sites.stanford.edu - Translating core data models to structs? - FetchRequest wrapper vs View Model - Map Into structs - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ehV2gp5uVhs - Sync is hard - Custom environment variables - UI/UX Design Discussion - Tags - Habits (ADA Winner) - https://www.andy.works/words/the-most-satisfying-checkbox - UI Focus - Sprints UI - Timeline Review - iPhone vs iPad vs Mac UX - Next - UI Core Mechanics (Kotaro) - Basic Charts view to explore (Steve) - ViewModel fleshed out (Steve + Aaron) - Tests! Intro music: "When I Hit the Floor", © 2021 Lorne Behrman. Used with permission of the artist.
John 00 Fleming presents JOOF Radio 031 (Tracklist below) Let's head straight to Coredata the guest mixer this month as he's responsible for setting the vibe of the whole show (in a good way!), his guest mix is as per expected, heads down twisted psychedelic mayhem that in return has bought that side out of me too
Financial literacy advocate Dr Pushpa Wood says renters who are aiming to survive on super can no longer afford skyrocketing city rentals. Recent research commissioned by New Zealand Seniors in partnership with CoreData showed that more people are working longer as the advent of Covid has delayed their retirement plans. The Retirement Report 2022 also found that only half of the over 50 year olds surveyed felt they were on track to retire at their preferred age. the Government has just announced an Employment Action Plan to support workers past retirement age. Dr Pushpa Wood is from the New Zealand Centre of Financial Education and Research Centre based at Massey University. She says it's imperative that people of all ages have a plan for their retirement.
More Than Just Code podcast - iOS and Swift development, news and advice
This week we fact check Hockey Night in Canada, and compare the new iPad Air to the iPad Pro, review masked Face ID, and debate whether the Apple Studio Display is a good deal. Apple announces WWDC 2022 starting June 6. We share our opinions on the online version of WWDC. Apple is apparently testing nine M2 based Macs and may introduce a new MacBook Air at WWDC. Apple's new A16 chip only included with higher-end iPhone 14 Pro models, base model iPhone 14 uses same chip as iPhone 13. Has the time come to rent iPhones? Apple finally lets ‘reader' link to their own sites. 'if let' gets new syntax in Swift 5.6. Picks: RWDevCon 2017 Inspiration Talk: I'm an Idiot by Richard Turton, Remember when Apple built a Mac OS running on top of Solaris and HP-UX? Seriously. It happened, Cybersecurity and Skin Care, Improving Accessibility: VoiceOver, Swift Fiddle, Live, Laugh, Delete Derived Data, Awesome Swift, 40+ iOS 15.4 changes and features!
Welcome to Code Completion, Episode 78! We are a group of iOS developers and educators hoping to share what we love most about development, Apple technology, and completing your code! Follow us @CodeCompletion (https://twitter.com/CodeCompletion) on Twitter to hear about our upcoming livestreams, videos, and other content. Today, we discuss: - Differences between Learning Objective-C and Swift. - Closures, CoreData, and SwiftUI. - Hidden complexity learning app development. Your hosts for this week: * Spencer Curtis (https://twitter.com/SpencerCCurtis) * Fernando Olivares (https://twitter.com/FromJRtoSR) * Dimitri Bouniol (https://twitter.com/DimitriBouniol) Be sure to also sign up to our monthly newsletter (https://codecompletion.io/), where we will recap the topics we discussed, reveal the answers to #CompleteTheCode, and share even more things we learned in between episodes. You are what makes this show possible, so please be sure to share this with your friends and family who are also interested in any part of the app development process. Sponsor This week's episode of Code Completion is brought to you by Sticky Widgets. Go to https://apps.apple.com/app/apple-store/id1533254320?pt=1765080&ct=CodeCompletion&mt=8 today to check it out!
After we recorded this week's podcast, we did decide on our next side project and it's not what you might expect. It has to do with pickles. Stay tuned for info about that next time! This week, we delve into the side project "failure" bin to talk about overcoming the many challenges to completing side projects and how even when we move on from one, it was still worth doing. ## Topics Discussed: - Pre-Show: - Stocks and studio displays - The Death of Kotaro's Side Project Dividend Calc - KanjiLove: A Passion Project that Took Multiple Attempts - Fav10: Learn SwiftUI, CoreData, & CloudKit - A Customer of One - The Daily Chron Podcast: Learn a New Non-Dev Skillset - https://www.dailychronpodcast.com - Video Killed the Podcast Star? - Side Projects are building blocks - Kotaro and Aaron's Big O Apple TV app - How to finish a side project - Keep scope small enough to not be overwhelmed, but big enough to still be useful - Hold yourself accountable by building in public like with KanjiLove - Work with other people - When to move beyond v1.0 on a successful side project? - Revisit to learn new things - Stuff you had on the back burner - A platform for your learnings Intro music: "When I Hit the Floor", © 2021 Lorne Behrman. Used with permission of the artist.
La llamada del código, así anuncia Apple la WWDC 22 que este año será online y del 6 al 10 de junio. Desde Apple nos anuncian oficialmente la WWDC de este año 2022, con el logo de Swift en una nueva configuración de colores y presentación de gala, poniéndolo junto a la frase "Call to Code". ¿Qué podemos esperar de esta nueva WWDC? ¿Qué cambios? ¿Habrá VR/AR? ¿Habrá nuevas librerías en Swift? ¿Qué podemos esperar a nivel Developer? ¿Core Data en Swift? Hablamos y analizamos algunos detalles que nos dan pistas y os hablamos del Swift Student Challenge en el que podéis participar desde hoy. Descubre nuestro canal de Twitch en: twitch.tv/applecoding. Descubre nuestras ofertas para oyentes: Cursos en Udemy (con código de oferta) Apple Coding Academy Suscríbete a Apple Coding en nuestro Patreon. Canal de Telegram de Swift. Acceso al canal. --------------- Consigue las camisetas oficiales de Apple Coding con los logos de Swift y Apple Coding así como todo tipo de merchadising como tazas o fundas. Tienda de merchandising de Apple Coding. --------------- Tema musical: "For the Win" de "Two Steps from Hell", compuesto por Thomas Bergensen. Usado con permisos de fair use. Escúchalo en Apple Music o Spotify.
ONC has been at work setting up the Trusted Exchange Framework and Common Agreement, establishing information-blocking requirements, iterating on the U.S. Core Data for Interoperability and standardizing FHIR-based APIs. This groundwork is coming together to empower patients to use their health data and uplift the power of electronic health records. National Coordinator for Health IT Micky Tripathi is joining HealthCast from the 2022 HIMSS conference to tell us more.
More Than Just Code podcast - iOS and Swift development, news and advice
This week we discuss Apple's record breaking iPhone sales in India. A new MacBook Air could be coming with a notch, MagSafe, next generation Apple Silicon and more ports, along with a 5G iPhone SE. Apple's App Store likely to survive two U.S. Bills aimed to change it. We discuss Tom Harrington's Clash of the Optionals and Jesse Squire's interpretation on how to handle non-optionals with Core Data. Apple unveils contactless payments via Tap to Pay on iPhone. We revisit 2048, Threes, Wordle and the endless chain of "rip offs". Apple releases macOS Big Sur and Catalina security updates. Picks: The Smart Guitar Amp & App, Log: Job Application Tracker, open source iOS apps, Hidden Mac tricks, DevToys For macOS, Fire in the Valley, and Using Combine
How about that, some primordial version of what we now call Xcode has been released 20 years ago. That is just epic. Find out more on the history of Xcode and other new interesting articles now.Articles mentioned this week:Hosting your Swift Library Docs on Github Pages – RhonabwySpecial Effects with SwiftUI – Hacking with SwiftHow to create asynchronous Swift Command-Line Tool with AsyncParsableCommand? | An TranHow to more gracefully handle non-optional Core Data properties in Swift · Jesse SquiresXcode Through the YearsAlso mentioned a Twitter space I am co-hosting this Wednesday.Donny Wals on TwitterSwift Heroes tickets now on sale!Please rate me on Apple Podcasts.Send me feedback on SpeakPipeOr contact me through twitterNewsletter, sign up!My book: Being a Lead Software DeveloperRunwayPut your mobile releases on autopilot and keep the whole team in sync throughout. Lead Software Developer Learn best practices for being a great lead software developer.Backblaze Cloud Backup Never Lose a File Again with the World's Easiest Cloud Backup. Back up your Mac or PC just $6/month.Support the show (https://pod.fan/appforce1)
More Than Just Code podcast - iOS and Swift development, news and advice
We're back for 2022, to follow up on buying a MacBook Pro, and Apple suing NSO Group. Tim and Mark discuss migrating a Core Data app from Objective-C to SwiftUI. We discuss the 15th anniversary of the iPhone announcement, Uber parks its Watch app, and 9 to 5 writes about Watch app abandonment. Introducing Swift for Visual Studio Code. How do Verifiable Vaccination Records with SMART Health Cards Work? Wordle copycat creator apologizes for ripping off the popular free word game. Picks: Swift Playgrounds 4.0, Headfirst SwiftUI, Apple Design Resources (updated), Springboard: the secret history of the first real smartphone.
We are in the endgame now! Kotaro has refined the UI while Aaron has updated our Core Data stack and Steve got Notifications working! All the pieces are together and we basically have a feature complete 1.0 app! Now we are entering into the final stress test, debugging, and polishing stages. In this episode we discuss the promise and current limitations of Xcode Cloud, provide an overview of the App Store submission process and steps we need to complete, and worry out loud about whether Swift UI conditionals are a good idea or not. App Submission Day is rapidly approaching. Will we make it? Beta Test the app: https://testflight.apple.com/join/Ag07XWbg ## Topics Discussed: - Sprint Retrospective - Aaron: - Core Data migrations - Card Deck updates - Steve: - Notifications work! - Kotaro: - Refined UI! - Refined text-to-speech - Refined metadata displayed - Xcode Cloud Issues - Archive & build almost works. Bug in Xcode Cloud. - App Store Submission Process Overview - Copyright Info - Keywords - Privacy policy - App nutrition label - Screenshots - etc. - Core Data Migrations - Automatic Lightweight migrations - Swift UI Conditionals - If/Then, Switches, etc. within a view - Looks ugly - Is it appropriate? - Refactor into View Builders? - On-Device & Swift UI Preview Problems - Problems getting it to run on Kotaro's watch - Swift UI Previews unreliable - Rely on Simulators - getslopes.com - Not a sponsor! - Awesome app - How to open a SwiftUI View From a Notification? - Jump to a SwiftUI view from notification - Deep link via scheme? - Complications - Onwards to Submission Day: - We are feature complete for v1.0 - Need stress testing on device. - Polish time - Get app setup on Aaron's account - Marketing materials, App Store metadata, etc. - Deadline for Submission: Dec 23 - Parting Words Intro music: "When I Hit the Floor", © 2021 Lorne Behrman. Used with permission of the artist
Sprint 2 is done and we have data! In this episode, we check-in on our goals for the sprint and discuss what got done, what didn't, and some interesting issues that came up along the way. Now that we have Kanji data in the Core Data database, we can shift focus to building the UI for the app and notifications for next time. ## Follow-up from last sprint: - Wireframes and prototype UI - Kanji database parsed into JSON - Core Data stack setup - Everyone get the app built and run on their watches - Look into how notifications might work - Get a podcast website setup ### Steve - Got podcast website done - No notifications ### Aaron - Got subset of data parsed into Core Data (3,000 kanji!) ### Kotaro - Started skeleton layout of all views - Hasn't hooked up UI to Core Data, yet. ## Topics Discussed: - Hugo as an option for building your podcast or app website - PRs for collaboration on GitHub - Analysis Paralysis and comic book artists - Core Data array magic with the transformable attribute - UI mechanics - What are the stats we are saving? - Extensions on CoreData models (like Kotaro's Fav10) ## Next Time: - Working prototype swipe UI and save user stats (Kotaro) - Working notifications (Steve) - Public interface to the Kanji database (Aaron) Intro music: "When I Hit the Floor", © 2021 Lorne Behrman. Used with permission of the artist.
Tracklist: WARM-UP UNFOLDINGS 1. Spencer Brown & Qrion - Rainy April [ANJUNADEEP] {WARM-UP UNFOLDING OF THE WEEK} 2. Ucros - Deceptive [FSOE UV] 3. John Cosani - Bootes (Hicky & Kalo Remix) [ONEDOTSIXTWO] 4. Francesco Sambero & Madeleine Wood - Forget [ANJUNABEATS] 5. Tom Staar x Jem Cooke x AVIRA - Gravity (Fabrication Remix) [ARMADA] TRANCE HOUR 1. Coredata - 94 [PURE TRANCE (BLACK HOLE)] 2. Proteus - You Break Above The Waves [PURE TRANCE NEON] 3. Jake & Almo - Beyond The Red Sky (Miroslav Vrlik & Dave Steward Remix) [REDUX REC.] 4. Made Of Light - The Reason Why [INTERPLAY GLOBAL] 5. Tom Exo - Starfire [SURGIKAL] 6. Craig Connelly - Golden Gate [FSOE] 7. Tycoos - Turbulence [LIFTING FORCE MUSIC] 8. Giuseppe Ottaviani - Lumina (Fisical Project Remix) [GO MUSIC (BLACK HOLE)] {TRANCE UNFOLDING OF THE WEEK} 9. Rated R & Robert Curtis - Collision Course [OUTBURST TWILIGHT] 10. Liquid Soul - I See The Spirit (Protonica Remix) [IBOGA] {UNFOLDING FROM THE PAST} EXTRA UNFOLDING Inum - Always There [INUM]
Open source is an ever-evolving field since technological innovation and demands will not stop as human life progresses, finding a useful open-source alternative to existing projects. This way, the work of a developer can be easier depending on the purpose they are after. Ben Rometsch talks with Bjarne Christiansen to discuss the journey of how he built Realm, which offers a mobile database that is not only developer-friendly but also a useful alternative to SQLite and CoreData. He also shares how his partnerships with MongoDB and Firebase worked for him, as well as the company's plans to transcend into the realm of the Internet of Things.
Tired of Xcode Playgrounds crashing on you? We've got something you're going to like! Plus: Can Apple really pull off a CloudKit and Core Data persistence solution? Also some great news and a podcast recommendation!
This week, Chris and Soroush talk about how they persist data in their apps. YapDatabase YapDatabase Extensions YapDatabase R-Tree Index for Fast Geospatial Queries ValueCoding: Swift protocols for encoding/decoding value types, which can be used with YapDatabase How FriendFeed uses MySQL to store schema-less data PostgreSQL 9.6 Documentation: JSON Types Realm Core Data mogenerator NSPersistentContainer - Apple's simple core data stack class Appropriate Uses for SQLite EGODatabase FMDB FCModel
Gary Chou launched Orbital Boot Camp to accelerate people's product ideas into reality in a 12-week intensive session. He knows from startups from his work at Union Square Ventures and The Product Sessions, but his particular interest is making sure that people with traditionally fewer opportunities are included. Sponsors & patrons This podcast is made possible through the support of sponsors and patrons. Thanks to Cards Against Humanity, which is helping to underwrite our new indie ads: inexpensive, short advertisements designed for independent artists, makers, programmers, and others. Thanks to Cards Against Humanity, which just launched a site where you can buy directly from them, including their Bigger Blacker Box and their 2012 and 2013 holiday packs, the profits from which are donated to charity. Our indie advertisers this week are: The Cotton Bureau, enablers of well-designed screenprinted shirts. The Velocity app for faster reading — up to 1,000 words a minute! Ensembles, a Core Data sync framework, which works with iCloud and Dropbox, and is extensible Games by Play Date, an indie tabletop game development studio supporting their new game, Pack the Pack Sparkle, a Mac app for painless Website creation Promoter, a Web service for indie game developers — get 10% off by following the link Hey, Cotton Bureau has a special one-day sale, its first, on June 12: $4 off every shirt on its site! And, from June 12 to June 18, New Disruptors listeners can be entered for a drawing by tweeting #disrupt to @cottonbureau. Five winners will be picked on June 19. Thanks also to patrons Alex Bond, Rönne Ogland, and Andy Baio for supporting us directly through Patreon! You can back this podcast for as little as $1 per month. At higher levels, we'll thank you on the air and send you mugs and T-shirts! Show notes Gary taught a School of Visual Arts with Christina Cacioppo, once a colleague from his venture capital days. Here's a picture of the old Kickstarter offices that Gary's occupying. Stewart Brand's How Buildings Learn is a favorite title for understanding the utility and drawbacks of informal and formal spaces, told through the lessons of how buildings evolve over time. Gary posted information about the breakdown of applicants that shows he met his goals for inclusiveness.
This episode was recorded 17 May 2013 live and in person at Omni's beautiful offices overlooking Lake Union in Seattle. You can download the m4a file or subscribe in iTunes. (Or subscribe to the podcast feed.) Mike Lee, Appsterdam founder, has worked at Alaska Airlines, Delicious Monster (with Wil Shipley), Apple, and is now Chief Lemur at New Lemurs. This episode is sponsored by Hover. Hover makes domain name management easy. And it's a snap to transfer domains from other registrars using their valet service. Get 10% off your first purchase with the promotional code BMF. (BMF -- Be My Friend — is Mike Lee's Twitter handle.) You notice how people with a lot of domains are always talking about Hover? It's because of their excellent service. Take a look. This episode is also sponsored by Microsoft Azure Mobile Services. Mobile Services is a great way to provide backend services — syncing and other things — for your iPhone, iPad, and Mac apps. It's high level — you can get more done with less work. It's also deep: write JavaScript in your favorite text editor. Test with mocha. Deploy with git. Things we mention, in order of appearance (mostly): Kurt Cobain Grunge Honolulu Hawaii University of Puget Sound Tacoma Puget Sound Alaska Airlines SeaTac Lead ramp agent Skilled labor 1993 Choose Your Own Adventure DHTML Flash Web Standards Project XML Java C# DotNet Macintosh PC Microsoft Windows Windows 95 Mac OS X Terrorist watch list WWDC JavaOne Objective-C Xcode 2005 2001 Renoir Hotel WWDC Student Scholarship Wil Shipley Wil Shipley's Speech on the Indie Dream Devry FedEx Core Data Bill Bumgarner Federal Way I-5 Delicious Library Apple Design Award Campus Bash Denny's Omni Group Rumpus Room Apple Store Barnes & Noble Lucas Newman Mike Matas Knoxville Samurai Yoko Ono Seattle Xcoders Gus Mueller Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle Dave Winer Superman IL 7 John Geleynse Lemur Chemistry Cabel Sasser “Hi, I Make Macintosh Software” T-shirt altWWDC Debug podcast Tapulous Tap Tap Revenge iFart DTS IL 3 Caffè Macs Rands Matt Drance Michael Jurewitz