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On this episode we chat with celebrity chef and food stylist, Chef Kitura! We talk about loving the foods we eat, healthy cooking, and bringing families back to the table! You will love the passion she has for what she does, and she gives some great tips on preparing your turkey as we approach this Giving Season! So many other great gems given... Tap In! How to connect with Chef Kitura: https://chefkitura.com/ https://www.allabouttheminis.com/ https://www.instagram.com/chefkitura/ https://www.instagram.com/allabouttheminis_/ Stay Connected with us: https://linktr.ee/JanieCharlot --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/heartandsoul/message
In this episode of the iPhreaks Show the panel interviews Gopal Sharma who gave a talk at try! Swift 2018 about serverside Swift. He starts by sharing his background and how got into building stuff for the serverside. In his talk, Gopal outlined what is expected in a serverside framework and explains where Swift was at. The major things looked for in a serverside framework are performance and predictability. Swift has the basic building blocks of a serverside framework and Gopal shares what makes Swift unique. Its been over a year since his talk and Gopal tells the panel that things have improved for serverside Swift since then. Gopal explains that the real reason to use serverside Swift is for Neo. Vapor and Kitura are the Swift frameworks built on top of Neo. Gopal compares these too frameworks and walks the panel through the specifics of each one. They discuss how each handles requests, databases, migration, template-based rendering, and microservice environments. The panel discusses which frameworks should be used for different projects. They share their preferences for ORMs and weigh the costs and benefits of using ORMs. Gopal explains why he prefers to just use SQL and avoid ORMs. Shawn shares tips for using ORMs and explains how they save him time and make him more efficient. Panelists Alex Bush Shawn Clabough Guest Gopal Sharma Sponsors Sentry– use the code “devchat” for two months free on Sentry’s small plan CacheFly Links Swift on Server: Are We There Yet https://vapor.codes/ https://www.kitura.io/ https://twitter.com/gopalkri https://www.facebook.com/iphreaks/ https://twitter.com/iphreaks Picks Gopal Sharma: https://github.com/groue/GRDB.swift http://diesel.rs/guides/getting-started/ https://github.com/cashapp/sqldelight Alex Bush: The Obstacle Is the Way: The Timeless Art of Turning Trials into Triumph Shawn Clabough: Recreational Hockey
In this episode of the iPhreaks Show the panel interviews Gopal Sharma who gave a talk at try! Swift 2018 about serverside Swift. He starts by sharing his background and how got into building stuff for the serverside. In his talk, Gopal outlined what is expected in a serverside framework and explains where Swift was at. The major things looked for in a serverside framework are performance and predictability. Swift has the basic building blocks of a serverside framework and Gopal shares what makes Swift unique. Its been over a year since his talk and Gopal tells the panel that things have improved for serverside Swift since then. Gopal explains that the real reason to use serverside Swift is for Neo. Vapor and Kitura are the Swift frameworks built on top of Neo. Gopal compares these too frameworks and walks the panel through the specifics of each one. They discuss how each handles requests, databases, migration, template-based rendering, and microservice environments. The panel discusses which frameworks should be used for different projects. They share their preferences for ORMs and weigh the costs and benefits of using ORMs. Gopal explains why he prefers to just use SQL and avoid ORMs. Shawn shares tips for using ORMs and explains how they save him time and make him more efficient. Panelists Alex Bush Shawn Clabough Guest Gopal Sharma Sponsors Sentry– use the code “devchat” for two months free on Sentry’s small plan CacheFly Links Swift on Server: Are We There Yet https://vapor.codes/ https://www.kitura.io/ https://twitter.com/gopalkri https://www.facebook.com/iphreaks/ https://twitter.com/iphreaks Picks Gopal Sharma: https://github.com/groue/GRDB.swift http://diesel.rs/guides/getting-started/ https://github.com/cashapp/sqldelight Alex Bush: The Obstacle Is the Way: The Timeless Art of Turning Trials into Triumph Shawn Clabough: Recreational Hockey
Nos enteramos por los foros oficiales de Swift en Apple, que IBM ha decidido cambiar sus prioridades en su inversión en Open Source, y retira a sus dos ingenieros que actualmente trabajan en el proyecto de código abierto del lenguaje Swift y de la API de lado servidor Kitura. Esto deja en el aire, principalmente, el futuro de Kitura que es una de las grandes apuestas en el mundo de Swift Server Side y una de las soluciones que se habían asentado con mayor proyección de futuro. Os lo contamos y analizamos en profundidad. Descubre nuestras ofertas para oyentes: "Concurrencia en iOS con Swift" en Udemy por $20,99/20,99€. "Swift de lado servidor con Vapor" en Udemy por $69,99/69,99€. "Desarrollo Seguro en iOS con Swift" en Udemy por $124,99/124,99€. "Aprendiendo Swift 5.2" en Udemy por $74,99/74,99€. 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. Logo Apple Coding (negra, logo blanco) Logo Swift (negra, logo blanco) Logo Swift (blanco, logo color original Swift) Logo Apple Coding (blanco, logo negro) --------------- Sigue nuestro canal en Youtube en: Canal de Youtube 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.
David Okun joins us to discuss Kitura, the state of Swift on the server, and everything else I threw at him! David is the Developer Advocate at IBM and he has a passion for Kitura as well as the Swift community. Resources KituraDockerDeploying Kitura with Docker & Kubernetes: Getting Started - Audrey TamStencilVapor vs Kitura: Choosing a Server Side Swift Framework - Brian Schick Reach Out and Get Involved Here are a few people doing amazing work on Swift. David recommended reaching out to them if you want to get involved with Swift beyond mobile development. Ayaka Nonaka - @ayanonagonHarlan Haskins - @harlinhaskins Things We Love David Okun The Rust Programming LanguageEBow Eman Harout Simple Modern Ascent BottleiPhone XR / AirpodsUpdate: Removed iPhone Edge case recommendation. Company was great and sent me a Metal Bumper as a replacement, which I suspect will be a much better product. Contact @dokun24David's Twitch Stream@emanharout
Join Tammy Coron and Tim Mitra on Episode 127, which was recorded on April 4, 2019. On this episode, they talk with David Okun. David is a Developer Advocate working for IBM. His favorite kind of software development is on iOS, and he spends a lot of time working with Computer Vision. If you like listening to Roundabout: Creative Chaos, and you want to know how you can help support the show, please visit RoundaboutFM.com for details. Your support helps us cover the costs of hosting, post-production, and other administrative fees.
Swift 5 ha llegado públicamente, así como SwiftNIO 2, el framework de red orientado a eventos de Apple y que es el corazón de Vapor, Kitura y todo el desarrollo de lado servidor en Swift. Os contamos cómo instalar macOS Mojave en vuestro Mac no soportado si os habéis quedado fuera de la actualización, además de las novedades de Swift 5 y las de SwiftNIO 2 como una nueva librería SSL propia, nativa en Swift o soporte de HTTP/2 (donde también explicamos qué es este nuevo protocolo). Lo último en programación en Swift, en Apple Coding. Charlas de Applesfera, Post-Keynote. Enlace al podcast. Descubre nuestras ofertas para oyentes: "Concurrencia en iOS con Swift" en Udemy por $20,99/20,99€. "Swift de lado servidor con Vapor" en Udemy por $69,99/69,99€. "Desarrollo Seguro en iOS con Swift" en Udemy por $124,99/124,99€. "Aprendiendo Swift 5.2" en Udemy por $74,99/74,99€. 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. Logo Apple Coding (negra, logo blanco) Logo Swift (negra, logo blanco) Logo Swift (blanco, logo color original Swift) Logo Apple Coding (blanco, logo negro) --------------- Sigue nuestro canal en Youtube en: Canal de Youtube 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.
Swift 5 ha llegado públicamente, así como SwiftNIO 2, el framework de red orientado a eventos de Apple y que es el corazón de Vapor, Kitura y todo el desarrollo de lado servidor en Swift. Os contamos cómo instalar macOS Mojave en vuestro Mac no soportado si os habéis quedado fuera de la actualización, además de las novedades de Swift 5 y las de SwiftNIO 2 como una nueva librería SSL propia, nativa en Swift o soporte de HTTP/2 (donde también explicamos qué es este nuevo protocolo). Lo último en programación en Swift, en Apple Coding. Charlas de Applesfera, Post-Keynote. Enlace al podcast. Descubre nuestras ofertas para oyentes: "Concurrencia en iOS con Swift" en Udemy por $20,99/20,99€. "Swift de lado servidor con Vapor" en Udemy por $69,99/69,99€. "Desarrollo Seguro en iOS con Swift" en Udemy por $124,99/124,99€. "Aprendiendo Swift 5.2" en Udemy por $74,99/74,99€. 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. Logo Apple Coding (negra, logo blanco) Logo Swift (negra, logo blanco) Logo Swift (blanco, logo color original Swift) Logo Apple Coding (blanco, logo negro) --------------- Sigue nuestro canal en Youtube en: Canal de Youtube 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.
In this episode of Origin Stories I speak with David Okun of IBM and Kitura. We discuss how he got started as a kid building Geocities websites for Dragonball Z, and how he ended up as a developer evangelist for IBM working with the Kitura team helping bring Server Side Swift to the community. Be sure to stick around for the story of how he got his job at IBM and our discussion about luck being involved in everyone's journey. It's good stuff. Origin Stories is a series of interviews with iOS developers from the community where we discuss how they got their start in this industry. We discuss how they first became interested in code, what resources they used to learn, how they got their first job and much more. David's Twitter https://twitter.com/dokun24 Server Side Swift w/ Kitura Book https://store.raywenderlich.com/a/20866/link/1 Link to my book - How I Became an iOS Developer: https://gumroad.com/l/sean-allen-origin Books, hoodies and goodies: https://seanallen.co/store If you're enjoying this podcast, I have another one called Swift Over Coffee w/ Paul Hudson of Hacking with Swift: https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/swift-over-coffee/id1435076502?mt=2 Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/seanallen_dev Instagram: @seanallen_dev Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/seanallen YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/seanallen Portfolio: https://seanallen.co Book and learning recommendations (Affiliate Links): Ray Wenderlich Books: https://store.raywenderlich.com/a/20866/link/1 Ray Wenderlich Video Tutorials: https://store.raywenderlich.com/a/20866/link/24 Paul Hudson's Hacking With Swift: https://gumroad.com/a/762098803 Learn Advanced Swift Here: https://gumroad.com/a/656585843 My Developer & YouTube Setup: https://www.amazon.com/shop/seanallen --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/seanallen/support
The raywenderlich.com Podcast: For App Developers and Gamers
IBMers Chris Bailey and David Okun of the recently published "Server Side Swift with Kitura" walk us through this growing technology. Then, we say goodbye to Jay and season 8 and tell you how YOU can be our Season 9 Co-host. The post Kitura – Podcast S08 E12 appeared first on Ray Wenderlich.
In this episode, Leo talks different backend technologies to use when building an iOS app or any other Apple device: when you need a cloud service, running on your own server, cloudkit, firebase, and more...
Show Notes:- Get started with Kitura: https://www.kitura.io- Swift video series: https://www.pointfree.co Sponsors- Sentry Link $100 credit (only for new accounts): https://sentry.io/signup/?code=firesideswiftFireside Swift Theme song by Mike “Golden Pipes” DillinghamBlind Love Dub by Jeris (c) copyright 2017 Licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution (3.0) license. http://dig.ccmixter.org/files/VJ_Memes/55416 Ft: Kara Square (mindmapthat)
This week on Court Radio, Dean Weitzman of MyPhillyLawyer answers legal questions from callers, and later speaks to Kitura Dior about Power Up Your Business, a free business training program for small business owners in Philadelphia.
More Than Just Code podcast - iOS and Swift development, news and advice
We follow up with Mark about his experiences at WWDC 2018 and we discuss some of our favorite sessions. Mark gives shout outs to Victoria Heric, Ed Arenberg, David Sinclair and Dann Beauregard. We follow up on Apple banning apps that sell user's contact info. Audrey Tam has published a tutorial on Create ML. Apple is also banning apps that do cryptocurrency mining. We discuss a Swift for Android solution. Tim installs macOS Mojave to tryout Dark Mode. We discuss a video on 50 + macOS Mohave changes. We look at Marzipan in Mojave. Mark regales us with week at WWDC 2018. We both discuss our favorite WWDC sessions. Picks: What’s new in Swift 4.2, Pixelmator for iOS, Server Side Swift with Kitura tutorial.
We wanted to apologize for the audio quality and room echo from this episode. We're still figuring out our in-person recording setup, and we had a mishap with some of our audio equipment. Swift on the Server framework options: Vapor Kitura Zewo Perfect Frank Sadly limited Vapor documentation Vapor's ORM - Fluent kqueue - the BSD interface that Dispatch is based on Swifter - Twitter API client in Swift Vapor toolbox - the CLI tool for working with Vapor Docker Sourcery for codegen
The O’Reilly Programming Podcast: Applying the latest language features to build video games and containerized microservices.In this episode of the O’Reilly Programming Podcast, I talk about Swift with Paris Buttfield-Addison, co-founder of Secret Lab, a mobile development studio that builds games and apps for mobile devices. He is the co-author of Learning Swift, and a presenter of the Learning Path Getting Started with Swift on the iPad and the video Ultimate Swift Programming.Discussion points: The Swift Playground app, which Buttfield-Addison calls “a great programming testing environment and a concise way to get people up to speed with the language.” The appeal of the Swift language to game developers. “Swift is one of the few opportunities we have to develop games in a modern language for a platform we know people will actually use,” he says. Building containerized microservices with Swift: “It’s really interesting to see how far Swift has come in the three years it’s been around. You’re able to write a fairly full-fledged web framework, put it in a container, and deploy it,” he says. Buttfield-Addison explains why it’s easy to build a game in Unity: “You have to write less code, so fewer mistakes are on your side, and more is taken care of by the engine.” I also talk with Brian Foster, content lead at O’Reilly and co-chair of O’Reilly’s Software Architecture Conference, about some of the most discussed topics (including microservices, serverless architecture, and reactive architecture) at the conference in April 2017. Other links: The free report What’s New in Swift 3, by Paris Buttfield-Addison, John Manning, and Tim Nugent The next O’Reilly Software Architecture Conference, October 16-18, 2017, in London IBM’s Kitura framework for building microservices written in Swift Apple’s SpriteKit for game design The books Mobile Game Development with Unity and Swift Development for the Apple Watch, co-authored by Buttfield-Addison Buttfield-Addison is part of the organizing team for the /dev/world/2017 conference, August 28-30, 2017, in Melbourne
The O’Reilly Programming Podcast: Applying the latest language features to build video games and containerized microservices.In this episode of the O’Reilly Programming Podcast, I talk about Swift with Paris Buttfield-Addison, co-founder of Secret Lab, a mobile development studio that builds games and apps for mobile devices. He is the co-author of Learning Swift, and a presenter of the Learning Path Getting Started with Swift on the iPad and the video Ultimate Swift Programming.Discussion points: The Swift Playground app, which Buttfield-Addison calls “a great programming testing environment and a concise way to get people up to speed with the language.” The appeal of the Swift language to game developers. “Swift is one of the few opportunities we have to develop games in a modern language for a platform we know people will actually use,” he says. Building containerized microservices with Swift: “It’s really interesting to see how far Swift has come in the three years it’s been around. You’re able to write a fairly full-fledged web framework, put it in a container, and deploy it,” he says. Buttfield-Addison explains why it’s easy to build a game in Unity: “You have to write less code, so fewer mistakes are on your side, and more is taken care of by the engine.” I also talk with Brian Foster, content lead at O’Reilly and co-chair of O’Reilly’s Software Architecture Conference, about some of the most discussed topics (including microservices, serverless architecture, and reactive architecture) at the conference in April 2017. Other links: The free report What’s New in Swift 3, by Paris Buttfield-Addison, John Manning, and Tim Nugent The next O’Reilly Software Architecture Conference, October 16-18, 2017, in London IBM’s Kitura framework for building microservices written in Swift Apple’s SpriteKit for game design The books Mobile Game Development with Unity and Swift Development for the Apple Watch, co-authored by Buttfield-Addison Buttfield-Addison is part of the organizing team for the /dev/world/2017 conference, August 28-30, 2017, in Melbourne
In this episode, Jack stuns Gordon with a true story about a bizarre Swedish Christmas ritual, Gordon talks about his adventures creating a simple web app using Swift, and finally Jack reveals his true feelings about the new MacBook Pro. Sweden's bizarre Disney Christmas tradition A recording of the Swedish Disney Christmas show from years ago IBM's Kitura web framework The Vapor web framework
Fredrik snackar med Anders Carling - medgrundare och huvudutvecklare på Tummy lab och tidigare utvecklare på Football addicts - om bland annat att resa och jobba på nya platser. Att läsa källkoden för viktiga projekt man beror på. När är det vettigt och inte? Hur kommer det sig att Anders har så mycket koll på Varnish och vad har han fått ut av det? Vi snackar också om större och mindre omskrivningar, pragmatiska teknik- och omskrivningsval och hur Football addicts system växt och förändrats. Vi avhandlar också Apples nya Macbook pro-modeller och dess touch bar, från maskinerna i sig till allas pågående tankar om alternativ till Apples bärbara. Sist men inte minst: hur kom Anders in på Vim, och vad Tetris har med det att göra? Ett stort tack till Cloudnet som sponsrar vår VPS! Har du kommentarer, frågor eller tips? Vi är @kodsnack, @tobiashieta, @isallmaroon och @bjoreman på Twitter, har en sida på Facebook och epostas på info@kodsnack.se om du vill skriva längre. Vi läser allt som skickas. Gillar du Kodsnack får du hemskt gärna recensera oss i iTunes! Länkar Anders Carling Tummy lab Advent of code Kodsnacks Advent of code-repo Svenska podcastpriset Wonderbrand Baked - musiksättning av offentliga miljöer Football addicts Winter on fire - Netflixdokumentär om revolutionen i Ukraina Anders Elfving Wikipedia-artikeln om Summer of love New relic Varnish Cloudflare Fastly Xvim - Xcode-plugin som ger Vim-tangentbordskontroll Slackware - kanske den mest smärtsamma introduktion till Linux man kunde få? nano Tetris attack Bejeweled Intellij Appcode - Jetbrains IDE för Mac- och IOS-utveckling Fler har föreslagit att använda paragraftangenten för att kompensera avsaknaden av escape på Macar med touch bar Dell XPS 13 Lop - göteborgsk återförsäljare och servare av Macar med tillbehör Asana Squarespace Github pages Hugo Let’s encrypt Capistrano Elastic load balancer Cloudfront Percona Mariadb Percona toolkit - verktygsuppsättning för Mysql-databaser Innodb - lagringsmotorn Mysql använder Curl Daniel Stenberg - Curls upphovsman .NET core Visual studio code Kitura - IBMs webserverramverk för Swift N-gram Cocoaheads Göteborg - för alla som är intresserade av utveckling på Apples plattformar Core data Collection view Yapdatabase Mogenerator - Jonathan “Wolf” Rentzsch verktyg för att modellera Core data What’s new in Core data från WWDC 2016 Auto layout Draper Titlar Ett projekt ingen av oss ville äga Man skulle kunna jobba från nästan var som helst Det där har jag skrivit specen till Vi hade läst källkoden till den nya versionen Deras konfigfil kompileras till C-kod Ett “bad to the bone”-C-projekt Vet man hur det går sönder kan man i alla fall släppa det Det är sällan trivialt att byta ut någonting Verkligheten hade fula skarvar Livet utan Xvim är förvirrande Vägen in i Vim Ett steg åt det mjukare hållet Min Slackdator med 32 GB minne Hur det beter sig när det börjar ta stopp En tretusenraders Perl-best De vet vilka de är, och de behöver inte dig Ni gör det här på rätt sätt Det gör vardagen roligare tummylab-swift.h Klasser som verkligen aldrig exponerats för världen Tredje klassen jag översatte Det här tar längre tid än det borde Det här är dina komponenter, och det går att missbruka Han som har koll är och spelar badminton Respekten som jag kanske inte hade då
Patrick and I talk about all the Swift at IBM projects. Unfortunately, we don't get to learn about his personal story because there was so much Swift@IBM stuff to talk about. But, if you're interested in server-side Swift and considering using Kitura, then you should definitely listen to this episode. We break down all the projects, what they are, why and how to use them, and how they all fit together. If you want to get started with standing up your own web service using Kitura, or even just learning about it, Patrick recommends getting started by downloading the Cloud Tools for Swift app for macOS (see link below), then sign up for a BlueMix account through that app, and then checkout one of the sample projects like BluePic (link below). Links: Patrick on Twitter - @pbohrer - https://twitter.com/pbohrerGoing Server-side with Swift Open Source - Featuring Patrick! - WWDC 2016 video - https://developer.apple.com/videos/play/wwdc2016/415/Swift Sandbox - https://swiftlang.ng.bluemix.net/#/replKitura - Web framework and HTTP server written in Swift - https://github.com/IBM-Swift/KituraBluePic - Sample full stack Swift app using Kitura - https://github.com/IBM-Swift/BluePicCloud Tools for Swift - http://cloudtools.bluemix.netSwift@IBM Website - https://developer.ibm.com/swift/Slack Team - http://swift-at-ibm-slack.mybluemix.netSwift@IBM GitHub - https://github.com/ibm-swift Listen on iTunes. Questions, comments, or you just wanna say Hi? Contact your host @garricn on Twitter This episode was recorded using the Cast platform by @JulianLepinski. Wanna start your own podcast? Try Cast!
More Than Just Code podcast - iOS and Swift development, news and advice
We answer an askMTJC about our use of Swift 3. Aaron discusses some feedback on his Mac: End of Life prognostication on episode 111, as well as, feedback on Air Pods. Jaime tells us about his new position at Simple which leads into more fintech and banking. We follow up on ProtoBufs in Kitura and the Omni Group's new pricing strategy. We discuss the new App Store Search Ads, opposition to React Native and the Pixel phone by Google. Picks: Sky Force 2014 for Apple TV, an iOS Simulator logging protip and CatPaint (stealth pick) Sponsored by: Hired CatPaint & Sticker by @CoryDMC Episode 113 Show Notes: THE MAC DOES HAVE A FUTURE, EVEN IF IT’S OS DOESN’T Dave Rogers on Episode 111 – Storm & Stress Christophe Fondacci on Episode 111 – Storm & Stress Christopher Stott Simple Fintech Tangerine Protocol Buffers in your Kitura Apps - Swift@IBM GraphQL REST Experimenting with App Store Search Ads Branch.io Toronto Blue Jays 2016 MLB Sticker Pack The Omni Group is moving to free downloads with In App Purchases Curtis Herbert - Challenging our Assumptions to Succeed in the App Store Why I’m not a React Native programmer New leak tells us absolutely everything about Google's Pixel phones Nimbus Steel Series Controller Episode 113 Picks: Sky Force 2014 for Apple TV Protip: Make iOS Simulator logging great again CatPaint with Sticker Pack (stealth pick)
Lynda.com Scala Language Ruby on Rails Rails for Zombies tryruby.org railstutorial.org Kitura by IBM Vapor Framework Perfect Framework Watch Me Nae Nae (YouTube) Safari Books Online exercism.io
Bienvenue dans le cent-soixante-deuxième épisode de CacaoCast! Dans cet épisode, Philippe Casgrain et Philippe Guitard discutent des sujets suivants: Pragmatic Testing - Suivez le guide NSDateFormatter - En Swift sur le serveur Swift Syntax - Enfin un guide pratique Kitura - Le framework web d’IBM Swift Sandbox - Le bac à sable Swift d'IBM Ecoutez cet épisode
More Than Just Code podcast - iOS and Swift development, news and advice
We start off covering Tim Cook's appearance on ABC News. We follow up on the FBI's actions reseting the shooter's password and the populace understanding of the ramifications. We also follow up on the Cambrian explosion of Swift web servers and the Quartz news app. We discuss Github's drag and drop, devmate and Make Money Outside the App Store. We explore the two finger long press to select text. Picks: iOS App Extensions, Tiny Game of Pong, Test Your Swift. Episode 80 Show Notes: Tim Cook Interview with ABC News FBI: Resetting San Bernardino gunman's iCloud password wasn't a mistake Answers to your questions about Apple and security iOS: Understanding data protection iOS Security Eliza, computer therapist Quartz iOS App Apple TV Tech Talks Videos GitHub drag & drop GitHub Desktop for Mac DevMate goes free Make Money Outside the Mac App Store Fastspring Kitura Build End-to-End Cloud Apps using Swift with Kitura Perfect Blackfish Swifter Django Flask Pyramid Apple, don't cripple the Pencil's navigation in iOS 9.3 Teleprompt+ 3 Parrot Teleprompter Episode 80 Picks: iOS App Extensions: Series Introduction A Tiny Game of Pong How to measure the digital crown Test Your Swift