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Join us this week as we welcome Cecelia Martinez from the Ionic team to talk about the ins and outs of mobile development and how Ionic Appflow can help democratize releasing your apps to the various app stores. More about Cecelia and IonicBlueSky: @ceceliacreates.comThreads: cecelia_createsX: @ceceliacreatesLinkedIn: Cecelia Martinez useappflow.comionicframework.com/docs/angular/overviewatlantajavascript.comFollow us on X: The Angular Plus ShowThe Angular Plus Show is a part of ng-conf. ng-conf is a multi-day Angular conference focused on delivering the highest quality training in the Angular JavaScript framework. Developers from across the globe converge on Salt Lake City, UT every year to attend talks and workshops by the Angular team and community experts.Join: http://www.ng-conf.org/Attend: https://ti.to/ng-confFollow: https://twitter.com/ngconfhttps://www.linkedin.com/company/ng-confhttps://bsky.app/profile/ng-conf.bsky.socialhttps://www.facebook.com/ngconfofficialRead: https://medium.com/ngconf Watch: https://www.youtube.com/@ngconfonlineStock media provided by JUQBOXMUSIC/ Pond5
Reactions to Tuesday's iPhone event at Apple, the recent history of the development landscape in gaming, and an overview of the flaws in the plan Unity announced this week. At the end: Competing thoughts on the NFL and NBA, John Malone's portfolio, and Taylor Swift in theaters.
In this Special episode, We have a guest, Parithi who is a senior Mobile developer. We spoke lots of things about how is mobile development career now. What we need to learn to become a mobile( Android/IOS developer). Introduction to mobile development (Android & IOS) in Tamil. What are the interesting problems faced by Mobile Developers? How many people need to create and manage big apps like FB/Insta? How can I switch my career to Mobile Development? Can entrepreneurs use mobile development? and a lot of interesting questions. App Development has changed over the past decade and continues to change in a faster way. Mobile Application Technology is growing fast before we finish reading the latest book on App Development, what we learned is outdated Those days [2011-12], Android phones were not as widespread as nowadays. People used mobile phones- not smartphones, on their engineering projects using blue tooth with the android operating system they developed some applications, using the then existing android version 2.0 which is for mobile Application Development, and Android 3.0which is for Tablet Applications, Now, a decade later, people prefer the term Mobile Developer or Software Engineer rather than Android Developer. Earlier, it was not possible to develop any mobile app without knowing a programming language. These days, working knowledge of spreadsheet programs such as MS Excel or Google Sheets along with ‘Amazon Honeycode is sufficient to develop applications, without having to learn a programming language. This makes development much easier. ---------- You Can Read the full transcribe in the below blog. https://www.tamilboomi.com/mobile-app-development-career-trend-in-2023/ --------- If you are interested to learn about new technologies & careers, you'll like our newsletter. Sign up here: www.tamilboomi.com --------- We offer Online Classes for Cloud DevOps & Data Engineering. --------- You can reach out to us & join the group for discussions: --------- Insta: https://www.instagram.com/tamilboomitechnologies/ WhatsApp Group for Discussions: https://chat.whatsapp.com/LuwXgVza8B3EaFmXwkKSwq Whatsapp number: +91 9619663272 Twitter : https://twitter.com/TamilboomiT --------- We Talk about Life, Motivation, and Technology in Tamil and English. New Episodes Weekly twice (Tuesday & Friday). --------- We have three shows : அடிச்சாண்டா Appoinment Orderu : Talks about Career and Entrupreunership பொதுவாச் சொன்னேன்: Talks about General things which we want to share Tamilboomi online Course: Content related to technology and online live courses ---------- Want to appear in our shows or want to contribute? Feel free to reach us! Share and Enjoy! --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/tamilboomi/message
In this week’s episode of The Breakout Growth Podcast Sean Ellis and Ethan Garr chat with Jacob Eiting, Co-Founder and CEO of RevenueCat. Building the backend system to support subscriptions in a mobile app can take months. Jacob had done this work himself multiple times as an engineer and realized there had to be a better way. So today, mobile developers rely on RevenueCat’s APIs and SDKs to quickly add, manage, and grow subscription revenue in their businesses. For startups, time is a precious commodity, so being able to offload work that isn’t directly focused on improving customer experiences can be super-valuable. But it isn’t just time-savings that RevenueCat delivers. Working within the confines and ever-changing world of Apple and Android’s walled-gardens can be daunting for developers. RevenueCat deeply understands these ecosystems and uses that knowledge to make it easier for every customer to thrive on these platforms. The company wins by helping its developers grow their businesses, and it is clearly working as RevenueCat itself has grown into a go-to solution for mobile developers around the world. But, the work isn’t done. Jacob is pushing his team to look for additional ways to ensure RevenueCat is adding value for customer throughout their entire journey. He wants the company to, “be the Salesforce of what we do”, helping and empowering people who build apps at every step. From our conversation, it seems like he and his team are well on their way. Whether you are an app developer or not, this is a great conversation for anyone looking to better understand why directly aligning your company goals with the goals of your customers is a winning formula for sustainable growth. Take a listen, we think you will really enjoy this one! We discussed: * The RevenueCat backstory: from subscription frustration to accessible solutions (04:52) * “Building on the back of a giant;” adding value within Apple & Android’s walls (15:01) * The importance of being part of the wider developer community (17:59) * Figuring out RevenueCat’s long-term value for customers (27:52) * OKRs and other efforts to drive alignment (46:20) * Jacob’s most valuable growth learnings (55:18) And much, much, more . . .
In this week’s episode of The Breakout Growth Podcast Sean Ellis and Ethan Garr chat with Jacob Eiting, Co-Founder and CEO of RevenueCat. Building the backend system to support subscriptions in a mobile app can take months. Jacob had done this work himself multiple times as an engineer and realized there had to be a better way. So today, mobile developers rely on RevenueCat’s APIs and SDKs to quickly add, manage, and grow subscription revenue in their businesses. For startups, time is a precious commodity, so being able to offload work that isn’t directly focused on improving customer experiences can be super-valuable. But it isn’t just time-savings that RevenueCat delivers. Working within the confines and ever-changing world of Apple and Android’s walled-gardens can be daunting for developers. RevenueCat deeply understands these ecosystems and uses that knowledge to make it easier for every customer to thrive on these platforms. The company wins by helping its developers grow their businesses, and it is clearly working as RevenueCat itself has grown into a go-to solution for mobile developers around the world. But, the work isn’t done. Jacob is pushing his team to look for additional ways to ensure RevenueCat is adding value for customer throughout their entire journey. He wants the company to, “be the Salesforce of what we do”, helping and empowering people who build apps at every step. From our conversation, it seems like he and his team are well on their way. Whether you are an app developer or not, this is a great conversation for anyone looking to better understand why directly aligning your company goals with the goals of your customers is a winning formula for sustainable growth. Take a listen, we think you will really enjoy this one! We discussed: * The RevenueCat backstory: from subscription frustration to accessible solutions (04:52) * “Building on the back of a giant;” adding value within Apple & Android’s walls (15:01) * The importance of being part of the wider developer community (17:59) * Figuring out RevenueCat’s long-term value for customers (27:52) * OKRs and other efforts to drive alignment (46:20) * Jacob’s most valuable growth learnings (55:18) And much, much, more . . .
Timestamps(01:55) Jessica shared the formative experiences of her upbringing — being born in a triplet with two other sisters and growing up in an immigrant family from Russia.(05:45) Jessica shared her experience being part of UC Berkeley's first cohort of Data Science majors.(09:56) Jessica talked about her campus involvements with student-run organizations such as the Mobile Developers of Berkeley and the Data Science Society at Berkeley.(13:02) Jessica walked through her participation in initiatives like researching the CITRIS and the Banatao Institute, sitting on the leadership board of the TAMID Group, and being an Accel Scholar.(15:31) Jessica shared valuable lessons from her summer internships.(19:08) Jessica discussed her decision to join Ironclad, a Series D digital contracting startup building software to take legal teams to the next level.(22:39) Jessica provided a brief explanation of digital contracting for the uninitiated.(24:59) Jessica talked about challenges that in-house legal teams typically face and how Ironclad helps address them.(27:04) Jessica gave a tour of Ironclad's Contract Lifecycle Management software offerings.(30:00) Jessica walked through her journey of building the analytics function from scratch and providing data insights to inform business decisions cross-functionally.(33:40) Jessica shared tidbits about her time management and goal-setting systems.(34:45) Jessica walked through the end-to-end data analysis process for Ironclad's first legal analytics benchmark report analyzing economic trends caused by COVID-19.(38:38) Jessica discussed the learning curves as she took on bigger analytical responsibilities at Ironclad.(43:05) Jessica unpacked her 3-level framework for building a data analytics culture from the ground up.(48:07) Jessica shared concrete advice on positively influencing a company's culture to be data-driven.(50:27) Jessica unfolded the drive behind creating the Data Angels Community, a Slack group connecting women interested in data to resources for support, education, and opportunities.(52:25) Jessica revealed her community playbook to engage the members of Data Angels.(57:01) Jessica shared a bit of her guilty pleasure in using data for beauty and fashion.(01:00:44) Closing segment.Jessica's Contact InfoLinkedInTwitterData AngelsMentioned ContentResources"How to use contract data during COVID-19" (Ironclad Report)"Building data analytics culture from the ground up" (Women In Product 2020 Talk)"Building a data-centered culture at Ironclad" (Ironclad Article)PeopleEmily Robinson and Jacqueline Nolis (Co-Authors and Co-Hosts of “How To Build A Career in Data Science” the book and the podcast)Cassie Kozyrkov (Chief Decision Scientist at Google)Shreya Shankar (Ph.D. Student at UC Berkeley and Entrepreneur-In-Residence at Amplify Partners) (Check out my interview with Shreya as well!)Book“Everybody Lies: Big Data, New Data, and What The Internet Can Tell Us About Who We Really Are” (by Seth Stephens-Davidowitz)NotesMy conversation with Jessica was recorded back in May 2021. Jessica is now a Senior Data Analyst and Ironclad's Data Analytics team has grown to 4 so she is no longer a 1-woman show! Also, the Data Angels Slack community has over 500 members in it now!About the showDatacast features long-form, in-depth conversations with practitioners and researchers in the data community to walk through their professional journeys and unpack the lessons learned along the way. I invite guests coming from a wide range of career paths — from scientists and analysts to founders and investors — to analyze the case for using data in the real world and extract their mental models (“the WHY and the HOW”) behind their pursuits. Hopefully, these conversations can serve as valuable tools for early-stage data professionals as they navigate their own careers in the exciting data universe.Datacast is produced and edited by James Le. Get in touch with feedback or guest suggestions by emailing khanhle.1013@gmail.com.Subscribe by searching for Datacast wherever you get podcasts or click one of the links below:Listen on SpotifyListen on Apple PodcastsListen on Google PodcastsIf you're new, see the podcast homepage for the most recent episodes to listen to, or browse the full guest list.
As Damien Cavaillès’s developer team focuses primarily on mobile apps, building a website was a little out of their comfort zone. They brought in a 17-year-old web developer who immediately threw everything that they worked on into the trash. Virtually starting over, Damien and his team came together to learn new libraries and techniques to build a site that help developers in their job search.Watch it on YouTube HERE: https://youtu.be/qZFve6M8uuoABOUT OUR GUESTDamien Cavalliès is a developer based in France who loves to disrupt the recruitment space. He co-founded WeLoveDevs.com in 2015 and draws heavily from his passion to help other developers find a place where they’ll be happy with their work.Don't forget to subscribe to Educative Sessions on YouTube! ►► https://bit.ly/39sIrUNABOUT EDUCATIVEEducative (educative.io) provides interactive and adaptive courses for software developers. Whether it’s beginning to learn to code, grokking the next interview, or brushing up on frontend coding, data science, or cybersecurity, Educative is changing how developers continue their education. Stay relevant through our pre-configured learning environments that adapt to match a developer’s skill level. Educative provides the best author platform for instructors to create interactive and adaptive content in only a few clicks.More Videos from Educative Sessions: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCT_8FqzTIr2Q1BOtvX_DPPw/ Episode 22: "A Website? Build by Mobile Developers? How Hard Could It Be?" with Damien Cavaillès | Educative Sessions
BeyondSims and Rachybop chat about all of the latest Sims 4 news including the latest game update, roadmap and new community manager. Sims Mobile also has a new developer which we all know and love, and there's plenty of gossip from Dan and Rachael's lives! --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/llama-drama-podcast/message
In this episode we spend a bit tossing around our ideas on how the mobile gaming market is effecting (affecting) the gaming market as a whole. Also we discuss on whether or not we truly believe that streaming is the future of gaming. This episode was a little different than the normal one on Friday because we believe the impact of the mobile market is huge in the gaming arena. This was a topic we could have spent hours on but try to condense to an enjoyable length. Regardless we do want to know your opinion on the matter. Thanks so much! Let us know and check us out on: https://www.facebook.com/groups/hitstartgaming/https://twitter.com/HitStartPodcast
In this episode I'm joined by Cesare Rocchi, a mobile developer and popular author for Ray Wenderlich, where we discuss data in mobile applications. Pretty much every mobile application has a dependency of working with or storing data and we explore some of the available technologies and how developers are using them to get the job done. If you have any questions for the speakers, send them to advocates@couchbase.com.
02:34 - Angular in 2015 Visual Studio Code 09:11 - Tooling 10:47 - Angular 2 Courses, Style Guide 13:01 - People Leaving Angular for React ?? 14:31 - No New Frameworks of Consequence in 2016 ?? Cycle.js Elm 21:50 - New Year’s Challenge: Communicate “Why” Pair Programming 25:12 - Opinionated Blog Posts and Rants 28:42 - Mobile Developers and Applications 33:44 - Angular 2 LIVE Predictions Lukas: June 15th John: May 4th (ng-conf) Chuck: mid-July Ward: August Joe: April 1st 39:54 - ES2015/6, ES7 41:15 - Bootstrap Takes a Backseat 41:48 - Inline Styles 43:43 - Containers 44:08 - NOSQL Databases 44:35 - Java 45:06 - Ruby 45:35 - PHP 46:34 - Bootcamps / Coding Camps Education and Job Attainability 54:02 - Revolt on ES6 => Go Back to ES5 ?? 55:49 - WebAssembly Picks Mad Max: Fury Road (Ward) Luca Sestak Duo - Key Engine (Lukas) Star Wars: The Force Awakens (Joe) littleBits (Joe) Submit a CFP for ng-conf! (Joe) Spending time with family (John) Clash of Clans (Chuck) All Remote Confs (Chuck) Swarm Simulator (Chuck) CES (Chuck) The Venetian Hotel (Chuck)
02:34 - Angular in 2015 Visual Studio Code 09:11 - Tooling 10:47 - Angular 2 Courses, Style Guide 13:01 - People Leaving Angular for React ?? 14:31 - No New Frameworks of Consequence in 2016 ?? Cycle.js Elm 21:50 - New Year’s Challenge: Communicate “Why” Pair Programming 25:12 - Opinionated Blog Posts and Rants 28:42 - Mobile Developers and Applications 33:44 - Angular 2 LIVE Predictions Lukas: June 15th John: May 4th (ng-conf) Chuck: mid-July Ward: August Joe: April 1st 39:54 - ES2015/6, ES7 41:15 - Bootstrap Takes a Backseat 41:48 - Inline Styles 43:43 - Containers 44:08 - NOSQL Databases 44:35 - Java 45:06 - Ruby 45:35 - PHP 46:34 - Bootcamps / Coding Camps Education and Job Attainability 54:02 - Revolt on ES6 => Go Back to ES5 ?? 55:49 - WebAssembly Picks Mad Max: Fury Road (Ward) Luca Sestak Duo - Key Engine (Lukas) Star Wars: The Force Awakens (Joe) littleBits (Joe) Submit a CFP for ng-conf! (Joe) Spending time with family (John) Clash of Clans (Chuck) All Remote Confs (Chuck) Swarm Simulator (Chuck) CES (Chuck) The Venetian Hotel (Chuck)
02:34 - Angular in 2015 Visual Studio Code 09:11 - Tooling 10:47 - Angular 2 Courses, Style Guide 13:01 - People Leaving Angular for React ?? 14:31 - No New Frameworks of Consequence in 2016 ?? Cycle.js Elm 21:50 - New Year’s Challenge: Communicate “Why” Pair Programming 25:12 - Opinionated Blog Posts and Rants 28:42 - Mobile Developers and Applications 33:44 - Angular 2 LIVE Predictions Lukas: June 15th John: May 4th (ng-conf) Chuck: mid-July Ward: August Joe: April 1st 39:54 - ES2015/6, ES7 41:15 - Bootstrap Takes a Backseat 41:48 - Inline Styles 43:43 - Containers 44:08 - NOSQL Databases 44:35 - Java 45:06 - Ruby 45:35 - PHP 46:34 - Bootcamps / Coding Camps Education and Job Attainability 54:02 - Revolt on ES6 => Go Back to ES5 ?? 55:49 - WebAssembly Picks Mad Max: Fury Road (Ward) Luca Sestak Duo - Key Engine (Lukas) Star Wars: The Force Awakens (Joe) littleBits (Joe) Submit a CFP for ng-conf! (Joe) Spending time with family (John) Clash of Clans (Chuck) All Remote Confs (Chuck) Swarm Simulator (Chuck) CES (Chuck) The Venetian Hotel (Chuck)
Stella is the CEO and Co-founder of Matchist: the best place to find top US-based web and mobile developers online. She is also Co-founder of Entrepreneurs Unpluggd and is here today to share her journey.
Stella is the CEO and Co-founder of Matchist: the best place to find top US-based web and mobile developers online. She is also Co-founder of Entrepreneurs Unpluggd and is here today to share her journey.