Podcasts about Swift Playgrounds

Development environment for Swift

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Swift Playgrounds

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Best podcasts about Swift Playgrounds

Latest podcast episodes about Swift Playgrounds

iOS Today (Video HI)
iOS 742: STEM Apps for iOS - Swift Playground, BrainPOP, Lab O

iOS Today (Video HI)

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 6, 2025 29:58 Transcription Available


Head into the world of educational technology with Mikah Sargent and Rosemary Orchard as they explore cutting-edge iOS apps that make learning science, technology, engineering, and mathematics engaging and interactive. From virtual anatomy lessons to coding playgrounds, these apps transform your device into a powerful learning tool. Skeleton 3D Anatomy: A free app for exploring human anatomy in 3D, allowing users to tap and learn about different bones, their Latin names, and skeletal structures. Perfect for students, medical enthusiasts, or anyone curious about the human body. Swift Playground: Apple's coding education app that helps users learn Swift programming. Recent updates include the ability to create and publish entire apps directly from an iPad, making coding more accessible than ever. Khan Academy: A comprehensive learning platform offering free courses in mathematics, sciences, computing, and more. Features include partner content from NASA and the California Academy of Sciences, with the ability to track progress across devices. BrainPOP: An educational video platform featuring engaging content about scientific concepts, historical figures, and educational quizzes. Known for its animated robots and human characters that explain complex topics in an approachable manner. Enki: A coding learning app supporting multiple programming languages like Python, JavaScript, SQL, and CSS. Offers flexible subscription options for those wanting to expand their programming skills. The Elements by Theodore Gray: An interactive periodic table app with beautiful images, 3D representations, and fascinating stories about chemical elements. Froggipedia: A $3.99 iPad/iPhone app that provides a digital alternative to traditional frog dissection, teaching the amphibian life cycle through interactive experiences. Lab O Bundle: A collection of science apps including Beaker, Space, Chemist, and more.Shortcuts Corner VPN App Notification Shortcut: A listener seeks a way to create a notification/automation that reminds him to close work-related apps before launching NordVPN to avoid false security alerts. Hosts: Mikah Sargent and Rosemary Orchard Contact iOS Today at iOSToday@twit.tv. Download or subscribe to iOS Today at https://twit.tv/shows/ios-today Want access to the ad-free video and exclusive features? Become a member of Club TWiT today! https://twit.tv/clubtwit Club TWiT members can discuss this episode and leave feedback in the Club TWiT Discord.

iOS Today (MP3)
iOS 742: STEM Apps for iOS - Swift Playground, BrainPOP, Lab O

iOS Today (MP3)

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 6, 2025 29:58 Transcription Available


Head into the world of educational technology with Mikah Sargent and Rosemary Orchard as they explore cutting-edge iOS apps that make learning science, technology, engineering, and mathematics engaging and interactive. From virtual anatomy lessons to coding playgrounds, these apps transform your device into a powerful learning tool. Skeleton 3D Anatomy: A free app for exploring human anatomy in 3D, allowing users to tap and learn about different bones, their Latin names, and skeletal structures. Perfect for students, medical enthusiasts, or anyone curious about the human body. Swift Playground: Apple's coding education app that helps users learn Swift programming. Recent updates include the ability to create and publish entire apps directly from an iPad, making coding more accessible than ever. Khan Academy: A comprehensive learning platform offering free courses in mathematics, sciences, computing, and more. Features include partner content from NASA and the California Academy of Sciences, with the ability to track progress across devices. BrainPOP: An educational video platform featuring engaging content about scientific concepts, historical figures, and educational quizzes. Known for its animated robots and human characters that explain complex topics in an approachable manner. Enki: A coding learning app supporting multiple programming languages like Python, JavaScript, SQL, and CSS. Offers flexible subscription options for those wanting to expand their programming skills. The Elements by Theodore Gray: An interactive periodic table app with beautiful images, 3D representations, and fascinating stories about chemical elements. Froggipedia: A $3.99 iPad/iPhone app that provides a digital alternative to traditional frog dissection, teaching the amphibian life cycle through interactive experiences. Lab O Bundle: A collection of science apps including Beaker, Space, Chemist, and more.Shortcuts Corner VPN App Notification Shortcut: A listener seeks a way to create a notification/automation that reminds him to close work-related apps before launching NordVPN to avoid false security alerts. Hosts: Mikah Sargent and Rosemary Orchard Contact iOS Today at iOSToday@twit.tv. Download or subscribe to iOS Today at https://twit.tv/shows/ios-today Want access to the ad-free video and exclusive features? Become a member of Club TWiT today! https://twit.tv/clubtwit Club TWiT members can discuss this episode and leave feedback in the Club TWiT Discord.

All TWiT.tv Shows (MP3)
iOS Today 742: STEM Apps for iOS

All TWiT.tv Shows (MP3)

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 6, 2025 29:58 Transcription Available


Head into the world of educational technology with Mikah Sargent and Rosemary Orchard as they explore cutting-edge iOS apps that make learning science, technology, engineering, and mathematics engaging and interactive. From virtual anatomy lessons to coding playgrounds, these apps transform your device into a powerful learning tool. Skeleton 3D Anatomy: A free app for exploring human anatomy in 3D, allowing users to tap and learn about different bones, their Latin names, and skeletal structures. Perfect for students, medical enthusiasts, or anyone curious about the human body. Swift Playground: Apple's coding education app that helps users learn Swift programming. Recent updates include the ability to create and publish entire apps directly from an iPad, making coding more accessible than ever. Khan Academy: A comprehensive learning platform offering free courses in mathematics, sciences, computing, and more. Features include partner content from NASA and the California Academy of Sciences, with the ability to track progress across devices. BrainPOP: An educational video platform featuring engaging content about scientific concepts, historical figures, and educational quizzes. Known for its animated robots and human characters that explain complex topics in an approachable manner. Enki: A coding learning app supporting multiple programming languages like Python, JavaScript, SQL, and CSS. Offers flexible subscription options for those wanting to expand their programming skills. The Elements by Theodore Gray: An interactive periodic table app with beautiful images, 3D representations, and fascinating stories about chemical elements. Froggipedia: A $3.99 iPad/iPhone app that provides a digital alternative to traditional frog dissection, teaching the amphibian life cycle through interactive experiences. Lab O Bundle: A collection of science apps including Beaker, Space, Chemist, and more.Shortcuts Corner VPN App Notification Shortcut: A listener seeks a way to create a notification/automation that reminds him to close work-related apps before launching NordVPN to avoid false security alerts. Hosts: Mikah Sargent and Rosemary Orchard Contact iOS Today at iOSToday@twit.tv. Download or subscribe to iOS Today at https://twit.tv/shows/ios-today Want access to the ad-free video and exclusive features? Become a member of Club TWiT today! https://twit.tv/clubtwit Club TWiT members can discuss this episode and leave feedback in the Club TWiT Discord.

iOS Today (Video)
iOS 742: STEM Apps for iOS - Swift Playground, BrainPOP, Lab O

iOS Today (Video)

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 6, 2025 29:58 Transcription Available


Head into the world of educational technology with Mikah Sargent and Rosemary Orchard as they explore cutting-edge iOS apps that make learning science, technology, engineering, and mathematics engaging and interactive. From virtual anatomy lessons to coding playgrounds, these apps transform your device into a powerful learning tool. Skeleton 3D Anatomy: A free app for exploring human anatomy in 3D, allowing users to tap and learn about different bones, their Latin names, and skeletal structures. Perfect for students, medical enthusiasts, or anyone curious about the human body. Swift Playground: Apple's coding education app that helps users learn Swift programming. Recent updates include the ability to create and publish entire apps directly from an iPad, making coding more accessible than ever. Khan Academy: A comprehensive learning platform offering free courses in mathematics, sciences, computing, and more. Features include partner content from NASA and the California Academy of Sciences, with the ability to track progress across devices. BrainPOP: An educational video platform featuring engaging content about scientific concepts, historical figures, and educational quizzes. Known for its animated robots and human characters that explain complex topics in an approachable manner. Enki: A coding learning app supporting multiple programming languages like Python, JavaScript, SQL, and CSS. Offers flexible subscription options for those wanting to expand their programming skills. The Elements by Theodore Gray: An interactive periodic table app with beautiful images, 3D representations, and fascinating stories about chemical elements. Froggipedia: A $3.99 iPad/iPhone app that provides a digital alternative to traditional frog dissection, teaching the amphibian life cycle through interactive experiences. Lab O Bundle: A collection of science apps including Beaker, Space, Chemist, and more.Shortcuts Corner VPN App Notification Shortcut: A listener seeks a way to create a notification/automation that reminds him to close work-related apps before launching NordVPN to avoid false security alerts. Hosts: Mikah Sargent and Rosemary Orchard Contact iOS Today at iOSToday@twit.tv. Download or subscribe to iOS Today at https://twit.tv/shows/ios-today Want access to the ad-free video and exclusive features? Become a member of Club TWiT today! https://twit.tv/clubtwit Club TWiT members can discuss this episode and leave feedback in the Club TWiT Discord.

Total Mikah (Audio)
iOS Today 742: STEM Apps for iOS

Total Mikah (Audio)

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 6, 2025 29:58 Transcription Available


Head into the world of educational technology with Mikah Sargent and Rosemary Orchard as they explore cutting-edge iOS apps that make learning science, technology, engineering, and mathematics engaging and interactive. From virtual anatomy lessons to coding playgrounds, these apps transform your device into a powerful learning tool. Skeleton 3D Anatomy: A free app for exploring human anatomy in 3D, allowing users to tap and learn about different bones, their Latin names, and skeletal structures. Perfect for students, medical enthusiasts, or anyone curious about the human body. Swift Playground: Apple's coding education app that helps users learn Swift programming. Recent updates include the ability to create and publish entire apps directly from an iPad, making coding more accessible than ever. Khan Academy: A comprehensive learning platform offering free courses in mathematics, sciences, computing, and more. Features include partner content from NASA and the California Academy of Sciences, with the ability to track progress across devices. BrainPOP: An educational video platform featuring engaging content about scientific concepts, historical figures, and educational quizzes. Known for its animated robots and human characters that explain complex topics in an approachable manner. Enki: A coding learning app supporting multiple programming languages like Python, JavaScript, SQL, and CSS. Offers flexible subscription options for those wanting to expand their programming skills. The Elements by Theodore Gray: An interactive periodic table app with beautiful images, 3D representations, and fascinating stories about chemical elements. Froggipedia: A $3.99 iPad/iPhone app that provides a digital alternative to traditional frog dissection, teaching the amphibian life cycle through interactive experiences. Lab O Bundle: A collection of science apps including Beaker, Space, Chemist, and more.Shortcuts Corner VPN App Notification Shortcut: A listener seeks a way to create a notification/automation that reminds him to close work-related apps before launching NordVPN to avoid false security alerts. Hosts: Mikah Sargent and Rosemary Orchard Contact iOS Today at iOSToday@twit.tv. Download or subscribe to iOS Today at https://twit.tv/shows/ios-today Want access to the ad-free video and exclusive features? Become a member of Club TWiT today! https://twit.tv/clubtwit Club TWiT members can discuss this episode and leave feedback in the Club TWiT Discord.

iPad Pros
Learning Swift with Marcin Wolski (iPad Pros - 0193)

iPad Pros

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 14, 2024 34:25


Marcin Wolski is a year into learning Swift. We discuss how he learned Swift using the iPad with Swift Playgrounds and Paul Hudson's 100 Days of Swift. Bonus content and early episodes with chapter markers are available by supporting the podcast at www.patreon.com/ipadpros. Bonus content and early episodes are also now available in Apple Podcasts!Show notes are available at www.iPadPros.net. Feedback is welcomed at iPadProsPodcast@gmail.com.Links:https://masto.ai/@marcinhttps://www.hackingwithswift.com/100https://developer.apple.com/swift-playgrounds/Chapter Markers:00:00:00: Opening00:00:56: Support the Podcast00:01:17: Marcin Wolski00:03:33: Favorite iPad apps00:05:23: General iPad Thoughts00:09:31: Swift Playgrounds00:11:10: Your first language?00:12:56: Anyone can code00:14:44: Going outside of Playgrounds?00:16:54: Other resources?00:19:02: Swift vs Swift UI00:20:21: Moving to the Mac00:23:09: Any other apps on iPad to help learn?00:24:57: Virtual Keyboard00:26:36: What did you need to move to the Mac?00:28:32: Anything else?00:33:17: Where can people follow you online?00:33:58: Closing Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Ruby for All
Building Rails-Powered Mobile Apps with Joe Masilotti

Ruby for All

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 23, 2023 38:41


On this episode of Ruby for All, Andrew and Julie welcome Joe Masilotti, known as the ‘Turbo Native Guy,' to discuss Turbo Native. They cover what Turbo Native is, its advantages when building apps, and how it can be an effective tool for Rails developers.  Joe also gives us an update on his library, Turbo Navigator, and provides some insightful advice for those wanting to dive into Turbo Native.  He shares his experience of Rails World Conf, discusses the future of Turbo Native, and Joe shares advice for junior Rails developers interested in Turbo Native. Press download now to hear much more! [00:00:47] Joe introduces himself and discusses Turbo iOS and its benefits for Rails developers. He outlines the difficulties of building Native iOS and Android apps and explains how Turbo Native simplifies this.[00:03:12] Julie expresses interest in potentially using Turbo Native for her projects. Joe elaborates on the advantages of Turbo Native, such as avoiding the need to build and maintain separate screens for each platform. [00:04:50] Joe discusses the process of app release and approval on iOS and Android, highlighting the efficiency of Turbo Native in rolling out updates.[00:06:49] Julie asks how Turbo Native achieves its functionality and Joe describes the use of a web view that renders the mobile web content within the app. [00:08:19] Andrew talks about his expectations for app quality on his iPhone and Joe explains how Turbo iOS and Strata avoid poor native web implementations. [00:10:32] Andrew inquires about Strata, its necessity, and its impact now that it has been released. Joe clarifies that while Strata is not essential for building Turbo Native apps, it does facilitate easier communication between web content and native code, reducing boilerplate code. [00:12:28] Andrew comments on the marketing of Strata by 37signals and its positioning as a game-changer. Joe agrees it was a marketing issues and notes that Strata was branded as a third pillar of Hotwire, and he discusses a conversation he had with DHH about the positioning of Turbo, Stimulus, and Strata.  [00:14:49] Julie asks for an explanation of what Stimulus is. Andrew describes it as a lightweight JavaScript framework that integrates with HTML, providing a structured way to write JavaScript in Rails, and Joe adds that Stimulus allows for reusable JavaScript behaviors across multiple pages. [00:18:06] Andrew asks Joe about his library, Turbo Navigator. Joe explains that Turbo Navigator aims to bring Turbo iOS up to feature parity with Turbo Android, simplifying the use of Turbo Native on iOS by reducing boilerplate. Andrew mentions Joe's upcoming Turbo Native crash course. [00:20:58] Julie inquires about getting started with Turbo Native and Joe suggests watching his Rails World talks and checking out resources on his website and mentions a book he wrote coming out soon.  [00:24:21] Joe shares his positive experience at Rails World,  and he mentions the podcast booth at the conference and Andrew reminisces about RubyConf and looking forward to future events. [00:29:12] Andrew asks what Joe predicts happening in the new few months around iOS and what he's excited for. Joe anticipates a surge in interest for Turbo Native following the conference, and he's energized by increasing developer interest in Turbo Native and contemplates expanding his educational content as a result. [00:32:12] Andrew brings up a past RailsConf in Portland where he sought advice from Joe getting into iOS development and he credits Joe's suggestion to use Swift Playgrounds. Joe affirms that Swift Playgrounds is an excellent tool for leaning Swift, but for Turbo Native specifically, developers need to engage with Xcode and write Swift more directly related to app development.[00:35:03] Joe talks about Kotlin, noting its fast evolution and his plan to pick up more of the language due to demand for Android content. [00:35:35] Joe emphasizes that Turbo Native is a wrapper around a Rails website and suggests building a mobile website first before enhancing it with Turbo Native. [00:36:56] We end with Joe advising junior Rails developers that while Turbo Native is not necessary to know, it could provide a competitive advantage in the job market. Panelists:Andrew MasonJulie J.Guest:Joe MasilottiSponsors:HoneybadgerGoRailsLinks:Andrew Mason X/TwitterAndrew Mason WebsiteJulie J. X/TwitterJulie J. WebsiteJoe Masilotti X/TwitterJoe Masilotti WebsiteJoe Masilotti NewsletterThe reverse job board for Rails developersRails World 2023-Mobile Apps for Rails Developers with Joe Masilotti (YouTube)Turbo Native crash course-Joe MasilottiTurbo Native for iOSHotwireStradaReact NativeRemote Ruby Podcast-Episode 151: Turbo Native & Hotwire-How Polywork Supercharges DevelopmentTurbo Native DirectoryJoseph Masilotti Apps for iPhoneStimulusTurbo NavigatorSwift Playgrounds AppSwift Playgrounds KotlinXcode-SwiftUI

Partners in Crime in the 19046
#132: The PIC Make a Video Game!?

Partners in Crime in the 19046

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 16, 2023 50:00


Chrissie learns to code with the help of the programming environment, Scratch! Chrissie's youngest was playing with Scratch the other day and Steve decided to check it out for himself and build a little demo Pong game because a) it's fun and b) Chrissie has never heard of pong! Together during Steve's lunch break, the PIC add a feature to the game while exploring basic programming concepts. Is Chrissie going to quit dance to become a game developer now? Tune in and find out! Play our game here: https://scratch.mit.edu/projects/924724035 If you'd like to support the show, please consider buying us a coffee at http://jenkintownartsgarage.com/coffee Please like, subscribe, and share the show so the algorithms will notice us! We appreciate you! ━ Video Chapters ━━━━━━━━━━━ 00:00 Intro Theme 00:32 Introductions 03:39 Updating "CAT Pong" while exploring Scratch 37:28 Thoughts on Scratch 40:18 Moving Beyond Scratch 46:04 The Wrap-Up 48:55 Outro Theme ━ Episode Links ━━━━━━━━━━━ Our game, "CAT Pong" https://scratch.mit.edu/projects/924724035 Learn about Scratch! https://scratch.mit.edu Explore Apple's Swift Playgrounds https://developer.apple.com/swift-playgrounds/ ━ Show Links ━━━━━━━━━━━

Latent Space: The AI Engineer Podcast — CodeGen, Agents, Computer Vision, Data Science, AI UX and all things Software 3.0

Want to help define the AI Engineer stack? Have opinions on the top tools, communities and builders? We're collaborating with friends at Amplify to launch the first State of AI Engineering survey! Please fill it out (and tell your friends)!If AI is so important, why is its software so bad?This was the motivating question for Chris Lattner as he reconnected with his product counterpart on Tensorflow, Tim Davis, and started working on a modular solution to the problem of sprawling, monolithic, fragmented platforms in AI development. They announced a $30m seed in 2022 and, following their successful double launch of Modular/Mojo

iPad Pros
Captionista with Marc Palmer (iPad Pros - 0177)

iPad Pros

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 3, 2023 94:49


Marc Palmer is the developer of Captionista. He is also the iOS UI Developer of the Concepts app. In this discussion we discuss how he uses Swift Playgrounds, his favorite iPad apps including iA Writer, Working Copy, Notion, LumaFusion, Final Cut Pro, GarageBand, and Logic Pro. We touch on his work at Concepts and dive deep into his awesome captioning app, Captionista, that just hit version 1.5. Bonus content and early episodes with chapter markers are available by supporting the podcast at www.patreon.com/ipadpros. Bonus content and early episodes are also now available in Apple Podcasts! Subscribe today to get instant access to iPad Possibilities, iPad Ponderings, and iPad Historia! Show notes are available at www.iPadPros.net. Feedback is welcomed at iPadProsPodcast@gmail.com.Links:http://marcpalmer.nethttps://captionista.apphttps://concepts.app/https://iosdev.space/@marcpalmerChapter Markers:00:00:00: Opening00:01:58: Support the Podcast00:02:37: Marc Palmer00:05:58: Current iPad Setup00:09:09: Your relationship to iPad?00:10:40: Playgrounds00:11:34: Apple Developer app00:13:05: iA Writer00:14:34: Working Copy00:17:33: Notion00:19:51: LumaFusion and Final Cut Pro00:27:10: GarageBand and Logic Pro00:32:03: Swift Playgrounds00:36:10: Concepts00:39:28: Captionista00:41:03: What about the iPad do you love?00:50:36: Captionista00:54:17: Where did the idea for the app come from?01:00:05: Manual transcription vs AI01:05:38: Styling the subtitles01:07:35: Watermarks01:09:16: 3D Captions in visionOS?01:11:31: Caption Sync01:13:51: "sub" cards01:16:45: Version 1.501:21:00: Apple Pencil Hover01:23:56: iPad vs iPhone?01:25:55: Roadmap?01:29:02: Anything we haven't covered?01:32:00: More info?01:34:20: Closing Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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.

For Mac Eyes Only
For Mac Eyes Only – A Little Bedroom Coding

For Mac Eyes Only

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 28, 2023


On this episode of For Mac Eyes Only: You might be interested in learning to code, but where should you start? Xcode? Visual Studio? Swift Playgrounds? Or maybe it's best to start with scripting or playing with Shortcuts! In this episode, Mike and Eric share a little personal history and then dive into tools and languages that might be a good place to start if you're looking to get started with programming on the Mac.

The Array Cast
John Earnest and Multimedia

The Array Cast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 24, 2022 88:05


Array Cast - December 23, 2022 Show NotesThanks to Bob Therriault, Adám Brudzewsky, Marshall Lochbaum and John Earnest for gathering these links:[01] 00:02:00 Naming the APLNAATOT podcast twitter https://twitter.com/a_brudz/status/1607653845445873664[02] 00:03:54 John Earnest Arraycast episode 41 https://www.arraycast.com/episodes/episode41-john-earnest Michal Wallace Arraycast episode 40 https://www.arraycast.com/episodes/episode40-michal-wallace[03] 00:04:20 John's website https://beyondloom.com/[04] 00:05:10 iKe https://github.com/JohnEarnest/ok/tree/gh-pages/ike[05] 00:07:02 oK http://johnearnest.github.io/ok/index.html[06] 00:10:20 iKe Vector article https://vector.org.uk/a-graphical-sandbox-for-k-2/[07] 00:10:39 Lindenmayer fractals https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/L-system[08] 00:15:57 k programming language https://aplwiki.com/wiki/K[09] 00:16:40 turtle graphics https://docs.python.org/3/library/turtle.html[10] 00:17:44 Swift Playgrounds https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swift_Playgrounds Bret Victor http://worrydream.com/ Processing programming language https://processing.org/ Arduino https://www.arduino.cc/[11] 00:19:27 Dzaima APL -https://github.com/dzaima/APL/blob/master/APLP5/docs Dzaima BQN - https://github.com/dzaima/BQN/blob/master/app/readme.md[12] 00:25:08 Arthur Whitney https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arthur_Whitney_(computer_scientist)[13] 00:25:30 APL wiki Naming https://aplwiki.com/wiki/The_name_APL Adin Falkoff https://aplwiki.com/wiki/Adin_Falkoff[14] 00:27:48 Dyalog https://aplwiki.com/wiki/Dyalog_APL Dyadic https://aplwiki.com/wiki/Dyalog_Ltd. Zylog processor https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zilog[15] 00:30:32 Special k https://beyondloom.com/tools/specialk.html Fragment shader https://www.khronos.org/opengl/wiki/Fragment_Shader GLSL shader language https://learnopengl.com/Getting-started/Shaders[16] 00:33:25 NVIDIA https://learnopengl.com/Getting-started/Shaders[17] 00:37:00 Decker https://beyondloom.com/decker/index.html Lil programming language https://beyondloom.com/decker/lil.html macPaint https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MacPaint[18] 00:39:06 Interface builder https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Interface_Builder Visual Basic https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Visual_Basic Lua programming language https://www.lua.org/ q programming language https://aplwiki.com/wiki/Q[19] 00:44:29 APL# https://aplwiki.com/wiki/APL-sharp[20] 00:45:08 Rescript programming language https://rescript-lang.org/[21] 00:47:10 Niladic functions https://aplwiki.com/wiki/Niladic_function[22] 00:48:30 HyperCard https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HyperCard HyperTalk https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HyperTalk[23] 00:54:36 JavaScript programming language https://www.javascript.com/[24] 00:57:21 MacOS system 6 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/System_6[25] 01:02:12 Excel spreadsheet https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Microsoft_Excel[26] 01:04:02 J viewmat https://code.jsoftware.com/wiki/Studio/Viewmat[27] 01:05:40 regex https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Regular_expression[28] 01:06:10 Nick Psaris Arraycast episode 42 embedding languages https://www.arraycast.com/episodes/episode42-nick-psaris-q[29] 01:07:00 Python programming language https://www.python.org/[30] 01:18:21 Haskell programming language https://www.haskell.org/[31] 01:22:50 Myst video game https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Myst[32] 01:23:32 Decktember https://itch.io/jam/decktember

El Recurso
Swift Playgrounds y cómo introducir el coding en el curriculum

El Recurso

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 30, 2022 60:06


Hoy hablamos en El recurso, el podcast sobre educación de Manel Rives y Alf, con David Pérez desde Canarias, responsable de innovación y TiC en el colegio Brains. Sobre David Perez Responsable de Innovación y TIC del Grupo de Colegios Brains. Docente de Tecnologías de la Información y Comunicación en Educación Secundaria y Bachillerato desde hace 16 años. Profesor en el Máster universitario en Tecnología Educativa y Competencias Digitales (Universidad Europea). Profesor en el Máster de Recursos Humanos 4.0 (CEDERED). Profesor en el Experto en Inteligencia Artificial, Programación y Robótica aplicadas a la educación (Fundación Maecenas). Miembro de la comunidad internacional Apple Distinguished Educator desde el año 2013. Apple Certified Trainer en el desarrollo de aplicaciones con Swift. Consultor educativo – Apple Professional Learning Specialist. Microsoft Office Specialist Instructor. Linux Essentials Instructor. Embajador de diferentes apps educativas como Book Widgets, SeeSaw o Edpuzzle. Responsable de la primera implementación de un programa 1:1 con iPad en las Islas Canarias.Tiene 14 años de experiencia como coordinador TIC en el Colegio Arenas Sur y Colegio Brains, además de Coordinador de Educación Secundaria, Jefe de Departamento de Diseño (IB) y Jefe de Departamento de Innovación. Previamente ha trabajado 4 años como consultor tecnológico en diferentes empresas de Reino Unido y España en proyectos relacionados con la simulación robótica, e-learning y SAP (sector hospitalario).     Apps/ robots    Infantil Code a pillar Robot turtles (juego de mesa) Bee bot  Cubetto   Primaria Codespark academy Osmo coding Dash & dot Ozobot Bloxels LittleBits iRobot Root Lego spike Scratch Cospaces (RV, RA y programación) Swift Playgrounds   Secundaria/ Bachillerato Swift Playgrounds Sphero Parrot mambo/ DJI Tello (drones) Makeblock Arduino Xcode Libros Para profesores Descarga el libro en la app Libros de Apple Descarga el libro en la app Libros de Apple Para alumnos Descarga el libro en la app Libros de Apple Descarga el libro en la app Libros de Apple    David Pérez en LinkedIn, en Twitter Colegios Brains

More Than Just Code podcast - iOS and Swift development, news and advice

This week we discuss all the products introduced at Apple's Far Out event on Sept 7, 2022. We fact check Compose Custom Layouts in SwiftUI, the checkmark in the Developer app, Friday Night Baseball in Canada, and Universal Control. We follow up on Apple's Self Repair now includes M1, and Xcode Cloud availability for trial. We discuss the past and future of the 360iDev conference. We discuss the Apple Watch Series 8, Apple Watch SE, Apple Watch Ultra, Air Pods Pro 2nd gen, the iPhone 14, and the iPhone 14 Pro. We also discus What's New in Swift 5.7. Picks: WWDC22 SwiftUI Lounge archived, Cmd Opt R, Cmd Shift J, Swift Version, SwiftUI Essential Training, and Design the Next iPhone.

The FizzicsEd Podcast
STEM in Environmental Education with Meridith Ebbs

The FizzicsEd Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 19, 2022 43:36


Want to incorporate STEM into environmental education? Meridith Ebbs is someone to guide you through this! Meridith is a highly experienced teacher with a real passion for teaching students in natural environments whilst using different technologies. Hosted by Ben Newsome from Fizzics Education About Meridith Ebbs Meridith is an experienced teacher with a background in Education, Environmental Science and Digital Technologies. She is currently exploring applications for STEM and technology while learning outside and applications for STEM in low-cost real-world projects. She facilitates the hashtags #STEMnNature and #STEMinTheWorld on social media and shares knowledge and ideas using the handles @iMerinet and @MakeCreateEducate  In the past, Meridith worked for 4 years as the CSER NSW Project Officer on the Digital Technologies project with the University of Adelaide. Meridith has experience teaching students K-10 and she is an experienced facilitator of adult workshops, with experience working in both school and corporate environments. She has worked as an instructional designer documenting computer systems and creating training materials. Meridith is accredited as a Makey Makey ambassador, an Apple Teacher, an Apple Teacher in Swift Playground and Sphero Lead Educator.  Contact Meridith https://withkoji.com/@iMerinet  - one link for all contacts https://www.instagram.com/imerinet/ https://www.facebook.com/makecreateeducate https://twitter.com/iMerinet https://www.youtube.com/c/MeridithEbbsiMerinet/videos https://makecreateeducate.blogspot.com/  More information about Meridith https://imerinet.weebly.com/  Resources for more information What is Citizen Science - https://citizenscience.org.au/10-principles-of-citizen-science/  Project Finder https://www.csiro.au/en/education/get-involved/citizen-science  https://citizenscience.org.au/ala-project-finder/ https://biocollect.ala.org.au/acsa#isCitizenScience Projects mentionedInternational: Great Southern Bioblitz 2022 https://www.greatsouthernbioblitz.org/about-1  iNaturalist https://www.inaturalist.org/ Backyard Bioblitz https://www.backyardbio.net/ Australian: Frog ID Project https://www.frogid.net.au/  Dead Tree Project ​​https://biocollect.ala.org.au/acsa/project/index/77285a13-e231-49e8-b212-660c66c74bac About the FizzicsEd podcastHosted by Ben Newsome from Fizzics Education With interviews with leading science educators and STEM thought leaders, this science education podcast is about highlighting different ways of teaching kids within and beyond the classroom. It's not just about educational practice & pedagogy, it's about inspiring new ideas & challenging conventions of how students can learn about their world! https://www.fizzicseducation.com.au/ Know an educator who'd love this STEM podcast episode?  Share it!The FizzicsEd podcast is a member of the Australian Educators Online Network (AEON )http://www.aeon.net.au/See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Australian Educators Online Network
STEM in Environmental Education with Meridith Ebbs

Australian Educators Online Network

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 19, 2022 43:36


Want to incorporate STEM into environmental education? Meridith Ebbs is someone to guide you through this! Meridith is a highly experienced teacher with a real passion for teaching students in natural environments whilst using different  technologies. Hosted by Ben Newsome from Fizzics Education About Meridith Ebbs Meridith is an experienced teacher with a background in Education, Environmental Science and Digital Technologies. She is currently exploring applications for STEM and technology while learning outside and applications for STEM in low-cost real-world projects. She facilitates the hashtags #STEMnNature and #STEMinTheWorld on social media and shares knowledge and ideas using the handles @iMerinet and @MakeCreateEducate  In the past, Meridith worked for 4 years as the CSER NSW Project Officer on the Digital Technologies project with the University of Adelaide. Meridith has experience teaching students K-10 and she is an experienced facilitator of adult workshops, with experience working in both school and corporate environments. She has worked as an instructional designer documenting computer systems and creating training materials. Meridith is accredited as a Makey Makey ambassador, an Apple Teacher, an Apple Teacher in Swift Playground and Sphero Lead Educator.  Contact Meridith https://withkoji.com/@iMerinet  - one link for all contacts https://www.instagram.com/imerinet/ https://www.facebook.com/makecreateeducate https://twitter.com/iMerinet https://www.youtube.com/c/MeridithEbbsiMerinet/videos https://makecreateeducate.blogspot.com/ More information about Meridith https://imerinet.weebly.com/ Resources for more information What is Citizen Science - https://citizenscience.org.au/10-principles-of-citizen-science/ Project Finder https://www.csiro.au/en/education/get-involved/citizen-science https://citizenscience.org.au/ala-project-finder/ https://biocollect.ala.org.au/acsa#isCitizenScience Projects mentioned International: Great Southern Bioblitz 2022 https://www.greatsouthernbioblitz.org/about-1 iNaturalist https://www.inaturalist.org/ Backyard Bioblitz https://www.backyardbio.net/ Australian: Frog ID Project https://www.frogid.net.au/ Dead Tree Project ​​https://biocollect.ala.org.au/acsa/project/index/77285a13-e231-49e8-b212-660c66c74bac About the FizzicsEd podcast Hosted by Ben Newsome from Fizzics Education With interviews with leading science educators and STEM thought leaders, this science education podcast is about highlighting different ways of teaching kids within and beyond the classroom. It's not just about educational practice & pedagogy, it's about inspiring new ideas & challenging conventions of how students can learn about their world! https://www.fizzicseducation.com.au/ Know an educator who'd love this STEM podcast episode?  Share it! The FizzicsEd podcast is a member of the Australian Educators Online Network (AEON ) http://www.aeon.net.au/ See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

More Than Just Code podcast - iOS and Swift development, news and advice
Episode 349: WWDC22 - Regex for the Rest of Us

More Than Just Code podcast - iOS and Swift development, news and advice

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 12, 2022 155:19


This week we cover the WWDC 2022 Keynote and Platform State of the Union. We're joined by Friend of the Show Joe Cieplinski. We fact check Sir Adam Beck and Steve Westgarth. We discuss Awesome lists and a calculator on the Lock Screen. We get into the new HIG, WWDC Keynote, iOS 16, Apple Watch and watchOS 9, Mac hardware and M2, macOS Ventura, iPadOS 16, Platforms State of the Union, Xcode Cloud, Swift, SwiftUI, System Experience, MapKit, WeatherKit, Live Text API and Data Scanner API. Picks: WWDC Community links updated for 2022, return of the UK iOS conferences, iOS Dev UK and Codemobile UK, Hello Swift Charts Special Guest: Joe Cieplinski.

Faq-Mac Chat Podcast
De 1973 hasta 2022: qué esperar de la WWDC

Faq-Mac Chat Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 3, 2022 97:01


Hoy tenemos una extensa charla como puerta a la WWDC 2022 con Julio César Fernández, que vuelve a estar con nosotros para explicarnos cómo hemos llegado hasta este punto. No nosotros personalmente, que sigue siendo un misterio ;-) sino el desarrollo de programación en macOS. Desde los viejos tiempos en que Steve jobs visitó el Xerox Park (en 1973) y vio por primera vez el interfaz gráfico, recorreremos las diferentes evoluciones del software, la llegada de NextStep y lo que significó para la programación de interfaces de usuario y, finalmente, la aparición de Swift. Haremos un descanso en el camino para hablar de Swift Playgrounds y para acabar echaremos las cartas sobre qué esperar de la WWDC y los diferentes sistemas operativos que Apple tiene en marcha (maOS, iOS, iPadOS, watchOS, tvOS, homeOS, ...). Una charla intensa, extensa pero asequible para todos aquellos que quieran saber en qué punto se encuentra Apple y qué esperar del futuro.

More Than Just Code podcast - iOS and Swift development, news and advice

You can watch this episode on Youtube. A quick catch up before WWDC 2022. This week Tim covers adding drivers licenses to Wallet, tour options for visitors going to the in-person screenings at WWDC22, the rumoured Purple iPhone 14 Pro. Picks: ITSAppUsesNonExemptEncryption - Encryption compliance tip for App Store submissions, Jaime Lopez on Building Great Engineering Teams, SwiftUI Sessions, Exploring SwiftUI Sample Apps, The iOS App Icon Book, and Swift Playgrounds 4.1 adds app creation on macOS.

Rene Ritchie
Making iPad Apps... on the iPad!

Rene Ritchie

Play Episode Listen Later May 24, 2022 6:43 Very Popular


☕️ Sign up to Morning Brew for FREE today! https://morningbrewdaily.com/reneritchieFor some people, a computer is a device that you can use to make apps... for that computer. And, for most of its existence, that's counted the iPad out, almost completely. At least until last year… That's when Apple gave Swift Playgrounds the ability to use SwiftUI to create honest-to-Craig iPhone and iPad apps... on the iPad. And now, just this month, the Mac version of Swift Playgrounds has gained the ability to make SwiftUI apps as well!See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

Swift App School
9. Teens Earning More Money Than Adults | Swift Playgrounds for iPad | 45 Years Ago Apple Kickstarted The PC Industry | Something cool!

Swift App School

Play Episode Listen Later May 19, 2022 29:21


In this episode, you hear from Charles Long and Bob Williams, Co-Founders of Swift App School. Timestamps: 01:44 Teens Earning More Than Teachers and Parents 08:25 New Playgrounds App On iPad 15:24 45 Years Ago Apple Kickstarted The Personal Computer Industry 24:47 Something Cool - Sal Khan's Schoolhouse.world We hope you enjoy our episode! Links: Israeli hi-tech teens who earn more than their teachers and parents https://www.ynetnews.com/magazine/article/hjz0spps9 Swift Playgrounds: https://9to5mac.com/2022/05/17/swift-playgrounds-4-1/ JohnDav YouTube Channel: https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLBHRoLra9E24ryfDGxNwBmyBn_sa33VBU 45 Years Ago, Apple Kickstarted the Personal Computer Industry https://www.pcmag.com/news/45-years-ago-apple-kickstarted-the-personal-computer-industry Something Cool - Sal Khan's plan to educate the world https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i9i5i1Xnemw https://schoolhouse.world Music provided by "https://ncs.io/aperture"

Compile Swift
Goodbye iPod, hello new OS versions and more.

Compile Swift

Play Episode Listen Later May 17, 2022 10:03


iPod is discontinued. I'll miss you, thanks for all the years of entertainment. All new OS versions across the board. Xcode 13.4 released. Swift Playgrounds 4.1 for iPad and macOS released. Playing around with SceneKit. Could Apple game development benefit from a visual scripting tool? Please leave a review and show your support?https://lovethepodcast.com/compileswift★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★

A Couple of Teachers Podcast
Episode 2: Tech Integration

A Couple of Teachers Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 3, 2022 32:46


In this episode, Becky and Danny explore technology integration. Discussing everything from digital citizenship, to philosophies of technology integration, to digital platforms and projects ideas that enhance student learning experiences, the two share their best practices for technology integration in the elementary classroom. Episode Resources: Digital Citizenship Project 3 Great Tools from Flippity Get in Touch: Becky's Blog - Redhead Education A Couple of Teachers Twitter Becky's Twitter Danny's Twitter Instagram Mentioned in this Episode: Programs & Apps for Engagement: Flipgrid, Canva, Book Creator, Flippity, Pear Deck, Nearpod, Clips, Kahoot, Gimkit, Booklit, Clips, Swift Playgrounds, Tynker, Sphero EDU Tech Tools: Sphero, Ozobot, Makey Makey Programs for Security: Insight, Securely

The History of Computing
Bill Atkinson's HyperCard

The History of Computing

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 29, 2022 14:22


We had this Mac lab in school. And even though they were a few years old at the time, we had a whole room full of Macintosh SEs. I'd been using the Apple II Cs before that and these just felt like Isaac Asimov himself dropped them off just for me to play with. Only thing: no BASIC interpreter. But in the Apple menu, tucked away in the corner was a little application called HyperCard. HyperCard wasn't left by Asimov, but instead burst from the mind of Bill Atkinson. Atkinson was the 51st employee at Apple and a former student of Jeff Raskin, the initial inventor of the Mac before Steve Jobs took over. Steve Jobs convinced him to join Apple where he started with the Lisa and then joined the Mac team until he left with the team who created General Magic and helped bring shape to the world of mobile devices. But while at Apple he was on the original Mac team developing the menu bar, the double-click, Atkinson dithering, MacPaint, QuickDraw, and HyperCard.  Those were all amazing tools and many came out of his work on the original 1984 Mac and the Lisa days before that. But HyperCard was something entirely different. It was a glimpse into the future, even if self-contained on a given computer. See, there had been this idea floating around for awhile.  Vannevar Bush initially introduced the world to a device with all the world's information available in his article “As We May Think” in 1946. Doug Engelbart had a team of researchers working on the oN-Line System that saw him give “The Mother of All Demos in 1968” where he showed how that might look, complete with a graphical interface and hypertext, including linked content. Ted Nelson introduced furthered the ideas in 1969 of having linked content, which evolved into what we now call hyperlinks. Although Nelson thought ahead to include the idea of what he called transclusions, or the snippets of text displayed on the screen from their live, original source.  HyperCard built on that wealth of information with a database that had a graphical front-end that allowed inserting media and a programming language they called HyperTalk. Databases were nothing new. But a simple form creator that supported graphics and again stressed simple, was new. Something else that was brewing was this idea of software economics. Brooks' Law laid it out but Barry Boehm's book on Software Engineering Economics took the idea of rapid application development another step forward in 1981. People wanted to build smaller programs faster. And so many people wanted to build tools that we needed to make it easier to do so in order for computers to make us more productive. Against that backdrop, Atkinson took some acid and came up with the idea for a tool he initially called WildCard. Dan Winkler signed onto the project to help build the programming language, HyperTalk, and they got to work in 1986. They changed the name of the program to HyperCard and released it in 1987 at MacWorld. Regular old people could create programs without knowing how to write code. There were a number of User Interface (UI) components that could easily be dropped on the screen, and true to his experience there was panel of elements like boxes, erasers, and text, just like we'd seen in MacPaint. Suppose you wanted a button, just pick it up from the menu and drop it where it goes. Then make a little script using the HyperText that read more like the English language than a programming language like LISP.  Each stack might be synonymous with a web page today. And a card was a building block of those stacks. Consider the desktop metaphor extended to a rolodex of cards. Those cards can be stacked up. There were template cards and if the background on a template changed, that flowed to each card that used the template, like styles in Keynote might today. The cards could have text fields, video, images, buttons, or anything else an author could think of. And the author word is important. Apple wanted everyone to feel like they could author a hypercard stack or program or application or… app. Just as they do with Swift Playgrounds today. That never left the DNA. We can see that ease of use in how scripting is done in HyperTalk. Not only the word scripting rather than programming, but how HyperTalk is weakly typed. This is to say there's no memory safety or type safety, so a variable might be used as an integer or boolean. That either involves more work by the interpreter or compiler - or programs tend to crash a lot. Put the work on the programmers who build programming tools rather than the authors of HyperCard stacks. The ease of use and visual design made Hypercard popular instantly. It was the first of its kind. It didn't compile at first, although larger stacks got slow because HyperTalk was interpreted, so the team added a just-in-time compiler in 1989 with HyperCard 2.0. They also added a debugger.  There were some funny behaviors. Like some cards could have objects that other cards in a stack didn't have. This led to many a migration woe for larger stacks that moved into modern tools. One that could almost be considered HyperCard 3, was FileMaker. Apple spun their software business out as Claris, who bought Noshuba software, which had this interesting little database program called Nutshell. That became FileMaker in 1985. By the time HyperCard was ready to become 3.0, FileMaker Pro was launched in 1990.  Attempts to make Hypercard 3.0 were still made, but Hypercard had its run by the mid-1990s and died a nice quiet death. The web was here and starting to spread. The concept of a bunch of stacks on just one computer had run its course. Now we wanted pages that anyone could access. HyperCard could have become that but that isn't its place in history. It was a stepping stone and yet a milestone and a legacy that lives on. Because it was a small tool in a large company. Atkinson and some of the other team that built the original Mac were off to General Magic. Yet there was still this idea, this legacy.  Hypercard's interface inspired many modern applications we use to create applications. The first was probably Delphi, from Borland. But over time Visual Studio (which we still use today) for Microsoft's Visual Basic. Even Powerpoint has some similarities with HyperCard's interface. WinPlus was similar to Hypercard as well. Even today, several applications and tools use HyperCard's ideas such as HyperNext, HyperStudio, SuperCard, and LiveCode. HyperCard also certainly inspired FileMaker and every Apple development environment since - and through that, most every tool we use to build software, which we call the IDE, or Integrated Development Environment. The most important IDE for any Apple developer is Xcode. Open Xcode to build an app and look at Interface Builder and you can almost feel Bill Atkinson's pupils dilated pupils looking back at you, 10 hours into a trip. And within those pupils visions - visions of graphical elements being dropped into a card and people digitized CD collections, built a repository for their book collection, put all the Grateful Dead shows they'd recorded into a stack, or even built an application to automate their business. Oh and let's not forget the Zine, or music and scene magazines that were so popular in the era that saw photocopying come down in price. HyperCard made for a pretty sweet Zine.  HyperCard sprang from a trip when the graphical interface was still just coming into its own. Digital computing might have been 40 years old but the information theorists and engineers hadn't been as interested in making things easy to use. They wouldn't have been against it, but they weren't trying to appeal to regular humans. Apple was, and still is. The success of HyperCard seems to have taken everyone by surprise. Apple sold the last copy in 2004, but the legacy lives on. Successful products help to mass- Its success made a huge impact at that time as well on the upcoming technology. Its popularity declined in the mid-1990s and it died quietly when Apple sold its last copy in 2004. But it surely left a legacy that has inspired many - especially old-school Apple programmers, in today's “there's an app for that” world.

nextstep.fm
#48 コードはコピペにある

nextstep.fm

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 23, 2022 102:11


Starring:k_katsumi, sonson_twit, d_date, kateinoigakukun, 1024jp レギュラーメンバーになりつつある@1024jpも入り,Swift Playgrounds, coinhive事件,ソースコードのコピペ,包丁の話をしました. 1. Swift Playgrounds for iPadは,いいぞ. 2. やはり,まだしんどいSwiftUI 3. Objective-Cのブロックはもう書けない 7. http://fuckingblocksyntax.com/ 4. コピペは人類の財産で成り立っている. 5. YouTube Premiumに入るかどうか 6. YouTubeのレコメンドをどうやってハックするか問題 8. 包丁研ぎトーク 9. 合羽橋の包丁研ぎ屋さん https://togijin-japan.com 10. 使ってる砥石: https://www.amazon.co.jp/dp/B000XFHWDA/ 11. どんどんEvilになるAmazon EC・・・・. 12. @kateinoigakukunはmac.com使い・・?疑惑 13. mac.comのウィジットを私は忘れない・・!!! @1024jp 14. https://www.apple.com/jp/newsroom/2002/07/17Apple-Launches-Mac/ 15. https://twitter.com/1024jp/status/132068488402571264?s=21

Stacktrace
169: “Choosing what bugs to ship”

Stacktrace

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 19, 2022 59:02


Stacktrace is back! On this first episode of 2022, John and Rambo talk about their holidays, using Swift Playgrounds to build apps on the iPad, Mac gaming, and project goals. Download MP3 Hosts Gui on Twitter: @_inside John on Twitter: @johnsundell Links Gastropod Rambo's implementation of the App Library animation Ink Plot Subscribe

CacaoCast
Épisode 246 - Macbook Pro M1, MacVM, Swift Playgrounds 4, Astuces macOS et Terminal

CacaoCast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 12, 2022 49:32


Bienvenue dans le deux-cent-quarante-sixième épisode de CacaoCast! Dans cet épisode, Philippe Casgrain et Philippe Guitard discutent des sujets suivants: Nouveaux MacBook Pro - Problème de batterie réglé! MacVM - La virtualisation de macOS pour M1 en quelques lignes Swift Playgrounds 4 - Vous pouvez développer directement sur iPad (Application ToDon't) Astuce macOS - Les dialogues de plantage sous forme de notification Astuce Terminal - Cmd+flèche haut pour aller au début de la sortie de la dernière commande Ecoutez cet épisode

AppForce1: news and info for iOS app developers
Xcode is our playground and let's meet at conferences this year.

AppForce1: news and info for iOS app developers

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 11, 2022 22:21 Transcription Available


Last week I mentioned I wanted to get myself at more conferences this year. And already I have 3 opportunities lined up. That's amazing.Next to that, people in the iOS community are at it again in full force after the holidays. Lots of great stuff. I had tons of articles to go through. Enjoy this week's links.Swift Playgrounds 4: Building a Text-to-speech App on iPadSwift computed properties can be tuples | Chris WuWorking Around Xcode and Continuous Integration Issues on Apple Silicon – eMpTy TheorySome thoughts on Xcode Cloud – Oliver BinnsOliver on Twitter: https://twitter.com/oliver_binnsPublic-key cryptography with CryptoKit for iOS | iOS DevelopmentMetricKit - Getting Started - SwiftlyRushThe future of server side Swift - The.Swift.Dev.Tweet by @DonnyWalsConferences mentioned:https://iosconf.sg/https://swiftheroes.com/2022/CFP https://sessionize.com/swift-heroes-2022/https://360idev.com/https://www.do-ios.com/https://appdevcon.nl/https://swiftleeds.co.uk/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.Support the show (https://pod.fan/appforce1)

Anything But Idle
Google Is Looking to Apple's Ecosystem Playbook in 2022

Anything But Idle

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 11, 2022 62:44


https://youtu.be/SGfjy7CfWQ8 Google Is Looking to Apple's Ecosystem Playbook in 2022, and the Productivity News This Week (If you're reading this in a podcast directory/app, please visit https://anythingbutidle.com for clickable links and the full show notes and transcript of this cast.) Enjoy! Give us feedback! And, thanks for listening! If you'd like to continue discussing any news from this episode, please click here to leave a comment down below (this jumps you to the bottom of the post). In this Cast | Google Is Looking to Apple's Ecosystem Playbook in 2022 Ray Sidney-Smith Augusto Pinaud Headlines & Show Notes | Google Is Looking to Apple's Ecosystem Playbook in 2022 Resources we mention, including links to them, will be provided here. Please listen to the episode for context. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PQ4o1N4ksyQ How can I increase personal productivity at home and at work?  5 Ways To Reinvigorate And Level-Up Your Home Office  Omicron has exposed corporate leaders' lack of vision about remote work Progress Isn't Linear The Case for Slow Work The 5 Areas of Personal Growth (And How to Improve Them) This to-do list app is the first created and published with Swift Playgrounds 4 on iPad  Telegram Updated With Message Reactions and Several Other Features  What e-readers have Google Play? Lenovo's ultrawide 17-inch laptop has an 8-inch screen next to the keyboard  Tile is working with Lenovo to help you find your lost laptop Business & Finance Segment Apple's $3 trillion valuation is the least interesting news about the company Online whiteboarding platform Miro raises $400M to power the future of work | VentureBeat (Business & Finance) Productivity Resource of the Week A3383 videobarb600 - AnkerWork Apple Notes How (and Why) to Switch to Apple Notes 13 Things You Didn't Know Apple's Notes App Could Do Featured Story of the Week Google planning Apple-like integration between its products to compete  Google will spend 2022 trying to match Apples ecosystem integrations Announcements Momentum Kickstarter is Live TodayWhat Life Can Be Like When You Get Organized Digitally! Other News Lenovo Legion Y700 vs Apple iPad Mini 6: New leaked images show real-world size comparison of the compact tabletsClassic BlackBerry Smartphones Are Officially Dead Getting Into the Habit of Using OmniFocus Walmart is expanding its direct-to-your-refrigerator deliveriesGoogle pushes Android users to update Microsoft Teams to prevent now-fixed 911 bugSigning into Youtube on your TV is now easier than ever thanks to your phoneCES 2022: Chipolo Launches Find My-Compatible Wallet Tracker Chrome 97 Can Erase Stored Data on Every Website You Visit Google announces major improvements to Android Better Together at CES 2022Lenovos new smart clock swaps the Google Assistant for AlexaMore improvements that Google Play Books should make to its web app this yearSlack Free vs. Premium: Is It Worth Upgrading? Raw Text Transcript | Google Is Looking to Apple's Ecosystem Playbook in 2022 Raw, unedited and machine-produced text transcript so there may be substantial errors, but you can search for specific points in the episode to jump to, or to reference back to at a later date and time, by keywords or key phrases. The time coding is mm:ss (e.g., 0:04 starts at 4 seconds into the cast's audio). Read More Raymond Sidney-Smith 0:05 Hello personal productivity enthusiasts and community. Welcome to Anything But Idle the productivity news podcast. Today's show is brought to you by co working space by personal productivity club. I'm Sidney-Smith. And we're your your hosts for Anything But Idle. This is episode 93 0934 January 10 2022. Google is looking to Apple's ecosystem playbook in 2022. And, of course, the productivity and related technology news this week. So welcome, everybody, to those listening and watching live and to those listen...

Infinitum
Srećna slava, domaćine!

Infinitum

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 8, 2022 86:48


Ep 173Čika Kosta o DIY promeni sistemskih diskovaAlek menjao bateriju na Watch Series 2 i iPhone 5sLessons from Developing an App on the iPad in Swift Playgrounds from Start to Finish (Including Publishing on the App Store) — Cephalopod StudioBlackBerry ends support for all its classic phonesApple said to be prepping SIM card-free iPhones for 2022Apple becomes first company to hit $3 trillion market valueIntel Says New Core i9 Processor for Laptops is Faster Than Apple's M1 Max ChipKey M1 Mac Engineer Departs Apple for IntelMore Standards Confusion, This Time with HDMI 2.1Dropbox finally testing native Apple Silicon version | AppleInsiderSyncSyncthing12ft – Hop any paywalliMac G4 With Revolutionary Floating Display Announced 20 Years Ago TodayZahvalniceSnimljeno 8.1.2022.Uvodna muzika by Vladimir Tošić, stari sajt je ovde.Logotip by Aleksandra Ilić.Artwork epizode by Saša Montiljo, njegov kutak na Devianartu.Dondolamento2003.ulje na platnu/oil on canvas80 x 60 cmprivatno vlasništvo/private collection

TSP - The SandDune Podcast
SandDune - HAL's Red Eye will be Listening

TSP - The SandDune Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 17, 2021 27:12


We revisit our plans to document meetings transparently, and speculate that AI will join us for daily SCRUM meetings. Are AIs worried about job security? Sotheby's almost sells the U.S. Constitution to some crypto 'investors'. We think the versioning of the Web is absurd. Frank lets Artificial Intelligence resurrect Vincent van Gogh and paint him a 'starry' Christmas card. Hans codes some more in Swift Playgrounds, with help from 100DaysOfSwiftUI.We dedicate this episode to the AI imagined by Stanley Kubrick and Arthur C. Clarke.Send us your Tweets: @sanddunepodcast or Email: talk@sanddune.org and tell us what you think.

TechCrunch
Daily Crunch 12/17/21

TechCrunch

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 17, 2021 2:15


Reddit files confidentially to go public; Apple releases Swift Playgrounds 4 with support for app development on iPad; Spotify is launching Apple-like ratings for podcasts

Engadget
12/16/21: Apple closes three stores in US and Canada amid COVID-19 surge...and more news

Engadget

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 16, 2021 3:05


Apple closes three stores in US and Canada amid COVID-19 surge; Apple releases Swift Playgrounds 4, letting budding iOS developers create on iPad

snobOS
Episode 63: Execution Fail

snobOS

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 21, 2020 44:11


Welcome to Episode 63 of the snobOS Podcast!Intro: We talk why we were off last week.The Lowdown: We talk possible default app change coming to Apple, AirPods Pro Lite rumors, and Apple bring Swift Playgrounds to Mac.2nd String: We talk sharing private What's App group link invites because Google can find them.For the Culture: We talk Tech-ing While Black: In honor of Black History Month: Marc Regis Hannah - 3D InnovatorOne United's Harriet Tubman VISA CardThe Hookup: We talk how to Deauthorize your Mac.Apple Podcasts | Spotify | Google PodcastsEmail: snobOScast@gmail.comFollow snobOS Podcast @snobOScastFollow Nica Montford @TechSavvyDivaFollow Terrance Gaines @BrothaTechDownload, rate & review on Apple Google & SpotifyEngage on social @snobOScastLeave comments and suggestionsWeb: snobOScast.comEmail: snobOScast@gmail.com

The History of Computing
Smalltalk and Object-Oriented Programming

The History of Computing

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 29, 2019 12:22


Welcome to the History of Computing Podcast, where we explore the history of information technology. Because understanding the past prepares us for the innovations of the future! Today we're going to cover the first real object-oriented programming language, Smalltalk. Many people outside of the IT industry would probably know the terms Java, Ruby, or Swift. But I don't think I've encountered anyone outside of IT that has heard of Smalltalk in a long time. And yet… Smalltalk influenced most languages in use today and even a lot of the base technologies people would readily identify with. As with PASCAL from Episode 3 of the podcast, Smalltalk was designed and created in part for educational use, but more so for constructionist learning for kids. Smalltalk was first designed at the Learning Research Group (LRG) of Xerox PARC by Alan Kay, Dan Ingalls, Adele Goldberg, Ted Kaehler, Scott Wallace, and others during the 1970s. Alan Kay had coined the term object-oriented programming was coined by Alan Kay in the late 60s. Kay took the lead on a project which developed an early mobile device called the Dynabook at Xerox PARC, as well as the Smalltalk object-oriented programming language. The first release was called Smalltalk-72 and was really the first real implementation of this weird new programming philosophy Kay had called object-oriented programming. Although… Smalltalk was inspired by Simula 67, from Norwegian developers Kirsten Nygaard and Ole-johan Dahl. Even before that Stewart Nelson and others from MIT had been using a somewhat object oriented model when working on Lisp and other programs. Kay had heard of Simula and how it handled passing messages and wrote the initial Smalltalk in a few mornings. He'd go on work with Dan Ingalls to help with implementation and Adele Goldberg to write documentation. This was Smalltalk 71. Object oriented program is a programming language model where programs are organized around data, also called objects. This is a contrast to programs being structured around functions and logic. Those objects could be data fields, attributes, behaviors, etc. For example, a product you're selling can have a sku, a price, dimensions, quantities, etc. This means you figure out what objects need to be manipulated and how those objects interact with one another. Objects are generalized as a class of objects. These classes define the kind of data and the logic used when manipulating data. Within those classes, there are methods, which define the logic and interfaces for object communication, known as messages. As programs grow and people collaborate on them together, an object-oriented approach allows projects to more easily be divided up into various team members to work on different parts. Parts of the code are more reusable. The way programs are played out is more efficient. And in turn, the code is more scalable. Object-oriented programming is based on a few basic principals. These days those are interpreted as encapsulation, abstraction, inheritance, and polymorphism. Although to Kay encapsulation and messaging are the most important aspects and all the classing and subclassing isn't nearly as necessary. Most modern languages that matter are based on these same philosophies, such as java, javascript, Python, C++, .Net, Ruby. Go, Swift, etc. Although Go is arguably not really object-oriented because there's no type hierarchy and some other differences, but when I look at the code it looks object-oriented! So there was this new programming paradigm emerging and Alan Kay really let it shine in Smalltalk. At the time, Xerox PARC was in the midst of revolutionizing technology. The MIT hacker ethic had seeped out to the west coast with Marvin Minsky's AI lab SAIL at Stanford and got all mixed into the fabric of chip makers in the area, such as Fairchild. That Stanford connection is important. The Augmentation Research Center is where Engelbart introduced the NLS computer and invented the Mouse there. And that work resulted in advances like hypertext links. In the 60s. Many of those Stanford Research Institute people left for Xerox PARC. Ivan Sutherland's work on Sketchpad was known to the group, as was the mouse from NLS, and because the computing community that was into research was still somewhat small, most were also aware of the graphic input language, or GRAIL, that had come out of Rand. Sketchpad's had handled each drawing elements as an object, making it a predecessor to object-oriented programming. GRAIL ran on the Rand Tablet and could recognize letters, boxes, and lines as objects. Smalltalk was meant to show a dynamic book. Kinda' like the epub format that iBooks uses today. The use of similar objects to those used in Sketchpad and GRAIL just made sense. One evolution led to another and another, from Lisp and the batch methods that came before it through to modern models. But the Smalltalk stop on that model railroad was important. Kay and the team gave us some critical ideas. Things like overlapping windows. These were made possibly by the inheritance model of executions, a standard class library, and a code browser and editor. This was one of the first development environments that looked like a modern version of something we might use today, like an IntelliJ or an Eclipse for Java developers. Smalltalk was the first implementation of the Model View Controller in 1979, a pattern that is now standard for designing graphical software interfaces. MVC divides program logic into the Model, the View, and the Controller in order to separate internal how data is represented from how it is presented as decouples the model from the view and the controller allow for much better reuse of libraries of code as well as much more collaborative development. Another important thing happened at Xerox in 1979, as they were preparing to give Smalltalk to the masses. There are a number of different interpretations to stories about Steve Jobs and Xerox PARC. But in 1979, Jobs was looking at how Apple would evolve. Andy Hertzfeld and the original Mac team were mostly there at Apple already but Jobs wanted fresh ideas and traded a million bucks in Apple stock options to Xerox for a tour of PARC. The Lisa team came with him and got to see the Alto. The Alto prototype was part of the inspiration for a GUI-based Lisa and Mac, which of course inspired Windows and many advances since. Smalltalk was finally released to other vendors and institutions in 1980, including DEC, HP, Apple, and Berkely. From there a lot of variants have shown up. Instantiations partnered with IBM and in 1984 had the first commercial version at Tektronix. A few companies tried to take SmallTalk to the masses but by the late 80s SQL connectivity was starting to add SQL support. The Smalltalk companies often had names with object or visual in the name. This is a great leading indicator of what Smalltalk is all about. It's visual and it's object oriented. Those companies slowly merged into one another and went out of business through the 90s. Instantiations was acquired by Digitalk. ParcPlace owed it's name to where the language was created. The biggest survivor was ObjectShare, who was traded on NASDAQ, peaking at $24 a share until 1999. In a LA Times article: “ObjectShare Inc. said its stock has been delisted from the Nasdaq national market for failing to meet listing requirements. In a press release Thursday, the company said it is appealing the decision.” And while the language is still maintained by companies like Instantiations, in the heyday, there was even a version from IBM called IBM VisualAge Smalltalk. And of course there were combo-language abominations, like a smalltalk java add on. Just trying to breathe some life in. This was the era where Filemaker, Foxpro, and Microsoft Access were giving developers the ability to quickly build graphical tools for managing data that were the next generation past what Smalltalk provided. And on the larger side products like JDS, Oracle, Peoplesoft, really jumped to prominence. And on the education side, the industry segmented into learning management systems and various application vendors. Until iOS and Google when apps for those platforms became all the rage. Smalltalk does live on in other forms though. As with many dying technologies, an open source version of Smalltalk came along in 1996. Squeak was written by Alan Kay, Dan Ingalls, Ted Kaehler, Scott Wallace, John Maloney, Andreas Raab, Mike Rueger and continues today. I've tinkerated with Squeak here and there and I have to say that my favorite part is just getting to see how people who actually truly care about teaching languages to kids. And how some have been doing that for 40 years. A great quote from Alan Kay, discussing a parallel between Vannevar Bush's “As We May Think” and the advances they made to build the Dynabook: If somebody just sat down and implemented what Bush had wanted in 1945, and didn't try and add any extra features, we would like it today. I think the same thing is true about what we wanted for the Dynabook. There's a direct path with some of the developers of Smalltalk to deploying MacBooks and Chromebooks in classrooms. And the influences these more mass marketed devices have will be felt for generations to come. Even as we devolve to new models from object-oriented programming, and new languages. The research that went into these early advances and the continued adoption and research have created a new world of teaching. At first we just wanted to teach logic and fundamental building blocks. Now kids are writing code. This might be writing java programs in robotics classes, html in Google Classrooms, or beginning iOS apps in Swift Playgrounds. So until the next episode, think about this: Vannevar Bush pushed for computers to help us think, and we have all of the worlds data at our fingertips. With all of the people coming out of school that know how to write code today, with the accelerometers, with the robotics skills, what is the next stage of synthesizing all human knowledge and truly making computers help with As we may think. So thank you so very much for tuning into another episode of the History of Computing Podcast. We're lucky to have you. Have a great day!

ggtalk
如何(连续两次)获得 WWDC Scholarship

ggtalk

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 5, 2019 50:50


WWDC 是苹果每年最重要的开发者活动,相信大家都听过这个活动,哪怕你不是 iOS 开发者。除了主要内容,苹果每年有一个特殊的奖项,叫 WWDC Scholarship,全球的学生都可以提交申请。如果被苹果审核通过,就可以免费获得 WWDC 门票(价值 1599 美元并且需要靠抽签购买),包住宿,还有一系列专属的参观和交流活动。 这次请到了目前还是高中生的朱同学,他已经连续两年获得 WWDC Scholarship 并参加 WWDC。作为一名经验丰富的获奖者和参会者,朱同学会详细讲讲他的申请过程和参会过程,并给出他的申请建议。 如果你还是学生,并且对 Swift 感兴趣,可以按照朱同学的建议来尝试申请; 如果你已经工作,也别错过这期,看看“苹果春晚” WWDC 都有什么; 如果你参加过 WWDC,那更要仔细听一听,看看苹果给获奖者提供了什么特别活动,也可以了解到更多 WWDC 相关信息,帮助你更好地参与活动。 总之,听就对了! 参考链接: WWDC Scholarship 申请要求:https://developer.apple.com/wwdc/scholarships/ Swift Playground 介绍:https://www.apple.com/cn/swift/playgrounds/ 朱同学第一次申请时写的项目:https://github.com/ApolloZhu/Swifty-Karel/ 喵神写的《写给初次参加 WWDC 的开发者的简明攻略》:https://onevcat.com/2016/04/first-wwdc/ WWDC 的 Consulation 预约:https://developer.apple.com/wwdc/consultations/ Craig Federighi:https://www.apple.com/leadership/craig-federighi/ 朱同学的 WWDC Scholarship 介绍文章:https://apollozhu.github.io/2018/03/16/wwdc18-scholarships-info-cn/ 朱同学第二次申请时写的项目:https://github.com/ApolloZhu/Pong-Hau-K-i/ 宋奎熹:https://www.weibo.com/krayc4/ WWDC 官方特殊活动查询:https://developer.apple.com/wwdc/special-events/ WWDC 周边活动查询:https://developer.apple.com/wwdc/more/ 朱同学写的 Mac App 自动深色模式:https://github.com/ApolloZhu/Dynamic-Dark-Mode/ WWDC Scholarship 2017 项目列表:https://github.com/wwdc/2017/ WWDC Scholarship 2018 项目列表:https://github.com/wwdc/2018/ Swift Playground 文档:https://developer.apple.com/documentation/swift_playgrounds/ Swift Playground Markup 文档:https://developer.apple.com/library/archive/documentation/Xcode/Reference/xcode_markup_formatting_ref/ Swift Playground CustomPlaygroundDisplayConvertible 文档:https://developer.apple.com/documentation/swift/customplaygrounddisplayconvertible 朱同学博客关于 WWDC 的文章:https://apollozhu.github.io/tags/WWDC/ 朱同学的微博:@ApolloZhiyu(https://www.weibo.com/u/2607042732) 梁杰的微博:@梁杰_numbbbbb(https://www.weibo.com/numbbbbb) 时间线: 00:38 个人介绍 04:27 第一次申请以及 WWDC 参会经历 33:06 第二次申请的过程 39:57 今年还申请吗? 42:37 获奖对学习和生活有没有什么影响? 45:01 苹果到底看重的是什么 47:18 如果其他同学也想申请,有什么建议? 48:20 未来有什么规划? 49:42 最后有什么话想说?

ggtalk
聊聊 Swift 这四年(上)

ggtalk

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 27, 2018 65:01


从 2014 年到现在,Swift 发布已经超过四年。从 Swift 文档翻译开始,我们翻译组也一路参与 Swift 的发展过程,做了很多有意思的事。Swift 5 预计会在 2019 发布,届时 ABI 将会稳定,开发者一直盼望的黎明即将到来。黎明前夕,我们想回忆一下过去,说说这四年发生过什么。 这期节目我们请到了老朋友莲叔和星星,还在青总的帮助下请到了 Enjoy 团队的王雷,四个人站在四个不同的角度,聊聊我们的回忆和思考。(本期还有一段彩蛋,来自喵神的 Swift 开源解读!) 如果你一直在关注 Swift,可以和我们一起来回忆过去;如果你是新入行或者新转行的 iOS 开发者,那本期节目可以让你更加深入的了解 Swift。总之,听就对了。 哦对了,如果你觉得这期节目有价值,别忘了分享给你的朋友。 参考链接: 垃圾桶里的 OC 教程:https://img.25pp.com/uploadfile/news/2014/0604/20140604031716756_380x480.jpg 《The Swift Programming Language》中文版项目地址:https://github.com/SwiftGGTeam/the-swift-programming-language-in-chinese Swift 中文文档正式发布的那条微博:https://weibo.com/5174822990/B8CqZ7ox0?refer_flag=1001030103_ 苹果官方 Swift 首页:https://swift.org/ Enjoy App:https://itunes.apple.com/cn/app/enjoy-%E7%B2%BE%E9%80%89%E7%BE%8E%E9%A3%9F%E7%94%B5%E5%95%86/id943837902?mt=8 SwiftGG 翻译组官网:https://swift.gg/ SwiftGG 翻译组微博:@SwiftGG翻译组(https://www.weibo.com/swiftguide) Swift 官方开源项目地址:https://github.com/apple/swift 星星给 Swift 提交的 Pull Request:https://github.com/apple/swift/pull/770 IBM Swift Sandbox 在 2018 年 1 月已经关闭,官方解释说要专注在 Swift 服务端开发 Objective-C Block 用法说明网页:http://t.cn/z8iOhFs 喵神的微博:@onevcat(https://www.weibo.com/onevcat) 喵神的博客:https://onevcat.com/ 王雷的邮箱:r4ynum1@gmail.com 莲叔的微博:@aaaron7 (https://weibo.com/aaaron7) 羊叔的微博:@shanksyang(https://weibo.com/shanksyang0) 梁杰的微博:@梁杰_numbbbbb(https://www.weibo.com/numbbbbb) 时间线: 02:00 个人介绍 03:16 主题介绍 06:37 Swift 发布当天的回忆 13:00 Swift 官方文档翻译 19:23 Enjoy 的技术选型,为何决定使用 Swift 21:22 Swift Playground 介绍 27:54 各种 Swift 论坛和公司内部培训 33:00 Enjoy Swift 踩坑 38:13 Swift 8MB 包体积问题,不同版本编译的 framework 不通用问题 40:56 2014 年大家的补充内容 42:50 2015 年 Enjoy 的 Swift 使用体验 45:35 SwiftGG 翻译成立! 48:04 Swift 开源的介绍和解析,神秘嘉宾喵神出场! 54:26 星星给 Swift 项目提交的 PR 被合并 57:58 2015 年大家的补充内容

The Class Nerd
Semester 1, Episode 4 - Drafts

The Class Nerd

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 10, 2018


In our nerdiest episode yet, we do a deep dive into our most used iOS app, Drafts 5. We share how we use this app in the classroom, and how it can save you time and mental energy. Drafts 5 API Evernote X-callback-url OmniFocus Markdown David Sparks Markdown Field Guide Episode 3: Notes Bear Robby’s Repertoire Idea Action Note/Omnifocus/Mail Action Bear Task Reference Action Airtable Airtable Drafts Action - Scroll Down to the readme area for instructions on where to download the Airtable template and how to install this action. Code Academy Swift Playgrounds Drafts Episode of Robby Burns and Friends Automation Episode of Robbie Burns and Friends MacStories Review of Drafts 5 Subscribe Apple Podcasts Overcast Castro Pocket Casts RSS Follow The Class Nerd - Blog RSS, Micro.blog, Twitter Craig - Micro.blog, Twitter Robby - Twitter, Blog

Swift Teacher
21: 'There's a Negation of Failure in This Beautiful, Utopian Space.' with West Chester University Swift Playgrounds Study Group

Swift Teacher

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 13, 2018 55:56


Alternative Title: 'Swift Playgrounds App: It's the Macaroni and Cheese to Where You Put the Vegetables That Is Computer Science!' I had the distinct honor of interviewing four professors from West Chester University of Pensylvania: Dr. Chris Penny, Dr. Laquanna Cooke, Dr. Heather Schugar, and Dr. Jordan Schugar. They recently conducted a study with their undergraduate education majors that looked at coding in the Swift Playgrounds app. We had a thoughtful and extensive discussion on learning programming languages, coding, transferring skills, and implications for undergraduate teacher preparation. I think you will enjoy the episode. I really enjoyed the conversation! West Chester University of Pennsylvania - https://www.wcupa.edu/ Chris Penny: Twitter: @chrispenny - https://twitter.com/chrispenny Dr. Penny's Book: Technology Leadership in Teacher Education: Integrated Solutions and Experiences - https://www.igi-global.com/book/technology-leadership-teacher-education/37346 Laquana Cooke: Website - http://www.laquanacooke.com/ Heather Schugar: Twitter: @hschugar - https://twitter.com/hschugar Jordan Schugar: Twitter: @jschugar - https://twitter.com/jschugar You can find the show notes for this episode at https://swiftteacher.org/podcast

Swift Teacher
16: Swift Playgrounds in the Classroom

Swift Teacher

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 3, 2017 36:08


I am really excited to share my interview with Joe Moretti, Anders Randler, and Daniel Budd, the authors of the new multitouch book *Swift Playgrounds in the Classroom.* We had a fantastic discussion of all of the materials available to to teach Swift, about the process of starting a coding program, and the many fantastic third party accessories that can be used to teach programming in Swift. I think you will really enjoy the episode. Note: please excuse the audio in some points in the episode as it was difficult to find a good time for a truly global exchange of ideas. Swift Playgrounds in the Classroom in the iBook Store -https://itunes.apple.com/us/book/swift-playgrounds-in-the-classroom/id1299527160?mt=11 Joe Moretti: Twitter: @Joe_Morett -https://twitter.com/joe_moretti Joe in the App Store -https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/the-adventure-creator-pro/id891208540?mt=8 Joe's Website - http://Intuitionuk.co.uk Anders Randler: Twitter: @aDesignEdu - https://twitter.com/aDesignEdu Anders on YouTube - https://www.youtube.com/user/xarax64 Anders' Geometry Book - https://itunes.apple.com/us/book/euclidean-geometry/id1068232476?mt=13 Daniel Budd: Twitter: @danielbbudd - https://twitter.com/danielbbudd Probability with Swift Playgrounds - http://www.danielbudd.com.au/home/2017/1/18/probability-with-coding Geometry with Swift Playgrounds -http://www.danielbudd.com.au/home/2016/8/31/geometry-with-swift-playgrounds Sprite Invaders with Swift Playgrounds - http://www.danielbudd.com.au/home/2016/8/21/sprite-invaders-with-swift-playgrounds Blackjack with Swift Playgrounds - http://www.danielbudd.com.au/home/2016/8/21/blackjack-with-swift-playgrounds Hopscotch: Geometry & Transformations - https://itunes.apple.com/us/book/hopscotch-geometry-transformations/id1091830057?mt=13 Probability with Swift - https://itunes.apple.com/us/book/probability-with-swift/id1209829323?mt=11 You can find the show notes links for this episode at https://swiftteacher.org/podcast

Swift Teacher
13: 'With Swift I have the Opportunity to Teach in a Protective Environment With a Real Language.' with Giovanna Busconi

Swift Teacher

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 12, 2017 16:05


I am pleased to share my discussion with my fellow Apple Distinguished Educator and coding educator colleague, Giovanna Busconi. Giovanna is a recently retired computer science teacher in a technical school. Previously, Giovanna taught math and physics teacher at a high school. Currently, she works with teacher training in Piacenza in Italy. Giovanna's blog - https://radicedimenouno.wordpress.com/ Twitter: @giobus - https://twitter.com/giobus Show links Swift - https://swift.org/ Swift Playgrounds - https://appsto.re/us/eHUj2.i iPad 1:1 - http://www.ipadbootcampforteachers.com/11-teaching.html Learn to Code 1 & 2 - https://itunes.apple.com/us/book/swift-playgrounds-learn-to/id1118578018?mt=11 Xcode - https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/xcode/id497799835?mt=12 Intro to App Development with Swift curriculum: Teacher - https://itunes.apple.com/us/book/app-development-with-swift/id1118577558?mt=11 & Student - https://itunes.apple.com/us/book/app-development-with-swift/id1118575552?mt=11 Scratch - https://scratch.mit.edu/ Giovanna's published work Laboratorio di FISICA - https://itunes.apple.com/it/book/laboratorio-di-fisica/id591344955?mt=11 Nooo ... ma davvero?! - https://itunes.apple.com/it/book/nooo-ma-davvero/id1002671998?mt=11 Laboratorio di geometria - https://itunes.apple.com/it/course/laboratorio-di-geometria/id1077044868 Ask Swift Teacher Ask a question of the Swift Teacher community. Tweet your questions to @_SwiftTeacher - https://twitter.com/_SwiftTeacher using the #askSwiftTeacher hashtag or in the ask Swift Teacher channel in the Swift Teacher Slack Team (join using the link below). Join the Swift Teachers Slack Channel - http://swiftteacher.me You can find also find the show notes and other information on the Swift Teacher blog: Swift Teacher Blog - http://www.swiftteacher.org/podcast

Swift Teacher
12: 'They Will Take Those Ideas Back and Improve Their Own Code.' with Kane Pittard

Swift Teacher

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 29, 2017 41:23


In this episode I had an insightful discussion with Kane Pittard. Kane is a Humanities and computer science teacher from Butler College in Butler, WA. He is responsible for the creation and ongoing development of the Butler College IT teaching program. Kane's passion is using digital learning across all learning areas. Previous to becoming a teacher in 2013, he worked as a systems administrator and owned computer consulting business. I would to thank Kane for taking time away from his family, work, and fighting the time difference to talk with me on the podcast. Kanes's school - https://www.butlercollege.wa.edu.au/ Twitter: @kanepittard - https://twitter.com/kanepittard Show links Swift - https://swift.org/ BYOD - Bring Your Own Device - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bring_your_own_device ICT - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Information_and_communications_technology Digital Natives - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Digital_native Swift Playgrounds - https://appsto.re/us/eHUj2.i Learn to Code 1 & 2 - https://itunes.apple.com/us/book/swift-playgrounds-learn-to/id1118578018?mt=11 Learn to Code 3 - https://itunes.apple.com/us/book/swift-playgrounds-learn-to/id1173709121?mt=11 Scratch - https://scratch.mit.edu/ Xcode - https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/xcode/id497799835?mt=12 Into to App Development with Swift curriculum [Teacher] - https://itunes.apple.com/us/book/app-development-with-swift/id1118577558?mt=11) & [Student] - https://itunes.apple.com/us/book/app-development-with-swift/id1118575552?mt=11) Fraser Speirs - Episode 8 - https://www.swiftteacher.org/podcast/2017/6/13/8-swift-makes-it-very-hard-to-get-it-right-by-accident-which-is-good-with-fraser-speirs Ada Programming Language - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ada_(programming_language) Python - https://www.python.org/ Daniel Budd - Episode 4 - https://www.swiftteacher.org/podcast/2017/4/18/4-create-engaging-content-in-swift-with-daniel-budd David Brown - Episode 9 - https://www.swiftteacher.org/podcast/2017/6/21/9-i-have-a-student-who-says-leave-me-alone-i-want-to-solve-it-with-david-brown Apple's Human Interface Guideline (aka HIG) - https://developer.apple.com/ios/human-interface-guidelines/overview/design-principles/ Keynote - https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/keynote/id361285480?mt=8 Douglas Kiang - Episode 2 - https://www.swiftteacher.org/podcast/2017/3/14/2-i-think-its-about-the-friendliest-language-ive-ever-coded-in-with-douglas-kiang iOS Read Screen Accessiblity Feature - https://www.howtogeek.com/258218/how-to-make-your-ios-device-read-articles-books-and-more-out-loud-to-you/ Popplet - https://popplet.com/ Sphero - http://www.sphero.com/ Lego Mindstorms - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lego_Mindstorms Parrot Drone - https://www.parrot.com/us/drones#fly-and-film-an-adventure-with-your-drone John Hattie - University of Melbourne - https://findanexpert.unimelb.edu.au/display/person428067 Favorite Podcasts or Media You Should Learn to Program: Christian Genco - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xfBWk4nw440 The History of Rome - https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/the-history-of-rome/id261654474?mt=2 Ancient Greek History - https://itunes.apple.com/us/itunes-u/ancient-greek-history-audio/id341651987?mt=10 Ask Swift Teacher Ask a question of the Swift Teacher community. Tweet your questions to @_SwiftTeacher - https://twitter.com/_SwiftTeacher using the #askSwiftTeacher hashtag or in the ask Swift Teacher channel in the Swift Teacher Slack Team (join using the link below). Join the Swift Teachers Slack Channel - http://swiftteacher.me You can find also find the show notes and other information on the Swift Teacher blog: [Swift Teacher Blog - http://www.swiftteacher.org/podcast

Swift Teacher
11: ‘My favorite part is the looks on the faces of my students.' with Carlos Garcia Garcia

Swift Teacher

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 8, 2017 35:47


I would like to share the interesting discussion I had with Carlos Garcia. Carlos lives in Valencia, Spain and has an Audiovisual Communication degree for Universidad de Valencia and a Master's in Secondary Education. Carlos worked for ten years as a scriptwriter for television series of comedy, drama, and entertainment programms. After working those ten years in TV, Carlos changed careers and moved into the exciting world of teaching. In addition to being a teacher, Carlos is the Communication and Innovation department coordinator so he has two different points of view as an educator and he loves it. Carlos works hard to empower his students through the use of the technology in the classroom because he is deeply convinced of the power of Apple resources for the students in the 21st century classroom. I would like to thank Carlos for taking time out of his busy schedule to talk with me. Carlos' school - http://www.colintlev.net/es Twitter: @garcialcubo - https://twitter.com/garcialcubo Carlos' YouTube Channel - https://www.youtube.com/c/CarlosGarcíaGarcía Chicken and the Egg iTunes U course - It is a private course. Please contact Carlos for access. Show links Apple Distinguished Educator program - http://www.apple.com/education/apple-distinguished-educator/ Everyone Can Code - https://www.apple.com/everyone-can-code/ Swift - https://swift.org/ Swift Open Source - https://swift.org/about/#swiftorg-and-open-source Server-side Swift - https://swift.org/server-apis/ Swift Playgrounds - https://appsto.re/us/eHUj2.i Learn to Code 1 & 2 - https://itunes.apple.com/us/book/swift-playgrounds-learn-to/id1118578018?mt=11 Learn to Code 3 - https://itunes.apple.com/us/book/swift-playgrounds-learn-to/id1173709121?mt=11 Into to App Development with Swift curriculum - Teacher - https://itunes.apple.com/us/book/app-development-with-swift/id1118577558?mt=11 & Student - https://itunes.apple.com/us/book/app-development-with-swift/id1118575552?mt=11 App Development with Swift - Teacher - https://itunes.apple.com/us/book/app-development-with-swift/id1219118093?mt=11 & Student - https://itunes.apple.com/us/book/app-development-with-swift/id1219117996?mt=11 Swift Teacher - Episode 8 - https://www.swiftteacher.org/podcast/2017/6/13/8-swift-makes-it-very-hard-to-get-it-right-by-accident-which-is-good-with-fraser-speirs A Swift Time to Code - https://itun.es/us/-5Lu7 Code Spark Academy - http://codespark.org/ Tynker - https://www.tynker.com/ Tynker has partnered with Apple - https://9to5mac.com/2017/05/01/apple-tynker-coding-lessons/?pushup=1 Blue Bot - https://www.bee-bot.us/bluebot.html Lego Mindstorms - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lego_Mindstorms Clips - https://appsto.re/us/Jufsib.i search #ClassroomClips on Twitter - https://twitter.com/search?q=%23classroomclips&src=tyah Favorite Podcasts Apple Coding - https://itunes.apple.com/es/podcast/apple-coding/id1000199274?mt=2 hacia falta - https://itunes.apple.com/es/podcast/hac%C3%ADafalta/id670298410?mt=2 Join the Swift Teachers Slack Channel - http://swiftteacher.me You can find also find the show notes and other information on my blog: Swift Teacher Blog - http://www.swiftteacher.org/podcast

Swift Teacher
9: 'I have a student who says leave me alone I want to solve it' with David Brown

Swift Teacher

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 27, 2017 51:31


I am excited to share the great and varied conversation I had with David Brown. David is the Education Technology Integrator at St Mary's Anglican Girls' School located in Karrinyup in Perth Western Australia and is passionate about using technology to improve student learning. He has been at SMAGS since 2015 and his main role is to develop and assist staff in enhancing pedagogical teaching practices with the use of technology. He also teaches digital technology classes which is where he has been using Xcode and Swift since 2015. I would like to thank David for taking time out of his busy school, teaching, running, and blogging (I especially love the podcasting posts) activities to speak to me on the podcast. David's Site - https://superdavey.com Twitter: @superdavey - https://twitter.com/superdavey Show links St. Mary's Anglican School - http://www.stmarys.wa.edu.au/ Lego Mindstorms - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lego_Mindstorms Arduino - https://www.adafruit.com/category/17 Apple's AR Kit - https://developer.apple.com/arkit/ Ole Begemann - Playground: What's new in Swift 4 - https://oleb.net/blog/2017/05/whats-new-in-swift-4-playground/ Swift language - https://swift.org Swift Evolution - https://github.com/apple/swift-evolution Swift Unwrapped - https://spec.fm/podcasts/swift-unwrapped Swift Playgrounds - https://appsto.re/us/eHUj2.i Learn to Code 1 & 2 - https://itunes.apple.com/us/book/swift-playgrounds-learn-to/id1118578018?mt=11 Learn to Code 3 - https://itunes.apple.com/us/book/swift-playgrounds-learn-to/id1173709121?mt=11 Python - https://www.python.org/ Intro to App Development with Swift curriculum Teacher - https://itunes.apple.com/us/book/app-development-with-swift/id1118577558?mt=11 Student - https://itunes.apple.com/us/book/app-development-with-swift/id1118575552?mt=11 App Development with Swift Teacher - https://itunes.apple.com/us/book/app-development-with-swift/id1219118093?mt=11 Student - https://itunes.apple.com/us/book/app-development-with-swift/id1219117996?mt=11 Favorite Podcasts Accidental Tech Podcast - http://atp.fm Connected - https://www.relay.fm/connected Cortex - https://www.relay.fm/cortex The Talk Show - https://daringfireball.net/thetalkshow/ Hello Internet - http://www.hellointernet.fm/ Science Versus - https://gimletmedia.com/science-vs/ Join the Swift Teachers Slack Group - mailto:brian@swiftteacher.org You can find also find the show notes and other information on my blog: http://www.swiftteacher.org/podcast

Swift Teacher
8: 'Swift makes it very hard to get it right by accident, which is good.' with Fraser Speirs

Swift Teacher

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 13, 2017 46:47


I am pleased to share my conversation with Fraser Speirs in this episode. Fraser is the Head of Secondary at Cedars School of Excellence in Greenock, Scotland. Before that, he was the Head of Computing and IT responsible for the school's Computer Science education and IT infrastructure. I would like to thank Fraser for taking time out of his busy teaching, blogging, and podcasting schedule to share his expertise and knowledge. Fraser's Blog - http://speirs.org Out of School Podcast - http://outofschool.net Canvas Podcast - http://relay.fm/canvas Twitter: @fraserspeirs - https://twitter.com/fraserspeirs Show links “A Year of Teaching Swift” - http://www.speirs.org/blog/2017/6/1/a-year-of-teaching-swift Swift language - https://swift.org Swift Playgrounds - https://appsto.re/us/eHUj2.i Learn to Code 1 & 2 - https://itunes.apple.com/us/book/swift-playgrounds-learn-to/id1118578018?mt=11 Learn to Code 3 - https://itunes.apple.com/us/book/swift-playgrounds-learn-to/id1173709121?mt=11 Teaching App Development with Swift - http://swifteducation.github.io Intro to App Development with Swift curriculum Teacher - https://itunes.apple.com/us/book/app-development-with-swift/id1118577558?mt=11 Student - https://itunes.apple.com/us/book/app-development-with-swift/id1118575552?mt=11 App Development with Swift Teacher - https://itunes.apple.com/us/book/app-development-with-swift/id1219118093?mt=11 Student - https://itunes.apple.com/us/book/app-development-with-swift/id1219117996?mt=11 Server-side Swift - https://swift.org/server-apis/ Visual Basic - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Visual_Basic Ruby programming language - https://www.ruby-lang.org/en/ Python - https://www.python.org/ Hopscotch - https://appsto.re/us/f2cYK.i Everyone Can Code K - 5 with Tynker - https://www.tynker.com/everyone-can-code/ Get Started with Code 1 - https://itunes.apple.com/us/book/get-started-with-code-1/id1226776727?mt=11 Get Started with Code 2 - https://itunes.apple.com/us/book/get-started-with-code-2/id1226776857?mt=11 Business Professionals of America - http://www.bpa.org Branson Boggia: Mobile App Development National Champion - http://tctcspotlight.com/1835/news/tctc-bpa-competes-in-orlando/ Marco Arment: Twitter - https://twitter.com/marcoarment & website - https://marco.org/ Bradley Chambers: @bradleychambers - https://twitter.com/bradleychambers Federrico Viticci: @viticci - https://twitter.com/viticci Favorite Podcasts Ctrl-Walt-Delete - https://www.theverge.com/ctrl-walt-delete Cortex - https://www.relay.fm/cortex The West Wing Weekly - http://thewestwingweekly.com/ 50 Things that Made the Modern Economy - http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p04b1g3c/episodes/downloads Freakonomics Radio Podcast - http://freakonomics.com/ Join the Swift Teachers Slack Group - mailto:brian@swiftteacher.org You can find also find the show notes and other information on my blog: Swift Teacher Blog - http://www.swiftteacher.org/podcast

Swift Teacher
7: ‘The kids get to be so creative with coding.' with Mike Yakubovsky

Swift Teacher

Play Episode Listen Later May 30, 2017 43:40


I am happy to share my conversation with Mike Yakubovsky. Mike is the STEM Coordinator and lead engineering teacher at Coppell High School, a 1:1 iPad Apple Distinguished School. He has been with CISD since 2003 and started the CHS School of Engineering in 2006. The School of Engineering is a 4-year pre-college engineering program focusing on design in which learners work on projects that prepare them for college STEM disciplines. Activities expose learners to design, applications of math and science, electronics, kinematics, and coding. Learners have begun Swift Playgrounds and Swift as a core component of their coding instruction. In addition to teaching, Mike is the department Instructional Coach. Mike was honored as an Apple Distinguished Educator in the spring of 2017. In 2015, the Metroplex Technology Business Council named Mike the Tech Titan of the Future for High Schools. Prior to that, Mike was presented with the Excellence in Engineering Education award from National Instruments and was named a runner up for the Discover Educator Award. Mike is the advisor for several organizations related to the Engineering program: Society of Women Engineers, Society of Minority Engineers, and the Coppell Solar Racing Team. I would like to thank Mike for taking time out of his busy teaching and engineering coaching schedule. Coppell School of Engineering - http://www.coppellisd.com/engineering Mike Yakubovsky - http://www.coppellisd.com/Domain/377 Coppell Engineering on Facebook - http://www.coppellisd.com/engineering Mike - Twitter - https://twitter.com/myakSTEM @CoppellSTEM - https://twitter.com/CoppellSTEM @CoppellSolar - https://twitter.com/CoppellSolar @Coppell_SWE - https://twitter.com/Coppell_SWE Show links Apple Distinguished Educators - http://www.apple.com/education/apple-distinguished-educator/ C programming language - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_C_Programming_Language Lego Mindstorms - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lego_Mindstorms Lab View - http://www.ni.com/en-us/shop/labview.html Arduino - https://www.arduino.cc Swift language - https://swift.org Larry Reiff - https://twitter.com/Mrreiff Dr. Chris Penny - https://twitter.com/chrispenny Douglas Kiang - https://twitter.com/dkiang Swift Playgrounds - https://appsto.re/us/eHUj2.i Intro to App Development with Swift curriculum: Teacher - https://itunes.apple.com/us/book/app-development-with-swift/id1118577558?mt=11 Student - https://itunes.apple.com/us/book/app-development-with-swift/id1118575552?mt=11 Accidental Tech: Episode 205 - People Don't Use the Weird Parts - http://atp.fm/episodes/205 Everyone Can Code K - 5 with Tynker - https://www.tynker.com/everyone-can-code/ Favorite Podcasts Wired Educator Podcast - https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/the-wired-educator-podcast/id974270220?mt=2 Swift Unwrapped - https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/swift-unwrapped/id1209817203?mt=2 Runtime - https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/runtime/id1122203945?mt=2 Swift Teacher podcast Facebook page - https://www.facebook.com/SwiftTeachers/ Join the Swift Teachers Slack Group - mailto:brian@swiftteacher.org You can find also find the show notes and other information on my blog: Swift Teacher Blog - http://www.swiftteacher.org/podcast

The EdTech Take Out
EP24: #FormativeTech with Dr. Monica Burns

The EdTech Take Out

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 26, 2017 51:40


Follow Up: #classroomclips for edu examples of Apple Clips app The Mevo camera now broadcasts to YouTube Live & Periscope, as well as Facebook Live 15 Ways to Use Flipgrid in your Classroom by Karly Moura I'm going back to paper AND staying digital By Matt Miller Use Parrot drones with Swift Playgrounds - bit.ly/swift_drone New menu items: Apple makes iWork and iLife apps free for all devices Find and insert free pictures with the Pixabay Google Docs Add-on May 2, Microsoft is having an EDU event centered around Windows Cloud devices Wunderlist is being retired and will be replaced by Microsoft To-Do - boo! :( Main Course: #FormativeTech with Monica Burns ClassTechTips.com #FormativeTech Meaningful, Sustainable, and Scalable Formative Assessment With Technology Tech Nuggets! Tackk via Richard Byrne20 Ways to Use Tackk in the Classroom The Tackk EDU Blog iCivics free lesson plans and games for learning civics https://www.peanutgalleryfilms.com/ Auto Draw from Google Jonathan's Catch of the Day Listen Learn Lead Podcast from Andrew Fenstermaker & Scott Stimmel The Grift from Maria Konnikova You can follow Jonathan (@jonathanwylie) and Mindy (@TeamCairney) on Twitter, and see all the tweets from the Grant Wood AEA Digital Learning Team at @DLGWAEA. You can also email us, podcast@gwaea.org. If you enjoy the show please share it with your friends and colleagues and/or leave us a review on iTunes or Google Play Music. Until next time...

Swift Teacher
4: 'Create engaging content in Swift' with Daniel Budd

Swift Teacher

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 18, 2017 31:56


I had the pleasure of speaking with Daniel Budd for this episode. Daniel is the Director of Learning Technologies at Corpus Christi College, an Apple Distinguished School in Perth, Western Australia. As an Apple Distinguished Educator, Daniel is actively involved in research projects focussed on STEM education, robotics, information systems, big data and design thinking. Daniel's career began in Web Development and Design for learning Australian marketing and advertising firms. Daniel and I had an inspiring discussion about teaching Swift and creating engaging learning in Swift. Daniel Budd - Twitter - https://twitter.com/danielbbudd Daniel Budd - Blog - www.danielbudd.com.au Show Links Apple Distinguished Educators - http://www.apple.com/education/apple-distinguished-educator/ Corpus Christi College Perth, Western Australia - http://www.corpus.wa.edu.au/ Australian National Curriculum - http://www.australiancurriculum.edu.au/ Everyone Can Code - http://www.apple.com/education/everyone-can-code/ Swift Playgrounds - https://appsto.re/us/eHUj2.i Swift Playground Book file - https://developer.apple.com/library/content/documentation/Xcode/Conceptual/swift_playgrounds_doc_format/index.html Intro to App Development with Swift curriculum: Teacher - https://itunes.apple.com/us/book/app-development-with-swift/id1118577558?mt=11 Student - https://itunes.apple.com/us/book/app-development-with-swift/id1118575552?mt=11 Xcode - https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/xcode/id497799835?mt=12 Accidental Tech: Episode 205 - People Don't Use the Weird Parts - http://atp.fm/episodes/205 stackoverflow - http://stackoverflow.com/ Favorite Podcasts Leading Change - https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/leading-change-technology/id1205348149?mt=2 Wired Educator Podcast - http://wirededucator.com/ Out of School - https://outofschool.net/ Canvas - https://www.relay.fm/canvas Connected - https://www.relay.fm/connected Accidental Tech Podcast - http://atp.fm BBC Click - http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p002w6r2/episodes/downloads Daniel's published work Probablity with Swift Playgrounds - http://www.danielbudd.com.au/home/2017/1/18/probability-with-coding Geometry with Swift Playgrounds - http://www.danielbudd.com.au/home/2016/8/31/geometry-with-swift-playgrounds Sprite Invaders with Swift Playgrounds - http://www.danielbudd.com.au/home/2016/8/21/sprite-invaders-with-swift-playgrounds Blackjack with Swift Playgrounds - http://www.danielbudd.com.au/home/2016/8/21/blackjack-with-swift-playgrounds In the iBooks Store Hopscotch: Geometry & Transformations - https://itunes.apple.com/us/book/hopscotch-geometry-transformations/id1091830057?mt=13 Probability with Swift - https://itunes.apple.com/us/book/probability-with-swift/id1209829323?mt=11 And many more... You can find also find the show notes and other information on my blog: Swift Teacher Blog - http://www.swiftteacher.org

Swift Teacher
1: Introducing the Swift Teacher Podcast

Swift Teacher

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 7, 2017 17:20


In the first episode of the Swift Educator Podcast I give the origin story of the podcast and introduce myself. I lay out the purpose and goals for the podcast. Finally, I discuss what I have seen, the experiences I have had, and my students have had this school year with Swift (*spoiler alert*: it has been awesome!) I would like to thank my friend and Apple Distinguished Educator colleague Kelly Croy for his help, support, and inspiration in starting this podcast. He has a fantastic podcast [The Wired Educator Podcast](http://wirededucator.com)! I highly recommend it. Kelly can be found on Twitter and is a great follow: [@WiredEducator](https://twitter.com/WiredEducator). **Links** [Why Teach Swift](https://www.ifoutty.com/swift-teacher/2017/1/28/why-teach-swift) [Apple Distinguished Educator program](http://www.apple.com/education/apple-distinguished-educator/) [Trumbull Career & Technical Center](www.tctchome.com) [Association for Career & Technical Education](http://www.acteonline.org) [Swift Playgrounds app](https://appsto.re/us/eHUj2.i) [Learn to Code 1 & 2](https://itunes.apple.com/us/book/swift-playgrounds-learn-to/id1118578018?mt=11) [Learn to Code 3](https://itunes.apple.com/us/book/swift-playgrounds-learn-to/id1173709121?mt=11) App Development with Swift curriculum ([Teacher](https://itunes.apple.com/us/book/app-development-with-swift/id1118577558?mt=11)) ([Student](https://itunes.apple.com/us/book/app-development-with-swift/id1118575552?mt=11)) [iTunes U app](https://appsto.re/us/LgcoD.i) [Notability](https://appsto.re/us/6HJFv.i) [Connected](https://www.relay.fm/connected) * Myke Hurley - [@imyke](https://twitter.com/imyke) * Stephen Hackett - [@ismh](https://twitter.com/ismh) * Federrico Viticci - [@viticci](https://twitter.com/viticci) [Canvas](https://www.relay.fm/canvas) * Fraser Speirs - [@fraserspeirs](https://twitter.com/fraserspeirs) * Federrico Viticci - [@viticci](https://twitter.com/viticci) [Accidental Tech Podcast](http://atp.fm) * Casey Liss - [@caseyliss](https://twitter.com/caseyliss) * Marco Arment - [@marcoarment](https://twitter.com/marcoarment) * John Siracusa - [@siracusa](https://twitter.com/siracusa) You can find the text version of these discussions over on my blog: [Swift Teacher Blog](http://www.swiftteacher.org)