Welcome to this week's Mobile Development newsletter from CodeProject.
Use Your .NET Skills to Go Mobile. A brand new mobile Grid for UI for ASP.NET AJAX & two new products: UI for Windows Universal and UI for Xamarin pack the latest Telerik DevCraft release with variety of mobile improvements. Join us for the release webinar on October 29, click for details! |
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Introducing Fabric
The Fabric platform is made of three modular kits that address some of the most common and pervasive challenges that all app developers face: stability, distribution, revenue and identity. (more: Twitter)
Google Releases Full Android 5.0 Lollipop Software Developer Kit
There you go: everything you need to be frustrated trying to develop an Android app. Updated for the latest dessert. (more: ReadWrite)
Google to build Play-like hardware store for Project Ara
Project Ara being that modular phone they keep talking about (maybe it's time to ship something?). I wonder if you'd be able to assemble a phone with multiple CPUs and no cell functionality? (more: CIO)
Apple to require 64-bit support from all iOS apps starting in February
Start collecting all the bits you can. You'll need to add them to your apps. (more: Apple Insider)
RoboVM beckons Java 8 programmers to iOS
RoboVM translates Java bytecode into native ARM or x86 code and includes a Java-to-Objective-C code bridge. (more: Infoworld)
Hybrid Mobile Apps: Providing A Native Experience With Web Technologies
According to a recent report, HTML is the most widely used language for mobile app developers. The main reasons among developers for selecting web technologies are cross-platform portability of code and the low cost of development. We've also heard that hybrid apps tend to be sluggish and poorly designed. Let's prove whether it's possible to deliver the native look and feel that we're used to. (more: Smashing Magazine)
Mobile Design that Scales: Building for Existing and Future Devices
Mobile designers and developers share a common frustration stemming from the fragmented device landscape. With wearables on the horizon, the puzzle is becoming more baffling. Is it possible to design the perfect app and user experience for all devices, from TV to wearables? (more: Telerik)
Latest Articles
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