Welcome to this week's Mobile Development newsletter from CodeProject.
Get your app in the Amazon Appstore Most Android apps already work on the Amazon Appstore available on Android devices including Fire Tablets. Get started by testing your apps on Android and Amazon devices in less than 90 seconds. Test your app now! |
Get your app in the Amazon Appstore Most Android apps already work on the Amazon Appstore available on Android devices including Fire Tablets. Get started by testing your apps on Android and Amazon devices in less than 90 seconds. Test your app now! |
Test Your Android App
The Amazon App Testing Service allows you to test your app to identify potential issues (if anything) with your app's compatibility on Android, Fire Tablets and Fire phone devices. Now you will also be able to test how your app's look & feel on Amazon and other devices. All without leaving Code Project! (more: CodeProject)
Design UWP apps
A great app starts with a great user interface. Learn how to design a Universal Windows Platform (UWP) app that looks fantastic on all Windows 10-based devices, from phones and tablets to PCs and Surface Hub. (more: Windows Dev Center)
Defining Mobile: 4-5.5 Inches, Portrait & One-Thumb
The word mobile has come to mean many things. But when designing mobile software, we need some clarity. What kind of devices are we talking about and how do people interact with them? (more: Luke Wroblewski)
Analytics for Mobile Apps
The key is to know what your users are experiencing before they have time to complain. And don't just ask your friends. This is what analytics is all about. (more: Azure blog)
Microsoft introduces tools to let developers quickly compile iOS apps for Windows 10
Microsoft has announced at Build 2015 that their new tools will allow developers to compile the Objective-C code for their iOS apps to work on Windows 10. (more: Windows Central)
Mobile Report: Native Development Trails Web, Hybrid
The latest mobile development survey from OutSystems sheds further light on how companies are addressing the increasing importance of creating mobile apps, a business priority reaching "critical" status this year. (more: ADT Magazine)
Developers can reuse their Android code to bring their apps to Windows 10
Windows Phones will include a Android subsystem that can run the majority of existing code from an Android app. Developers can use Windows APIs along with their existing code to get live tiles and other features working. (more: The Next Web)
New Technical Blogs added
Android
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