We have heard from many people that there is so much work happening with React Native, it can be tough to keep track of what’s going on. To help communicate what work is in progress, we are now publishing a roadmap for React Native. At a high level, this work can be broken down into three priorities: If you have suggestions for features that you think would be valuable on the roadmap, check out Canny, where you can suggest new features and discuss existing proposals. What’s new in React Native Version 0.37 of React Native, released today, introduces a new core component to make it really easy to add a touchable Button to any app. We’re also introducing support for the new Yarn package manager, which should speed up the whole process of updating your app’s dependencies. Introducing Button Today we’re introducing a basic <Button /> component that looks great on every platform. This addresses one of the most common pieces of feedback we get: React Native is one of the only mobile development toolkits without a button ready to use out of the box. Experienced React Native developers know how to make a button: use TouchableOpacity for the default look on iOS, TouchableNativeFeedback for the ripple effect on Android, then apply a few styles. Custom buttons aren’t particularly hard to build or install, but we aim to make React Native radically easy to learn. With the addition of a basic button into core, newcomers will be able to develop something awesome in their first day, rather than spending that time formatting a Button and learning about Touchable nuances....
Introduction As soon as you decide to invest in a software application, you’ve surely identified a need on the market and you already have a solid business plan prepared. You might be an expert in your domain, but when it comes to implementing that idea, the right technologies and tools for it are not always clear from the beginning. The solution that best fits your needs in terms of technology used, hosting options, 3rd party integrations or platform, is often suggested by the development team, consultants or software architects – that know all the technicalities, as well as the pros and cons for each option available at the moment. Discover in this article the top 10 advantages of choosing to develop your application with .NET Core: .NET Core is Cross-Platform.NET Core is Open SourceMature Framework and Widely Used Programming LanguagesThe .NET Core Supports a Wide Range of Application TypesIncreased Security with .NET Core.NET Core Enables Top App Performance.NET Core Enables Flexibility.NET Core is Cost Effective.NET Core has a Large Community.NET Core was Created by Microsoft 1. .NET Core is Cross-Platform When you start creating an application, you go on the road with a few things already settled. One of them is the Operating System (OS) that your app targets. The decision is driven by the context, the market, the end users or, in some cases, even by your development team. Because the market and your budget are not linear, constantly evolving and changing, you need to be able to adapt your business fast. If at a given time you need to be able to support more users at the same...
An app developer in B.C.’s Interior is using his talents and spare time to create mobile ordering apps at no charge for small, locally-run restaurants, to help them keep their businesses running amid the COVID-19 pandemic. Even though many restaurants have remained open, their business models have changed — takeout and delivery have become king, and third-party delivery services like Skip The Dishes and DoorDash are busier than ever. But when a restaurant signs up for one of those third-party delivery apps, they lose revenue. Kelowna restaurant owner Trevor Jones said it would cost him up to 30 per cent to have a third-party driver deliver food to customers. “It really is a complete ordering experience that kind of cuts out the middleman,” he said. That’s where Jeremy Buhler comes in; his app development business, Eazi-Apps, slowed down, just like many others, when the pandemic hit. He was growing restless and said he couldn’t sit on the couch any longer. He decided to put his skills to use, offering free mobile app development for restaurants. “Mobile apps are highly underappreciated and underutilized technology right now, because historically, this has been, apps are only for the big players,” he said. “[Any restaurant] can have their own mobile app and the mobile app goes directly on their customer’s phone.” On average, app development for a small restaurant would cost between $2,400 and $3,500, Buhler said. There is a maintenance fee of $149 per month to maintain the app and keep it current on Apple and Google. Once an app has been created, which Buhler said takes about a week, it has to be approved by Apple and Google before...
Andrew Ng’s startup Landing AI has created a new workplace monitoring tool that issues an alert when anyone is less than the desired distance from a colleague. Six feet apart: On Thursday, the startup released a blog post with a new demo video showing off a new social distancing detector. On the left is a feed of people walking around on the street. On the right, a bird’s-eye diagram represents each one as a dot and turns them bright red when they move too close to someone else. The company says the tool is meant to be used in work settings like factory floors and was developed in response to the request of its customers (which include Foxconn). It also says the tool can easily be integrated into existing security camera systems, but that it is still exploring how to notify people when they break social distancing. One possible method is an alarm that sounds when workers pass too close to one another. A report could also be generated overnight to help managers rearrange the workspace, the company says. Under the hood: The detector must first be calibrated to map any security footage against the real-world dimensions. A trained neural network then picks out the people in the video, and another algorithm computes the distances between them. Workplace surveillance: The concept is not new. Earlier this month, Reuters reported that Amazon is also using similar software to monitor the distances between their warehouse staff. The tool also joins a growing suite of technologies that companies are increasingly using to surveil their workers. There are now myriad cheap off-the-shelf AI...
Schools, colleges, and various institutions have been hosting webinars to make the best use of the lockdown period after the COVID-19 crisis began. Girls In Tech – Nepal in collaboration with Genese Cloud Academy has been hosting webinars, three each week, since the end of March 2020. Over two dozen webinars have been already organized and getting encouraging participation of around a hundred enthusiastic youths in each session. Sadly, the webinar in Nepal has started getting disturbed by spammers who participate anonymously with the sole intention of disturbing these sessions. After severe disturbances, some of the webinars hosted by Girls In Tech – Nepal had to be terminated and postponed. Girls In Tech – Nepal is not the sole victim of such occurrences. Robotics Association of Nepal (RAN) also faced similar spammer activity in a virtual panel discussion hosted on 27 April by its Miss Tech wing. Few spammers posted comments with vulgar words in the chat thread of the session’s LIVE video making the situation awkward for all the guests and participants. Similarly, NxtGen – a non-profit organization under the Pulchowk Engineering Campus also faced a similar incidence on the ‘COVID-19 Preparedness for Students’ session hosted on 27 April. The session was hosted to prepare individuals for upcoming uncertain times due to the COVID-19 outbreak. During the event, the organizers noticed some audiences from fake emails violating cybersecurity laws which left the audience and the speakers to misery. However, NxtGen was able to immediately fix the lack of security on the platform that the individuals exploited and promptly began working with law enforcement. Furthermore, the NxtGen team has...
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