Mobile app development has multiple stages before the features are put in an application, some factors are examined to ensure the success of the app. Now, UI UX design and are so trending in the field of the IT market, and such enterprises are having a big time. The number of users of mobile applications is growing fast day-by-day. As various mobile applications are uploaded every month the success charge is low. If you have a great mobile app idea and experience in developing a mobile application, it is quite tricky it went wrong while . Mobile apps have grown a go-to for enterprises. Ever since mobile apps were identified for their expertise to improve businesses, everyone needs to work for it. If you are a well-established business with huge supplies for an app then you can simply hire a mobile app development company and get started with your mobile app. The main purpose of a mobile application development company is to develop an interface that even inexperienced users will understand without cutting any of the features. We have already discussed the latest mobile app trends in our previous blogs so today we will discuss what are the key features of a successful mobile application development – features that should satisfy the user’s needs. User-friendly app All the screens in the app should be clean and nice, and not look distorted. The app should include a few generic and specific valuable features rather than having a truckload of unwanted features. These should be above the crimp and enlightenment to use. While designing and developing the android app development or...
2020 ELECTION.Ballot box with ballot “I conclude with high confidence that the election 2020 data were altered in all battleground states”… US Intelligence Expert with PhD. in computer systems management & DIA/CIA/FBI/NSA/DHS advanced training *SHREDS* claims 2020 election was free & fair. 1/10 1. “I have previously discovered major exploitable vulnerabilities in DVS and ES&S that permit a nefarious operator to perform sensitive functions via its built-in covert backdoor… such as shifting votes, deleting votes, or adding votes in real-time.” 2. “In 2018, NY Times conducted an investigation and concluded that DVS machines can be easily hacked. Subsequently, security experts… discovered innumerable exploitable vulnerabilities that do not require extensive technical skill to breach.” 3. “In my expert opinion, the combination of DVS, Scytl/SOE Software/eClarity and Smartmatic are vulnerable to data manipulation by unauthorized means… electronic voting machines, including DVS have glaring security weaknesses that have remained unresolved.” 4. “I have conducted detailed analysis of the NY Times data sets and have discovered significant anomalies are caused by fraudulent manipulation of the results. In my expert judgment, the evidence is widespread and throughout all battleground states.” 5. “The DVS Democracy Suite’s ImageCast Central optical scanner failed to correctly verify and validate absentee ballots… This indicates that the DVS system configuration was modified to accept invalid ballots when they should have been rejected.” 6. “[It] is required to tabulate and store the results in a cast vote record along with a human-readable image of the ballot that has been scanned… [it] failed to properly verify absentee ballots… [and] to maintain records… necessary to conduct an audit.” 7. “The cryptographic key store...
How we store and manage data has completely changed over the last decade. We moved from an ETL world to an ELT world, with companies like Fivetran pushing the trend. However, we don’t think it is going to stop there; ELT is a transition in our mind towards EL(T) (with EL decoupled from T). And to understand this, we need to discern the underlying reasons for this trend, as they might show what’s in store for the future. This is what we will be doing in this article. I’m the co-founder of Airbyte, the new upcoming open-source standard for data integrations. What Are the Problems With ETL? Historically, the data pipeline process consisted of extracting, transforming, and loading data into a warehouse or a data lake. There are serious disadvantages to this sequence. ETL is inherently rigid. It forces data analysts to know beforehand every way they are going to use the data, every report they are going to produce. Any change they make can be costly. It can potentially affect data consumers downstream of the initial extraction. Lack of Visibility Every transformation performed on the data obscures some of the underlying information. Analysts won’t see all the data in the warehouse, only the one that was kept during the transformation phase. This is risky, as conclusions might be drawn based on data that hasn’t been properly sliced. Lack of Autonomy for Analysts Last but not least, building an ETL-based data pipeline is often beyond the technical capabilities of analysts. It typically requires the close involvement of engineering talent, along with additional code to extract and transform each source...
September 08, 2020 / Paul Redmond Laravel 8 is now released and includes many new features including Laravel Jetstream, a models directory, model factory classes, migration squashing, rate-limiting improvements, time testing helpers, dynamic blade components, and many more features. Before we jump into the new features, we’d like to point out that starting with version 6, Laravel now follows semver and will release a new major version every six months. You can see how the release process works here. Laravel Jetstream Laravel Jetstream improves upon the existing Laravel UI scaffolding found in previous versions. It provides a starting point for new projects, including login, registration, email verification, two-factor authentication, session management, API support via Laravel, and team management. Models Directory Laravel 8’s application skeleton includes an app/Models directory. All generator commands assume models exist in app/Models; however if this directory doesn’t exist, the framework will assume the application keeps models within the app/ folder. Model Factory Classes Eloquent model factories are now class-based starting in Laravel 8, with improved support for relationships between factories (i.e., a user has many posts). I think you’ll agree how awesome the new syntax is for generating records via the new and improved model factories: Migration Squashing If your application contains many migration files, you can now squash them into a single SQL file. This file will be executed first when running migrations, followed by any remaining migration files that are not part of the squashed schema file. Squashing existing migrations can decrease migration file bloat and possibly improve performance while running tests. Improved Rate Limiting Laravel 8 brings improvements to existing rate limiting...
7+ Million HTTP requests per second from a single server It’s coming up to 2 years since I last posted about the performance of ASP.NET Core; during its preview, pre version 1.0. As preview 2 of has ASP.NET Core 3.0 has just been to released; it’s time to follow up, and find out how its evolved. ASP.NET Core 2.2 (Current) Looking at the latest run from the TechEmpower Benchmarks continuous results ASP.NET 2.2 is the 3rd fastest webserver (0.046% off the top spot); able to respond to 7 Million HTTP request per second: I recently saw another post; about a different product, where throughput that was measured monthly; so if we use that time period, that’s 18.1 trillion HTTP requests per month. It’s also an extraordinary amount of bandwidth; enough to continuously saturate a 10GBps link. These results are with the webserver and load tester running inside Docker containers, on two different physical Linux machines *; connected with a 10GbE network. All this throughput from a single server! ASP.NET Core is fast on Linux (and on Windows). How does it compare to other well known servers? In these “platform” comparisons that’s: Internet Facing Server ASP.NET Core’s Kestrel Webserver; which is used in these benchmarks, is an edge server so can be used as an internet facing webserver, as explained in the documentation: It doesn’t need a second webserver acting as a reverse-proxy server in front and can go full speed. It also works with reverse-proxies if that fits more with your infrastructure. Data Access Performance I often hear the defeatist argument that performance like this doesn’t matter because “my...
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