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Top Mobile App Development Trends in 2019

Top Mobile App Development Trends in 2019

Since the past recent years, mobile apps have been changed constantly. And because of their enormous popularity and usefulness, they serve to be a significant opportunity for appreneurs as well as enterprises. Smartphones have fully dominated the life of people. There is hardly any individual in the world who is unaware of the features and uses of smartphones. People spend maximum hours of their day using smartphone apps and features like listening to music, reading news, sending official reports and a lot more. Among the users of a mobile phone, the maximum users are youngsters below the age of 30 who use mobile phones for doing texting and calling. With the increasing usage and the need for mobile phones also increases the development of mobile applications. The mobile app development has forced the companies to think of better and innovative ways to meet the growing demand for smartphone users.  Top Trends in Mobile App Development AMP will change the web scenario: Google’s AMP is under process in the current year. With this project, Google will bring a separate index on the mobile web. With this, there will be a great change and advancement in the development of a mobile application. This results in faster loading on smartphones and a reduction in the bouncing rates. Also, it will offer better and improved visibility, thus increases the number of visitors. Thus, with the AMP feature, there will be trending changes in both web application and SEO standpoint. AR and VR will play a more significant role: You must be aware of VR and AR, the top two trending technologies that are...
Ministry of Defence forms new cyber security regiment

Ministry of Defence forms new cyber security regiment

The Ministry of Defence (MoD) has formally “stood up” a dedicated cyber security regiment tasked with protecting the UK’s defence networks both at home and on overseas operations. Based at Blandford in Dorset, home of the Royal Signals, the 13th Signal Regiment will be tasked with providing “digital armour” around armed forces personnel operating overseas to give commanders and soldiers alike the ability to operate with confidence in their IT and comms systems while under fire. The MoD said that that both adversaries and hostile actors were already creating a “cyber frontline” alongside the more traditional domains of land, sea and air, and as the character of warfare evolves, digital and cyber capabilities will be increasingly relied on to ensure the UK’s national security. “This is a step-change in the modernisation of the UK armed forces for information warfare. Cyber attacks are every bit as deadly as those faced on the physical battlefield, so we must prepare to defend ourselves from all those who would do us harm and 13th Signal Regiment is a vital addition to that defence,” said defence secretary Ben Wallace. Sitting within the (UK) Signal Brigade, under the command of 6th (UK) Division, the 250-strong regiment forms the core of the new Army Cyber Information Security Operations Centre – although it will also work on behalf of the Royal Navy and the Royal Air Force – and will provide specialist technical support for a hub to test and implement next-generation information capabilities. It unifies a number of existing cyber functions from across the Army, with personnel from 15 different units joining in the first intake,...
Firefighter to Web Developer

Firefighter to Web Developer

I’m jolted awake to the sound of the tones going off in my room. I knew that I hadn’t been asleep long because we’d already run a late call and it was still dark outside. Running to the truck, I hear the address come out over the radio for a medical call. It’s the third time this week we’ve been called to the same house. My driving is on autopilot because I know the city streets like the back of my hand. Not only had I worked in the same fire department for the last 6 years, but I’d also grown up in this city. On this and many other times I’d been woken up in the middle of the night, I’m starting to realize that I’m losing my passion for the job I once loved. How I Got Into Firefighting At 19 years old I was working in fast food, and I knew I needed to do something more with my life. I wasn’t really keen on going to college just yet, so I started looking for jobs that only needed vocational school. Knowing that I wouldn’t be a very good police officer, I signed up for fire school. During fire school I found the only way to get a job as a firefighter in Florida was to also be an EMT in order to run medical calls, so I enrolled in there as well. While I was in school, one of the instructors I met told me their department was taking on volunteers. Six years in the field, a year of paramedic school, and many sleepless nights...

React Native Tutorial – Building Your First iOS App With JavaScript (Part 1) — Smashing Magazine

The idea of building mobile apps with JavaScript is not new. We’ve seen frameworks like Ionic and PhoneGap take on the challenge, and to some extent succeed in gaining a fair amount of developer and community support. To part 2 of the tutorial. These frameworks and the whole idea of building mobile apps with JavaScript never appealed to me, though. I always thought, why not just learn Swift/Objective-C or Java and build real apps? That definitely requires a significant amount of learning, but isn’t that what we developers do and should be good at? Quickly learn new languages and frameworks? What’s the point, then? For me, the advantages never outweighed the doubts. Fast-forward a couple of months, and I’m confident enough to say I may never write an iOS app in Objective-C or Swift again. What? Are you, like… serious? Further Reading on SmashingMag: Reading such a bold assertion made me go ahead and give React Native a shot. Why not? I was already using React and loving it. React Native is so similar to React (duh!), you’ll feel right at home if you’re already a React developer. Even if you’re not, React luckily happens to be very easy to wrap your head around. What We Will Be Building I’ve never had luck finding the perfect wallpaper app for my iPhone in the App store. On the desktop, Unsplash is the one-stop shop for all my wallpaper needs. On the phone: Settings → Wallpaper 🙁 So, unlike some other tutorials where you build counters and barely use them, in this tutorial, together we’ll build ourselves an app that will...
Laravel Envoyer & PHPUnit in Production with a smartly crafted HealthTest

Laravel Envoyer & PHPUnit in Production with a smartly crafted HealthTest

Laravel Envoyer is known for deploying PHP applications (especially Laravel or Lumen web applications) with zero-downtime, because of a smart mechanism that performs a full deploy, including all composer packages, migrations and everything your deploy needs, and then, if everything is a success, it just switches a symbolic link of the running website to the newly deployed path. That’s it. It’s a smart hot-swap system that really works. I find it to be an important piece of the puzzle for any CI pipeline. And this is even smarter when you’re deploying to multiple servers at the same time. Of course, this is usually not the right platform to run all your unit, browser, integration or any other tests, especially if it targets a production environment. However, there is one special test that I use to greatly reduce the chances of shipping a broken increment of the product: The HealthTest This is a special kind of PHPUnit test, that makes sure the deploy is healthy enough for actual users to interact with it. Although it can run in the usual testing environment, along with all the other tests, in Envoyer I use it for one purpose: to make sure all the moving parts are correctly set up before activating this release. The HealthTest contains several quick methods that check the following cases: Consider the following scenario Development adds a new Amazon SQS queue that’s being used. All the unit and browser tests are passed, because the ‘testing’ environment is mocking all external access. Rumors say it’s a good practice. The development environment has been set up with real, live queues...
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