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Track 12: Hey, Siri, Make Me an App
Archived series ("Inactive feed" status)
When? This feed was archived on November 18, 2020 16:28 (). Last successful fetch was on June 19, 2020 09:04 ()
Why? Inactive feed status. Our servers were unable to retrieve a valid podcast feed for a sustained period.
What now? You might be able to find a more up-to-date version using the search function. This series will no longer be checked for updates. If you believe this to be in error, please check if the publisher's feed link below is valid and contact support to request the feed be restored or if you have any other concerns about this.
Manage episode 222801294 series 2365187
Bugs, crashes, simulators, scrums, sprints, and -- quite literally -- grumpy old gits. It's all in a day's work as we explore what it takes to make an app, how we got here, and why we care so much about apps anyway. Also: why two burgers are better than one. Recorded Thursday, November 15, 2018.
- Follow-up: Homework check
- Anson's rap battle assignment (done and done)
- Anson's Critical Role assignment
- News Tidbit of the Week
- Kurt: The passing of Stan Lee
- Mini-Topic: Christmas decor
- Real versus artificial trees
- How soon is too soon?
- Main topic: Computer Science
- A brief history of apps
- Why do we care about apps?
- A day in the life of a software developer
- How do apps get made?
Links:
- iPhone (1st generation) - Wikipedia
- iOS - Wikipedia — Apple's operating system that runs on iPhone and iPad
- App Store (iOS) - Wikipedia
- Pull-To-Refresh Inventor Says There's No Need To Worry About Twitter's Patent Application | Cult of Mac — Article from 2012, citing a third-party Twitter app developer as the inventor of pull-to-refresh
- Think different - Wikipedia — Apple's marketing slogan, 1997-2002
- App Store Review - Apple — The process every iOS app must pass before being available in the App Store.
- Agile software development - Wikipedia
- Xcode - Apple Developer — Apple's software for making iOS (and Mac) apps
- BBEdit 12 - Bare Bones Software — Anson's preferred high-powered text editor
- Git — The dominant version control system in use by software developers, and one of Anson's favorite things to read about
- Unix - Wikipedia — Contains a chart showing how macOS is a member of the UNIX family of operating systems
- fish shell — Anson's preferred shell
- GitUp — Excellent tool for visualizing the history in a Git repository
- Sublime Merge - Git Client, done Sublime — Anson's current favorite Git GUI
- ansonj on GitHub — Anson's open-source projects on GitHub
- App Store Connect - Apple Developer — Used to upload apps to the App Store
- Swift - Apple Developer — Apple's promo page about the programming language Swift
- Swift.org - Welcome to Swift.org — The homepage for the open-source development of the Swift programming language
- Unit testing - Wikipedia
- Test-driven development - Wikipedia
- Cocoa Touch - Wikipedia — Apple's set of frameworks for iOS development
- Stack Overflow — A programmer's frequent companion and reference
- Stack Exchange — A hub of Q&A forums, of which Stack Overflow is a member
- dnd 5e - Can I defeat Strahd von Zarovich by stuffing him in a bag of holding and tearing it? - Role-playing Games Stack Exchange
- Codecademy - Ruby — Kurt's homework assignment
47 episodes
Archived series ("Inactive feed" status)
When? This feed was archived on November 18, 2020 16:28 (). Last successful fetch was on June 19, 2020 09:04 ()
Why? Inactive feed status. Our servers were unable to retrieve a valid podcast feed for a sustained period.
What now? You might be able to find a more up-to-date version using the search function. This series will no longer be checked for updates. If you believe this to be in error, please check if the publisher's feed link below is valid and contact support to request the feed be restored or if you have any other concerns about this.
Manage episode 222801294 series 2365187
Bugs, crashes, simulators, scrums, sprints, and -- quite literally -- grumpy old gits. It's all in a day's work as we explore what it takes to make an app, how we got here, and why we care so much about apps anyway. Also: why two burgers are better than one. Recorded Thursday, November 15, 2018.
- Follow-up: Homework check
- Anson's rap battle assignment (done and done)
- Anson's Critical Role assignment
- News Tidbit of the Week
- Kurt: The passing of Stan Lee
- Mini-Topic: Christmas decor
- Real versus artificial trees
- How soon is too soon?
- Main topic: Computer Science
- A brief history of apps
- Why do we care about apps?
- A day in the life of a software developer
- How do apps get made?
Links:
- iPhone (1st generation) - Wikipedia
- iOS - Wikipedia — Apple's operating system that runs on iPhone and iPad
- App Store (iOS) - Wikipedia
- Pull-To-Refresh Inventor Says There's No Need To Worry About Twitter's Patent Application | Cult of Mac — Article from 2012, citing a third-party Twitter app developer as the inventor of pull-to-refresh
- Think different - Wikipedia — Apple's marketing slogan, 1997-2002
- App Store Review - Apple — The process every iOS app must pass before being available in the App Store.
- Agile software development - Wikipedia
- Xcode - Apple Developer — Apple's software for making iOS (and Mac) apps
- BBEdit 12 - Bare Bones Software — Anson's preferred high-powered text editor
- Git — The dominant version control system in use by software developers, and one of Anson's favorite things to read about
- Unix - Wikipedia — Contains a chart showing how macOS is a member of the UNIX family of operating systems
- fish shell — Anson's preferred shell
- GitUp — Excellent tool for visualizing the history in a Git repository
- Sublime Merge - Git Client, done Sublime — Anson's current favorite Git GUI
- ansonj on GitHub — Anson's open-source projects on GitHub
- App Store Connect - Apple Developer — Used to upload apps to the App Store
- Swift - Apple Developer — Apple's promo page about the programming language Swift
- Swift.org - Welcome to Swift.org — The homepage for the open-source development of the Swift programming language
- Unit testing - Wikipedia
- Test-driven development - Wikipedia
- Cocoa Touch - Wikipedia — Apple's set of frameworks for iOS development
- Stack Overflow — A programmer's frequent companion and reference
- Stack Exchange — A hub of Q&A forums, of which Stack Overflow is a member
- dnd 5e - Can I defeat Strahd von Zarovich by stuffing him in a bag of holding and tearing it? - Role-playing Games Stack Exchange
- Codecademy - Ruby — Kurt's homework assignment
47 episodes
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