InfoQ Homepage Operating Systems Content on InfoQ
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From Hackathon to React Native @ Facebook
Christopher Chedeau walks through the challenges, both technical and people management related, involved in bringing the React JavaScript UI library to iOS.
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Android Wear: Who’s Next
Wesley Reisz explores Android Wear, providing practical ways to introduce wearables into your mobile strategy and exercising the Android Wear API through a demo.
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Reactive Android
Benjamin Augustin takes the practical approach of a complex API to explain how RxJava and Functional Reactive Programming (FRP) can be used on every project to make one's life easier.
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Portable Code - The Trials of Porting Total War from Windows to Mac OS X
Guy Davidson, Tom Miles discuss 64-bit programming pitfalls, Unity builds, writing portable code, and persuading a large development team of varying levels of skill to write portable code as well.
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Catching up with Swift
Ash Furrow discusses Swift, why Swift was needed, the Objective-C problems it addresses, and how ready it is from both technical and business standpoints.
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Building Functional Infrastructure with Mirage OS
Anil Madhavapeddy explains how the OCaml module system enables the construction of a large scale OS software, and also the resulting portability benefits.
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Gradle for Android
Ken Kousen introduces Gradle to Android developers and shows how easy it is to integrate into Android projects.
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Groovy Mobile Automation
Bobby Warner discusses mobile automation and dives into the iOS and Android functional testing world using Groovy, Spock and Gradle.
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Swift - Under the Hood
Alex Blewitt introduces the history behind Swift, why it was created, how it differs from Objective-C and how Swift is compiled and executed under the covers.
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Facebook’s iOS Architecture
Ari Grant discusses how Facebook is iterating its mobile products, continuing to increase the richness of the content and speed at which it is delivered.
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Pre-release Kinect for Windows
William Fink demos a pre-release Kinect for Windows, showing its new features and capabilities.
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Android and Groovy, a Winning Pair?
Cedric Champeau tries to answer the question: "Android developers are used to develop applications in Java, so why Groovy, a JVM language, wouldn't be usable for Android development too?"