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  • Applying Use Cases in Agile: Use Case 2.0, Slicing and Laminating

    To incrementally develop and deliver products using agile software development, requirements are gathered and organized into a product backlog. A requirement technique that is used in agile software development is use cases. Some techniques to apply use cases for managing product requirements in agile are use case 2.0, slicing and laminating.

  • Pebble opens up the first appstore for wearable devices

    Pebble, maker of the successful Pebble and Pebble Steel smartwatches, opened up its appstore earlier this month. Pebble appstore aims at offering both customers and developers a centralised app distribution channel, thus becoming "the first place where Pebble users look for Pebble apps."

  • ActiveReports 8 Adds Maps, HTML5 Viewer, Advanced Barcodes and Windows Azure Support

    ComponentOne has released ActiveReports 8 with support for maps, RSS14Stacked, RSSLimited and MicroPDF417 barcodes, Windows Azure under both partial and full trust environments in addition to a HTML5 viewer which enables you to build applications optimized for various mobile devices.

  • Google Wants to Speed Up the Internet with QUIC

    QUIC (Quick UDP Internet Connections, pronounced 'quick') is a multiplexing transport protocol running over UDP with the main goal to have 0-RTT connectivity overhead.

  • Interview with WildFly Lead Jason Greene on WildFly 8

    Red Hat's JBoss division has today announced the availability of WildFly 8, the product formerly know as JBoss Application Server. InfoQ spoke to Jason Greene, WildFly Lead / JBoss EAP Platform Architect at Red Hat's JBoss division to find out more about the new product.

  • Red Hat's JBoss Team Launch WildFly 8 with full Java EE 7 Support and a New Embeddable Web Server

    Red Hat's JBoss division has today announced the availability of WildFly 8, formerly know as JBoss Application Server. This release fully supports the Java EE 7 specification. WildFly also gains a completely new web server called Undertow, new security features, and a patching system for updates to the running system.

  • Design Patterns for Cloud-Hosted Applications

    The patterns & practices group at Microsoft have released a guide with solutions and patterns suitable when implementing cloud-hosted applications. The guide contains ten guidance topics together with 24 design patterns targeting eight categories of problems covering common areas in cloud application development. Also included are ten sample applications to demonstrate the usage these patterns.

  • Running Spark on R with SparkR

    UC Berkeley’s AMPLab announced a developer preview of their new project SparkR to use Apache Spark natively from R.

  • Salesforce.com Woos Windows Developers with New Toolkits for .NET

    Salesforce.com is attempting to make it easier for .NET developers to consume its web services thanks to a new pair of open-source Toolkits. These Toolkits target the Force.com REST API and Chatter API and are the brainchild of Salesforce Platform Advocate Wade Wegner who talked to InfoQ about the goals and logistics of building these components.

  • Parse Announces Bolts, a Collection of Low-level Libraries for iOS and Android

    Parse, acquired by Facebook a few months ago, has recently open-sourced a collection of low-level libraries for Android and iOS collectively called Bolts. According to Parse announcement, Bolts is the outcome of the joint Parse/Facebook effort to consolidate small, low-level utility classes that both companies had already developed on their own.

  • Google's Java Coding Standards

    Google has recently released their complete definition of coding standards for Java source code. These are hard-and-fast rules that are clearly enforceable, and are followed universally within Google. It covers not only formatting, but other types of conventions and coding standards.

  • DevOps Cafe Podcast on the QCon London 2014 DevOps Track

    Last DevOps Cafe Podcast (Episode 47) previewed the QCon London 2014 DevOps track. Manuel Pais and Shane Hastie, the track hosts, explained the rationale behind the track's session selection, the speakers introduced their talks and there was still time to discuss other topics, such as the importance of the scientific method and how agile's definition of "done" must be adapted in a DevOps world.

  • CoffeeScript 1.7 Released: Adds Chaining Without Parenthesis, Multiline Strings and More

    Jeremy Ashkenas has released version 1.7 of CoffeeScript, and with it introduced some highly anticipated changes to the popular JavaScript transpiler. Version 1.7 includes one of the most popular requests for the language; support for chaining without parenthesis.

  • iOS Auto Layout with Masonry

    Open Source project Masonry aims to make Auto Layout code more concise and readable. Masonry, “a light-weight layout framework which wraps Auto Layout with a nicer syntax”, enables a XIB- and Storyboard-free experience.

  • Getting the Avengers with Marvel Comics API

    Recently, Marvel has made available a public API and a RESTful service which provides access to their comics metadata.

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