This document contains information about DroidKaigi, an Android developer conference. It includes the following key details:
- Masahiro Hidaka is the representative for the conference.
- Network information and facilities details are provided.
- A survey on Android developer statistics in Japan is presented, covering demographics like age, experience levels, business types, development practices.
- The conference schedule is outlined, including sessions, speakers and an after party event. Feedback from attendees is requested.
The document discusses how to keep work technically interesting. It suggests leading engineering as a CTO, building a development team, and working on personal projects like a toy browser engine, Flexbox, CSS Grid, and libraries for converting numbers to Vietnamese and bookmarking. It provides links to several of the author's open source projects on GitHub as examples.
The document discusses the deprecation of the "Tachikoma gem" and transition to continuing support for the "Tachikoma.io service" instead. It also references tools for checking code style and formatting like Saddler gem and Reviewdog, and submitting changes to GitHub. Additionally, it mentions Heroku changing their CLI tool from a Go implementation to Node.js to avoid issues with OS updates and cross-compiling.
The document discusses the Tachikoma gem, which is a Ruby gem that creates a rake task to automatically run bundle update and create pull requests on GitHub repositories daily. It provides links to the Tachikoma GitHub page and blog posts about configuring similar automatic pull request systems on services like Heroku, Travis CI, and Cloudbees. It also includes tweets from users discussing their experience with Tachikoma and the bot-motoko IRC bot.
Sikachu Matt discussed using Appraisal to test multiple versions of gem dependencies. Plans were made to hold a "Sikachu meetup" in Tokyo on May 30th with @machida, @komagata, and others. Sikachu offered to answer questions in advance about RubyKaigi, the Ruby community in Thailand, and applications he has worked on.
This document outlines 35 different tips and tricks for using Travis-CI, a continuous integration service. It covers topics like playing games within Travis builds, debugging issues, environment configuration, testing strategies, and tools for interacting with the Travis community. The document is presented as a numbered list by Murahashi "Sanemat" Kenichi and is intended to share hidden or underutilized features of Travis-CI.
This document discusses how card battle games are popular but diversity in games is important, mentioning some card and non-card games like Hearthstone, Pokemon Go, Angry Birds, and Candy Crush. It suggests that while card battle games are good, developers should also explore other types of games beyond just card battles.
The document discusses the gap between the Rails asset pipeline and existing solutions for building offline-capable web applications like rack-offline. It introduces several existing tools for building offline apps, like the HTML5 cache manifest and jQuery offline plugins. It also discusses how the asset pipeline complicates generating file manifests needed for offline caching since files can be preprocessed. The author is looking for solutions to integrate offline capabilities while using the asset pipeline.
The document discusses challenges with implementing offline support for Rails applications that use the asset pipeline. Specifically, it notes a gap between the rack-offline gem, which generates an application cache manifest, and the asset pipeline, which compiles and concatenates assets. Temporary solutions are proposed like manually listing asset files, but generating the correct cache manifest automatically as assets change is difficult. The author invites others interested in offline apps to discuss solutions and work on the problem together.
Limonade is a lightweight PHP framework for developing mobile websites and applications. It follows the MVC pattern and principles like DRY. Limonade aims to be simple and customizable. Examples of using Limonade for a blog and wiki are available on GitHub. The framework includes libraries for detecting mobile devices and rendering pictograms and mobile-friendly HTML and CSS.
現地時間3月3日から10日にかけて、世界中のテレコムが注目するテクノロジーカンファレンスである「Mobile World Conference 2025」がバルセロナで開催されました。特に競争の激しいヨーロッパのマーケットでは、各社が生き残りをかけたイノベーションをたくさん生み出しています。5G/6G、エッジクラウド、新しい音声技術など、多くのキーワードが注目されています。