You don’t need to be a programmer to bring your app ideas to life. With beginner-friendly platforms like MIT App Inventor and no-code tools, anyone can design, test, and share mobile apps. Whether for ...
One of the things that we’re working on right now at MIT is a tool that will help all kinds of people to create more applications based on the new technology that we have. There’s so much coming out ...
MIT App Inventor makes it easy for anyone to turn creative ideas into interactive games without prior coding skills. Its visual, drag-and-drop interface lets you quickly design, program, and test ...
Now that apps have become such a key part of computing life, it seems pretty safe to assume that most of us have had an idea for a new one at some time or another. The prospect of actually building an ...
In today’s digital world, mobile applications have become the glue that connects people with both information and just about every kind of service. In many ways, they are at the core of business ...
The great thing about ideas is that they don’t cost anything. Today there are more ways than ever to turn your app ideas into something material for close to free, but at the next steps of app ...
Last time, I described how to write a simple Android app and get it talking to your code on Linux. So, of course, we need an example. Since I’ve been on something of a macropad kick lately, I decided ...
Successfully launching startup app ideas is solely dependent on entrepreneurs’ continuous search for answers. One important question can have one answer today and a completely different one at a ...
You’ve likely heard of the “vomit comet” — an rather graphic nickname for the aircraft used to provide short bursts of near-weightlessness by flying along a parabolic trajectory. They’re used to train ...