Seems like Apple has forgotten who their customers are... instead they are going for people who worry about specs and technology etc.... this is not kind of apple i have viewed in the past.
i recently spoke to a recruiter whom i am applied using this feature 1 month ago. recruiter said that he has received 2K and had to go through them. the point here is, easy feature is good for candidates for quickly applying. but candidates are not getting responses faster which implies that recruiter life is tough in sorting through the right ones.
Hi - you are assuming everyone uses gmail . The other benefit is I am not always happy giving out my personal email address with a load of people in earshot.
Those who worry that UC browser is not sticking to standards... not thinking about end users. End users or layman are using it because it is easy and lite.
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cost involved in investing for the devices, upfront developer fees for a individual developer like me.
i have a MBP. so not an issue for programming. but i dont have an iphone. my app mostly relies on location services, accelerometer, gyroscope and magnetometer.
not sure whether these are all available in various android / samsung devices...!
To my knowledge, any recent device should have them, and location services should be available on fairly old devices - Google maintains that as part of Play Services. If you don't have an iPhone, do you have an Android device? I'd be weary to suggest developing anything until you scope out competitors - there's a LOT of apps on both platforms.
You can use play.google.com if you didn't know for Google Play apps, so if you're not an Android user that's a good place to start checking the ecosystem out. Maybe you can do something similar with the iTunes client, but I'm not too sure about that.
Oh, and another point to consider is there's far more variety among features etc on Android devices. In an attempt not to be diplomatic, that's probably a bad thing for a developer. Probably.
My printer, scanner, graphics tablet, and sound card won't work in windows (the printer manufacturer explicitly refuses to support 64-bit, the graphics tablet bluescreens win7 when plugged in, the others just do nothing). All work flawlessly out of the box on Ubuntu. Hooray for anecdotal evidence \o/