サクサク読めて、アプリ限定の機能も多数!
トップへ戻る
レイングッズ
readwrite.com
Much of everything front-end is being built with React. It seems that React isn’t going anywhere anytime soon. One of the most important and promising aspects of React is working with code components. From buttons to scrollers and toolbars, these components are the building blocks of our UI applications. React encapsulated components can manage their own state, and can be composed to make complex
A new EU-Japan collaboration looks to take smart cities to the next level with a cloud-based open data platform. Telecom Paper recently reported on the summer launch of the research project “City Platform-as-a-Service – integrated and open,” or CPaaS.io for short. The EU-funded initiative is a partnership between government and private sector players in Japan and Europe, with a key role played by
Even with the rise of cloud computing, the world still revolves around servers. That won’t last, though. Cloud apps are moving into a serverless world, and that will bring big implications for the creation and distribution of software and applications. Guest author Ken Fromm is VP of Business Development at Iron.io, makers of industrial-strength cloud services for data processing and message handl
Slack, the increasingly popular team-messaging software, wants more developers to build apps that hook into its work-chat software. So it’s announcing new software, Botkit, to simplify the building of such apps; a directory to make it easier to find them; and an investment fund to back developers, particularly ones building apps solely for Slack. (Slack executives are expected to make the announce
Heroku may be dropping the hammer on hobbyist developers, at least according to hints we’re seeing that it may soon limit its free services. The app hosting company has apparently floated a new pricing scheme that’s only visible to participants in a private beta of its service. According to those who’ve seen it, the most notable change in the new plan is an apparent restriction on Heroku’s free of
OpenStack remains the open-source community’s cloud of choice, mustering tens of thousands of minions as it marches on toward cloudy relevance. That same community has turned OpenStack into a morass of competing projects and priorities, but there’s one area where OpenStack dearly needs even more community: Helping it scale. I talked with Mirantis co-founder and CMO Boris Renski this week in advanc
One of the more common themes of this year’s SXSW festival, and indeed 2015 so far, has been self-driving cars. In a very short space of time the technology has gone from a far-off futuristic vision to something we now expect to find integrated into our daily lives within the next five to 10 years. That rapid rate of progress has many drivers shifting uncomfortably in their seats. Outside of the i
A nascent rivalry between two closely related JavaScript programming frameworks—Node.js and IO.js, the latter of which recently split off, or “forked,” from the former—may be heating up. Node’s corporate steward, Joyent, is ready to offer some serious incentives to keep developers from flocking to its rival. See also: What Developers Need To Know About The Node.js Fork Joyent officially remains op
Over the years, software development has fashioned itself more and more to resemble the lucrative, gonzo machine that fuels Hollywood, with top talent scoring big deals and even hiring agents. So it was just a matter of time before one of its sectors actually overtook Tinseltown. In this case, it’s the not-so-small segment of mobile app development. As analyst Horace Dediu pointed out on his Asymc
ReadWriteReflect offers a look back at major technology trends, products and companies of the past year. This year’s hottest startups were all about boosting our productivity and well-being. They seized the opportunities presented by open APIs, and they rode the ongoing shift to mobile devices. In so doing, these small, innovative companies improved our professional and personal lives in ways that
Node.js, a hugely popular open-source framework for building Web applications, could be headed for a painful schism unless its restive contributors and the project’s corporate lead, Joyent, can come to terms. At stake is a possible “fork” in the Node codebase, a change proposed by some of Node’s most important developers, who are frustrated with the project’s pace and other issues under Joyent’s o
The machines are taking over. Or they will, if we keep teaching machines to think for themselves. And we can’t seem to stop. Two years back GigaOm’s Derrick Harris opined that “it’s difficult to imagine a new tech company launching that doesn’t at least consider using machine learning models to make its product or service more intelligent.” And that’s true. But engineers at Google, Twitter and new
Nobody is more excited about the most recent version of Google’s Chrome browser than JavaScript developers. The latest version, Chrome 36, now includes a long awaited potential update to the JavaScript language. Called Object.observe(), it’s a low-level API (see our API explainer) that might solve one of the biggest problems in modern JavaScript development. That problem: JavaScript developers hav
Mike Curtis, Airbnb’s vice president of engineering, tells me he was “shocked” by what he found when he joined the fast-growing marketplace for lodging a little over a year ago. Call it a pleasant frisson: Curtis tells me he found a culture that was largely self-organized and driven by Airbnb’s mission of making people feel at home anywhere in the world. What it lacked in structure, it made up for
The next time you log in to Facebook, you might see a notification letting you know the company is “improving” advertising and giving users more control. To translate from Facebookese: The company will now be tracking your browsing and activity on third-party sites and applications to serve you up even more personalized ads. Facebook currently displays ads it thinks you’ll be more likely to engage
Last modified: February 2021. ReadWrite is a publication of ReadWrite, Inc. (hereinafter “The Publisher”). The Publisher collects certain personally identifiable information about ReadWrite’s readers. Please read this policy to understand more about how The Publisher collects and uses this information. The Publisher knows that you care how information about you is used and shared. This Privacy Pol
A good text editor can be a developer’s best friend. Unlike the default Notepad or TextEdit apps on Windows and OS X, coding-specific text editors help developers shortcut common tasks to program applications more quickly. The one downside? Learning to use a text editor can be a chore in itself. Some of them, like Vim, can only be customized in a specific language (Vimscript). Others, like Nano, a
If you’re at all familiar with do-it-yourself (DIY) electronics, you’ve probably heard about the comparable merits of Arduino and Raspberry Pi. You may have even, like I did, assumed they were competing hardware platforms solving similar problems. Actually, Arduino and Raspberry Pi are quite different. For starters, Raspberry Pi is a fully functional computer, while Arduino is a microcontroller, w
Amazon Web Services gives developers access to massive computing capability. Now hackers have found ways to hijack some accounts and use that power to make money on someone else’s dime. Joe Moreno’s bill for Amazon Web Services is usually about $5 a month. But last Thursday, he learned his AWS credentials had been compromised. An unknown person started renting computing power from Amazon on his ac
With Facebook’s acquisition of WhatsApp last month, mobile messaging apps have taken center stage thanks to the sheer weight of their ever-expanding user bases. Such apps are colossal players in the mobile game, originating everywhere from Silicon Valley in California to Gurgaon, India. Here are 10 international messaging apps whose worldwide influence is racking up millions of users from across t
For the last three years, I have gotten most of my news from one primary source: Zite on the iPad. I knew there were other capable and quality newsreaders out there, but Zite always delivered the breadth and serendipity of news that I craved to get a whole perspective on what is happening in the world. Soon, Zite will be no more and will get rolled into social magazine Flipboard, which acquired Zi
Coding is all the rage these days. Students of all ages and adults already in the workforce are increasingly encouraged to learn programming. Even President Obama said everyone should learn to code. There are countless resources that offer the opportunity to learn different skills. From free online classes through services like Codecademy to multi-thousand dollar programs that promise to turn you
In one salty word, PayPal president David Marcus summed up how he’s changing a company whose reputation for innovation and customer service had taken a dive before he took over. Executives who say they don’t have time to respond to customers on social media? “It’s bullshit,” Marcus told me on stage at our latest ReadWriteMix event in San Francisco on Tuesday evening. “If you lead a company, you’re
Raspberry Pi, the affordable, credit-card sized computer, has inspired tinkerers everywhere. Originally designed to get kids interested in computing, it has also developed a following among programmers looking for a smaller, cheaper medium for projects. See also: Raspberry Pi: Everything You Need To Know In our introduction to Raspberry Pi, we listed ten simple project tutorials for beginners. But
Guest author Sharon Wagner is founder and CEO of Cloudyn, a provider of cloud analytics and optimization services. When we look at the future of cloud, we have to consider the current business trajectory. It’s clear to me that the three most consumed cloud resources are compute, database and storage—they account for about 80% of the average business customer’s monthly cloud bill. Given the fact th
We uphold a strict editorial policy that focuses on factual accuracy, relevance, and impartiality. Our content, created by leading industry experts, is meticulously reviewed by a team of seasoned editors to ensure compliance with the highest standards in reporting and publishing. ReadWriteReflect offers a look back at major technology trends, products and companies of the past year. When tech comp
For those still struggling to understand open source, the fracas over Oracle’s handling of MySQL won’t help. When Oracle acquired Sun in 2010, open sourcerors (including me) worried that Oracle would kill MySQL by under-investing in its development or turning it proprietary. Neither has happened. In fact, MySQL performance has dramatically improved under Oracle’s stewardship, with the bulk of MySQ
While R has traditionally been the programming language of choice for data scientists, it is quickly ceding ground to Python. While there are several reasons for the shift, perhaps the biggest one is that Python is general purpose and comparatively easy to learn whereas R remains a somewhat complex programming environment to master. In a world increasingly dependent on data and starved for data sc
Node.js, a framework that’s been around since 2009, is making a big impact in web programming circles. With disciples in Microsoft, Yahoo, LinkedIn and PayPal, developers have not only heard of the merits of Node.js, but they’re either using or learning it now. See also: Why Developers Should Pay Attention To Node.js Consumers may have heard that Node.js as “responsive” or “lightweight,” but might
次のページ
このページを最初にブックマークしてみませんか?
『ReadWriteWeb - Web Apps, Web Technology Trends, Social Networking and Social ...』の新着エントリーを見る
j次のブックマーク
k前のブックマーク
lあとで読む
eコメント一覧を開く
oページを開く