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 ...
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 ...
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 ...
Google and MIT have announced an initial free and open-source release of the 'App Inventor' source code for Android. In the same week that Google announced it will be closing its Picnik image editing ...
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 ...
Back in July 2010, Google announced a nifty educational project called App Inventor. The goal? Give non-programmers a relatively easy way to build their own applications for the Android platform, ...
Drag and drop your way to Android programming. MIT App Inventor, re-released as a beta service (as of March 5, 2012) by the MIT Center for Mobile Learning after taking over the project from Google, is ...
Entwicklungsumgebung zum Erstellen von Android-Apps; enthält einen Editor, in dem man Schleifen, Fallunterscheidungen und Funktionsaufrufe zur App-Logik erstellt, sowie ein Modul zur Bearbeitung der ...