Fragments 2017

Fragments 2017

A conference on the mobile ecosystem in India

#About Fragments:

Fragments is a two-day, single track conference on the mobile ecosystem in India. The conference will feature talks – full-length and crisp – panel discussions, and Off-The-Record (OTR) sessions.

We are looking for proposals in the following topics:

  1. Modern Development Practices

    • How are modern development teams structured?
    • How do you achieve cross platform design/feature parity?
    • How do your collaboration, decision making, and development processes adapt to accommodate cross platform teams?
  2. Continuous Integration/Continuous Delivery

    • How is your CI/CD pipeline designed to allow you to test, build and deploy to multiple platforms (Android,iOS,Web) simultaneously?
  3. Design

    • What tools and processes to designers follow when they have to design for multiple platforms simultaneously, given that each platform as it’s own guidelines/styles?
  4. Localisation and Accessibility

    • How do you handle localization and accessibility in modern mobile apps?
  5. Progressive Web Apps

    • Are progressive web apps the way forward?
    • Are progressive web apps a better way to solve cross platform development? What’s their future?
  6. On the ground case studies

    • Talks on how companies have changed their development workflows, processes, teams, app architecture, and tooling over time.
  7. Platform specific talks

    • We are also open to platform specific technology talks that are novel in their content or approach.

Commitment to open source

HasGeek believes in open source as the binding force of our community. If you are describing a codebase for developers to work with, we’d like for it to be available under a permissive open source licence. If your software is commercially licensed or available under a combination of commercial and restrictive open source licences (such as the various forms of the GPL), please consider picking up a sponsorship. We recognise that there are valid reasons for commercial licensing, but ask that you support us in return for giving you an audience. Your session will be marked on the schedule as a “sponsored session”.

Selection process

Proposals will be filtered and shortlisted by an Editorial Panel.

** Make sure to add links to videos / slide decks when submitting proposals. We will not review proposals without detailed outlines or slide decks and preview videos.**

The first filter for every proposal is whether the technology or solution you are referring to is open source or not. If you are referring to a proprietary technology, consider picking up a sponsored session.

The criteria for selecting proposals, in the order of importance, are:

  1. Key insight or takeaway: what can you share with participants that will help them in their work and in thinking about the problem?
  2. Structure of the talk and flow of content: a detailed outline helps us understand the focus of the talk, and the clarity of your thought process.
  3. Ability to communicate succinctly, and how you engage with the audience. You must submit link to a two-minute preview video explaining what your talk is about, and what is the key takeaway for the audience.

No one submits the perfect proposal in the first instance. We therefore encourage you to:

  1. Submit your proposal early so that we have more time to iterate if the proposal has potential.
  2. Talk to us on our community Slack channel: https://friends.hasgeek.com if you want to discuss an idea for your proposal, and need help / advice on how to structure it.

Our editorial team also helps potential speakers in honing their speaking skills, and rehearsing at least twice - before the main conference - to sharpen the focus of talks.

Passes and honararium for selected speakers:

A speaker is NOT confirmed a slot unless we explicitly mention so in an email or over any other medium of communication.

Selected speakers get a pass to the conference and networking dinner. We do not provide free passes for speakers’ colleagues and spouses.

We also pay an honararium of Rs. 5,000 to each speaker, at the end of their talk.

Travel grants for outstation speakers:

Fragments 2017 is funded through ticket purchases and sponsorships.
We try to provide full or partial travel grants for at least two international and two domestic speakers.
First preference in awarding grants is given to women speakers, persons of non-binary genders, and speakers from Africa. If you require a travel grant, indicate this in the field where you add your location.

Important dates:

Deadline for submitting proposals: 30 July, 2017

**Conference date: ** 12-13 Sept, 2017

Contact

For more information about speaking proposals, contact fragments.editorial@hasgeek.com.
For tickets and sponsorships, contact info@hasgeek.com or call +91-7676332020.

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How do you make a great mobile experience? Explore with Fragments. Follow Fragments on Twitter more

Harshit Bangar

@bangarh

Code with Confidence - Tools for Android Developer

Submitted Jun 12, 2017

As an Android developer, we face multiple issues such as Null pointers, Memory leak, Hardcoded XML, RTL. On the top of that, we may want to enforce custom rules such as all the activities extends BaseActivity, or no one uses an internal buggy API.

In this talk, I will be going through several tools such as Custom lints, Rave, Infer, and Error Prone to help you fix these issues and help you focus on your core business logic.

Learn from errors and create checks for the obscure errors, so that no one in your team faces the same again.

Outline

Things I will be talking of:

  1. Annotations - Using annotations not only improve your code quality but also help tools like Rave and Infer.
  2. Lint and Custom Lints - Enums are expensive and should be replaced by magic constants (it is just an example to demonstrate custom lint). We will go through a sample custom lint which prevents anyone from checking enums into your code.
  3. Infer - We will be talking about the cases infer can catch - Context Leaks and NPE.
  4. Rave - We will be validating schema from servers or local DB. How it can be integrated into your existing network layer (such as retrofit 2).
  5. ErrorProne - How can we move the errors earlier into our build process? Instead of waiting for lint tasks to be completed on CI/Locally, how can we detect the issues at compile time. If a code has pointer null pointer flows, the compilation will fail.

I will be talking about using these tools locally and on CI.

Speaker bio

I am an Android Engineer at Uber working on payments. Long ago, in my previous life, I was a software engineer at Amazon.

I am passionate about developer tools and anything else which make developers life easy and presented sessions in Droidcon 2015 and 2016 (on Espresso).

Slides

http://fragmentspresentation.surge.sh/#/

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How do you make a great mobile experience? Explore with Fragments. Follow Fragments on Twitter more