Call for round the year submissions for Fragments in 2019

Call for round the year submissions for Fragments in 2019

Submit a proposal at any time in the year on mobile engineering, state of mobile platforms, and building products with mobile. We will find you a suitable opportunity to share your work.

Make a submission

Accepting submissions till 31 Dec 2020, 11:59 AM

##We have closed submissions for Fragments Conf, Bangalore edition which will be held on 30 March. If you wish to submit a proposal for the conference, make a submission here.

##About Fragments:

Fragments is a conference on mobile engineering, including:

  1. State of platforms/OS
  2. Hardware
  3. Engineering approaches and paradigms
  4. UX

In 2019, Fragments is a traveling conference with editions in Ahmedabad, Bangalore, and potentially Hyderabad and Kochi (in the second half of 2019).

##Topics for submission:

We seek proposals -- for short and long talks, Birds of Feather (BOF) session topics, and workshops + tutorials -- on the following topics:

  1. Deep dive technical talks on Flutter.
  2. AR Core: practical approaches and the business use cases.
  3. Reducing app size to below 10MB and how to cater for lower-end phones.
  4. PWA caching strategies.
  5. ML Kit (ML Kit | Google Developers).
  6. On device ML.
  7. Server-side ML.
  8. Progressive ML, where the fallback is on-device ML when the device goes offline.
  9. Functional programming for mobile.
  10. Coroutines in Kotlin.
  11. Mobile specific user research.
  12. Case studies from teams which have switched away from cross platform approaches.
  13. Use cases for which Native apps work versus use cases where it doesn’t make sense to build Native apps.
  14. Deep dive talks on performance.
  15. Optimising for lower-end hardware.
  16. Future of chatbots for conversations on mobile.
  17. Automating design to code.

##Contact us:

If you have questions/queries, write to us on fragments.editorial@hasgeek.com

Hosted by

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

Mohanraj K.M.

@kmmraj

Kotlin Clean Code for Android

Submitted Feb 19, 2019

Are you an Android developer? Do you have huge monolithic fragments in your code? Are there too many non-testable classes? Are you faced with poor code coverages? Doesn’t this sound like a familiar story in Android app engineering? Kotlin Clean Code can help you solve these problems and improve the developer experience.

In this experiential talk, Mohanraj Karatadipalayam gives you a detailed overview of Kotlin Clean Code For Android, that enables the developers to write clean code, that has a good degree of separation of concerns and testability. He explores in detail, the need for Kotlin Clean Code for Android that makes programming more predictable. Using real examples and code snippets, Mohan highlights key challenges encountered while writing such apps and how he overcame them.

What actionable benefits / knowledge will attendees gain by attending your talk?
Key Takeaways from this talk include:

  • Understanding the need for Kotlin Clean Code For Android
  • Learn how it differs from other patterns
  • Learn how to write apps using Kotlin Clean Code For Android
  • Learn about how to code less and test more in an efficient manner

Outline

https://medium.com/@kmmraj/kotlin-clean-code-for-android-series-f3b32307342d

Requirements

Android app development knowledge

Speaker bio

Mohanraj works as a Senior Architect for Mobile and Conversational commerce products at Amadeus Software Labs, Bangalore. He is responsible for mobile app and conversational products design, and architecture. He is a polyglot developer, who is passionate about writing clean code. He loves clean coding in JavaScript, Java, Groovy, NodeJS, Kotlin, and Swift. Mohan is an active contributor to open source world, particularly in Kotlin and Javascript. Mohan is a developer advocate, believes in creating best developer experience in everyday engineering life. Other than software, Mohan interests include teaching, cricket, and farming, believes and practices zero budget farming. You can follow Mohan on Medium (https://medium.com/@kmmraj) or Linked In (https://www.linkedin.com/in/kmmraj/)

Slides

https://speakerdeck.com/kmmraj/kotlin-clean-code

Comments

{{ gettext('Login to leave a comment') }}

{{ gettext('Post a comment…') }}
{{ gettext('New comment') }}
{{ formTitle }}

{{ errorMsg }}

{{ gettext('No comments posted yet') }}

Make a submission

Accepting submissions till 31 Dec 2020, 11:59 AM

Hosted by

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