List of videos

try! Swift NYC 2017 - Creating Rich Custom UI Notifications
try! Swift NYC Conference 2017 - try! Swift is an immersive community gathering about Swift Language Best Practices, Application Development in Swift, Server-Side Swift, Open Source Swift, and the Swift Community in New York City! Topic - Creating Rich Custom UI Notifications Speaker - Craig Clayton Twitter - https://twitter.com/thedevme Bio - Craig Clayton is a Sr. iOS Engineer at Adept Mobile, which specializes in building mobile experiences primarily for NBA & NFL teams. Craig also volunteers as the organizer of the Suncoast iOS meetup group in the Tampa/St. Petersburg area, and prepares presentations and hands-on talks for the community. On top of all that, Craig is also the owner of Cocoa Academy – launching in Jan 2017, Cocoa Academy specializes in iOS video courses. Abstract - In this talk, Craig Clayton covers how you can build a unique user experience using custom UI for notifications, in particular, how he created a custom experience for NFL teams to use year round for fan engagement. try! Swift NYC Twitter - https://twitter.com/tryswiftnyc try! Swift NYC Twitter Hashtag - https://twitter.com/hashtag/tryswiftnyc try! Swift Website - https://www.tryswift.co/ try! Swift Conference Photos - https://www.flickr.com/photos/tryswift/albums try! Swift Conference Contact - info@tryswift.co try! Swift Conference © 2018 - Powered by NatashaTheRobot
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try! Swift NYC 2017 - Error Handling Made Easy
try! Swift NYC Conference 2017 - try! Swift is an immersive community gathering about Swift Language Best Practices, Application Development in Swift, Server-Side Swift, Open Source Swift, and the Swift Community in New York City! Topic - Error Handling Made Easy Speakers - Eleni Papanikolopoulou & Kostas Kremizas Eleni’s Twitter - https://twitter.com/kostaskremizas Kostas’s Twitter - https://twitter.com/elenipapanikolo Eleni’s Bio - Eleni Papanikolopoulou is an iOS Developer at Workable, an innovative recruiting software company. She is from Athens, Greece and holds a Masters degree in CS and IT Management from University of Manchester, UK. She started her developing career as a Java engineer but converted to Swift when contributing in Pobuca, a contact management app. She is an advocate of RxSwift for solving tough asynchronous-like problems and currently working in developing Error Handler, an open-source Swift framework. When she doesn’t work, she enjoys traveling more than anything and watching Silicon Valley series. Kostas’s Bio - Kostas is an iOS Engineer at Workable, the recruitment software company. He’s developed over a dozen iOS apps, from cooking and fashion, to retail, radio, food delivery and more. Having survived the years of Objective-C and manual memory management, he now basks in the comfort and (type) safety of Swift. He loves TDD, clean architecture and more recently getting to grips with functional programming and ReactiveX concepts. Abstract - UX doesn’t only come down to looks and speed. Error handling is quite as important, and in order to get it right it has to be easy and straightforward. However, for most, it is still a mundane task with painfully too many cases to consider. In this talk Helen and Kostas propose a recipe for reducing this friction and for adding complex error handling with just a few lines of code. You can follow up slides here ( https://github.com/tryswift/talks/blob/master/try!%20Swift%20NYC%202017/Error_handling_made_easy.pdf ), and Github repo here (https://github.com/Workable/swift-error-handler) try! Swift NYC Twitter - https://twitter.com/tryswiftnyc try! Swift NYC Twitter Hashtag - https://twitter.com/hashtag/tryswiftnyc try! Swift Website - https://www.tryswift.co/ try! Swift Conference Photos - https://www.flickr.com/photos/tryswift/albums try! Swift Conference Contact - info@tryswift.co try! Swift Conference © 2018 - Powered by NatashaTheRobot
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try! Swift NYC 2017 - Modern RxSwift Architectures
try! Swift NYC Conference 2017 - try! Swift is an immersive community gathering about Swift Language Best Practices, Application Development in Swift, Server-Side Swift, Open Source Swift, and the Swift Community in New York City! Topic - Modern RxSwift Architectures Speaker - Krunoslav Zaher Twitter - https://twitter.com/KrunoslavZaher Bio - Krunoslav Zaher worked on various projects for the past 16 years (augmented reality engines, BPM systems, mobile applications, bots …). Recently, he is studying functional programming and modeling systems in a declarative way using observable sequences. He’s the initial committer in the RxSwift repository. He’s helping out bootstrapping an ecosystem inside the RxSwiftCommunity, and sharing architecture ideas in the RxFeedback repository. Currently, he is building systems at the YC well-being startup Bellabeat. Abstract - This talk explains a cross platform architecture that works really well with RxSwift and other Rx implementations. try! Swift NYC Twitter - https://twitter.com/tryswiftnyc try! Swift NYC Twitter Hashtag - https://twitter.com/hashtag/tryswiftnyc try! Swift Website - https://www.tryswift.co/ try! Swift Conference Photos - https://www.flickr.com/photos/tryswift/albums try! Swift Conference Contact - info@tryswift.co try! Swift Conference © 2018 - Powered by NatashaTheRobot
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try! Swift NYC 2017 - Exploring Natural Language Processing
try! Swift NYC Conference 2017 - try! Swift is an immersive community gathering about Swift Language Best Practices, Application Development in Swift, Server-Side Swift, Open Source Swift, and the Swift Community in New York City! Topic - Exploring Natural Language Processing Speaker - Paola Mata Twitter - https://twitter.com/PaolaNotPaolo Bio - I’m Paola (not Paolo). I’m an iOS developer, social media addict, and occasional blogger based in Brooklyn. I’m currently building awesome apps at BuzzFeed, where last year I was part of the team that launched the highly acclaimed BuzzFeed News app. I am also actively involved in the tech community as co-founder of NYC Tech Latinas and regularly volunteer my time to promoting diversity in tech and supporting the next wave of new programmers. When I’m not buried in code, you’ll likely find me binge-watching a sci-fi series on Netflix, lifting at the gym, or hunting down good eats. Abstract - Paola Mata will introduce us to the natural language processing APIs, an underutilized but powerful set of APIs that have been updated for iOS 11 and explore the possibilities of harnessing their power to improve the user experience in apps. try! Swift NYC Twitter - https://twitter.com/tryswiftnyc try! Swift NYC Twitter Hashtag - https://twitter.com/hashtag/tryswiftnyc try! Swift Website - https://www.tryswift.co/ try! Swift Conference Photos - https://www.flickr.com/photos/tryswift/albums try! Swift Conference Contact - info@tryswift.co try! Swift Conference © 2018 - Powered by NatashaTheRobot
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try! Swift NYC 2017 - Swift Chatbots for Fun! and Profit
try! Swift NYC Conference 2017 - try! Swift is an immersive community gathering about Swift Language Best Practices, Application Development in Swift, Server-Side Swift, Open Source Swift, and the Swift Community in New York City! Topic - Swift Chatbots for Fun! and Profit Speaker - Ray Tsaihong Twitter - https://www.twitter.com/rmundo Bio - Technical debt collector. Master of Drunken Keyboard and Hidden Mouse. Abstract - Chatbots can be a fun way to try out server-side Swift. With or without AI, it’s possible to build compelling user experiences that are different from current native and web applications. In this talk, Ray will share some details of building useful chatbots in Swift. try! Swift NYC Twitter - https://twitter.com/tryswiftnyc try! Swift NYC Twitter Hashtag - https://twitter.com/hashtag/tryswiftnyc try! Swift Website - https://www.tryswift.co/ try! Swift Conference Photos - https://www.flickr.com/photos/tryswift/albums try! Swift Conference Contact - info@tryswift.co try! Swift Conference © 2018 - Powered by NatashaTheRobot
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try! Swift NYC 2017 - Building a Framework with VIPER
try! Swift NYC Conference 2017 - try! Swift is an immersive community gathering about Swift Language Best Practices, Application Development in Swift, Server-Side Swift, Open Source Swift, and the Swift Community in New York City! Topic - Building a Framework with VIPER Speaker - Sonam Dhingra Twitter - https://twitter.com/Sdhingra89 Bio - Sonam Dhingra is a Senior iOS engineer, entrepreneur, and spikeballer living in Brooklyn. She has a B.A in Business Administration & Finance and graduated from Boston University. Her background is extremely diverse. From being a real estate agent, to a motion graphics editor, to an entrepreneur, and for the past few years building iOS apps for a variety of companies. Her journey into programming included a 2 month iOS bootcamp in 2013. She has built over 3 iOS applications from the ground up through her experience at a few different agencies. Abstract - Viper design pattern, and show an implementation of the design pattern itself. try! Swift NYC Twitter - https://twitter.com/tryswiftnyc try! Swift NYC Twitter Hashtag - https://twitter.com/hashtag/tryswiftnyc try! Swift Website - https://www.tryswift.co/ try! Swift Conference Photos - https://www.flickr.com/photos/tryswift/albums try! Swift Conference Contact - info@tryswift.co try! Swift Conference © 2018 - Powered by NatashaTheRobot
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try! Swift NYC 2017 - Server-side Swift Using Vapor
try! Swift NYC Conference 2017 - try! Swift is an immersive community gathering about Swift Language Best Practices, Application Development in Swift, Server-Side Swift, Open Source Swift, and the Swift Community in New York City! Topic - Server-side Swift Using Vapor Speaker - Tanner Nelson Twitter - https://www.twitter.com/tanner0101 Bio - Tanner is a software engineer based in New York City. He studied Computer Science at New York University and has worked as a full stack, iOS, and embedded systems engineer. Tanner’s current focus is developing Vapor, an open source Server-Side Swift framework that he created in 2016. Abstract - The creator of Vapor, a web framework for Swift, explains why you should consider using Swift for your next server-side project. You will learn about what makes Swift a great server-side language, what you can create, and how to deploy your first Swift web app. try! Swift NYC Twitter - https://twitter.com/tryswiftnyc try! Swift NYC Twitter Hashtag - https://twitter.com/hashtag/tryswiftnyc try! Swift Website - https://www.tryswift.co/ try! Swift Conference Photos - https://www.flickr.com/photos/tryswift/albums try! Swift Conference Contact - info@tryswift.co try! Swift Conference © 2018 - Powered by NatashaTheRobot
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try! Swift NYC 2017 - A Funny Thing Happened On The Way To This Array
try! Swift NYC Conference 2017 - try! Swift is an immersive community gathering about Swift Language Best Practices, Application Development in Swift, Server-Side Swift, Open Source Swift, and the Swift Community in New York City! Topic - A Funny Thing Happened On The Way To This Array Speaker - Erica Sadun Twitter - https://twitter.com/ericasadun Bio - Erica Sadun writes lots of books. When not writing, she’s a full time parent of geeks who are brushing up on their world domination skills. According to her academic dosimeter, she’s acquired more education than any self-respecting person might consider wise. She enjoys deep diving into technology and has written, co-written, and contributed to dozens of books about computing and digital media. Sadun has blogged at TUAW, Ars Technica, O’Reilly, and Lifehacker and written for Make magazine. She has authored and co-authored more accepted proposals for Swift than anyone, including the Core Team. Abstract - Swift is flexible. You just won’t believe how vastly, hugely, mindbogglingly flexible it is. I mean, you might think it takes just a wee bit of code to populate some array, but that’s just peanuts compared to how many amazing ways you can use everything from closures to protocols to functional programming to build small collections for testing, prototyping, etc. These kinds of tiny challenges open you to Swift’s enormous design space. Just as it’s a mistake to think you can solve any major problem with potatoes, Swift’s power features help you move past obvious code to the expert, the arcane, and the reusable. Swift’s simplicity is an illusion. Move past that illusion. try! Swift NYC Twitter - https://twitter.com/tryswiftnyc try! Swift NYC Twitter Hashtag - https://twitter.com/hashtag/tryswiftnyc try! Swift Website - https://www.tryswift.co/ try! Swift Conference Photos - https://www.flickr.com/photos/tryswift/albums try! Swift Conference Contact - info@tryswift.co try! Swift Conference © 2018 - Powered by NatashaTheRobot
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try! Swift NYC 2017 - Machine Ethics and Emerging Technologies
try! Swift NYC Conference 2017 - try! Swift is an immersive community gathering about Swift Language Best Practices, Application Development in Swift, Server-Side Swift, Open Source Swift, and the Swift Community in New York City! Topic - Machine Ethics and Emerging Technologies Speaker - Paul Fenwick Twitter - https://twitter.com/pjf Bio - Paul Fenwick is an internationally acclaimed public speaker, developer, and science educator. Paul is well known for presenting on a diverse range of topics including privacy, neuroscience and neuroethics, Klingon programming, open source, depression and mental health, advancements in science, diversity, autonomous agents, and minesweeper automation. His dynamic presentation style and quirky humor have delighted audiences worldwide. Paul was awarded the 2013 O’Reilly Open Source award, and the 2010 White Camel award, both for outstanding contributions to the open source community. Abstract - Technology is advancing at a faster rate than society’s expectations, and many technologies go from the being the stuff of science-fiction to being consumer-available, with very little in the way of discussion in between. But with the increasing rate of progress comes many questions that are uncomfortable to contemplate, and which may be dangerous to ignore. When should an autonomous vehicle sacrifice itself and its owner to protect others? What happens when medical expert systems work on behalf of insurance agencies rather than patients? What happens when the world’s weapon systems—including combat drones—are able to make lethal decisions without human involvement? try! Swift NYC Twitter - https://twitter.com/tryswiftnyc try! Swift NYC Twitter Hashtag - https://twitter.com/hashtag/tryswiftnyc try! Swift Website - https://www.tryswift.co/ try! Swift Conference Photos - https://www.flickr.com/photos/tryswift/albums try! Swift Conference Contact - info@tryswift.co try! Swift Conference © 2018 - Powered by NatashaTheRobot
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