iPhone Design Award-Winning Projects

iPhone Design Award-Winning Projects

von: Chris Dannen

Apress, 2010

ISBN: 9781430272342 , 216 Seiten

Format: PDF, OL

Kopierschutz: DRM

Windows PC,Mac OSX für alle DRM-fähigen eReader Apple iPad, Android Tablet PC's Online-Lesen für: Windows PC,Mac OSX,Linux

Preis: 35,30 EUR

  • Fundamentals of Computerized Tomography - Image Reconstruction from Projections
    Et voilĂ  i robot - Etica ed estetica nell'era delle macchine
    User-Centered Interaction Design Patterns for Interactive Digital Television Applications
    Pervasive Computing - Innovations in Intelligent Multimedia and Applications
    Multimedia Interaction and Intelligent User Interfaces - Principles, Methods and Applications
    Distributed Video Sensor Networks
  • Codes and turbo codes
    Grids, Clouds and Virtualization
    Online Worlds: Convergence of the Real and the Virtual
    Self-Service in the Internet Age - Expectations and Experiences
    Social Media on the Road - The Future of Car Based Computing
    Evaluating User Experience in Games - Concepts and Methods
 

Mehr zum Inhalt

iPhone Design Award-Winning Projects


 

This book profiles developers who have received the prestigious Apple Design Award for iPhone app excellence. You'll learn all about what makes these apps truly standout, including explanations of great user interface design and implementation, as well as the code under the hood that makes these the most responsive, intuitive, useful, and just plain fun apps running on the iPhone.
  • Insightful profiles of the developers behind Tweetie, Topple 2, AccuTerra, Postage, and Wooden Labyrinth 3D
  • Detailed explanations of the technical wizardry that makes these apps tick
  • Full-color screenshots and copious downloadable code snippets to get you started building the next iPhone Design Award-winning apps


Chris Dannen is a technology journalist for FastCompany magazine and CBS Interactive. He has authored one Apress book, iPhone Design Award-Winning Projects: The Definitive Guide, published in early 2010, and wrote Google Voice for Dummies (2009). He has also written for Inc., Rolling Stone, and Discover magazines. He has worked extensively with foursquare and Facebook in the past, including for his last Apress book, and also has good relationships with developers at Twitter. He holds a degree in English literature from the University of Virginia. He is based in Brooklyn, New York.