Fake hardware, Makefiles, protocols and churn... Lots of iOS and Swift content too.

It has been a while since my last episode. But no worries, I am not gone. January has been a super busy month and I have been working on some exciting things this month. Hopefully I can share a bit more on that soon. It involves setting up a new project using a micro framework architecture using Tuist.io. If you never checked out that too, make sure you do.Also, you can now support my podcast with a subscription directly through my podcast hosting provider. I love Buzzsprout for the way they keep raising the bar as a podcast hosting provider.I did part of the recording and editing after the surprise wedding of my nephew. The surprise was on us, the guests, do if I missed something in editing, now you know why.In this episode I am going to talk about many things:Fake hardware and my my quest for a new microphoneReading hardwareUtilizing Makefiles for Swift projectsShift in the protocol paradigmDebouncing with Swift concurrency5 Techniques to Effortlessly Send Data from UIKit to SwiftUIUsing JavaScript in a Swift appCreating App Prototypes from Low to High-FidelityThe Tyranny of the Churn EquationText modifiers in SwiftUIApplying Built-In Image Filters In SwiftMaking a serverless Swift function with Fastly and UpstashRunwayPut your mobile releases on autopilot and keep the whole team in sync throughout. More info on runway.team Lead Software Developer Learn best practices for being a great lead software developer.Support the showRate me on Apple Podcasts. Send feedback on SpeakPipeOr contact me on Mastodon: https://hachyderm.io/@appforce1Support my podcast with a monthly subscription, it really helps.My book: Being a Lead Software Developer

Om Podcasten

Weekly podcast discussing the latest updates, tools and events relevant to iOS app developers. I will also have a couple of reoccurring show sections to spread the word on fellow iOS developers doing fun and interesting things. On top of that I am working hard to do interviews with people relevant to iOS app developers. Think peers, teachers, bloggers who will have an open discussion with me so you can see what passion, hard work and a great community can do for your personal work and success.