Sunday, February 7, 2016

Mobile Application Development Tools

These are some of the sites that have a mobile application development tools for free

InfoWorld

techworld

TechTarget

Excellent Platforms for Building Mobile Apps

Xamarin

PhoneGap

Appcelerator

ifactr

kony

sap

alphasoftware

5app

appindex

 



for core development:

If you are a coder then go for below IDEs to find the best mobile application development tools:
Android Studio (recommended) or Eclipse for Android and
Xcode for iOS

If you want to develope iOS apps, then go for XCode and download it from apple official source. https://developer.apple.com/downloads/
However if you want to develope Android apps then go for Android Studio (Latest IDE for Android development) from here http://developer.android.com/tools/studio/index.html OR Eclipse (Old way of developing Android apps).

Wednesday, February 3, 2016

MORE EFFECTIVE MEETINGS

You Should Take Notes in meetings.
Recently I met with some young, green entrepreneurs to discuss their business idea. I gave them a bunch of feedback at the end of the meeting. They nodded hungrily and said they appreciated it.

One problem. Neither took a single note during the meeting. As I read off a list of 6 or 7 specific things I had written down in my notebook, they nodded but did nothing else.

I’m a notebook-and-pen kind of guy. I try to carry a notebook around with me everywhere because I never know when a good idea will strike me, or when someone will tell me something I want to remember. In meetings, I not only take notes to remember things — I’ll trust paper notes over someone’s memory any day of the week — but also to signal respect to the person talking. I want to show that I value their ideas.

I apply this value the other way, too. That is, if I give someone specific, responsive feedback over several points, I appreciate it when he writes it down because it shows he’s taking my time / ideas seriously.

Here’s the catch: sometimes there’s rationale not to scribble notes in a meeting. If you’re trying to build a personal relationship with someone, or are out with a friend, sometimes taking notes can make the interaction seem too transaction. Also, if you are taking notes but your partner is not, a subtle power dynamic can emerge (ie, the person taking notes is less than the person not taking notes).

In the end, it’s a personal choice. I take notes all the time, regardless of situation. There’s no worse feeling than trying to remember that golden nugget of wisdom that you didn’t write down. I also try to signal that I value my partner’s time. But I can appreciate the perspective that in certain non-professional interactions taking notes can be weird and maybe counterproductive in the long-run.

People who says that they can remember each and every bit of something they are wrong. even science cannot prove it that human brain can remember everything. If someone saying that they can remember means that they are at the level a bit below their actual strength. For Example: a 6 year old kid can easily remember a table of 2 but for 4 year old kid its quite difficult.
ref http:// casnocha .com /2008/04/should-you-take.html