Why you shouldn’t miss the May #4Sessions. Be warned!

Equipo Comunicacion 03/05/2017

    May has arrived and with it a new appointment with the #4Sessions of our comrades of [T]echdencias.

    The new edition will be on Saturday 20th at the spectacular Mobile World Centre in Plaça de Catalunya (Barcelona), in the format you already know: four technological update talks, a breakfast with networking, lots of laughter and friendly faces. And with free admission, because one of the bases of the philosophy of [T]echdencias is the conviction that training is worth a lot but should cost little. That’s why they make it accessible through a new session of the #4Sessions, for which you can already register for the 4Sessions through the Meetup, and that bring this agenda:

     

    Give me the Power(Point)!

    by Toni Recio and Laura Camino

    Welcome to the metatalk: the talk that presents how to make the presentation of a talk with PowerPoint. Basic functions, tricks, rules, aberrations and other keys so that your PPT does not end with you before you finish with it. If you want to see code, this is not your talk. Of course, if you are looking to take advantage of PowerPoint, solve doubts about how to use it, learn tricks that will make your life easier, or if you have not understood this synopsis, you would do well not to miss it. Give me the Power(Point)!

     

    Continuous integration with Docker and Jenkins

    by Sergio Garcia

    Have you ever heard: “on my computer it works, but when you upload it to production peta”? In this presentation we will forget this phrase.
    Continuous integration is here to stay, how about taking a look at it and avoiding headaches?

     

    Universal app deployment without store with PowerShell

    by Juan Cuello

    Demonstrates how to create and program a basic and simple infrastructure for automated deployment of UWP apps using powershell. And it works…

     

    One app to master them all. A unique code to tie them to .Net

    by Juanjo Montiel

    When we develop an app, we want as many people as possible to access it. However, in the .Net ecosystem, developing a desktop application for the three major operating systems (Windows, MAC and Linux), was a complicated task, only possible if we used the Mono platform. However, with the arrival of .Net Core, a new world of possibilities opens up, being able to run .Net code on any platform natively. In this talk, we’ll look at how to create a cross-platform app using .Net Core with a web interface, and how to package it to run transparently on Windows, Linux, or MAC using Electron.

    Are you ready to write a single code and master them all?

     

     

     

     

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