AnDevCamp 2012 Dates Announced: the Google IO weekend

After several rounds of review, SVAndroid core team had decided to host the AnDevCamp 2012 at the Google IO 2012 weekend, that is Friday for June 29.

Thanks for the 170 people who register to this event before we confirm the details! We are finalized the venue right now and at this point, we are pretty sure we can get a venue and several sponsors.  So we are going to lower the price to $20 from $40.

The AnDevCamp 2012 structure will be similar to 2011 as well as Google TV Hackathon but with more technical sessions.

 

We are looking for sponsors and partners now! Contact by:

https://docs.google.com/spreadsheet/viewform?formkey=dEZXYWJGQzJVTGpNRVBibnE4aERNTVE6MA

Twitter: #andevcamp

Current registration is pre-registration. We will start to collect money after few more details are confirmed.

For more details, see the full listing:
http://www.svandroid.org/events/41534612/

Made in Silicon Valley: App Demos at CTIA Wireless Android Bootcamp

Aquí for Android

http://www.aquiapp.com Yummy Melon Software LLC

Jam11

http://www.jam11.com Topobile, Inc.

Phone Halo

http://www.phonehalo.com Phone Halo

Tellmewhere

Kathy Barnes BadTech SAS

Secret Agent

http://www.android.aerende.com Aerende, Inc.

gmob 365 chat

Multiple Madness

Mobile Application Development Academy VRogers

Whiz Media Flow Platform

http://www.whizti.com Whiz Technologies Inc.

Android Bootcamp Session: Android App Discovery and Monetization by Getjar

The topic is Android App Discovery and Monetization.
Time: 2PM – 255PM
Day: Oct 7th
Please feel free to drop me any questions you’d like me to ask you but in general here are some of the types of questions I’m thinking of putting out there:
- App Discovery:  How easy is it to get your Android app discovered?  what kinds of tools are out there and how do they compare to see Rim or Apple?
- App Discovery:  As app stores become more congested marketing becomes a necessity.  Is marketing even affordable for the vast majority of developers?
- App Discovery: What’s your experience with cheap or free app discovery?  What kind of tools are out there that are either free or cheap that developers can use?
- App Monetization:  Briefly summarize the variety of business models out there that developers can use to monetize apps on Android
- App Monetization:  Google Check Out on AM:  Success or failure?  What does Google need to do to help monetization?
- App Monetization:  Returns.  Good for consumers sucks for developers.  Is there a happy middle ground?

Google Announced Android Developer Lab day world wide

Google just published its world wide Android Lab Day event.
The Android Advocates are going on a world tour, traveling to locations all
around the globe! Hear about the state of the Android platform, get hands-on with the latest version of the SDK, meet like-minded Android engineers, play with the latest Android devices, test your apps, and ask your questions directly to Android team members.
Upcoming Sessions

North America

Date Location Time * Status
Feb. 4, 2010 Austin, Texas, USA 5pm-9pm Open! Register Now!
Feb. 8, 2010 Seattle, Washington, USA 2pm-6pm Open! Register Now!
Feb. 8, 2010 Waterloo, Ontario, Canada 2pm-6pm Open! Register Now!
Feb. 9, 2010 Washington D.C., USA 2pm-6pm Open! Register Now!
Feb. 10, 2010 Mountain View, California, USA 2pm-6pm Open! Register Now!
Feb. 11, 2010 Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA 10am-2pm Open! Register Now!
Feb. 12, 2010 New York, New York, USA 2pm-6pm Open! Register Now!

Europe

Date Location Time * Status
Feb. 2, 2010 London, UK 9am-1pm Open! Register Now!
Feb. 8, 2010 Paris, France 2pm-6pm Open! Register Now!
Feb. 10, 2010 Berlin, Germany 2pm-6pm Open! Register Now!
Feb. 12, 2010 Zurich, Switzerland 2pm-6pm Open! Register Now!
Feb. 13, 2010 Madrid, Spain 2pm-6pm Open! Register Now!

Asia

Date Location Time * Status
Feb. 28, 2010 Singapore TBD Open! Register Now!
March 3, 2010 Taipei, Taiwan TBD Open! Register Now!
March 4, 2010 Hong Kong TBD Open! Register Now!

Detail may still change.  To find out more, visit the official site:

Registration open for Google Developer Android Lab Day at Mountain View

Google’s Android Advocates are going on a world tour, traveling to locations all around the globe! Hear about the state of the Android platform, get hands-on with the latest version of the SDK, meet like-minded Android engineers, play with the latest Android devices, test your apps, and ask your questions directly to Android team members.

The Lab day had been scheduled at Feb 10th from 2Pm to 6PM

Space is limited. This is special half day Google event. You must register at Google’s official registration site to attend the Mountain View event:

http://sites.google.c…
Due to limited seating, please register ASAP.

7 places to find help with developing your Android application

From android.opensourceror.org – luke.

If you’ve ever used a search engine to look for answers to your development questions, you know there are a lot of people out there talking about Android who aren’t too interested in development. You’ve probably also found that the reference documentation for the Android platform isn’t terribly helpful without some context.

Sometimes you just want to ask questions and get answers. Here are 7 ways to do that.

1. d.android.com – especially the “Resources” tab

This is the canonical source for all things related to Android development and an obvious starting point. The site gets changed around occasionally – there used to be a “Community” tab with links to get support, but as of this writing the “Resources” tab is the place to start if you’re looking for answers to questions. Some of the following items are listed there, but this would be a short post if it were a complete guide! Anyway, check back there for further developments.

Of course, the site also has a pretty good search box to find help among the tutorials, blog posts, and documentation there.

2. IRC – #android-dev on freenode; developer office hours

As detailed in that “Resources” tab, anyone can join an ongoing chat on the freenode network – see the link for more information on how. For application development, the most relevant channel seems to be #android-dev; there are frequently several fairly knowledgeable developers (including ones that work at Google) lurking in that channel, and many are pretty helpful, even with “dumb” questions, as long as they are asked sincerely and follow netiquette. There are a few other channels for folks to talk about Android in general, about Android’s OS development, about root and ROM hacks, and so forth, but you’ll know when you need those.

Recently, Google developers have offered “office hours” on this IRC channel. It remains to be seen if they’ll keep doing this and how useful it will be, but give it a try. Questions may be asked (and later, answered) via the Moderator sessions that are set up for each session of office hours.

3. Twitter – #androiddev

The “Resources” tab notes that you can follow AndroidDev on Twitter. I haven’t found much benefit from it yet, and it’s been pretty quiet lately, but perhaps it will pick up.

Of more interest are other developers who are tweeting. Many are beginning to use the #androiddev hashtag when tweeting about application development (#android is pretty much dominated by speculation about hardware, OS, and app releases). Follow them, ask questions, and contribute to the conversation.

4. Google groups

Google groups are like mailing lists with better-than-usual web interfaces. A number of these are listed on the “Resources” tab, and you would do well to read the guidelines there. Probably the most immediately relevant are android-beginners and android-developers.

5. Stack Overflow

The Google groups are pretty great for conversations, but when you’re asking questions involving code and looking for detailed answers, a general conversational tool may not be optimal. Recently Google officially recognized that the Stack Overflow website was becoming popular for Android programming questions, promised to work with the site, and encouraged asking beginner questions there.

6. Books

Do books answer questions? Well, not directly, and furthermore you may be overwhelmed by the sheer number of Android books on Amazon. However, books have authors, and these days authors are often answering questions about the books on the book website. Of the very limited sample of books I’ve encountered, I’ve found Hello, Android to be helpful and relatively current. The book’s website has a link fordiscussions, and the author (by the way) runs the Planet Android blog aggregator. No, I wasn’t paid anything for that mention!

7. Local meetups

If you’re lucky enough to live in an area where there is already an Android meetup (or even a mobile development meetup) then you can join and try your questions in person. If no one has created one near you yet, create your own! You don’t need to be particularly experienced with Android to do it – create the event and people will come. I started one for the NC Triangle – if you’re in the area, come on by.

8. Bonus: the blogosphere!

There are a lot of blogs related to Android development; the best place to find them is on the blogroll for Planet Android. Some of these blogs will fill you in on information you can’t find anywhere else; for instance, I know of no one except Diego Torres Milano that’s talking about testing Android applications and TDD. Go to the relevant blogs and ask questions in the comments if you can. And if you can’t find anyone talking about what you want to know, become part of the solution and start your own blog! Discuss what you’re trying and the problems you’re having, and link to other blogs with pieces of the puzzle.

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