This week Telerik not only shipped Icenium updates, but also a brand new Kendo UI release! It's a big week if you're a HTML5 developer. One of the things that shipped alongside Kendo UI is an extension to the Kendo UI Music Store demo, and in this post we'll take a look at how you can quickly get your own copy of the demo app on your devices using Icenium Mist and Ion.
It’s Kendo UI launch day, and I hope you’re as excited to get your hands on the new Kendo UI bits as we are to share them with you! We’ve been hard at work since the Q3 2012 release to bring you the most jam-packed release since our initial launch over a year ago!
Telerik and Nokia Developer are proud to announce The Boston Hackathon on April 13th and 14th. Whether you’re a novice or expert, Day 1 will hone your Windows Phone ninja skills with hands-on tutorials and demos. You’ll learn how easy it is to implement cool OS features like Proximity Sensors and Bluetooth as well as polishing your UI with the RadControls.
Our v1.3 release is a prime example of the Icenium team's dedication to simplifying your mobile development. It is a culmination of your direct requests and our team's drive to present you with all the tool to make your development experience as pleasant and as efficient as possible.
The first big bang for this year brought to you a great set of components for your enterprise applications – RadPivotGrid, RadPdfViewer, as well as improvements in RadChartView. Today, I would like to shed more light on RadPdfViewer and what it can do for your application and its end-users.
The next major Kendo UI release is almost here! This Wednesday,March 20th is the big day, and the online keynote is where you need to be to get your first hosted overview of what's new. Plus, we're giving away some cool prizes!
Asynchronous delays are the second biggest automation issue you need to nail down in your environment—locators/find logic being the first. Asynch operations cause all kinds of grief for even experienced automators. It can be extraordinarily frustrating to try and figure out exactly which thing you need to delay your test script’s execution for. I’ve said it once, I’ve said it a thousand times: DO NOT EVER rely on execution delays, manual pauses, or Thread.Sleep() to handle your tests’ timing issues. Ever. Period. (OK, maybe once in an extreme situation. I’ve written tens of thousands of UI tests. I’ve justifiably used ...