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Apple Offers New Swift Learning Tools and Free Hour of Code

Image via Apple

Image via Apple

Apple brings free hour of code sessions from Dec 1- Dec 14 at all Apple Store Locations

Apple revealed new resources to help students learning coding in their Everyone Can Code program, first launched in 2016. Apple customers can register for a free Hour of Code session, available from December 1 through 14 at all Apple Store locations around the world. More than 5,000 schools, community colleges and technical colleges worldwide are using Everyone Can Code curriculum today.


Image via Apple

Image via Apple

To help students learn coding outside of a classroom, Apple also introduced Swift Coding Club kit materials for kids aged 8 and up to accompany learning Swift, Apple’s programming language by collaborating, prototyping apps and exploring how coding can make a difference with fun activities. In addition, Apple also has offered an Advanced Placement curriculum and App Development program with Swift certification for older students.

The Hour of Code program is in its sixth year and part of the Today at Apple series. There are a variety of sessions available, with Kids Hour sessions for kids aged six to 12 to explore coding with robots. Kids aged 12 and older can attend sessions with Swift Playgrounds and iPad to learn coding concepts.

Apple also is offering a new Hour of Code Facilitator Guide to help educators host sessions for Swift playgrounds and iPad apps, as part of Computer Science Education Week. Swift Playgrounds is available as a free download in the App Store in 15 languages, including English, German, French, Spanish, Italian, Chinese and Japanese.


Preparing Students Today for the Workforce of Tomorrow

Image via Apple

Image via Apple

By the start of the next school year, Apple will release a free AP Computer Science Principles course syllabus and curriculum, giving high school students the opportunity to earn Advanced Placement (AP) credit for learning App Development with Swift. The App Development with Swift Level 1 certification exams are offered through Certiport Authorized Testing Centers worldwide.









tags: Apple News, coding, Swift, children, adults, high school, learning, education, Today at Apple, community, events
categories: Apple News
Friday 12.07.18
Posted by Elf
 

WWDC: Some of our Favorite Updates & Announcements - Part 1

At WWDC earlier this month, Apple shared so many exciting updates. Here's a look at some of our favorites.

1. Launch of the new 10.5 inch iPad Pro

Building upon its bestselling and beloved product, the iPad, Apple announced a new 10.5 inch iPad Pro to replace the prior 9.7 inch model. The new sizing allows you to have a full on-screen keyboard. The new ProMotion display technology at a refresh rate of 120Hz offers easier, smoother scrolling with swift responses. Animation and movement are more seamless, making the new iPad Pro models (both 10.5 and 12.9) able to display HDR video for the first time.

For folks like us who like to draw and tweak things on screen, you'll also like the lowered 20ms latency of the Apple Pencil for a more natural drawing experience. We also love the bigger color range available with a brighter 600-night display with True Tone for outdoor lighting, and also the two cameras available (12 Megapixels rear-facing and 7 Megapixels front-facing) first introduced with the iPhone 7. The new iPad Pro is designed with iOS 11 in mind.

Photo from Apple.com

Photo from Apple.com

2. AR Kit Offers Immersive App Experiences

Apple introduced the new AR Kit where we can build augmented reality apps for the iPhone. This means we can track motion, estimate scale, plan out ambient lighting and even locate objects (like a plane for instance). AR Kit builds upon the iPhone's existing high quality imaging capabilities and thus do not require additional external hardware like the HoloLens from Microsoft.

Photo from Apple.com

Photo from Apple.com

Photo from Apple.com

Photo from Apple.com

AR Kit Demo at WWDC 2017 via WingNut Studio, game development company founded by film director, Peter Jackson

AR Kit Demo at WWDC 2017 via WingNut Studio, game development company founded by film director, Peter Jackson

3. iOS 11 Design Changes

The new iOS 11 offers some design changes system-wide, providing an increasingly seamless look with borderless buttons and bolder fonts, while overhauling some interface elements such as the Control Center with customization options and new animations. The Lock Screen and Notification Center are now merged, simplifying access.

New iOS 11 Control Center via Apple.com

New iOS 11 Control Center via Apple.com

New iOS 11 Integrated Notifications & Lock Screen via Apple.com

New iOS 11 Integrated Notifications & Lock Screen via Apple.com

4. Oldest and Youngest App Developers

There's a lot to love about the new releases and product enhancements that were announced in 2017 WWDC, but one announcement by far, caught our attention immediately - the oldest (80s) and youngest (10 years old) app developers. Amazing, isn't it?

Just goes to show that age is literally no limit - on either end of the spectrum! So maybe you started the first part of your life doing one thing. Who knows? There may be an app developer in you yet!! :)

Youngest (10) and oldest (80s) app developers at WWDC 2017.

Youngest (10) and oldest (80s) app developers at WWDC 2017.

5. Xcode's Fast New Refactoring System

In terms of code, one thing that we're excited about is the ease and speed of use in the new refactoring system and source editor available in Xcode 9. This definitely makes things faster for repetitive steps and also better organization.

Image of Ken Orr, senior Xcode manager presenting at WWDC 2017.

Image of Ken Orr, senior Xcode manager presenting at WWDC 2017.

We're also excited about the GitHub integration now available through easy cloning with full notes.

This is the first blog post in a series of 3 covering some highlights from WWDC 2017.


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tags: WWDC, refactoring, Xcode, source editor, development, coding, ease, swift, objective C, Apple, iPad Pro, ProMotion, Elf, elfagency, iOS 11, design, animation, app developers, AR Kit, WingNut, Peter Jackson, wwdc summary 2017
categories: Apple News
Friday 06.30.17
Posted by Elf
 

Having a Creative Career and Making an Impact

creative

We live in an incredible time. Art and science intersect in new, profound ways. Technology has also become more accessible, allowing for the widespread adoption of new ideas faster than ever before. 

Like many other tech founders, Steve Jobs, founder of Apple, could have kept his company solely within the technology space. Instead, he said that a great business lay at the intersection of liberal arts and the sciences. This vision and foresight is so apparent today at Apple through its product line that has helped unleash the creative power and potential of so many individuals across the world.

For anyone interested in a creative career, the swift changes happening today as art and science mesh and interact in new ways, is also very exciting.

Having the ability to create - whether it is writing, designing, drawing, coding, teaching, research, playing music or inventing a new product or service - is a wonderful gift. Being able to apply that in a way that is meaningful can also offer you tremendous fulfillment.

The creative class, a term coined by Richard Florida, accounts for 1/3 of the workforce and earns over 1/2 of the nation's wages.

An economist and social scientist, Richard Florida came up with the term creative class in his book The Rise of the Creative Class to constitute people who were working in professions where they constantly create and "fully engage in the creative process." (2002, pg. 69). This includes a large variety of occupations including science, computer programming, engineering, research, education, arts, design and media.

This class is also responsible for creating entirely new jobs that did not exist even five to ten years ago. The demand for these positions is accelerating today. In fact, an extensive study by the World Economic Forum revealed that as high as 65% of children entering primary school today will be in jobs that do not yet exist. 

Future of Jobs Report, World Economic Forum 2018

Future of Jobs Report, World Economic Forum 2018

So how do you build a creative career that uses your abilities and offers you ways to make an impact?

We've got a few ideas. :) 
 

1. Have Purpose
Work that has meaning, resonates with you. Having purpose in what you do, is both a grounding experience and an empowering one. From that place, you grow aware of your strengths and abilities and learn how you can contribute effectively. You also become part of something bigger than yourself. Purpose gives meaning to your work.

Apple CEO Tim Cook recently shared in his commencement address to MIT graduates how working at Apple gave him purpose he was seeking. He also encouraged graduates to "use your minds and hands — and your hearts — to build something bigger than yourselves." Tim also asked this great question, "How will you serve humanity?"
 

2. Allow Yourself the Freedom to Experiment and Fail
It may be hard to believe but when Thomas Edison was in school, his teachers considered him not intelligent enough to learn anything. Edison thankfully did not take this to heart. His persistence in work was remarkable. Edison failed 1,000 times before he finally succeeded in inventing the light bulb, one of the greatest inventions of modern society. So many entrepreneurs and inventors have failed multiple times over a long span of time before they ultimately found success in their ideas. During his 84 years, Thomas Edison went on to acquire 1,093 patents, inventing the phonograph, the  incandescent light bulb and one of the first motion picture cameras. Edison also created the first industrial research laboratory in the world. What would have happened if he just gave up?

We like Edison's mindset to keep experimenting and not giving up, where you allow yourself the ability to fail and make mistakes and try again! This gives you the freedom to begin and to try out new ideas. The freedom to experiment is often where the best ideas and solutions come from. We value both experimentation and giving each person working at Elf the freedom to think independently. A great example of this in action is Gmail, in use by 1.2 billion people as of July 2017 and by 25% of the American workforce, that was created by a Google employee Paul Buchheit during the 20 percent time given to employees every week to experiment and create their own ideas. Many apps today come out of experimentation and responding to problems that people perceive and wish to address. 
 

3. Keep a Solution-Oriented Design and Engineering Mindset
We love designing at Elf. We also have found that having a design and engineering mindset helps us solve client problems. We go in with a clear goal to solve problems and to come up with winning solutions, and then we go and accomplish that. This mindset can be applied to anything though. It is not limited to digital creative work.

Often in creating intellectual property and designing innovative experiences for clients, we have discovered that we are also transforming their existing businesses. Looking at a problem in a new way can also help identify and then address previously unmet customer needs. This in turn, also engage new customers and help expand our clients' customer base and audience.

We think that many of the global problems that we see today are design problems - problems that can be solved! By using your mind in new creative ways, who knows - maybe you will be the individual who rises to the challenge and helps design and engineer a solution to an existing problem!
 

4. Be Original
Creativity demands originality. To do something original, you create something that has never been done before. It is unique to you. This is often the main reason you wish to be in a creative profession - you have a deep desire to express your own ideas.


5. Be Skilled, Love Craftsmanship and Strive for Excellence
Creating anything of value requires a desire to excel. It draws upon your skills (innate and learned), a love of craftmanship, beauty and precision. You care about the work you do and contributing at a higher level. You own your work and you want to create value.


6. Help Others
We've found in helping others, that we grow too. At Elf, we have a couple of different initiatives that we have done over the years. Our magazine Hayden's has grown significantly over the years since its founding in Dec 2008 to become a 9 M+ global community. By sharing the works of visual artists and musicians, we've learned a lot as well. It is an enriching and inspiring experience.

Additional ideas in the works include an accelerator to help graduating high school students build out new business ideas while they are at college and a hack-a-thon series that we are just beginning in 2017. We also host portfolio reviews periodically with Behance to encourage aspiring creatives within our local communities both here and abroad at our office in London, England.

Through all of our events and community endeavors, we've noticed some common threads. Creative people consistently seek out:

- high quality experiences
- opportunities to excel and collaborate
- open environments for learning
- opportunities to validate their creativity
- recognition and appreciation for their work
- opportunities to be creative in other ways (lifestyle and recreational choices)
- inclusive and tolerant environments
 

7. Employ Creative Thinking
Being original could be a small thing, spinning off an existing idea, product or service or a small improvement that improves a product or service. As a designer, it could be in the way you take a complex idea and present it effectively in one illustration.

It can also be a very big disruptive idea, resulting in businesses that completely upend industries through innovative approaches to meeting customer needs.

The sharing economy is an example of a big disruptive idea. AirBnB revolutionized the travel lodging industry by offering a way for people to rent out their homes without actually owning or controlling at least a stake in all the rental properties in question (like prior practice). Uber also changed the transportation industry in a similar way. This shift from an asset-driven economy to a sharing economy is happening across many industry sectors.

When you have got a big disruptive idea, you may not have any benchmarks or relevant industry data to learn from. You are essentially creating something entirely new that has not been done before. You need courage and determination to do this despite the unknowns that you may face.

You can also create a spinoff or variation of an existing idea that has been met with great customer success. The meal delivery service industry is a good example of this. Blue Apron was one of the first companies to offer packaged weekly meals delivered to your home, saving you time going to the grocery store while helping you stay healthy and teaching you how to cook. Since then, many companies now offer this. Some provide additional options like paleo, gluten-free or other dietary choices such as SunBasket and yet others provide even pre-cut vegetables like Terra's Kitchen. In the car rental and transportation industry as well, companies like Lyft and locally based businesses have now developed models similar to Uber but with their own differentiating factors (better customer service, quality of vehicles) that make them stand out.

We don't expect you to come up with a new idea for a new business product or service when you arrive or even while you work at Elf. What we do want to see though is curiosity, a desire to experiment, a willingness to collaborate and an internal drive and passion for excellence.

On a last note, we have remarkable opportunities available today to us to create new innovations and to see things in new ways. This also allows for more individuals to share their ideas and creativity, which in turn, leads to inclusivity and bringing people from different industries and backgrounds together.

We're excited by this and what we can do to contribute to our society and the world, in both big and small ways. We hope reading this inspires you to grow and to become all that you can be.


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tags: creative career, elf agency, purpose, impact, design, coding, writing, science, art, steve jobs, edison, tim cook, creative people, creative jobs, opportunities, growth, mindset, design thinking, engineering
categories: Elf News & Case Studies
Sunday 06.18.17
Posted by Elf
 

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