Book Image

Mac Application Development by Example: Beginner's Guide

By : Robert Wiebe
Book Image

Mac Application Development by Example: Beginner's Guide

By: Robert Wiebe

Overview of this book

It's never been more important to have the ability to develop an App for Mac OS X. Whether it's a System Preference, a business app that accesses information in the Cloud, or an application that uses multi-touch or uses a camera, you will have a solid foundation in app development to get the job done.Mac Application Development by Example takes you through all the aspects of using the Xcode development tool to produce complete working apps that cover a broad range of topics. This comprehensive book on developing applications covers everything a beginner needs to know and demonstrates the concepts using examples that take advantage of some of the most interesting hardware and software features available.You will discover the fundamental aspects of OS X development while investigating innovative platform features to create a final product which take advantage of the unique aspects of OS X.Learn how to use Xcode tools to create and share Mac OS X apps. Explore numerous OS X features including iCloud, multi-touch trackpad, and the iSight camera.This book provides you with an illustrated and annotated guide to bring your idea to life using fundamental concepts that work on Mac.
Table of Contents (17 chapters)
Mac Application Development by Example Beginner's Guide
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

What is iCloud?


When software designers, network architects, system designers, and other assorted technical geeks draw pictures of networks they use the cloud symbol to represent wide area networks. More specifically, in many network diagrams, they use the cloud symbol to represent the most famous wide area network of them all, the Internet. Companies have been trying, with varying degrees of success, to provide wide area network (AOL and CompuServe) and Internet based (MobileMe, Yahoo, and MSN) services for decades.

With the introduction of mobile computing platforms (phones and tablets), a real need for Internet based services has finally arrived, and since the marketing folks want consumers to distinguish these needed services from the previous efforts to provide unneeded services, they have decided to call them cloud-based services.

So in answer to the question, iCloud is nothing more than Apple's marketing, or brand name, for its Internet based services. Specifically, iCloud provides...