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Really good
Life
How a Twitter clone heralded a no-code boom
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<blockquote data-quote="cheryl" data-source="post: 2454" data-attributes="member: 1"><p><a href="https://www.bbc.com/worklife/article/20200810-how-a-twitter-clone-heralded-a-no-code-boom" target="_blank"><strong>How a Twitter clone heralded a no-code boom - BBC</strong></a></p><p></p><p>What happens when developing apps doesn’t require any coding skills at all? One technology is opening up a famously opaque industry, which could help level the tech playing field. </p><p></p><p>Many people who quit their jobs spend their new-found time updating LinkedIn profiles, polishing resumes or bingeing on Netflix. Not Vladimir Leytus. After leaving his analytics role at a start-up in 2015, Leytus holed up in his apartment to focus on an ambitious project: cloning Twitter. In less than a week, he’d built a nearly carbon copy of the social media network. And he did it all without writing a line of code.</p><p></p><p>As a recent MBA graduate, Leytus had plenty of ideas for apps, though he lacked skills in software development, a common barrier to would-be tech entrepreneurs. But then he discovered Bubble, a drag-and-drop builder with a deceptively simple interface. It’s one of several advanced ‘no-code’ tools enabling hundreds of thousands of people without technical backgrounds to create their own apps, effectively eliminating the need to learn a coding language before launching a start-up.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="cheryl, post: 2454, member: 1"] [URL='https://www.bbc.com/worklife/article/20200810-how-a-twitter-clone-heralded-a-no-code-boom'][B]How a Twitter clone heralded a no-code boom - BBC[/B][/URL] What happens when developing apps doesn’t require any coding skills at all? One technology is opening up a famously opaque industry, which could help level the tech playing field. Many people who quit their jobs spend their new-found time updating LinkedIn profiles, polishing resumes or bingeing on Netflix. Not Vladimir Leytus. After leaving his analytics role at a start-up in 2015, Leytus holed up in his apartment to focus on an ambitious project: cloning Twitter. In less than a week, he’d built a nearly carbon copy of the social media network. And he did it all without writing a line of code. As a recent MBA graduate, Leytus had plenty of ideas for apps, though he lacked skills in software development, a common barrier to would-be tech entrepreneurs. But then he discovered Bubble, a drag-and-drop builder with a deceptively simple interface. It’s one of several advanced ‘no-code’ tools enabling hundreds of thousands of people without technical backgrounds to create their own apps, effectively eliminating the need to learn a coding language before launching a start-up. [/QUOTE]
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How a Twitter clone heralded a no-code boom
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