Apple has expanded its Developer Academy to two new locations in Detroit and Korea.
Courses running one month and one year are available.
Apple today announced that it is opening new developer academies in Detroit and Korea. The move to Michigan will be the first time such an academy has landed on United States soil.
Apple says that there are two different courses available to those looking to learn about developing for Apple s ecosystem – one runs for 30 days while another can run up to 12 months with the latter going deeper into coding and professional skills.
The first Apple Developer Academy opened in Brazil in 2013, with the goal of providing the tools and training for aspiring entrepreneurs, developers, and designers to find and create jobs in the thriving iOS app economy. Since then, the company has opened more than a dozen academies across the world with two more on the way: one in Korea, and one in Detroit, Michigan, the first-ever US location.
Michigan State University has started taking applications to attend the Apple Developer Academy, a code education program it is partnering with Apple on in Detroit.
The Detroit Apple Developer Academy, announced in January and made in partnership with Michigan State University offers training to would-be developers looking to get into app development. On Tuesday, potential candidates for the program were able to apply to take part.
According to the MSU site for the academy, anyone aged 18 years or older can apply for the one-year program. Students will be able to work on real-world challenges and connect with community and industry partners.
What you need to know
New research says tech s big four, including Apple, only pay about 60% of the average tax burden of companies worldwide.
Nikkei Asia analyzed 57,000 companies to compare.
The average ratios given for the four was 15.4%, 9.7% less than the global average.
New research from Nikkei Asia claims that Apple, Google, Amazon, and Facebook only pay around 60% of the average tax burden of more than 50,000 companies worldwide.
The average tax burden ratio for top American IT companies, collectively known as the Big Four Google, Apple, Facebook and Amazon is about 15%, or around 60% of the average among more than 50,000 large companies worldwide, a recent Nikkei analysis finds.
Michigan State University has started taking applications to attend the Apple Developer Academy, a code education program it is partnering with Apple on in Detroit.
The Detroit Apple Developer Academy, announced in January and made in partnership with Michigan State University offers training to would-be developers looking to get into app development. On Tuesday, potential candidates for the program were able to apply to take part.
According to the MSU site for the academy, anyone aged 18 years or older can apply for the one-year program. Students will be able to work on real-world challenges and connect with community and industry partners.
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Apple MDK d, murder death killed, the iMac Pro. Not the 27-inch silver Intel non-Pro. But the Space Black. Massively multicore Xeon machine. And while we ve since gotten an all-new, all colorful M1 iMac, I want Apple to bring the iMac Pro back as well, in an all-new, all-better, all blacker, all M1X final form. And here s why! Not innovating any more my @$$
In 2013 Apple cut the cheese-grater and introduced the trashcan-shaped Darth Vader helmet of a Mac Pro. A triangle of Xeon CPU and dual AMD GPU that was either meant to be a… a harbinger of the general compute future or just the further appliance-ification of Apple s Mac lineup. Starting at $3000.