You want to learn to work with HTML5 to boast of another line in your skill set? Too proud to ask someone to teach you? Well. It isn’t really required either. Here are 3 wonderful Android Apps to learn HTML5.
1. Learn HTML5
Created for a thesis about interactive textbooks for Internet technologies, this educational app is easy to use, and ideal for beginners. Listing all the elements used in the HTML5 Explanation as well as presenting tests in statistical tables adds to the user-friendly nature. Popular among users, it’s scored an average of 4.7 stars out of 5 on Google Play.
Download Here
2. HTML5 & PHP
‘Another useful tutorial for those new to HTML5. This handy app helps you learn the new upgrade via the various tags associated with HTML5 and PHP. This is a particularly useful app for those just starting out as it allows users to attach notes. You can also access all content offline, for those pesky times when you’re out of wireless reach.
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3. HTML WAGmob
If you’re completely new to HTML5 you can’t go past WAGmob’s handy app. Featuring flash cards and quizzes alongside tutorials, WAGmob provides easy tips and lessons designed to accompany the HTML5 guidebook. With an average rating of 4.2 from Google play users this is definitely one app to invest in if you’re looking to get to grips with HTML5. Available for Android.
The world of computer language development can be a difficult one to navigate but armed with one of these easy to use guides you’ll be a master of HTML5 in no time!
Download here
Ita Ewa, Nigeria’s minister of science and technology, has said the ongoing Abuja Silicon Valley project will create thousands of jobs in the country’s technology sector. Speaking to participants at a workshop on the project, the minister said it would be sited on 79.8 hectares of land located in Sheda, Abuja.
More than 100 young Nigerians are teaming up with Google to add restaurants, markets, hospitals and other prominent locations in the Nigerian capital to Google Maps. Youth leaders say by mapping their city, they could boost the local economy by attracting tourists and investors. They also see maps as a tool to improve security and reduce poverty. In a training room in Abuja, there are almost as many laptops and smart phones as there are 20-something “citizen cartographers.” At the front of the room, young men who volunteer for Internet search engine Google wear green and blue tee shirts that say, “map your world,” while the Google Abuja Map-up project director, Oludotun Babayemi, explains how to do it.
The modern New York pay phone will provide no shelter from the rain, no alcove for the quarreling couple seeking a private moment to reconcile. It will afford little refuge to the prospective superhero requiring a wardrobe change. In fact, the pay phone of tomorrow will include no traditional phone at all — nor any payment, for that matter, at least for communication within the United States.
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