You can do both. For OSS software though, it would need to be iPadOS apps built with Xcode or some cross-platform framework like Xamarin, but some time ago, Apple enabled anyone to install apps without a developer…
Take a look at Cloud Foundry, especially the Container Runtime. The Application Runtime (CFAR) is like an OSS Heroku, installable on AWS, GCP, Azure, vSphere, and OpenStack. Then just push your app and scale it out. It…
The first advantage I see of Apple's support of Ruby is RubyOnRails developers may be able to create a Mac desktop auxiliary versions of their applications with less trouble (like Evernote: although I'm not sure if it's…
You can do both. For OSS software though, it would need to be iPadOS apps built with Xcode or some cross-platform framework like Xamarin, but some time ago, Apple enabled anyone to install apps without a developer…
Take a look at Cloud Foundry, especially the Container Runtime. The Application Runtime (CFAR) is like an OSS Heroku, installable on AWS, GCP, Azure, vSphere, and OpenStack. Then just push your app and scale it out. It…
The first advantage I see of Apple's support of Ruby is RubyOnRails developers may be able to create a Mac desktop auxiliary versions of their applications with less trouble (like Evernote: although I'm not sure if it's…