Chicago Mobile App Cross Platform Development
BASIC
- Around 5 Screens.
- Around 5 Integrations
- Only simple validations on device
- No-obligation inquiry.
- Team consists of: Dev Team - 1 Developer (full time) QA Team - 1 Test Engineer (shared)
STANDARD
- Around 10 Screens
- Around 10 Integrations
- Simple business logic for Validations / Calculations / Chart Data etc.
- Some local storage of data
- Team consists of: Dev Team - 1 Developer (full time) QA Team - 1 Test Engineer (shared)
- 1 Project Manager (shared)
- 1 Team Lead (shared)
PREMIUM
- Around 20 Screens
- Around 20 Integrations
- Complex business logic like Interactive Charts, Animations, Validations, Conditions etc.
- Complete local storage of data used by App
- We will create suggestions on monthly basis for improvement for you.
Cross-Platform App Development Services & Solutions in Chicago
We take your groundwork and create a market-ready app based on your needs while you focus on product and company growth.
Flutter is the fastest-growing cross-platform development framework. It was introduced in 2017 by Google and managed to gain great popularity among cross-platform programmers.
Chicago News
‘A real physical thing’: Quantum computer exhibit at O’Hare seeks to make the technology tangible
An exhibit of a quantum computer at O’Hare put on by the University of Chicago and IBM aims to make learning about the technology accessible amid Chicago’s rise as a quantum hub.
Nobel in physics awarded to scientists showing quantum mechanics on macro scale
John Clarke, Michel H. Devoret and John M. Martinis demonstrated quantum tunneling in an electrical circuit, with implications for the next generation of quantum technology.
Molecular qubits can communicate at telecom frequencies
A team of scientists from the University of Chicago, the University of California Berkeley, Argonne National Laboratory, and Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory has developed molecular qubits that ...
Nobel Prize in Physics Is Awarded for Work in Quantum Mechanics
John Clarke, Michel H. Devoret and John M. Martinis were recognized for work that made behaviors of the subatomic realm observable at a larger scale.

