Lombard 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 Lombard
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.
Lombard News
Hunters in South Africa Were Using Complex Poison Arrows 60,000 Years Ago
New chemical analysis of quartz microliths from South Africa confirms that humans were skilled with poison long ago.
Archaeologists find earliest known use of poison-laced weapons by humans
Peculiar 60,000-year-old Stone Age arrowheads unearthed in South Africa could be the earliest known use of poison-laced weapons by human hunters, archaeologists say in a new study. For long, ...
Poison-Laced Arrows Date Back Tens of Thousands of Years Earlier Than Expected
The arrow came to light in a layer of sediments dating to 60,000 years ago, suggesting the artifact is just as old. Namely, the researchers identified residue from buphandrine and epibuphanisine, two ...
Earliest Direct Evidence of Poisoned Arrows Revealed in 60,000-Year-Old Relics
A pile of ancient arrowheads from southern Africa still holds traces of toxic plant residue, even after some 60,000 years. The discovery pushes back the earliest direct evidence of poisoned arrow use ...