Mountain Brook 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 Mountain Brook
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.
Mountain Brook News
Hefei high-tech zone witnesses thriving ecology, innovation
Centered on Dashu Mountain, Shuxi Lake, and Baiyan Lake, the zone forms the core area of high-quality development. With over 95% forest coverage, Dashu Mountain functions as the zone's "ecological ...
Apollo Moon sample opened after 50 years contains evidence of extraterrestrial landslide
More than 50 years after the last manned moon mission, the Apollo program is still making groundbreaking discoveries.
Study explains mystery of former crater lakes in the highest mountain range of the Sahara
An interdisciplinary research team led by scientists from Freie Universität Berlin and the Max Planck Institute for Meteorology has shown how deep lakes formed more than 9,500 years ago in the craters ...
Two years ago, Earth was hit by the most energetic neutrino in history. Scientists thought it might be a measurement error, but a new study has confirmed this “ghost particle” was real.

