Hatica equips engineering teams with work visibility dashboards, actionable insights and effective workflows to drive team productivity and engagement in remote and in-office environments alike. Free forever plans to help you get started quickly.
Features: Engineering metrics dashboards 100+ metrics from 20+ apps including Github, Jira, Slack, Zoom, Google Workplace Remote work insights Aggregated work overview, sprint and retro dashboards DORA metrics, CI/CD performance insights and code review analytics Collaboration analytics Team Goals based on dev metrics Async stand-ups and developer check-ins via Slack and Email Code quality metrics Automated Code reviews
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Till we started using Hatica, most managers had 10s of tabs open, sifted through each one, and had to piece together work to get a picture of what’s happening at work. With Hatica, these tabs are gone, and is replaced with one app! Especially the activity dashboards that show all activity along with check-ins from our team. Practically solved all our needs!
This is a young product with ambitious plans to become a comprehensive engineering metrics platform. This means, we can expect great surprises and some room for improvement.
The founders vision is clear and it shows in every release of the product. Plus, with such frequent feature releases, they might just achieve their vision! Responsive founders make the process of reporting bugs and requesting features a breeze and actually see it implemented in the app in a blazing fast turnaround time
Hatica provides all inputs needed for an engineering team! From gauging whether work load is balanced, to understanding people’s actual work hours, to finally looking at code churn - Hatica provides all of these in one place! Would love to see a TV mode so that we can present these dashboards in our workforce planning meetings.
Based on our record, Apple ARKit seems to be more popular. It has been mentiond 6 times since March 2021. We are tracking product recommendations and mentions on various public social media platforms and blogs. They can help you identify which product is more popular and what people think of it.
Apple has quite nice page with docs at the bottom: https://developer.apple.com/augmented-reality/. Source: about 1 year ago
Feels like you're grasping at straws to dismiss them. If you think lower weight, not-grainy MR, six years of a public AR SDK, far better computing units, and an existing high-quality software ecosystem are "not noticeable", I'm left wondering what you think is noticeable. Source: about 1 year ago
If you're looking to build a more advanced application, there are plenty of useful resources for all major technologies. For mobile apps, the best places to get started are docs for Google ARCore and Apple ARKit. Both platforms work with popular gaming engines like Unity and Unreal Engine. - Source: dev.to / over 2 years ago
ARKit is Apple's (A)ugmented (R)eality development (K)it. It takes the output from Unity and displays it in the goggles/headset the guy is wearing to see all this. Well, what a camera pointed at the display sees. Source: over 2 years ago
Google and Apple have already released their augmented reality development platforms, ARCore or ARKit, enabling the seamless integration of the digital and physical worlds. - Source: dev.to / almost 3 years ago
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