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No Coding Javacript App Inventor - With Admob Enabled


AiLiveComplete
App Inventor is absolutely no coding required to build some android app,it's good for beginner to understand the logic and algoritms of app. App Inventor was built for education purposes only and it won't showing some ads on it.

Developer Still Need Monetization
On App we usually seeing some banner ads,that is the way how the developer making money on their hard working.It's fair to me.But,if you planning to build app from app inventor you won't see ads setting on applications. How to setup these ads on app inventor?The answer is AiLiveComplete

Admob Enabled On AiLiveComplete
This is a great way to start making money from app inventor app,AiLiveComplete uses this opportunity to making your app earn some good money. Great.
So if you are complete beginner of android app maker then you should consider the AiLiveComplete,it's free.

You can find AiLiveComplete here.

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Javascript Beginner Starting Point

javascript tutorial
Javascript beginner guide may be the way of we to make some awesome games on cross-platform devices. With many function makes js script choosen by android,iphone,desktop application to handle their app to interact with user.

Different Engine But One Language
There are a bunch of engine that we can use it to make awesome games but it's a same language and that is javascript.

What Wikipedia Said about Javascript
Javascript wikipedia tell us JavaScript was originally developed by Brendan Eich, while he was working for Netscape Communications Corporation. Indeed, while competing with Microsoft for user adoption of web technologies and platforms, Netscape considered their client-server offering a distributed OS with a portable version of Sun Microsystems' Java providing an environment in which applets could be run.[citation needed] Because Java was a competitor of C++ and aimed at professional programmers, Netscape also wanted a lightweight interpreted language that would complement Java by appealing to nonprofessional programmers, like Microsoft's Visual Basic (see JavaScript and Java).[10]

Although it was developed under the name Mocha, the language was officially called LiveScript when it first shipped in beta releases of Netscape Navigator 2.0 in September 1995, but it was renamed JavaScript[11] when it was deployed in the Netscape browser version 2.0B3.[12]

The change of name from LiveScript to JavaScript roughly coincided with Netscape adding support for Java technology in its Netscape Navigator web browser. The final choice of name caused confusion, giving the impression that the language was a spin-off of the Java programming language, and the choice has been characterized as a marketing ploy by Netscape to give JavaScript the cachet of what was then the hot new web programming language. 

So go further with our next article to see it's growing.cheers...
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