Sign In

Nick Arner

iOS Engineer

Nick Arner is a developer and researcher based in San Francisco, California, specializing in creative technology systems and Human-Computer Interaction. He currently holds the position of Founding Engineer at Stitch Design, where he is involved in developing an iPad app aimed at designers. His work encompasses prototyping and researching innovative interactions, particularly in augmented reality (AR) and other creative technologies.12

Professional Background

  • Stitch Design: As a Founding Engineer, Nick focuses on developing applications that enhance design workflows.

  • Asteroid Technologies: Previously, he served as a Founding Engineer, where he worked on a macOS app for ARKit interactions, emphasizing rapid prototyping and feature evaluation across various modalities, including audio and haptics.1

  • Other Roles: Nick has also held positions as a Freelance iOS Engineer, Associate Consultant, and Application Developer, contributing to projects for notable organizations such as CBS Interactive and Squirrels LLC. His early career included research in audio technology and application development.1

Education

Nick earned a Bachelor of Arts in Music Technology from Capital University and a Master of Science by Research in Music Technology from the University of York. He has also completed a certification in Audio Production.1

Interests

In addition to his engineering work, Nick is interested in angel investing, particularly in startups that aim to improve human-computer interactions.2

Highlights

Apr 1 · twitter

SwiftUI is one of those things where it works great up until you’ve found yourself in a really tough corner where you can’t engineer yourself out of it.

The LLM’s don’t (can’t) help with this - there just isn’t enough training data compared to Python or JS. Often, they’ll default to using old frameworks that Apple doesn’t even recommend anymore, or build views with a crazy amount of re-rendering.

I’ve often seen them also just try to build things in UIKit even in an existing SwiftUI project!

I think the only way that could be changed is if Apple gave the labs access to their internal repository of Swift code - which isn’t going to happen.

Apr 1 · twitter

Seeing this reminds me that ATAP’s Project Soli was very much ahead of its time https://t.co/q3ZDDDFxSd

[PDF] INNOVATION: TECHNOLOGY & PATENTS - Leadersleague

Related Questions

What projects has Nick Arner worked on at Stitch Design?
How did Nick Arner transition from music technology to software development?
What are some notable technologies Nick Arner has worked with?
Can you tell me more about the iPad app for designers that Nick Arner is working on?
What are Nick Arner's interests outside of technology?
Nick Arner
Nick Arner, photo 1
Nick Arner, photo 2
Add to my network

Location

San Francisco, California, United States