Skip to content

4 posts tagged with “case study”

View all tags
15 minute read

Nick Hehr

The term "robots" invokes a fascinating range of ideas, from manually controlled machines to automated software that crawls the web. One of the prime examples in this area is robotic arms, traditionally used to aid and extend the reach of humans in manufacturing, surgery, and space exploration. Each of these use cases require some way of programming and controlling the arm to perform their dedicated task, usually with proprietary software developed by the manufacturer. The UI is tightly coupled to the hardware through a touchscreen device or desktop application physically connected to the arm, which makes it tough to put online securely and using modern technology.

Viam provides an open source software stack and set of cloud services that makes managing all types of robots (and other smart machines) accessible to developers without any prior hardware experience. To help demonstrate the types of experience that can be built with Viam, the developer advocacy team built an arcade claw game that used an industrial robot arm and arcade claw that could be operated using a single-page web application powered by TypeScript SDK.

5 minute read

Gavin Bauman
Parker McMullin

TIDEFI turns to Stately to build a resilient financial platform that prioritizes user-friendly transactions and investments.

The Stately team had the pleasure of sitting down with Parker McMullin, Senior Frontend Lead at TIDEFI, to discuss how our logic modeling and visualization tooling helped him manage app complexity and onboarding in TIDEFI’s financial services platform. Parker was so kind as to provide his experiences below, covering the very beginnings of his project from design to development as well as the challenges encountered and how other Stately users came to his aid. He shares his firsthand experiences applying modern software design patterns to his project, engaging with the technical community, and proving instrumental in shaping the direction of XState V5. We’re honored to have Parker in our community, and we hope his words can inspire teams to better navigate complexity in their own apps!