CodeBase heralds return of in-person events and programmes at UK’s largest startup incubator

Left to right are Max Reiter, Yasmin Sulaiman, Oli Littlejohn and Claire Wheelan of CodeBase. Photo Credit: Sarna

CODEBASE has heralded the return of in-person events and programmes at the UK’s largest startup incubator, ahead of one of its main conferences later this month.  The NoCode Gathering takes place at CodeBase in Edinburgh on Tuesday 23rd November, with CodeBase Head of Community Oli Littlejohn saying that, “it feels like the Scottish startup community has made a big step forward now that it can get together, share ideas and engage in more of a pre-pandemic way”.

The NoCode Gathering – no-code, or low-code, is a rapidly growing enterprise trend that enables non-technical people and teams to build software, websites, apps, or games without writing code – will see in-person delegates joined by virtual attendees, and is being sponsored by Creative Informatics, Glasgow-based automation specialists Cobry, and Supemetrics, a Finland-headquartered automation tool developer that recently began recruiting in Scotland.  

Speakers at NoCode Gathering include Max Haining, who runs the UK’s largest no-code community, 100 Days of NoCode, Mariam Hakobyan from no-code platform Softr, Mariel Vargas from Bubble, who recently raised $100 million from Silicon Valley investors, and Nile Frater, Managing Director of NoCode.Tech.  

Nile Frater said: “For years, creating and changing the digital world we all use has been a privilege restricted to computer scientists and Silicon Valley whiz-kids. No-Code changes this and allows absolutely anyone to create apps, automate computers and edit the digital world they live in – without having to understand computer programming, going to university or a steep learning curve. It’s why we’re so invested in No-Code education, it’s why we’re supporting the NoCode Gathering in Edinburgh and it’s why we think No-Code is the next huge technology shift of the 2020s!”

Oli Littlejohn, Head of Community at CodeBase, said: “No-code and low-code allows more people to build software and create new startups, and is set to be transformative across Scotland.”  Global technology research group Gartner has forecast that 65 per cent of all apps will be created by low-code platforms by 2024, platforms that use visual interfaces and human language rather than coding.   

Oli Littlejohn added: “No-code is giving companies a competitive advantage by enabling them to move much faster and at lower cost.  And it has really come into its own during the pandemic.  Some of the companies we have been speaking to have been able to deliver software projects in weeks or even days, rather than months which was the previous status quo.”

CodeBase is offering free tickets for virtual attendees.  Oli Littlejohn said: “No-code is already here and it’s only going to become more mainstream, so we would love as many people as possible to learn more about the industry and emerging trends.”   

CodeBase’s main locations are in Edinburgh, where it was founded in 2014, Stirling and Aberdeen, with the CodeBase team delivering programmes at 24 cities across the UK and currently supporting around 400 digital companies. 

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