Building mobile apps with Expo and React Native for Canadian organizations
Published April 10, 2026. Documents how I ship cross-platform apps for organizations that need one codebase with a real deployment process.
View cited pageFull-Stack & AI Engineer
Ottawa mobile apps I take on tend to be internal tools rather than consumer apps — inspection apps, inventory apps, and government-adjacent workflows. The question is never which store features to use; it is how the app behaves on locked-down corporate devices.
Ottawa's tech market splits between government-adjacent work and a strong cluster of product companies in Kanata. Compliance, data residency, and procurement shape project scope here in ways they do not elsewhere in Ontario — I account for that early, not after the first legal review.
Published April 10, 2026. Documents how I ship cross-platform apps for organizations that need one codebase with a real deployment process.
View cited pageUpdated March 18, 2026. The exhibit guide module shipped with offline content support for in-museum use.
View cited pageUpdated March 15, 2026. Live streaming player, background playback, and push-driven release work for a production audience app.
View cited pagePin the core user flows, offline requirements, and integration points before any build. Pick the right Expo config (managed vs. bare) for the actual needs.
Ship the core flows on TestFlight and Play internal testing fast. Early feedback drives scope decisions before money goes into polish.
Add native modules, background tasks, streaming, or device APIs where required. Keep the codebase managed wherever possible.
Assets, privacy disclosures, review notes, and response loops with App Store and Play reviewers until both builds are live.
EAS Update pipelines so bugfixes and content changes reach users in hours, not days. Analytics review loops to guide next iteration.
Yes. I take on mobile app development engagements with clients in Ottawa and across the National Capital Region. Most work runs remote-first with in-person touchpoints where useful, and I'm used to the Ontario business environment.
Ottawa work in this service area usually comes from government contractors, cybersecurity, telecom teams that need a senior partner to scope the work clearly and ship it without adding process overhead.
The work is scoped around Ottawa, but delivery usually extends across the wider National Capital Region, including Toronto and remote-first teams that need the same service.
Expo managed workflow for almost every project — it is faster, has better tooling, and now supports custom native modules through config plugins. Bare workflow only when a hard native requirement forces it.
Yes. I regularly take over apps with technical debt, outdated dependencies, broken upgrade paths, or failing store submissions. The first step is always a short audit and a prioritised fix plan.
A practical look at building mobile apps that support customer experiences, field teams, and business operations without unnecessary complexity.
How I build cross-platform mobile apps for organizations like the Canadian Tank Museum and Canadian Tamil Radio using Expo and React Native.
If your team sits outside Ottawa but inside the wider National Capital Region, these nearby market pages usually reflect the same buying patterns and delivery constraints.