The Most Popular Applications Built with AngularJS

Everyone in the tech world will agree that JavaScript is one of the biggest game changers when it comes to the development community. This small, lightweight, object-oriented scripting language has proved just how essential it is for the proper functioning of mobile and web apps alike. Offering connections to objects within the environments that it is used, along with a standard library and a set of language elements such as control structures, statements, and operators, JS provides both client-side and server-side extensions. These extensions are what make interactions between different web and app components possible. It is also not as static as similarly developed languages such as Java and is reasonably free-form compared to other programming languages (it is not strict on matters to do with private, public or protected methods or declaration of variables or classes, etc.)

It is evident that we have enough to be grateful for when it comes to JavaScript. However, Google has gone further to develop a JavaScript framework which offers even more dynamic web application development. This framework is Angular JS. Among the many benefits of Angular is the transformation of static HTML to dynamic, which is possible through the addition of built-in attributes as well as the provision of creating new ones using JavaScript. Coders have made proper use of Angular JS, and these apps are proof of just how efficient it has become in the developers’ world.

WEATHER.COM

The web-based application is designed to provide accurate weather reports and forecasts. This application is available for both pcs and mobile devices. It is one of the most popular weather apps in the world, providing up to 90% correct weather predictions across the globe. It uses Angular to define its different web components and give the user more detailed view and navigation of its user interface.

FREELANCER.COM

This web application is among the most preferred freelance portals in the world today. It works by providing an employer and employee interface, where employers post work to be done, and employees can apply for these jobs and negotiate on terms with the employer. It also provides payment options as well as return policies, or termination of contracts in case employers are not satisfied with the results. Angular enables Freelancer.com to configure different elements so that they can be employer or employee-specific.

NETFLIX

Ask any 20-year-old or younger (or older) person, and they will tell you all about Netflix. It has risen to become one of the most popular video streaming applications, both web, and mobile. It provides the latest movies and TV series on request in addition to its component. More than that, it includes DVD delivery for those with no internet connections at home at their doorstep. Netflix uses Angular to constitute animation and different themes to each of its streaming options so that it always has a modern feel and a dynamic user interface to fit different user needs and preferences.

UPWORK

The web application is arguably the most popular freelance portals available today. UPWORK provides online job opportunities for people across the globe. It works through the provision of employer and employee interfaces, with the addition of interviews and online tests to ensure that employees are in fact qualified for the jobs which they apply. It is built with a stylish, green and white user interface which uses Angular to enforce dynamic loading of classes and other attributes when they are needed.

The Most Popular Applications Built with Angular

THE GUARDIAN

The Guardian is one of the most popular design and publishing domains worldwide. It provides the latest news on significant technological advancements, political news, and sports worldwide. It sponsors a plethora of awards while earning some of its own. The Guardian uses Angular to run its web-based application.

PAYPAL

PayPal is the world’s leading online payment companies. It has a dynamic build for both web and mobile applications, using a seamless white and blue user interface which covers different user needs across the globe. PayPal uses Angular to generate classes and dynamic HTML components which enable secure monetary transactions through the Internet.

POSSE.COM

Do you wish to go somewhere? Or do you need company? Well, not to worry because posse.com gives you a chance to interact with people who are on the same destination as you. It also gives you an opportunity to explore the different available areas to visit on your journey and destination. Posse.com uses Angular to provide dynamic views of regions and profiles so that it does not have to load unnecessary data to its clients.

MEALSHAKER.COM

It can be quite the dilemma deciding where to eat, and MealShaker knows this all too well. This is why they are specialized in giving appropriate meal destinations for that first date, quick drive-by or celebrations. It is well equipped with hotel information including graphics display and extensive descriptions which will make it easy for you to select a destination. Angular enables MealShaker to create different classes dynamically so that they are available to clients on request, therefore giving it a more robust and navigable interface.

YOUTUBE FOR PLAYSTATION 3

When YouTube decided to incorporate its video streaming services on the PS3, Angular was the platform which they chose to use so that the HTML data used would be utilized efficiently. They applied dynamic coding through Angular to implement its user interface. The decision was a wise one, too, because it allowed streaming of videos on the PS3 seamlessly without compromising the quality or speed.

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From Pain Relief to Rehabilitation: A Portrait of VR Therapeutics in 2026
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From Pain Relief to Rehabilitation: A Portrait of VR Therapeutics in 2026

VR therapeutics is becoming a real category of reimbursable medicine. It now has FDA authorization pathways, dedicated billing codes, and growing support from commercial insurers. This shift didn’t happen overnight. It has built up over several years through a series of regulatory, clinical, and commercial milestones that together make 2026 a turning point for the industry. The market is starting to reflect that. Estimates vary by methodology, but SNS Insider projects the broader VR healthcare market to grow from $4.27B in 2024 to $46.4B by 2032 (a 33% CAGR). VR telerehabilitation alone is projected to grow from $1.2B in 2026 to $2.67B by 2030, a 22% CAGR that captures the segment this article focuses on. Three moments tell the story of how we got here. 2021: The first prescription VR therapy gets FDA cleared. AppliedVR’s RelieVRx became the first VR product authorized as a prescription medical device in the US. 2023: Medicare opens the reimbursement door. Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services created the first VR-specific billing code, placing prescription VR into the Durable Medical Equipment category. The practical effect: doctors gained a way to prescribe VR therapy, and insurers gained a code to pay against. 2025: Commercial insurers begin following Medicare’s lead. In September, Cigna became one of the first major commercial payers to cover FDA-approved digital therapeutics. In this article, we’ll walk through six therapeutic domains where that infrastructure is taking shape. Each has its own clinical logic, its own leading players, and its own path to scale.  Market architecture Before we walk through the six therapeutic domains, it’s worth understanding the shape of the market they sit inside: what’s growing, where the money is concentrated, and what changed structurally between 2023 and 2025 to make any of this viable. Where therapy and rehab sits inside VR healthcare VR healthcare as a whole spans everything from surgical training simulators to anatomical education tools. But within that broader market, VR therapeutics and rehabilitation is the fastest-growing application segment, and it’s also where regulatory and reimbursement infrastructure is forming most actively. Inside therapy-and-rehab itself, two sub-segments are consistently identified by independent market research as the fastest-growing: pain management and mental health therapy. Both have something the other categories don’t yet: FDA-cleared products in the market, peer-reviewed efficacy data, and at least nascent reimbursement pathways. Geographically, the market is concentrated in two regions for very different reasons. North America is leading adoption mainly because the FDA has started approving prescription VR therapies, and dedicated billing codes now allow healthcare providers to get reimbursed for using them. Europe is catching up via different infrastructure, particularly Germany’s DiGA framework, which provides a parallel route to physician prescription and statutory health insurance coverage. France’s PECAN and the UK’s DTAC are developing in a similar direction. The pattern is clear: once regulators create a formal pathway, companies and investment tend to follow. What the hardware cycle unlocked The clinical use cases for VR therapy didn’t really change between 2020 and 2025. What changed is that the hardware finally became viable for the business models the clinical work demanded. Consumer-grade standalone headsets brought the price floor down to where at-home prescription models work. Meta Quest 3, Meta Quest 3S, and Pico 4 helped bring standalone VR headsets to more affordable consumer price levels—an important step for prescription VR therapies that patients are expected to use at home. 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Pain management Pain is the single largest unmet need in clinical medicine. In the United States alone, roughly 50 million adults live with chronic pain, and the toolkit physicians have to treat it is uncomfortably narrow: opioids carry addiction risk, non-opioid pharmaceuticals are inconsistently effective, and behavioral therapies are scarce and slow. Procedural pain is its own category, often managed with anesthesia or sedation, which adds cost, risk, and recovery time. This is the gap VR fills. The clinical evidence for VR as a pain intervention rests on two well-documented neurological mechanisms. The first is gate control theory: pain signals traveling up the spinal cord compete with other sensory inputs for processing capacity, and immersive visual and auditory stimulation can effectively crowd them out before they reach the brain as pain. The second is cognitive load: a fully immersive VR experience occupies enough of that capacity to leave less available for processing pain as pain. Together, these mechanisms make VR more than just a distraction. They turn it into a real neurological intervention, which helps explain why VR can reduce pain in clinical settings where simpler distractions like music or conversation often cannot. There are two distinct applications emerging from this. The first is procedural pain, where Medtronic provides the clearest commercial example. Medtronic’s VR solution makes office hysteroscopy more comfortable by immersing the patient in a virtual environment during the procedure. According to Medtronic, the immersive sedation-analgesia content reduces patient anxiety and decreases pain-related brain activity. The second application is chronic pain. 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Digital Twins for Digital Transformation Strategy in the Industrial Sector
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Digital Twins for Industry 5.0 Transformation Strategy

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Quality and Security You Can Trust, Proven Again: Qualium Renews ISO 27001 and 9001 Certifications

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As Dmytro Stetsenko explains: “Regulatory pressure from frameworks like DORA and NIS2 continues to grow and compliance is becoming increasingly complex, demanding more resources. Our ISO 27001 certification in particular simplifies that landscape for our clients – reducing audit friction, accelerating approvals, and ensuring a consistently high standard of security.” Global frameworks such as DORA and NIS2 are reshaping expectations around cybersecurity, resilience, and governance. For companies operating in regulated environments, compliance is no longer optional – it is foundational. 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The 2026 renewal reflects a deeper evolution of internal systems, including: ● Advanced risk management practices integrated across delivery, infrastructure, and operations ● Role-based access controls and data governance models aligned with modern security expectations ● Enhanced business continuity and resilience planning, ensuring stability under disruption ● Process optimization frameworks that improve delivery speed without compromising quality This systemic approach allows clients to operate with greater confidence, reducing audit friction, accelerating approvals, and ensuring readiness for increasingly complex regulatory environments. What It Means for our Clients For organizations in healthcare, fintech, and other compliance-driven sectors, working with a certified partner is no longer a preference — it is a requirement. Qualium Systems ISO 9001 and ISO/IEC 27001 certifications translate into tangible business value: ● Reduced compliance burden across regulatory frameworks ● Lower operational and cybersecurity risk exposure ● Predictable, high-quality delivery outcomes ● Faster alignment with enterprise procurement and audit requirements In practice, this means clients can focus on innovation and growth – while relying on a partner whose processes are already aligned with global best practices. What Comes Next: Beyond Compliance The 2026 certification milestone is not an endpoint, but part of a broader strategy to continuously elevate standards across delivery. As regulatory expectations continue to evolve, we are actively expanding our compliance framework to better support clients in highly regulated industries, particularly healthcare. This includes advancing our alignment with GDPR requirements and progressing toward HIPAA readiness, further strengthening our ability to manage sensitive data in complex regulatory environments. By combining deep technical expertise with certified operational frameworks, the company continues to bridge the gap between cutting-edge technology and enterprise-grade reliability. As Dmytro notes: “This certification reflects our long-term commitment to helping clients navigate the most demanding regulatory environments with confidence. While we continue to expand our compliance capabilities, advancing toward GDPR and HIPAA readiness for healthcare-focused solutions.”



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