About Us

Miqenekor was created for learners who want to study mobile development through digital course materials, written modules, clear examples, and practical tasks. The brand was started by ANDRII STRIBITSKYI, the owner and course author behind Miqenekor, with 6 years of experience working with mobile interface structure, screen planning, app logic notes, reusable interface sections, and digital learning resources.

Andrii’s path into mobile development did not begin with a smooth study route. At the start, he often found learning materials that explained terms separately but did not always show how they connected inside one mobile screen. One source explained layouts, another described user actions, another showed code fragments, and another introduced screen movement. The ideas were useful, but the order felt broken. He could read a term, yet still pause when trying to understand how a list, input field, button action, message area, and detail screen worked together.

STRIBITSKYI ANDRII - Owner
That personal struggle shaped the way Miqenekor was built. Andrii began rewriting his own notes into smaller screen maps, plain-language explanations, code-style examples, and practice worksheets. Instead of placing a learner in front of a large example right away, he divided each topic into visible parts, user actions, screen states, reusable blocks, and review questions. Over time, this method became the foundation of Miqenekor.

Our team created these courses because mobile development can feel much clearer when it is studied through structure. A learner does not need to begin with a large project or heavy terminology. A better first step is often a simple screen, a clear purpose, a few visible sections, and one action that changes what appears next. Miqenekor materials follow that idea across every tier.

The mission behind Miqenekor is to guide learners through mobile development with calm order and practical repetition. Our courses are made for people who prefer written materials, examples, diagrams, and exercises that can be reviewed at their own pace. Each tier is arranged around a specific learning stage, from basic screen anatomy to connected screen maps, route planning, data display, state notes, and wider practice tasks.

Andrii’s background includes mobile interface planning, screen flow documents, app logic outlines, layout review, and learning material preparation. His previous work included creating screen plans for small service teams, preparing interface notes for independent digital projects, reviewing mobile layout structures, and building internal study documents for junior-level learners. These projects helped him understand a common problem: many learners do not only need code examples; they also need a way to read, organize, and review those examples.

Before creating Miqenekor, Andrii prepared study notes, screen maps, and beginner-friendly worksheets for small learning groups and private study sessions. He worked with learners who needed a clearer way to understand screen structure, input behavior, lists, user actions, state changes, and route thinking. This background helped shape the Miqenekor style: structured modules, short examples, topic maps, glossary pages, and practical worksheets.

Miqenekor does not present mobile development as a shortcut or a dramatic career claim. The courses are digital learning materials made for study, review, and practice. They are not built around pressure, exaggerated wording, or unrealistic outcomes. Instead, they focus on topic order, readable explanations, and hands-on written tasks.

Group of people working together at a table with laptops and papers.
Every Miqenekor tier follows a careful structure. Free Kit introduces screen parts, layout blocks, user actions, states, lists, and simple navigation. Axis Set builds a stronger beginner route. Frame Bundle studies reusable sections and screen composition. Flux Course focuses on changing information and action chains. Halo Module looks at labels, feedback text, grouping, and screen clarity. Vertex Guide moves into connected screens and shared values. Luma Library brings many topic sections into one organized learning set. Grid Map focuses on structured maps and tables. Motion Map studies screen movement and return paths. Lattice Map connects wider course ideas through larger scenarios and review materials.

Behind each course is the same principle: mobile development becomes easier to study when screens are divided into parts, actions are described in plain language, and code-style examples are connected to visible behavior. This is why Miqenekor materials include screen maps, layout notes, practice prompts, review pages, and glossary sections.

Miqenekor is for learners who want to build knowledge through steady reading and practical tasks. Whether someone is reviewing their first screen structure or studying a wider multi-screen flow, the courses are arranged to make the learning path feel organized, focused, and readable.

Our team continues to prepare materials with the same approach that started the brand: begin with structure, explain each part clearly, connect examples to practice, and give learners notes they can return to during study.