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Panel: Charles Max Wood Dave Kimura Eric Berry Special Guests: Rahul Mahale In this episode of Ruby Rogues, the panel talks to Rahul Mahale. Rahul is a Senior DevOps Engineer at BigBinary in India. He has also worked with SecureDB Inc., Tiny Owl, Winjit Technologies among others. In addition, he attended the University of Pune. The panel and the guest talk about Kubernetes. Show Topics: 1:25 – Swag.com for t-shirts and mugs, etc. for Ruby Rogues / DevChat.tv. 1:49 – Chuck: Why are you famous? 1:57 – Guest’s background. 4:35 – Chuck: Kubernetes – Anyone play with this? 4:49 – Panelist: Yes. Funny situation, I was working with Heroku. Heroku is very costly, but great. The story continues... 6:13 – Panelist: I was so overwhelmed with how difficult it was to launch a simple website. Now, that being said we were using the Amazon EKS, which is the Kubernetes. They don’t have nearly as much good tools, but that’s my experience. 6:48 – Chuck: I haven’t tried Kubernetes. 8:58 – Rahul: I would like to add a few comments. Managing Kubernetes service is not a big deal at the moment, but... 11:19 – Panelist: You wouldn’t recommend people using Kubernetes unless they were well versed? What is that term? 11:40 – Rahul: Not anyone could use the Kubernetes cluster. Let’s offer that complexity to another company that can handle and mange it. 13:02 – The guest continues this conversation. 14:02 – Panelist: I didn’t know that Kubernetes needed different nodes. 14:28 – Rahul continues this topic. 15:05 – What hardware requirements do they need? 15:19 – Rahul: Yes, they do need a good system. Good amount of memory. Good network space. 15:45 – Panelist asks Rahul a question. 16:30 – Rahul: Let’s answer this into two parts. Kubernetes topic is being discussed in detail. 18:41 – Chuck adds comments and asks a question. 18:58 – Rahul talks about companies and programs. Check out this timestamp to hear his thoughts. 20:42 – Another company is mentioned added to this conversation. 21:55 – Additional companies mentioned: Google, Microsoft, IBM, etc. (Rahul) 22:14 – Chuck: It’s interesting how much community plays a role into success stories. Whether or not it’s best technologies it comes down to where there are enough people to help me if I don’t know what to do. 22:43 – Rahul: People, even enterprises, are there. 23:15 – Chuck: At what point (let’s say I docked my app) should they be looking at Kubernetes? Are you waiting on traffic? How do you make that call? 23:56 – Rahul answers the questions. 26:29 – Rahul: If your application is... 27:13 – Announcement – Digital Ocean! 27:51 – Chuck: How does someone get started with Kubernetes? 27:53 – Rahul answers the question. 30:00 – Chuck: It sounds like you have an amateur setup – Dave? 30:21 – Dave: I think the problem is that there is not a Kubernetes for dummies blog post. There has always been some sort of “gottcha!” As much as these documents say that there are solutions here and there, but you will see that there are networking issues. Once you get that up and running, then there are more issues at hand. The other strange thing is that once everything seems to be working okay, and then I started getting connectivity issues. It’s definitely not an afternoon project. It takes researching and googling. At the end, it takes a direction at large that the community is investing into. 32:58 – Chuck makes additional comments. 33:21 – Dave adds more comments. Sorry bad joke – Dave. 33:40 – Topic – Virtualization. 34:32 – Having Swamp is a good idea. 34:44 – Rahul adds his comments. 36:54 – Panelist talks about virtualization and scaling. 37:45 – Rahul adds in comments about the ecosystems. 38:21 – Panelist talks about server-less functions. 39:11 – Rahul: Not every application can... 40:32 – Panelist: I guess the whole downside to... 41:07 – Rahul talks about this. 43:03 – Chuck to Eric: Any problems with Kubernetes for you? 43:05 – Eric: Yes – just spelling it! For me it feels like you are in a jet with all of these different buttons. There are 2 different types of developers. I am of DevOps-minded. That’s why we are getting solutions, and tools like Heroku to help. When I listen to this conversation, I feel quiet only because you guys are talking about spiders and I’m afraid of spiders. 44:44 – Dave to Eric: Having information and knowledge about Kubernetes will help you as a developer. Having some awareness can really help you as a developer. 45:43 – Chuck: There are all these options to know about it – they way he is talking about it sounds like it’s the person on the jet. Don’t touch the red button and don’t’ cut the wrong wire! It feels like with software – it’s a beautiful thing – you erase it and reinstall it! 46:50 – Dave: What? What are all of these crazy words?! What does this exactly mean? The visibility is definitely not there for someone who is just tinkering with it. 47:16 – Rahul: It’s not for someone who is tinkering with it. Definitely. 50:02 – Chuck: We have been talking about benefits of Kubernetes – great. What kinds of processes to setup with Kubernetes to make your life easier? 50:40 Rahul answers the question. 53:54 – Rahul’s Social Media Accounts – check them out under LINKS. 54:29 – Get a Coder Job Course Links: T-Shirts for Ruby Rogues! Get a Coder Job Course Ruby JavaScript Phoenix Heroku Amazon EKS Kubernetes Kubernetes Engine Kubernetes Setup AKS Kubernetes – Creating a single master cluster... Kubernetes GitHub Docker Rancher Learn Kubernetes Using Interactive...by Ben Hall Podcast – All Things Devops Nanobox Cloud 66 Chef Puppet Ansible Salt Stack Orange Computers Rahul Mahale’s Blog Rahul’s Talks and Workshops Rahul Mahale’s LinkedIn Rahul Mahale’s Facebook Rahul Mahale’s Kubernetes Workshop via YouTube Sponsors: Sentry Digital Ocean Get a Coder Job Course Picks: Charles Conference Game – TerraGenesis – Space Colony Book – The One Thing Dave Orange Computers Eric Cloud 66 Nanobox Rahul Podcast – All Things Devops Kubernetes
Panel: Charles Max Wood Dave Kimura Eric Berry Special Guests: Rahul Mahale In this episode of Ruby Rogues, the panel talks to Rahul Mahale. Rahul is a Senior DevOps Engineer at BigBinary in India. He has also worked with SecureDB Inc., Tiny Owl, Winjit Technologies among others. In addition, he attended the University of Pune. The panel and the guest talk about Kubernetes. Show Topics: 1:25 – Swag.com for t-shirts and mugs, etc. for Ruby Rogues / DevChat.tv. 1:49 – Chuck: Why are you famous? 1:57 – Guest’s background. 4:35 – Chuck: Kubernetes – Anyone play with this? 4:49 – Panelist: Yes. Funny situation, I was working with Heroku. Heroku is very costly, but great. The story continues... 6:13 – Panelist: I was so overwhelmed with how difficult it was to launch a simple website. Now, that being said we were using the Amazon EKS, which is the Kubernetes. They don’t have nearly as much good tools, but that’s my experience. 6:48 – Chuck: I haven’t tried Kubernetes. 8:58 – Rahul: I would like to add a few comments. Managing Kubernetes service is not a big deal at the moment, but... 11:19 – Panelist: You wouldn’t recommend people using Kubernetes unless they were well versed? What is that term? 11:40 – Rahul: Not anyone could use the Kubernetes cluster. Let’s offer that complexity to another company that can handle and mange it. 13:02 – The guest continues this conversation. 14:02 – Panelist: I didn’t know that Kubernetes needed different nodes. 14:28 – Rahul continues this topic. 15:05 – What hardware requirements do they need? 15:19 – Rahul: Yes, they do need a good system. Good amount of memory. Good network space. 15:45 – Panelist asks Rahul a question. 16:30 – Rahul: Let’s answer this into two parts. Kubernetes topic is being discussed in detail. 18:41 – Chuck adds comments and asks a question. 18:58 – Rahul talks about companies and programs. Check out this timestamp to hear his thoughts. 20:42 – Another company is mentioned added to this conversation. 21:55 – Additional companies mentioned: Google, Microsoft, IBM, etc. (Rahul) 22:14 – Chuck: It’s interesting how much community plays a role into success stories. Whether or not it’s best technologies it comes down to where there are enough people to help me if I don’t know what to do. 22:43 – Rahul: People, even enterprises, are there. 23:15 – Chuck: At what point (let’s say I docked my app) should they be looking at Kubernetes? Are you waiting on traffic? How do you make that call? 23:56 – Rahul answers the questions. 26:29 – Rahul: If your application is... 27:13 – Announcement – Digital Ocean! 27:51 – Chuck: How does someone get started with Kubernetes? 27:53 – Rahul answers the question. 30:00 – Chuck: It sounds like you have an amateur setup – Dave? 30:21 – Dave: I think the problem is that there is not a Kubernetes for dummies blog post. There has always been some sort of “gottcha!” As much as these documents say that there are solutions here and there, but you will see that there are networking issues. Once you get that up and running, then there are more issues at hand. The other strange thing is that once everything seems to be working okay, and then I started getting connectivity issues. It’s definitely not an afternoon project. It takes researching and googling. At the end, it takes a direction at large that the community is investing into. 32:58 – Chuck makes additional comments. 33:21 – Dave adds more comments. Sorry bad joke – Dave. 33:40 – Topic – Virtualization. 34:32 – Having Swamp is a good idea. 34:44 – Rahul adds his comments. 36:54 – Panelist talks about virtualization and scaling. 37:45 – Rahul adds in comments about the ecosystems. 38:21 – Panelist talks about server-less functions. 39:11 – Rahul: Not every application can... 40:32 – Panelist: I guess the whole downside to... 41:07 – Rahul talks about this. 43:03 – Chuck to Eric: Any problems with Kubernetes for you? 43:05 – Eric: Yes – just spelling it! For me it feels like you are in a jet with all of these different buttons. There are 2 different types of developers. I am of DevOps-minded. That’s why we are getting solutions, and tools like Heroku to help. When I listen to this conversation, I feel quiet only because you guys are talking about spiders and I’m afraid of spiders. 44:44 – Dave to Eric: Having information and knowledge about Kubernetes will help you as a developer. Having some awareness can really help you as a developer. 45:43 – Chuck: There are all these options to know about it – they way he is talking about it sounds like it’s the person on the jet. Don’t touch the red button and don’t’ cut the wrong wire! It feels like with software – it’s a beautiful thing – you erase it and reinstall it! 46:50 – Dave: What? What are all of these crazy words?! What does this exactly mean? The visibility is definitely not there for someone who is just tinkering with it. 47:16 – Rahul: It’s not for someone who is tinkering with it. Definitely. 50:02 – Chuck: We have been talking about benefits of Kubernetes – great. What kinds of processes to setup with Kubernetes to make your life easier? 50:40 Rahul answers the question. 53:54 – Rahul’s Social Media Accounts – check them out under LINKS. 54:29 – Get a Coder Job Course Links: T-Shirts for Ruby Rogues! Get a Coder Job Course Ruby JavaScript Phoenix Heroku Amazon EKS Kubernetes Kubernetes Engine Kubernetes Setup AKS Kubernetes – Creating a single master cluster... Kubernetes GitHub Docker Rancher Learn Kubernetes Using Interactive...by Ben Hall Podcast – All Things Devops Nanobox Cloud 66 Chef Puppet Ansible Salt Stack Orange Computers Rahul Mahale’s Blog Rahul’s Talks and Workshops Rahul Mahale’s LinkedIn Rahul Mahale’s Facebook Rahul Mahale’s Kubernetes Workshop via YouTube Sponsors: Sentry Digital Ocean Get a Coder Job Course Picks: Charles Conference Game – TerraGenesis – Space Colony Book – The One Thing Dave Orange Computers Eric Cloud 66 Nanobox Rahul Podcast – All Things Devops Kubernetes
Panel: Charles Max Wood Dave Kimura Eric Berry Special Guests: Rahul Mahale In this episode of Ruby Rogues, the panel talks to Rahul Mahale. Rahul is a Senior DevOps Engineer at BigBinary in India. He has also worked with SecureDB Inc., Tiny Owl, Winjit Technologies among others. In addition, he attended the University of Pune. The panel and the guest talk about Kubernetes. Show Topics: 1:25 – Swag.com for t-shirts and mugs, etc. for Ruby Rogues / DevChat.tv. 1:49 – Chuck: Why are you famous? 1:57 – Guest’s background. 4:35 – Chuck: Kubernetes – Anyone play with this? 4:49 – Panelist: Yes. Funny situation, I was working with Heroku. Heroku is very costly, but great. The story continues... 6:13 – Panelist: I was so overwhelmed with how difficult it was to launch a simple website. Now, that being said we were using the Amazon EKS, which is the Kubernetes. They don’t have nearly as much good tools, but that’s my experience. 6:48 – Chuck: I haven’t tried Kubernetes. 8:58 – Rahul: I would like to add a few comments. Managing Kubernetes service is not a big deal at the moment, but... 11:19 – Panelist: You wouldn’t recommend people using Kubernetes unless they were well versed? What is that term? 11:40 – Rahul: Not anyone could use the Kubernetes cluster. Let’s offer that complexity to another company that can handle and mange it. 13:02 – The guest continues this conversation. 14:02 – Panelist: I didn’t know that Kubernetes needed different nodes. 14:28 – Rahul continues this topic. 15:05 – What hardware requirements do they need? 15:19 – Rahul: Yes, they do need a good system. Good amount of memory. Good network space. 15:45 – Panelist asks Rahul a question. 16:30 – Rahul: Let’s answer this into two parts. Kubernetes topic is being discussed in detail. 18:41 – Chuck adds comments and asks a question. 18:58 – Rahul talks about companies and programs. Check out this timestamp to hear his thoughts. 20:42 – Another company is mentioned added to this conversation. 21:55 – Additional companies mentioned: Google, Microsoft, IBM, etc. (Rahul) 22:14 – Chuck: It’s interesting how much community plays a role into success stories. Whether or not it’s best technologies it comes down to where there are enough people to help me if I don’t know what to do. 22:43 – Rahul: People, even enterprises, are there. 23:15 – Chuck: At what point (let’s say I docked my app) should they be looking at Kubernetes? Are you waiting on traffic? How do you make that call? 23:56 – Rahul answers the questions. 26:29 – Rahul: If your application is... 27:13 – Announcement – Digital Ocean! 27:51 – Chuck: How does someone get started with Kubernetes? 27:53 – Rahul answers the question. 30:00 – Chuck: It sounds like you have an amateur setup – Dave? 30:21 – Dave: I think the problem is that there is not a Kubernetes for dummies blog post. There has always been some sort of “gottcha!” As much as these documents say that there are solutions here and there, but you will see that there are networking issues. Once you get that up and running, then there are more issues at hand. The other strange thing is that once everything seems to be working okay, and then I started getting connectivity issues. It’s definitely not an afternoon project. It takes researching and googling. At the end, it takes a direction at large that the community is investing into. 32:58 – Chuck makes additional comments. 33:21 – Dave adds more comments. Sorry bad joke – Dave. 33:40 – Topic – Virtualization. 34:32 – Having Swamp is a good idea. 34:44 – Rahul adds his comments. 36:54 – Panelist talks about virtualization and scaling. 37:45 – Rahul adds in comments about the ecosystems. 38:21 – Panelist talks about server-less functions. 39:11 – Rahul: Not every application can... 40:32 – Panelist: I guess the whole downside to... 41:07 – Rahul talks about this. 43:03 – Chuck to Eric: Any problems with Kubernetes for you? 43:05 – Eric: Yes – just spelling it! For me it feels like you are in a jet with all of these different buttons. There are 2 different types of developers. I am of DevOps-minded. That’s why we are getting solutions, and tools like Heroku to help. When I listen to this conversation, I feel quiet only because you guys are talking about spiders and I’m afraid of spiders. 44:44 – Dave to Eric: Having information and knowledge about Kubernetes will help you as a developer. Having some awareness can really help you as a developer. 45:43 – Chuck: There are all these options to know about it – they way he is talking about it sounds like it’s the person on the jet. Don’t touch the red button and don’t’ cut the wrong wire! It feels like with software – it’s a beautiful thing – you erase it and reinstall it! 46:50 – Dave: What? What are all of these crazy words?! What does this exactly mean? The visibility is definitely not there for someone who is just tinkering with it. 47:16 – Rahul: It’s not for someone who is tinkering with it. Definitely. 50:02 – Chuck: We have been talking about benefits of Kubernetes – great. What kinds of processes to setup with Kubernetes to make your life easier? 50:40 Rahul answers the question. 53:54 – Rahul’s Social Media Accounts – check them out under LINKS. 54:29 – Get a Coder Job Course Links: T-Shirts for Ruby Rogues! Get a Coder Job Course Ruby JavaScript Phoenix Heroku Amazon EKS Kubernetes Kubernetes Engine Kubernetes Setup AKS Kubernetes – Creating a single master cluster... Kubernetes GitHub Docker Rancher Learn Kubernetes Using Interactive...by Ben Hall Podcast – All Things Devops Nanobox Cloud 66 Chef Puppet Ansible Salt Stack Orange Computers Rahul Mahale’s Blog Rahul’s Talks and Workshops Rahul Mahale’s LinkedIn Rahul Mahale’s Facebook Rahul Mahale’s Kubernetes Workshop via YouTube Sponsors: Sentry Digital Ocean Get a Coder Job Course Picks: Charles Conference Game – TerraGenesis – Space Colony Book – The One Thing Dave Orange Computers Eric Cloud 66 Nanobox Rahul Podcast – All Things Devops Kubernetes
Panel: Charles Max Wood Mark Ericksen Josh Adams Eric Berry Special Guest: Devon Estes In this episode of Elixir Mix, the panel talks to Devon Estes. He is an American programmer located in Berlin, Germany. Devon is coaching on Elixir, and his background is on Ruby Rails. Check-out today’s episode to hear how passionate Devon is about the Elixir program, and what he loves about it. Show Topics: 3:58 – Devon finds that the process of writing helps him find “bugs”. He tries to write once a month on various topics, such as what he has learned, and his freelancing work. 4:50 – One of the panelists says that he also writes, too, and how it helps him process what is going on. He treats it like a research paper, because he wants it to sound coherent. 5:43 – Devon used to work in PR and Marketing. What he learned from those fields is that: visibility creates opportunity. 7:19 – When you choose the technology, it’s about how easy previous resources to help support that if it’s the right tech. Finding Elixir developers is hard to find. Elixir ahs been that way for a while, but actually it is becoming the new and improved Ruby. You get the 10X productivity, but you aren’t held up by some factors. Have you ever had finding work in Elixir? 8:22 – Devon: Not in the last year-and-a-half. Being a freelancer, stay visible, because you are constantly looking for different projects, and so on. There are other countries out there where Elixir is more prominent than compared to the United States. Companies in San Francisco are having a hard time finding Elixir developers to work with them. 10:31 – How was your transition from Ruby to Elixir and your writing projects? How did you go down that path? 11:07 – Devon: The more I wrote in Elixir the more he liked the program. Ruby inspired Elixir, for sure. He likes how it’s comprehensive to him, and how productive he is with Elixir. For Devon, it fits well with how he writes code; and because he’s happy, his clients are happy, too. Elixir’s language fits well with his way of thinking and there are other benefits for Devon by working with Elixir. Devon likes feeling productive and it fulfills his needs. Finally, he also really enjoys the Elixir community! 16:51 – What do you not like about Elixir? 16:55 – Devon: He found his first thing he doesn’t love about Elixir, and he found it today, of all things! Listen to this timestamp to see what Devon shares. 20:47 – Question asked for Devon: How are other languages doing that, and what can we do to make that happen? 20:53 – Check-out Devon’s answer! 24:11 – Digital Ocean’s Mid-Roll Advertisement 24:48 – Devon continues his answer from 20:53. Programmers talk and, when more people are having certain experiences, the word is going to get out. The flexibility of the language is going to be great in the long run. Great sales pitch. 26:47 – Josh, you have a lot of experience of the years, pushing the eco-system, have you seen a pick-up from that or has it grown, how have you seen your involvement in these projects helped with the awareness... 27:19 – Josh: I don’t know how much of an influence I have, but it has doubled almost every year. Of course, this won’t happen every year, and at some time it will plateau. Elixir is rapidly growing now, though. 28:09 – Question to Devon: Let’s talk about your project, Fast Elixir. 28:16 – Devon talks about how he got involved with Fast Elixir and how it developed. 31:19 – Let’s talk about Benchy. 31:28 – Devon: We are very proud of it. Devon continues in detail about the before-mentioned question. 36:30 – Question to Devon – Let’s talk about reductions, so people can understand it better. 36:41 – Think of a reduction that it’s one thing the virtual thing does. It has a counter, and it does a certain number of things before it needs to take a break. That’s the most basic unit. One reduction is one instruction and it counts that. That’s how it manages its internal scheduler. 38:20 – Chuck: When you adopted Ruby did you feel the same way about it like you do about Elixir. Chuck says, “I totally get it...” It’s more a learning opportunity for Chuck. Have you found the next best thing? Or... 39:06 – Devon was an opera singer for a while, and studied at the Manhattan School of Music. Check out his full bio in LinkedIn, and other social media profiles. As Devon became an advanced programmer he started to develop his programming skills. He tried JavaScript, but the language didn’t appeal to him. The more he experienced in different programs, he found that the bigger picture for him boiled down to the community aspect for him. He could have fallen in-love with Clojure, but he’s not quite sure. Finally, it basically was the Elixir’s language and the community that he likes. 45:05 – It’s neat to see the progression that you went through. 45:25 – Let’s do picks! 45:30 – Code Badges' Advertisement! 46:11 – Picks! Links: Coder Job eBook by Charles Max Wood Elixir Code Badger with Charles Max Wood on Kickstarter! Devon Estes’ GitHub Devon Estes’ Twitter Devon Estes’ Website Devon Estes’ LinkedIn Devon Estes’ Refactoring Elixir – Lessons Learned from a Year on Exercism.lo Fast Elixir Ruby Rails Clojure Devon Estes’ Blog GitHub’s Elixir-Lang Exercism – Code Practice Elixir Sips: Learn Elixir With A Pro Devon Estes’ Heroku App Sponsors: Get a Coder Job Digital Ocean Code Badges Cache Fly Picks: Charles Lootcrate (once a month) Audible, Audio Book – “The ONE Thing” by Gary Keller Helps you focus on one thing to help you reach your goals. Mark Movie: (YouTube) Erlang: The Movie Retro Gaming – Original Nintendo Josh Follow-up on Mark’s pick (see above) – Posters / Harry Potter-Themed Tortoise Eric Legos! Funko POP Animation Bob’s Devon Toggl – Time-tracking Tool / It’s free! “Understanding Computation” by Tom Stuart Movie: Handmaiden
Panel: Charles Max Wood Mark Ericksen Josh Adams Eric Berry Special Guest: Devon Estes In this episode of Elixir Mix, the panel talks to Devon Estes. He is an American programmer located in Berlin, Germany. Devon is coaching on Elixir, and his background is on Ruby Rails. Check-out today’s episode to hear how passionate Devon is about the Elixir program, and what he loves about it. Show Topics: 3:58 – Devon finds that the process of writing helps him find “bugs”. He tries to write once a month on various topics, such as what he has learned, and his freelancing work. 4:50 – One of the panelists says that he also writes, too, and how it helps him process what is going on. He treats it like a research paper, because he wants it to sound coherent. 5:43 – Devon used to work in PR and Marketing. What he learned from those fields is that: visibility creates opportunity. 7:19 – When you choose the technology, it’s about how easy previous resources to help support that if it’s the right tech. Finding Elixir developers is hard to find. Elixir ahs been that way for a while, but actually it is becoming the new and improved Ruby. You get the 10X productivity, but you aren’t held up by some factors. Have you ever had finding work in Elixir? 8:22 – Devon: Not in the last year-and-a-half. Being a freelancer, stay visible, because you are constantly looking for different projects, and so on. There are other countries out there where Elixir is more prominent than compared to the United States. Companies in San Francisco are having a hard time finding Elixir developers to work with them. 10:31 – How was your transition from Ruby to Elixir and your writing projects? How did you go down that path? 11:07 – Devon: The more I wrote in Elixir the more he liked the program. Ruby inspired Elixir, for sure. He likes how it’s comprehensive to him, and how productive he is with Elixir. For Devon, it fits well with how he writes code; and because he’s happy, his clients are happy, too. Elixir’s language fits well with his way of thinking and there are other benefits for Devon by working with Elixir. Devon likes feeling productive and it fulfills his needs. Finally, he also really enjoys the Elixir community! 16:51 – What do you not like about Elixir? 16:55 – Devon: He found his first thing he doesn’t love about Elixir, and he found it today, of all things! Listen to this timestamp to see what Devon shares. 20:47 – Question asked for Devon: How are other languages doing that, and what can we do to make that happen? 20:53 – Check-out Devon’s answer! 24:11 – Digital Ocean’s Mid-Roll Advertisement 24:48 – Devon continues his answer from 20:53. Programmers talk and, when more people are having certain experiences, the word is going to get out. The flexibility of the language is going to be great in the long run. Great sales pitch. 26:47 – Josh, you have a lot of experience of the years, pushing the eco-system, have you seen a pick-up from that or has it grown, how have you seen your involvement in these projects helped with the awareness... 27:19 – Josh: I don’t know how much of an influence I have, but it has doubled almost every year. Of course, this won’t happen every year, and at some time it will plateau. Elixir is rapidly growing now, though. 28:09 – Question to Devon: Let’s talk about your project, Fast Elixir. 28:16 – Devon talks about how he got involved with Fast Elixir and how it developed. 31:19 – Let’s talk about Benchy. 31:28 – Devon: We are very proud of it. Devon continues in detail about the before-mentioned question. 36:30 – Question to Devon – Let’s talk about reductions, so people can understand it better. 36:41 – Think of a reduction that it’s one thing the virtual thing does. It has a counter, and it does a certain number of things before it needs to take a break. That’s the most basic unit. One reduction is one instruction and it counts that. That’s how it manages its internal scheduler. 38:20 – Chuck: When you adopted Ruby did you feel the same way about it like you do about Elixir. Chuck says, “I totally get it...” It’s more a learning opportunity for Chuck. Have you found the next best thing? Or... 39:06 – Devon was an opera singer for a while, and studied at the Manhattan School of Music. Check out his full bio in LinkedIn, and other social media profiles. As Devon became an advanced programmer he started to develop his programming skills. He tried JavaScript, but the language didn’t appeal to him. The more he experienced in different programs, he found that the bigger picture for him boiled down to the community aspect for him. He could have fallen in-love with Clojure, but he’s not quite sure. Finally, it basically was the Elixir’s language and the community that he likes. 45:05 – It’s neat to see the progression that you went through. 45:25 – Let’s do picks! 45:30 – Code Badges' Advertisement! 46:11 – Picks! Links: Coder Job eBook by Charles Max Wood Elixir Code Badger with Charles Max Wood on Kickstarter! Devon Estes’ GitHub Devon Estes’ Twitter Devon Estes’ Website Devon Estes’ LinkedIn Devon Estes’ Refactoring Elixir – Lessons Learned from a Year on Exercism.lo Fast Elixir Ruby Rails Clojure Devon Estes’ Blog GitHub’s Elixir-Lang Exercism – Code Practice Elixir Sips: Learn Elixir With A Pro Devon Estes’ Heroku App Sponsors: Get a Coder Job Digital Ocean Code Badges Cache Fly Picks: Charles Lootcrate (once a month) Audible, Audio Book – “The ONE Thing” by Gary Keller Helps you focus on one thing to help you reach your goals. Mark Movie: (YouTube) Erlang: The Movie Retro Gaming – Original Nintendo Josh Follow-up on Mark’s pick (see above) – Posters / Harry Potter-Themed Tortoise Eric Legos! Funko POP Animation Bob’s Devon Toggl – Time-tracking Tool / It’s free! “Understanding Computation” by Tom Stuart Movie: Handmaiden
Panel: Charles Max Wood Guest: Victor Savkin This week on My Angular Story, Charles speaks with Victor Savkin about his business Narwhal Technologies. In addition, they discuss Angular, past and current business projects, and their picks. Victor is a co-founder of nrwl.io, providing Angular consulting to enterprise teams. He was previously on the Angular core team at Google, and built the dependency injection, change detection, forms and router modules. In particular, we dive pretty deep on: Victor’s background. Two of Victor’s past episodes on the “My Angular Story:” Episode 42 Episode 123 When and how did you get into programming? Back when Victor was in Russia and playing games. This brought him to the idea that “I could build my own game” when he was a teenager. Programming is hard and difficult, but also fun and enjoying. There is a creative side to this. State of flow. How did you go from creating games with Flash to Angular? Eventually ended up using Angular. Victor prefers to use on the backend. It’s interesting to see how things have changed, such as Data Flow and Business Logic. In what ways do you think it has improved? Charles first got into programming it was Rails. JavaScript sprinkles Ember into Angular Why does this feel much harder – because we are solving much more complicated issues. Look at the tools we have today. Trello How did you get into Angular 14? Dart What contributions do you feel that you have made on the Angular team? Angular Dart In writing Angular apps, Charles is curious, how is it different writing the framework vs. an app within the framework? What made you and Jeff leave Google and go start Narwhal Technologies (nrwl.io)? I felt like I could provide more value. What things have Narwhal been contributing to the community? What are you working on now? NX Personal life Wedding in August and buying a home for Victor. Links: FreshBooks Past “My Angular Story” Episodes Data Flow Business Logic JavaScript Ember Trello Dart Narwhal Technologies NX Rails Victor Savkin’s Angular Victor Savkin’s Medium Victor Savkin’s Twitter Victor Savkin’s LinkedIn Victor Savkin’s GitHub Victor Savkin’s Lean Pub Victor Savkin’s Nrwl Blog Victor Savkin’s Book: Angular Router Victor Savkin’s & Jeff Cross’ Book: Essential Angular Angular Digital Ocean Cache Fly Sponsor: Digital Ocean Picks: Charles Audio Books: “The Big Leap” by Gay Hendricks “The Whole-Brain Child” by Daniel J. Siegel & Tina Payne Bryson Take a minute to be human through life’s different experiences. Victor Self-Help Books They Daily Stoic by Ryan Holiday & Stephen Hanselman Go see your doctor first before you buy equipment! Logitech Wireless Trackball Vertical Mouse
Panel: Charles Max Wood Guest: Victor Savkin This week on My Angular Story, Charles speaks with Victor Savkin about his business Narwhal Technologies. In addition, they discuss Angular, past and current business projects, and their picks. Victor is a co-founder of nrwl.io, providing Angular consulting to enterprise teams. He was previously on the Angular core team at Google, and built the dependency injection, change detection, forms and router modules. In particular, we dive pretty deep on: Victor’s background. Two of Victor’s past episodes on the “My Angular Story:” Episode 42 Episode 123 When and how did you get into programming? Back when Victor was in Russia and playing games. This brought him to the idea that “I could build my own game” when he was a teenager. Programming is hard and difficult, but also fun and enjoying. There is a creative side to this. State of flow. How did you go from creating games with Flash to Angular? Eventually ended up using Angular. Victor prefers to use on the backend. It’s interesting to see how things have changed, such as Data Flow and Business Logic. In what ways do you think it has improved? Charles first got into programming it was Rails. JavaScript sprinkles Ember into Angular Why does this feel much harder – because we are solving much more complicated issues. Look at the tools we have today. Trello How did you get into Angular 14? Dart What contributions do you feel that you have made on the Angular team? Angular Dart In writing Angular apps, Charles is curious, how is it different writing the framework vs. an app within the framework? What made you and Jeff leave Google and go start Narwhal Technologies (nrwl.io)? I felt like I could provide more value. What things have Narwhal been contributing to the community? What are you working on now? NX Personal life Wedding in August and buying a home for Victor. Links: FreshBooks Past “My Angular Story” Episodes Data Flow Business Logic JavaScript Ember Trello Dart Narwhal Technologies NX Rails Victor Savkin’s Angular Victor Savkin’s Medium Victor Savkin’s Twitter Victor Savkin’s LinkedIn Victor Savkin’s GitHub Victor Savkin’s Lean Pub Victor Savkin’s Nrwl Blog Victor Savkin’s Book: Angular Router Victor Savkin’s & Jeff Cross’ Book: Essential Angular Angular Digital Ocean Cache Fly Sponsor: Digital Ocean Picks: Charles Audio Books: “The Big Leap” by Gay Hendricks “The Whole-Brain Child” by Daniel J. Siegel & Tina Payne Bryson Take a minute to be human through life’s different experiences. Victor Self-Help Books They Daily Stoic by Ryan Holiday & Stephen Hanselman Go see your doctor first before you buy equipment! Logitech Wireless Trackball Vertical Mouse
Panel: Charles Max Wood Guest: Victor Savkin This week on My Angular Story, Charles speaks with Victor Savkin about his business Narwhal Technologies. In addition, they discuss Angular, past and current business projects, and their picks. Victor is a co-founder of nrwl.io, providing Angular consulting to enterprise teams. He was previously on the Angular core team at Google, and built the dependency injection, change detection, forms and router modules. In particular, we dive pretty deep on: Victor’s background. Two of Victor’s past episodes on the “My Angular Story:” Episode 42 Episode 123 When and how did you get into programming? Back when Victor was in Russia and playing games. This brought him to the idea that “I could build my own game” when he was a teenager. Programming is hard and difficult, but also fun and enjoying. There is a creative side to this. State of flow. How did you go from creating games with Flash to Angular? Eventually ended up using Angular. Victor prefers to use on the backend. It’s interesting to see how things have changed, such as Data Flow and Business Logic. In what ways do you think it has improved? Charles first got into programming it was Rails. JavaScript sprinkles Ember into Angular Why does this feel much harder – because we are solving much more complicated issues. Look at the tools we have today. Trello How did you get into Angular 14? Dart What contributions do you feel that you have made on the Angular team? Angular Dart In writing Angular apps, Charles is curious, how is it different writing the framework vs. an app within the framework? What made you and Jeff leave Google and go start Narwhal Technologies (nrwl.io)? I felt like I could provide more value. What things have Narwhal been contributing to the community? What are you working on now? NX Personal life Wedding in August and buying a home for Victor. Links: FreshBooks Past “My Angular Story” Episodes Data Flow Business Logic JavaScript Ember Trello Dart Narwhal Technologies NX Rails Victor Savkin’s Angular Victor Savkin’s Medium Victor Savkin’s Twitter Victor Savkin’s LinkedIn Victor Savkin’s GitHub Victor Savkin’s Lean Pub Victor Savkin’s Nrwl Blog Victor Savkin’s Book: Angular Router Victor Savkin’s & Jeff Cross’ Book: Essential Angular Angular Digital Ocean Cache Fly Sponsor: Digital Ocean Picks: Charles Audio Books: “The Big Leap” by Gay Hendricks “The Whole-Brain Child” by Daniel J. Siegel & Tina Payne Bryson Take a minute to be human through life’s different experiences. Victor Self-Help Books They Daily Stoic by Ryan Holiday & Stephen Hanselman Go see your doctor first before you buy equipment! Logitech Wireless Trackball Vertical Mouse