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Latest podcast episodes about alyssa it

immaEATthat Podcast
Book Club - Chapter 6: Breaking Free from Body Shame

immaEATthat Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 28, 2022 48:54


Alyssa Pike, RDN, LD and Kylie Mitchell, MPH, RDN, LD discuss chapter 6 (Your Body is Not a Project) from Jess Connolly's book Breaking Free from Body Shame. If you have any comments on the book, we'd love to hear from you. Send us a voicemail via the voicemail button here. My favorite quote from this episode came from Alyssa: "It's not that thin isn't beautiful, it's just that it's no more beautiful than another body size. There's so much more to beauty than body size." --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app

Conscious Chatter with Kestrel Jenkins
S05 Episode 244 | Alyssa Beltempo on creativity over consumption & shifting the narrative away from placing *all* responsibility on the consumer

Conscious Chatter with Kestrel Jenkins

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 3, 2021 55:39


In episode 244, Kestrel welcomes Alyssa Beltempo, a Canadian slow fashion expert and stylist, to the show. Through her YouTube channel with over 144K subscribers to her Instagram and website, Alyssa is dedicated to reminding us that there is a power in advocating for creativity over consumption. "I wanted to fill the gap of showing that you can consume less and it can actually be fun and it doesn't have to be a sacrifice — which, like society has made it out that way — like we have to be in this constant search of more, when in fact, the opposite can actually be a very fruitful and rewarding endeavor." -Alyssa The idea for this conversation was actually sparked when Alyssa reached out to Kestrel, after listening to episode 241 with Akilah Stewart of FATRA. In that chat, there was a lot of discussion about creativity, and Alyssa said she loved how Akilah highlighted that everyone can be creative, and that resonated a lot with her own approach to styling. So, thanks to Akilah for inspiring the seeds for this episode! We explore more on the power that creativity holds, when we are thinking about how to get beyond the rhetoric of consuming less, shopping your own closet when you can, how the narrative is finally shifting away from putting *all* of the responsibility on the shopper to address fashion's messes, and more. Quotes & links from the conversation: “Using less and being creative with what you have — this is not a new concept. Maybe I'm presenting it in a different way, but being more sustainable in your mindset is rooted in the way of life for poor and marginalized communities. My immigrant grandparents were reusing and being creative because that was what was available to them.” -Alyssa “It's almost like we need to be a bit more materialistic in a sense — like we need to love what we have — when you love what you have, you tend to want less.” -Alyssa Episode 240 with Maxine Bédat Episode 47 with Timo Rissanen Power Of My People, brand that makes linen shirt Alyssa mentions Live virtual “Shop Your Closet” event Subscribe to Alyssa's YouTube Channel > Follow Alyssa on Instagram > This week's episode is brought to you by For Days — they call themselves the “first closed loop clothing brand” and are dedicated to building a better, waste-free future. If you're interested in checking out For Days, you can use code CHATTER15 to get 15% off. Learn more and shop at For Days.com

Sunshine Parenting
Ep. 137: Parents Who Lead

Sunshine Parenting

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 24, 2020 40:09


Show notes & links. In this episode, Audry is joined by Alyssa Westring, co-author of Parents Who Lead: The Leadership Approach You Need to Parent with Purpose, Fuel Your Career, and Create a Richer Life. Alyssa is an associate professor of management at the Driehaus College of Business, DePaul University, and has studied organizational psychology, particularly work-life integration. Parenting life isn't easy and many people feel guilty, stressed, and on autopilot, instead of being present with their families at the end of a busy workday. It is possible for parents to harness the powerful science of leadership in order to thrive in all aspects of their lives. Big Ideas Parents Who Lead was co-authored with Stuart Friedman, who wrote Total Leadership. Westring and Friedman took the leadership principles that were more individual-focused and applied them, along with some new research, to parenting. They look at what it means to be a total leader and a leader in all parts of life. Parents can be just as intentional about seeking purpose in parenting as they are about seeking fulfillment in their careers. For the past 3 years, she has focused on working parents and discovering ways they can parent more effectively and thrive in their careers and personal lives. Her research asks: How do we help people make better choices about balancing work and family? How do we help organizations make better policies? How do we influence these things on a national level and on a global level? She shares the "Four Way View." We think of these four domains of our lives as if they are four buckets: career - work or school family - kids, partner, extended family community - friends, neighbors, religious or political organizations self - mind, body, and spirit Looking for four-way wins means not settling for changes in one part of your life that make things worse in another. When you're overwhelmed, ask yourself: How important is it? How much time and energy am I spending on it? How am I doing? How satisfied am I?  Look at how all of those pieces fit into the puzzle of your life. This reveals opportunities to make things better across domains, not just in one. What are the values that you hope define this moment in your lives, as an individual and as a family? How do our values impact the choices we make on a daily basis? When parents realize they can assert more control and achieve better outcomes for themselves and others, they feel less overwhelmed. Mental health improves when parents learn how to pursue four-way wins. Quotes Audrey: "A lot of what I teach parents and what I've learned is from leadership and working to get your company on the same page culturally, creating a positive culture." Audrey: "At work, we're often so much better about stepping back and doing strategic planning once a year, looking at what's going well, what's not going well, having weekly meetings. There's so much structure usually in our careers but often we forget to apply those same principles at home." Alyssa: "Many dual-career couples are so enlightened about what great leadership looks like at work and then they get home they turn into these annoying micromanagers. We forget all of that good stuff that we learned about how to inspire other people, get them on board, and create a shared vision and culture. We just abandon it when we walk into the house." Alyssa: "It's a skill that we have and we just have to turn it on. And if you don't have it, and you're learning how to do it at home, that makes you better in your job, as well. Because then you know how to communicate and set goals and check in with people. It's a win-win." Alyssa: "Many of us are operating on autopilot (especially in pre-pandemic times.) We have a sense that we want things to be better, but we don't know how to change it. We don't know what to do to make it better. The Four-Way View is a tool that we use to take stock of the present. It will reveal opportunities to make things better in a way where you're not just sacrificing one thing to get more of another." Alyssa: "Our default assumption is that if we want our work to be better then we'd better take time away from sleep or from parenting or from friends. Taking the Four-Way View starts to help you think about how the different parts of your life are interconnected." Audrey: "Many parents have become so overwhelmed just getting through the day, getting their kids where they need to be, getting to work, that people don't have as close of neighborhoods. Most people don't have a religious affiliation or any kind of outside group that they connect with. I'm wondering if this pandemic is going to change that at all because it just makes it even more clear how we all need each other and nobody can do this alone." Alyssa: "I think the community is at the forefront of our minds right now because we are social distancing for the greater good, for our communities, for our society. We're aware of the sacrifices that we're making for other people in a way that's much more straightforward than normal. Yet I think we assume that we need to feel more isolated because we're physically isolated." Alyssa: "If as a family we care about showing gratitude, then that can be woven into anything that you do." Audrey: "Sometimes parents don't realize that they haven't communicated their values." Alyssa: "A lot of people feel like they don't have the time, they're too busy for these sorts of conversations, whether it's with kids or coworkers or community members of friends. We've found that it does seem to save them time and increase their happiness in the long run. It really does pay off, even if it's sort of hard to get on board with sacrificing some time upfront." Audrey: "What an opportunity we have when we don't have sports and we don't have anything going on to maybe take this time to clarify a little bit what our values are for this time and this season." Resources Values List: Pick your top values as an individual and as a family. On The Web: www.ParentsWhoLead.net Alyssa Westring is the Vincent de Paul Associate Professor of Management and Entrepreneurship at DePaul University's Driehaus College of Business. She earned her Ph.D. in organizational psychology from Michigan State University in 2007. She is the Director of Research for Total Leadership. In addition to her research on work-life topics, she is a scholar of women's careers and leadership. She is an award-winning educator and DePaul's inaugural Presidential Fellow. Westring lives in Chicago and has two young children. Her TEDx talk, "The Secret Life of a Work-Life Insider," is about motherhood, and the Time magazine cover story she was interviewed for was about millennial parents. Alyssa's TED Talk One Simple Thing This week's One Simple Thing came from listener Gail, who shared the idea of practicing "Thoughtful Thursdays" with kids. One day a week (Thursdays work because of the nice alliteration), have your kids send a drawing or note to one of their classmates. Perhaps your kids can start a trend in their school just like Gail's grandchildren have! My Favorite From Six Daily Questions to Ask Yourself in Quarantine, by Brooke Anderson for the Greater Good Science Center: Listener Question How do I stay calm while balancing parenting my three kids (ages 14, 12, & 6)? 10 Ways to Teach Our Kids to Calm Down

Devchat.tv Master Feed
AiA 212: “Angular Console” with Dan Muller

Devchat.tv Master Feed

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 23, 2018 60:44


Panel: Charles Max Wood Aaron Frost John Papa Alyssa Nicholl Special Guests: Dan Muller In this episode, the Adventures in Angular panel talks with Dan Muller who is a member of the NRWL team and who has developed Angular Console. The panel asks Dan questions about the console and the pros and cons of it. Check out today’s episode! Show Topics: 1:19 – Dan: I work now with NRWL and I used to work at Google and then I got bored writing Angular applications. I then texted a colleague and worked with him and he gave me what is now called 1:52 – Chuck: Nice. Give us the elevator pitch for Angular Console? 2:00 – Dan: It is mostly pretty. 2:19 – Alyssa comments. 2:30 – Dan: To each their own. 2:38 – Dan One of the parts working at Google I would copy and paste the patterns I did at Google. Now we stopped copying and pasting code. If you are newbie there is a learning code and that’s a drag. What it (Angular Console) does it makes it easier for novices for them to know what can you generate and what options are available to you. It makes you feel nice and comforted and holds your hand. It’s a tool for me because I often go fast and it makes sure I don’t do anything wrong. It’s focused, and it keeps me focused. 4:29 – Panelist: I just installed it for the first time. I am working on a project for a client and been doing a lot of NGG things. I am looking at this thing and I can see how it can be pretty helpful with its UI. Get in and try it out. 5:23 – Dan: That’s the generate screen. 5:30 – I have a terminal and it... 5:51 – Dan: As you building up the commands it constantly runs them. It would be insane for you to hit the Enter key and copy and paste, cause we only have 2 hands. As you are doing the commands it will tell you what’s missing. You will have the flags above it and tweak it a little and it comes together. 6:45 – Chuck. 6:53 – Dan: Under the hood it’s running it verbatim. Anything that has an architecture definition every 1/10 sec it...will live update and it sees what projects you have, what apps you have and anything you have with a CI it will present it to you. 7:51 – It has some custom scripts. 8:03 – Alyssa: What did you do to install it? 8:05 - AngularConsole.com Welcome download button and I downloaded it. 8:43 – It’s a tiny file. 8:47 – You are trying your best to make your bundle efficient. 8:57 – Electron app is about the same size. It took only 11 seconds to download for me. 9:11 – Nobody uses Lenox, so... 9:22 – It does some very simple things it can do and chime-in when you want, Dan! I can see all my projects and if you were in a workspace you can see it all. If you have an Angular project you can do a generate component. There is a code generator, and there is a run screen. And in the end – I have a question about extensions? This is really where you can get a bunch of schematics, right? 10:34 – Panelist asks a question. 10:38 – Dan: Not wrong at all. 11:25 – Panelist and Dan go back-and-forth. 11:36 – We should do a show on schematics. 11:43 – You are percolating a few new ones – that’s cool. What would be cool is if you... 12:14 – Dan: Yeah it’s hard coded. We put this together in less than a month. It started in the middle of like October and we just put together and released in 3 weeks. Considering how slow Angular has developed it’s interesting to see... 13:01 – Yeah I am seeing the extensions that reminds me... I like how you can search with these extensions there especially with the filter. 13:21 – Dan: We want to eventually I hope we can surface more things. Not everyone thinks how a designer thinks. We are trivial to discover them maybe they would. He’s very much open to that someday. 14:24 – I want to ask a question. Let’s do a poll request and it’s important to me. I don’t see the file where that lives. 14:41 – Dan: I think there is a pre-existing file. You can base it off of that one. 14:55 – A little context that I have and the one question that keeps coming up is what’s to say that this won’t drive us down a road to only do what NX wants us to do? 15:52 – Dan: It’s tricky. Actually, back when the CUI they were thinking of something very similar to the console and it never happened. Basically before we launched it to the public we wanted to make sure that Angular team was on board with us. Even though we own the repo we wanted Google to sign-off the code. Make sure that they did it the correct way and they have lawyers more so than a start-up does. Eventually they will own...and they will be in charge of the release schedule. But all in all it’s my baby and I won’t give it up. There are extensions... Dan continues this conversation. 18:20 – Yeah so far using the console I can see the NX and finding extensions is hard. Where would you go find it? So this stuff... 18:53 – As long as NX still stays an option than something you MUST choose then... 19:12 – Dan: We decided early on that we didn’t want to shove NX into their face. That console can be useful but useful in another way. What we are building is this way you can reach out to us. We are a consulting company. If you are in the middle of making your app and you see a bug then we are building out a NWRL connect where you can connect with us. 20:12 – Yeah I see that NWRL connect. Do I get you for free? 20:26 – John Papa discount. 20:31 – I usually have to pay him $10,000 a minute! 20:53 – Yeah, he’s a cofounder (Victor). 21:03 – It gives his number and SSN! 21:17 – Alyssa: You said you have a lot of ideas of how console could go, do you have any things in the next steps? 21:32 – Dan: I wasn’t very ambitious when I started the project. It’s not a huge desktop client focus application. I am adding background tasks. Things you can run all the time so you don’t have to click them all the time. 23:17 – Advertisement – Get a coder job! 23:58 – Why would you use this tool? 24:05 – Dan: I have this fun experience when I was making console at first. It didn’t have the command screen and I needed to make a dialogue for creating a new workspace. And I said: Oh Shoot I don’t remember how to generate a module with routing. So instead of Googling...server and opened up Angular Console workspace and generated a component with it and it... 25:11 – Comment. 25:19 – Dan: During auto complete... 26:10 – Panelist: If they want that UI...and when I teach Angular the first thing I teach is the UI. I think UI is a great starting point. I look at the console to see the extensions. 27:09 – The CUI is already abstracting multiple different things. Now you have added a UI to it, I think it will be attractive for different people. I can see people saying I got it, and other people (John Papa) teaching a course, or maybe...certain people will like/don’t like it. 28:12 – I don’t think it’s an either or. 28:20 – Chuck: I would try things on the command line, and then things on the console line and figure out how it works with my flow. If I have 2 tools then I will use 1 for X and the other for Y. 28:47 – Dan comments. 29:17 – Where should people go to voice their ideas? 29:29 – Dan: Some ideas are really, really good! Yeah shoot me a message. 30:19 – You haven’t seen my issues, yet, bro. 30:28 – Chuck: Was it inspired by the... 30:37 – Dan: Shamelessly I steal design all the time. As I develop the Angular Console more I am steering away from their design but... 31:26 – Chuck: Depending on WHO I am talking about there is rivalry between maybe Vue and Angular and whatever. I like the idea of sharing to show the mature elements to bring in what I am doing. 31:59 – The main difference is the implementation is electron and web app and tell us pros and cons and why? 32:14 – Dan: We could have done it either way. It looked more beautiful in my dock. Having it be an honest to goodness app and not having to open a terminal and fire it up, it didn’t feel professional or good. There is a little bit of professionalism there. 33:42 – Chuck: I agree with that. 33:48 – I like that it is web and that it’s a web application. It’s nice to have a web app open. 34:06 – Dan comments. Dan: Discoverability is there. There are 2 servers and you could load it up and open it up in Chrome. We don’t use a lot of electronic UPIS because you are just running your terminal. 34:56 – Chuck comments. 35:02 – I just put the 7’s in there and there it is! 35:11 – Dan: Theoretically, it is useful. That’s good. 35:19 – What port? 35:40 – Chuck, panel and guest go back-and-forth. 36:06 – Seems like a good idea. 36:13 – Hacker News. 36:17 – Dan: That’s the dream – my life would be made as a developer. 36:38 – Chuck. 36:55 – I submitted a PR in there and looks like you are still getting help with this. I am a fan of this tool. People will love this. 37:15 – Dan: We have more things that we want to add it - it to make it more attractive. We are making it official we are... 37:54 – There are people that kill NWRLs. 38:03 – Chuck. 38:08 – Dan: Fellow NWRLer, Jack... 38:50 – That stuff exists through web pack, right? 39:20 – Dan: We can’t use it because it’s garbage and I won’t touch it. 39:35 – Dan: I don’t know. We are going to do basically the same thing but prettier. The code will be prettier. 40:10 – Chuck: Aaron, it looks like you put in a request to put in the plug-in. And you did it pretty fast so it’s not hard to do? 40:31 – Probably not formatted properly. 40:40 – Panel and guest go back-and-forth. 40:54 – You have to fix it on the air. It’s a space problem. My line space is too long. 41:07 – Panelists and guest. 41:46 – Dan: Any compliment from Victor makes my life. 41:57 – Panelist: I changed it. 42:05 – Alyssa: Is it green light, green arrow? 42:15 – I am just failing. 42:21 – I used the web editor I really didn’t... 42:30 – Alyssa: It was a space issue. 42:39 – 3 more minutes to go... 42:54 – Chuck sing us a song while we wait. 43:03 – Is there a contributions page for people to contribute? 43:18 – Dan: It tells you exactly how to run it. 43:33 – Chuck: It using some of the web pack tools and the CUI and the command line, I am wondering if it’s possible to add - not extensions to the CUI stuff but - to the console itself? Setup the other things that aren’t Angular specific but are apart of my overall template? Or do you do that through schematics? 44:16 – Dan: There are different ways to approach it. Your personal workflow you probably should integrate it. Like anything else why wouldn’t you keep it the same? 45:42 – Panelist comments. 46:08 – Dan: Have you contributed to Angular before? 46:25 – Chuck: Anything else before Picks? 46:36 – NRWL Connects is our support product to help you with being a more productive Angular developer. 47:24 – Panelists and guest go back-and-forth. 47:41 – I didn’t know NRWL Connects was a thing. If I wasn’t personal friends with Victor and... There have been problems that I have solved because I have smart friends. NRWL Connect is to help those people who don’t have smart friends. People can solve a lot of problems and this is HUGE! 49:03 – Dan: Fingers crossed we are helping integrate Angular Connect to help with Basil. 49:39 – Chuck: Picks! 50:00 – Advertisement – Fresh Books! Links: Vue Angular NRWL NGRX – DATA LAB – GITHUB Angular Console Angular Prettier Schematic Chuck’s Twitter 5 Things about developing on a Mac – Video Real Talk JavaScript King and Queen of the Universe Grinders Dan Muller’s Bio through NRWL Sponsors: Angular Boot Camp Fresh Books Get a Coder Job Course Picks: Alyssa Kendal UI Library component update John Season 2 of 5 Things of JavaScript Podcast  - Realtalk JavaScript Aaron Role for Initiative Charles Extreme Ownership Dungeon and Dragons HeroDevs.com Dan Look at the Birdie The King and Queen of the Universe Grinders Boots Screaming Females

google pr video universe adventures mac dragons panel initiative setup bio special guests chrome dungeon ui github javascript basil panelists googling extreme ownership advertisement vue danone angular electron nx freshbooks lenox grinders hacker news ssn cui danas screaming females extreme ownership u s navy seals data lab danto chuck nice charles max wood dan it john papa dan yeah dan muller ngg dan there chuck it aaron frost nrwl ngrx chuck anything us 2528sem 2529branded 257cexm chuck picks angular connect coder job course real talk javascript chuck aaron angular boot camp herodevs alyssa it alyssa nicholl alyssa what angular console alyssa you dan under dan some nrwl connect alyssa is
All Angular Podcasts by Devchat.tv
AiA 212: “Angular Console” with Dan Muller

All Angular Podcasts by Devchat.tv

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 23, 2018 60:44


Panel: Charles Max Wood Aaron Frost John Papa Alyssa Nicholl Special Guests: Dan Muller In this episode, the Adventures in Angular panel talks with Dan Muller who is a member of the NRWL team and who has developed Angular Console. The panel asks Dan questions about the console and the pros and cons of it. Check out today’s episode! Show Topics: 1:19 – Dan: I work now with NRWL and I used to work at Google and then I got bored writing Angular applications. I then texted a colleague and worked with him and he gave me what is now called 1:52 – Chuck: Nice. Give us the elevator pitch for Angular Console? 2:00 – Dan: It is mostly pretty. 2:19 – Alyssa comments. 2:30 – Dan: To each their own. 2:38 – Dan One of the parts working at Google I would copy and paste the patterns I did at Google. Now we stopped copying and pasting code. If you are newbie there is a learning code and that’s a drag. What it (Angular Console) does it makes it easier for novices for them to know what can you generate and what options are available to you. It makes you feel nice and comforted and holds your hand. It’s a tool for me because I often go fast and it makes sure I don’t do anything wrong. It’s focused, and it keeps me focused. 4:29 – Panelist: I just installed it for the first time. I am working on a project for a client and been doing a lot of NGG things. I am looking at this thing and I can see how it can be pretty helpful with its UI. Get in and try it out. 5:23 – Dan: That’s the generate screen. 5:30 – I have a terminal and it... 5:51 – Dan: As you building up the commands it constantly runs them. It would be insane for you to hit the Enter key and copy and paste, cause we only have 2 hands. As you are doing the commands it will tell you what’s missing. You will have the flags above it and tweak it a little and it comes together. 6:45 – Chuck. 6:53 – Dan: Under the hood it’s running it verbatim. Anything that has an architecture definition every 1/10 sec it...will live update and it sees what projects you have, what apps you have and anything you have with a CI it will present it to you. 7:51 – It has some custom scripts. 8:03 – Alyssa: What did you do to install it? 8:05 - AngularConsole.com Welcome download button and I downloaded it. 8:43 – It’s a tiny file. 8:47 – You are trying your best to make your bundle efficient. 8:57 – Electron app is about the same size. It took only 11 seconds to download for me. 9:11 – Nobody uses Lenox, so... 9:22 – It does some very simple things it can do and chime-in when you want, Dan! I can see all my projects and if you were in a workspace you can see it all. If you have an Angular project you can do a generate component. There is a code generator, and there is a run screen. And in the end – I have a question about extensions? This is really where you can get a bunch of schematics, right? 10:34 – Panelist asks a question. 10:38 – Dan: Not wrong at all. 11:25 – Panelist and Dan go back-and-forth. 11:36 – We should do a show on schematics. 11:43 – You are percolating a few new ones – that’s cool. What would be cool is if you... 12:14 – Dan: Yeah it’s hard coded. We put this together in less than a month. It started in the middle of like October and we just put together and released in 3 weeks. Considering how slow Angular has developed it’s interesting to see... 13:01 – Yeah I am seeing the extensions that reminds me... I like how you can search with these extensions there especially with the filter. 13:21 – Dan: We want to eventually I hope we can surface more things. Not everyone thinks how a designer thinks. We are trivial to discover them maybe they would. He’s very much open to that someday. 14:24 – I want to ask a question. Let’s do a poll request and it’s important to me. I don’t see the file where that lives. 14:41 – Dan: I think there is a pre-existing file. You can base it off of that one. 14:55 – A little context that I have and the one question that keeps coming up is what’s to say that this won’t drive us down a road to only do what NX wants us to do? 15:52 – Dan: It’s tricky. Actually, back when the CUI they were thinking of something very similar to the console and it never happened. Basically before we launched it to the public we wanted to make sure that Angular team was on board with us. Even though we own the repo we wanted Google to sign-off the code. Make sure that they did it the correct way and they have lawyers more so than a start-up does. Eventually they will own...and they will be in charge of the release schedule. But all in all it’s my baby and I won’t give it up. There are extensions... Dan continues this conversation. 18:20 – Yeah so far using the console I can see the NX and finding extensions is hard. Where would you go find it? So this stuff... 18:53 – As long as NX still stays an option than something you MUST choose then... 19:12 – Dan: We decided early on that we didn’t want to shove NX into their face. That console can be useful but useful in another way. What we are building is this way you can reach out to us. We are a consulting company. If you are in the middle of making your app and you see a bug then we are building out a NWRL connect where you can connect with us. 20:12 – Yeah I see that NWRL connect. Do I get you for free? 20:26 – John Papa discount. 20:31 – I usually have to pay him $10,000 a minute! 20:53 – Yeah, he’s a cofounder (Victor). 21:03 – It gives his number and SSN! 21:17 – Alyssa: You said you have a lot of ideas of how console could go, do you have any things in the next steps? 21:32 – Dan: I wasn’t very ambitious when I started the project. It’s not a huge desktop client focus application. I am adding background tasks. Things you can run all the time so you don’t have to click them all the time. 23:17 – Advertisement – Get a coder job! 23:58 – Why would you use this tool? 24:05 – Dan: I have this fun experience when I was making console at first. It didn’t have the command screen and I needed to make a dialogue for creating a new workspace. And I said: Oh Shoot I don’t remember how to generate a module with routing. So instead of Googling...server and opened up Angular Console workspace and generated a component with it and it... 25:11 – Comment. 25:19 – Dan: During auto complete... 26:10 – Panelist: If they want that UI...and when I teach Angular the first thing I teach is the UI. I think UI is a great starting point. I look at the console to see the extensions. 27:09 – The CUI is already abstracting multiple different things. Now you have added a UI to it, I think it will be attractive for different people. I can see people saying I got it, and other people (John Papa) teaching a course, or maybe...certain people will like/don’t like it. 28:12 – I don’t think it’s an either or. 28:20 – Chuck: I would try things on the command line, and then things on the console line and figure out how it works with my flow. If I have 2 tools then I will use 1 for X and the other for Y. 28:47 – Dan comments. 29:17 – Where should people go to voice their ideas? 29:29 – Dan: Some ideas are really, really good! Yeah shoot me a message. 30:19 – You haven’t seen my issues, yet, bro. 30:28 – Chuck: Was it inspired by the... 30:37 – Dan: Shamelessly I steal design all the time. As I develop the Angular Console more I am steering away from their design but... 31:26 – Chuck: Depending on WHO I am talking about there is rivalry between maybe Vue and Angular and whatever. I like the idea of sharing to show the mature elements to bring in what I am doing. 31:59 – The main difference is the implementation is electron and web app and tell us pros and cons and why? 32:14 – Dan: We could have done it either way. It looked more beautiful in my dock. Having it be an honest to goodness app and not having to open a terminal and fire it up, it didn’t feel professional or good. There is a little bit of professionalism there. 33:42 – Chuck: I agree with that. 33:48 – I like that it is web and that it’s a web application. It’s nice to have a web app open. 34:06 – Dan comments. Dan: Discoverability is there. There are 2 servers and you could load it up and open it up in Chrome. We don’t use a lot of electronic UPIS because you are just running your terminal. 34:56 – Chuck comments. 35:02 – I just put the 7’s in there and there it is! 35:11 – Dan: Theoretically, it is useful. That’s good. 35:19 – What port? 35:40 – Chuck, panel and guest go back-and-forth. 36:06 – Seems like a good idea. 36:13 – Hacker News. 36:17 – Dan: That’s the dream – my life would be made as a developer. 36:38 – Chuck. 36:55 – I submitted a PR in there and looks like you are still getting help with this. I am a fan of this tool. People will love this. 37:15 – Dan: We have more things that we want to add it - it to make it more attractive. We are making it official we are... 37:54 – There are people that kill NWRLs. 38:03 – Chuck. 38:08 – Dan: Fellow NWRLer, Jack... 38:50 – That stuff exists through web pack, right? 39:20 – Dan: We can’t use it because it’s garbage and I won’t touch it. 39:35 – Dan: I don’t know. We are going to do basically the same thing but prettier. The code will be prettier. 40:10 – Chuck: Aaron, it looks like you put in a request to put in the plug-in. And you did it pretty fast so it’s not hard to do? 40:31 – Probably not formatted properly. 40:40 – Panel and guest go back-and-forth. 40:54 – You have to fix it on the air. It’s a space problem. My line space is too long. 41:07 – Panelists and guest. 41:46 – Dan: Any compliment from Victor makes my life. 41:57 – Panelist: I changed it. 42:05 – Alyssa: Is it green light, green arrow? 42:15 – I am just failing. 42:21 – I used the web editor I really didn’t... 42:30 – Alyssa: It was a space issue. 42:39 – 3 more minutes to go... 42:54 – Chuck sing us a song while we wait. 43:03 – Is there a contributions page for people to contribute? 43:18 – Dan: It tells you exactly how to run it. 43:33 – Chuck: It using some of the web pack tools and the CUI and the command line, I am wondering if it’s possible to add - not extensions to the CUI stuff but - to the console itself? Setup the other things that aren’t Angular specific but are apart of my overall template? Or do you do that through schematics? 44:16 – Dan: There are different ways to approach it. Your personal workflow you probably should integrate it. Like anything else why wouldn’t you keep it the same? 45:42 – Panelist comments. 46:08 – Dan: Have you contributed to Angular before? 46:25 – Chuck: Anything else before Picks? 46:36 – NRWL Connects is our support product to help you with being a more productive Angular developer. 47:24 – Panelists and guest go back-and-forth. 47:41 – I didn’t know NRWL Connects was a thing. If I wasn’t personal friends with Victor and... There have been problems that I have solved because I have smart friends. NRWL Connect is to help those people who don’t have smart friends. People can solve a lot of problems and this is HUGE! 49:03 – Dan: Fingers crossed we are helping integrate Angular Connect to help with Basil. 49:39 – Chuck: Picks! 50:00 – Advertisement – Fresh Books! Links: Vue Angular NRWL NGRX – DATA LAB – GITHUB Angular Console Angular Prettier Schematic Chuck’s Twitter 5 Things about developing on a Mac – Video Real Talk JavaScript King and Queen of the Universe Grinders Dan Muller’s Bio through NRWL Sponsors: Angular Boot Camp Fresh Books Get a Coder Job Course Picks: Alyssa Kendal UI Library component update John Season 2 of 5 Things of JavaScript Podcast  - Realtalk JavaScript Aaron Role for Initiative Charles Extreme Ownership Dungeon and Dragons HeroDevs.com Dan Look at the Birdie The King and Queen of the Universe Grinders Boots Screaming Females

google pr video universe adventures mac dragons panel initiative setup bio special guests chrome dungeon ui github javascript basil panelists googling extreme ownership advertisement vue danone angular electron nx freshbooks lenox grinders hacker news ssn cui danas screaming females extreme ownership u s navy seals data lab danto chuck nice charles max wood dan it john papa dan yeah dan muller ngg dan there chuck it aaron frost nrwl ngrx chuck anything us 2528sem 2529branded 257cexm chuck picks angular connect coder job course real talk javascript chuck aaron angular boot camp herodevs alyssa it alyssa nicholl alyssa what angular console alyssa you dan under dan some nrwl connect alyssa is
Adventures in Angular
AiA 212: “Angular Console” with Dan Muller

Adventures in Angular

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 23, 2018 60:44


Panel: Charles Max Wood Aaron Frost John Papa Alyssa Nicholl Special Guests: Dan Muller In this episode, the Adventures in Angular panel talks with Dan Muller who is a member of the NRWL team and who has developed Angular Console. The panel asks Dan questions about the console and the pros and cons of it. Check out today’s episode! Show Topics: 1:19 – Dan: I work now with NRWL and I used to work at Google and then I got bored writing Angular applications. I then texted a colleague and worked with him and he gave me what is now called 1:52 – Chuck: Nice. Give us the elevator pitch for Angular Console? 2:00 – Dan: It is mostly pretty. 2:19 – Alyssa comments. 2:30 – Dan: To each their own. 2:38 – Dan One of the parts working at Google I would copy and paste the patterns I did at Google. Now we stopped copying and pasting code. If you are newbie there is a learning code and that’s a drag. What it (Angular Console) does it makes it easier for novices for them to know what can you generate and what options are available to you. It makes you feel nice and comforted and holds your hand. It’s a tool for me because I often go fast and it makes sure I don’t do anything wrong. It’s focused, and it keeps me focused. 4:29 – Panelist: I just installed it for the first time. I am working on a project for a client and been doing a lot of NGG things. I am looking at this thing and I can see how it can be pretty helpful with its UI. Get in and try it out. 5:23 – Dan: That’s the generate screen. 5:30 – I have a terminal and it... 5:51 – Dan: As you building up the commands it constantly runs them. It would be insane for you to hit the Enter key and copy and paste, cause we only have 2 hands. As you are doing the commands it will tell you what’s missing. You will have the flags above it and tweak it a little and it comes together. 6:45 – Chuck. 6:53 – Dan: Under the hood it’s running it verbatim. Anything that has an architecture definition every 1/10 sec it...will live update and it sees what projects you have, what apps you have and anything you have with a CI it will present it to you. 7:51 – It has some custom scripts. 8:03 – Alyssa: What did you do to install it? 8:05 - AngularConsole.com Welcome download button and I downloaded it. 8:43 – It’s a tiny file. 8:47 – You are trying your best to make your bundle efficient. 8:57 – Electron app is about the same size. It took only 11 seconds to download for me. 9:11 – Nobody uses Lenox, so... 9:22 – It does some very simple things it can do and chime-in when you want, Dan! I can see all my projects and if you were in a workspace you can see it all. If you have an Angular project you can do a generate component. There is a code generator, and there is a run screen. And in the end – I have a question about extensions? This is really where you can get a bunch of schematics, right? 10:34 – Panelist asks a question. 10:38 – Dan: Not wrong at all. 11:25 – Panelist and Dan go back-and-forth. 11:36 – We should do a show on schematics. 11:43 – You are percolating a few new ones – that’s cool. What would be cool is if you... 12:14 – Dan: Yeah it’s hard coded. We put this together in less than a month. It started in the middle of like October and we just put together and released in 3 weeks. Considering how slow Angular has developed it’s interesting to see... 13:01 – Yeah I am seeing the extensions that reminds me... I like how you can search with these extensions there especially with the filter. 13:21 – Dan: We want to eventually I hope we can surface more things. Not everyone thinks how a designer thinks. We are trivial to discover them maybe they would. He’s very much open to that someday. 14:24 – I want to ask a question. Let’s do a poll request and it’s important to me. I don’t see the file where that lives. 14:41 – Dan: I think there is a pre-existing file. You can base it off of that one. 14:55 – A little context that I have and the one question that keeps coming up is what’s to say that this won’t drive us down a road to only do what NX wants us to do? 15:52 – Dan: It’s tricky. Actually, back when the CUI they were thinking of something very similar to the console and it never happened. Basically before we launched it to the public we wanted to make sure that Angular team was on board with us. Even though we own the repo we wanted Google to sign-off the code. Make sure that they did it the correct way and they have lawyers more so than a start-up does. Eventually they will own...and they will be in charge of the release schedule. But all in all it’s my baby and I won’t give it up. There are extensions... Dan continues this conversation. 18:20 – Yeah so far using the console I can see the NX and finding extensions is hard. Where would you go find it? So this stuff... 18:53 – As long as NX still stays an option than something you MUST choose then... 19:12 – Dan: We decided early on that we didn’t want to shove NX into their face. That console can be useful but useful in another way. What we are building is this way you can reach out to us. We are a consulting company. If you are in the middle of making your app and you see a bug then we are building out a NWRL connect where you can connect with us. 20:12 – Yeah I see that NWRL connect. Do I get you for free? 20:26 – John Papa discount. 20:31 – I usually have to pay him $10,000 a minute! 20:53 – Yeah, he’s a cofounder (Victor). 21:03 – It gives his number and SSN! 21:17 – Alyssa: You said you have a lot of ideas of how console could go, do you have any things in the next steps? 21:32 – Dan: I wasn’t very ambitious when I started the project. It’s not a huge desktop client focus application. I am adding background tasks. Things you can run all the time so you don’t have to click them all the time. 23:17 – Advertisement – Get a coder job! 23:58 – Why would you use this tool? 24:05 – Dan: I have this fun experience when I was making console at first. It didn’t have the command screen and I needed to make a dialogue for creating a new workspace. And I said: Oh Shoot I don’t remember how to generate a module with routing. So instead of Googling...server and opened up Angular Console workspace and generated a component with it and it... 25:11 – Comment. 25:19 – Dan: During auto complete... 26:10 – Panelist: If they want that UI...and when I teach Angular the first thing I teach is the UI. I think UI is a great starting point. I look at the console to see the extensions. 27:09 – The CUI is already abstracting multiple different things. Now you have added a UI to it, I think it will be attractive for different people. I can see people saying I got it, and other people (John Papa) teaching a course, or maybe...certain people will like/don’t like it. 28:12 – I don’t think it’s an either or. 28:20 – Chuck: I would try things on the command line, and then things on the console line and figure out how it works with my flow. If I have 2 tools then I will use 1 for X and the other for Y. 28:47 – Dan comments. 29:17 – Where should people go to voice their ideas? 29:29 – Dan: Some ideas are really, really good! Yeah shoot me a message. 30:19 – You haven’t seen my issues, yet, bro. 30:28 – Chuck: Was it inspired by the... 30:37 – Dan: Shamelessly I steal design all the time. As I develop the Angular Console more I am steering away from their design but... 31:26 – Chuck: Depending on WHO I am talking about there is rivalry between maybe Vue and Angular and whatever. I like the idea of sharing to show the mature elements to bring in what I am doing. 31:59 – The main difference is the implementation is electron and web app and tell us pros and cons and why? 32:14 – Dan: We could have done it either way. It looked more beautiful in my dock. Having it be an honest to goodness app and not having to open a terminal and fire it up, it didn’t feel professional or good. There is a little bit of professionalism there. 33:42 – Chuck: I agree with that. 33:48 – I like that it is web and that it’s a web application. It’s nice to have a web app open. 34:06 – Dan comments. Dan: Discoverability is there. There are 2 servers and you could load it up and open it up in Chrome. We don’t use a lot of electronic UPIS because you are just running your terminal. 34:56 – Chuck comments. 35:02 – I just put the 7’s in there and there it is! 35:11 – Dan: Theoretically, it is useful. That’s good. 35:19 – What port? 35:40 – Chuck, panel and guest go back-and-forth. 36:06 – Seems like a good idea. 36:13 – Hacker News. 36:17 – Dan: That’s the dream – my life would be made as a developer. 36:38 – Chuck. 36:55 – I submitted a PR in there and looks like you are still getting help with this. I am a fan of this tool. People will love this. 37:15 – Dan: We have more things that we want to add it - it to make it more attractive. We are making it official we are... 37:54 – There are people that kill NWRLs. 38:03 – Chuck. 38:08 – Dan: Fellow NWRLer, Jack... 38:50 – That stuff exists through web pack, right? 39:20 – Dan: We can’t use it because it’s garbage and I won’t touch it. 39:35 – Dan: I don’t know. We are going to do basically the same thing but prettier. The code will be prettier. 40:10 – Chuck: Aaron, it looks like you put in a request to put in the plug-in. And you did it pretty fast so it’s not hard to do? 40:31 – Probably not formatted properly. 40:40 – Panel and guest go back-and-forth. 40:54 – You have to fix it on the air. It’s a space problem. My line space is too long. 41:07 – Panelists and guest. 41:46 – Dan: Any compliment from Victor makes my life. 41:57 – Panelist: I changed it. 42:05 – Alyssa: Is it green light, green arrow? 42:15 – I am just failing. 42:21 – I used the web editor I really didn’t... 42:30 – Alyssa: It was a space issue. 42:39 – 3 more minutes to go... 42:54 – Chuck sing us a song while we wait. 43:03 – Is there a contributions page for people to contribute? 43:18 – Dan: It tells you exactly how to run it. 43:33 – Chuck: It using some of the web pack tools and the CUI and the command line, I am wondering if it’s possible to add - not extensions to the CUI stuff but - to the console itself? Setup the other things that aren’t Angular specific but are apart of my overall template? Or do you do that through schematics? 44:16 – Dan: There are different ways to approach it. Your personal workflow you probably should integrate it. Like anything else why wouldn’t you keep it the same? 45:42 – Panelist comments. 46:08 – Dan: Have you contributed to Angular before? 46:25 – Chuck: Anything else before Picks? 46:36 – NRWL Connects is our support product to help you with being a more productive Angular developer. 47:24 – Panelists and guest go back-and-forth. 47:41 – I didn’t know NRWL Connects was a thing. If I wasn’t personal friends with Victor and... There have been problems that I have solved because I have smart friends. NRWL Connect is to help those people who don’t have smart friends. People can solve a lot of problems and this is HUGE! 49:03 – Dan: Fingers crossed we are helping integrate Angular Connect to help with Basil. 49:39 – Chuck: Picks! 50:00 – Advertisement – Fresh Books! Links: Vue Angular NRWL NGRX – DATA LAB – GITHUB Angular Console Angular Prettier Schematic Chuck’s Twitter 5 Things about developing on a Mac – Video Real Talk JavaScript King and Queen of the Universe Grinders Dan Muller’s Bio through NRWL Sponsors: Angular Boot Camp Fresh Books Get a Coder Job Course Picks: Alyssa Kendal UI Library component update John Season 2 of 5 Things of JavaScript Podcast  - Realtalk JavaScript Aaron Role for Initiative Charles Extreme Ownership Dungeon and Dragons HeroDevs.com Dan Look at the Birdie The King and Queen of the Universe Grinders Boots Screaming Females

google pr video universe adventures mac dragons panel initiative setup bio special guests chrome dungeon ui github javascript basil panelists googling extreme ownership advertisement vue danone angular electron nx freshbooks lenox grinders hacker news ssn cui danas screaming females extreme ownership u s navy seals data lab danto chuck nice charles max wood dan it john papa dan yeah dan muller ngg dan there chuck it aaron frost nrwl ngrx chuck anything us 2528sem 2529branded 257cexm chuck picks angular connect coder job course real talk javascript chuck aaron angular boot camp herodevs alyssa it alyssa nicholl alyssa what angular console alyssa you dan under dan some nrwl connect alyssa is
Devchat.tv Master Feed
AiA 208: From Custom Webpack Build to Angular CLI with Martin Jakubik

Devchat.tv Master Feed

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 25, 2018 54:57


Panel: Alyssa Nicholl Joe Eames John Papa Ward Bell Special Guests: Martin Jakubik In this episode, the Adventures in Angular panel talk with Martin Jakubik and he has been working with Angular for the last three years. He has one large and one small Angular application, which the panel talks about. Show Topics: 2:31 – Alyssa likes to be called... 2:40 – Alyssa: You have a large and small application – what makes it small? Is it the user-base? 2:56 – Martin: It is one module out of ten or twenty components. 2: 59 – Panelist: Only 1 Angular module? 3:47 – Panelist: Joe went off on how much he hates modules. I am sorry JP we had to throw that in that? 4:04 – Joe: I am an anti-modulist. 4:11 – Martin: Just one module. 4:21 – Panelist: When you are building an application with one module – start us from the beginning, what does it look like? 4:38 – Martin: It is actually quite special. It has to run in an iFrame, and all it does it allows the user to add into the experiment. 5:05 – Alyssa: Is it like a CMS? 5:10 – Martin: It is like Google Optimize. The application is quite simple and every component is in that one module. 5:36 – Panelist: How many do you have? 5:44 – Martin: There are less than 10 services and 20 components at most. 5:57 – Panelist: I feel personally, I feel like that I a decent size? 6:11 – Panelist: That makes perfect sense. If there is no routing or nothing... 6:40 – Panelist: Asks a question, and clarifies the question to Martin. 7:48 – Panelist: It is nice and clean. 7:55 – Panelist: I do, too. 8:08 – Alyssa: How new is it? 8:15 – Panelist: June/July? 8:32 – Martin: I am using the new style. 9:01 – Panelist: I am leery of using it. 9:13 - Panelist: I would like to clarify. When you mention you have 20 components... 9:40 - Panelist: Do it. 10:34 – Panelist: Webpack. Can you explain what that is and how you solved it? 10:57 – Martin: I don’t think I did anything special. I wanted to know how it works. I used webpack and used their configurations. Several months into the project then I... 11:40 – Panelist: Why did you decide not to use the CLI? This is like an Iron Man thing. 11:55 – Panelist: I think it’s a pain thing. 12:05 – Martin: I wanted to know how it works. 12:32 – Martin: I started from scratch, I can’t remember. 12:44 – Panelist: Whenever I use webpack it makes my head spin. 12:56 – Martin: The application was very simple. I was doing more blogging. 13:45 – Panelist: It is doing more configurations on the fly for you. It’s wonderful if it works and if it doesn’t work then I don’t know what you’d do. 14:17 – Martin: That’s why I did it, so I can appreciate all the magic. 14:30 – Panelist: How big is big? 14:36 – Martin: Enterprise level. 100 different components. 15:06 – Panelist chimes in. 15:13 – Panelist: That is complex. 15:28 – Panelist: let’s add more modules to add to the complexity... 15:55 – Alyssa: When you took your app to the CLI was that hard? 16:06 – Martin: That took me one whole day. The module is so simple that’s why. 16:32 – Panelist talks about this topic. 17:39 – Panelist asks a question. 17:53 – Panelist: Fixing any problem ... ever work on tooling help people if they have their stuff in the right file name? 18:18 – Martin: I used Cypress. 18:58 – Panelist: Under what situation would you recommend it to anyone? Do it your own webpack configuration? 19:23 – Martin: Only if... 19:51 – Alyssa: What if you wanted to add a watermark to each file, do you have to stop adding the CLI? 20:13 – Panelist: So am I...what are the boundaries, I don’t know what they are? I’m curious. 20:41 – Panelist: Are you asking, Alyssa, how you would customize it? 21:09 – Panelist: You won’t loose all the features that you get. You now elected out of that place where they had it; webpack configurations. 22:12 – Panelist: What happened to it ejecting? How do you get it out of there? 22:26 – Good question! I have – I like to play with scissors. 22:43 – Advertisement 23:32 – Panelist reads a message from the company. How do you get that voice? 24:10 – First you have to have a really deep sinus cold. 25:00 – Panelist: Do you live without eject? I really don’t care. What I care about...Scratch that! I want to know what kinds of things you can’t do with a CLI that would drive you to do your own application? What other things could you not do in webpack. 25:50 – Martin: I wanted to see how it works. 25:56 – Panelist: Now I use CLI and all it’s features except testing. I use Cypress completely separate than CLI. 26:46 – Panelist: I feel like it’s talking to the one person without a cellphone. 27:01 – Panelist: Wow! I had no concept that life could be like that! I thought you had to have a cellphone. 27:29  – Martin: What does anyone use the CLI for anyways? 27:44 – Martin: I use it for unit tests. 27:52 – Panelist: Another question. 28:30 – Alyssa: You write things out by hand because it’s easier?! 28:44 – Panelist: You copy, and paste and it’s less work. 29:06 – Panelist: It feels easier. 29:22 – Joe: No, I am serious. 29:48 – Joe: Yes, I am amazing. 30:30 – Martin talks about another topic. 30:48 – Alyssa: When you generate a component do you put it into a different file? 31:29 – Panel: We are all friends here and we aren’t shaming anyone here. We are joking here. 32:00 – Alyssa: It’s that he can write it from memory. 33:08 – Panelist: I have been using Vue lately. He also talks about Angular and mentions Sarah Drasner, too. 34:26 – Panelist: Not everyone has a memory like him, though. 35:32 – Panelist: The fourth version of Renderer. 36:28 – Panelist: We are not talking about Nirvana the band, here. 36:46 – Alyssa: It will be the new Renderer. It’s out for you to try. Check out Angular Air. He was trying out IB yourself right now. People are flipping out about it. I am excited to see how my Angular app runs differently now. Here is the code that was generated, here is the code that... I am not sure that there is a promise date. Any secrets heads-up on when it will come out? 38:22 – Panelist: The big question what does this mean for my existing code? Do I have to change my existing code? 38:48 – Alyssa: The Angular team is working so that there are minimal changes. I don’t have a good answer. NGGC. For third-party libraries you run it through and it... I don’t know what that means for the community. 39:49 – Panelist: My hope is that they... 40:03 – Alyssa: For your third-party... 40:18 – Panelist: Question: between your small and large pack? What architectural differences are there? 40:44 – Martin: I have a template edit. 41:03 – Panelist: Come to my... 41:32 – Panel talks about talks that Jon can do. 42:13 – Panelist: True story... The panel is having fun going back and forth with jokes. 43:03 – Panelist: This kind of stuff creeps into production code. That’s the great thing about copy and paste. 43:21 – Panelist: We had a rule, though, if it happens more than once let’s put into our build. 44:20 – It’s 3 hours if you have a CI process, if you don’t... 44:33 – Console.log 44:49 – Martin chimes in. 45:14 – Panelist: Let’s talk about an iFrame in your app? 45:27 – Martin: The point is to be able to do it with any... Make sure that it doesn’t collide. The CSS wasn’t separated. I had to put my application inside an iFrame. 46:27 – Panelist: Thanks for coming on for us, Martin. 46:37 – Picks! 46:44 - Advertisement Links: Martin Jakubik’s Medium How to Copy, Cut, Paste for Beginners by Melanie Pinola Art Joker Blog @AngularMine Cypress Vue Renderer Sponsors: Angular Boot Camp Digital Ocean Get a Coder Job course Picks: Alyssa Question as my pick – About Angular 7...(47:52) True or False? Martin Thank you for having me today. Present your work more. I challenge you all to cook. Blog: Bratislava Angular Ward How to Copy, Cut, and Paste Joe Brian Holt – Eleven Tips to Scale Node.js NPM scripts – I relearned something “new” lately.

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All Angular Podcasts by Devchat.tv
AiA 208: From Custom Webpack Build to Angular CLI with Martin Jakubik

All Angular Podcasts by Devchat.tv

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 25, 2018 54:57


Panel: Alyssa Nicholl Joe Eames John Papa Ward Bell Special Guests: Martin Jakubik In this episode, the Adventures in Angular panel talk with Martin Jakubik and he has been working with Angular for the last three years. He has one large and one small Angular application, which the panel talks about. Show Topics: 2:31 – Alyssa likes to be called... 2:40 – Alyssa: You have a large and small application – what makes it small? Is it the user-base? 2:56 – Martin: It is one module out of ten or twenty components. 2: 59 – Panelist: Only 1 Angular module? 3:47 – Panelist: Joe went off on how much he hates modules. I am sorry JP we had to throw that in that? 4:04 – Joe: I am an anti-modulist. 4:11 – Martin: Just one module. 4:21 – Panelist: When you are building an application with one module – start us from the beginning, what does it look like? 4:38 – Martin: It is actually quite special. It has to run in an iFrame, and all it does it allows the user to add into the experiment. 5:05 – Alyssa: Is it like a CMS? 5:10 – Martin: It is like Google Optimize. The application is quite simple and every component is in that one module. 5:36 – Panelist: How many do you have? 5:44 – Martin: There are less than 10 services and 20 components at most. 5:57 – Panelist: I feel personally, I feel like that I a decent size? 6:11 – Panelist: That makes perfect sense. If there is no routing or nothing... 6:40 – Panelist: Asks a question, and clarifies the question to Martin. 7:48 – Panelist: It is nice and clean. 7:55 – Panelist: I do, too. 8:08 – Alyssa: How new is it? 8:15 – Panelist: June/July? 8:32 – Martin: I am using the new style. 9:01 – Panelist: I am leery of using it. 9:13 - Panelist: I would like to clarify. When you mention you have 20 components... 9:40 - Panelist: Do it. 10:34 – Panelist: Webpack. Can you explain what that is and how you solved it? 10:57 – Martin: I don’t think I did anything special. I wanted to know how it works. I used webpack and used their configurations. Several months into the project then I... 11:40 – Panelist: Why did you decide not to use the CLI? This is like an Iron Man thing. 11:55 – Panelist: I think it’s a pain thing. 12:05 – Martin: I wanted to know how it works. 12:32 – Martin: I started from scratch, I can’t remember. 12:44 – Panelist: Whenever I use webpack it makes my head spin. 12:56 – Martin: The application was very simple. I was doing more blogging. 13:45 – Panelist: It is doing more configurations on the fly for you. It’s wonderful if it works and if it doesn’t work then I don’t know what you’d do. 14:17 – Martin: That’s why I did it, so I can appreciate all the magic. 14:30 – Panelist: How big is big? 14:36 – Martin: Enterprise level. 100 different components. 15:06 – Panelist chimes in. 15:13 – Panelist: That is complex. 15:28 – Panelist: let’s add more modules to add to the complexity... 15:55 – Alyssa: When you took your app to the CLI was that hard? 16:06 – Martin: That took me one whole day. The module is so simple that’s why. 16:32 – Panelist talks about this topic. 17:39 – Panelist asks a question. 17:53 – Panelist: Fixing any problem ... ever work on tooling help people if they have their stuff in the right file name? 18:18 – Martin: I used Cypress. 18:58 – Panelist: Under what situation would you recommend it to anyone? Do it your own webpack configuration? 19:23 – Martin: Only if... 19:51 – Alyssa: What if you wanted to add a watermark to each file, do you have to stop adding the CLI? 20:13 – Panelist: So am I...what are the boundaries, I don’t know what they are? I’m curious. 20:41 – Panelist: Are you asking, Alyssa, how you would customize it? 21:09 – Panelist: You won’t loose all the features that you get. You now elected out of that place where they had it; webpack configurations. 22:12 – Panelist: What happened to it ejecting? How do you get it out of there? 22:26 – Good question! I have – I like to play with scissors. 22:43 – Advertisement 23:32 – Panelist reads a message from the company. How do you get that voice? 24:10 – First you have to have a really deep sinus cold. 25:00 – Panelist: Do you live without eject? I really don’t care. What I care about...Scratch that! I want to know what kinds of things you can’t do with a CLI that would drive you to do your own application? What other things could you not do in webpack. 25:50 – Martin: I wanted to see how it works. 25:56 – Panelist: Now I use CLI and all it’s features except testing. I use Cypress completely separate than CLI. 26:46 – Panelist: I feel like it’s talking to the one person without a cellphone. 27:01 – Panelist: Wow! I had no concept that life could be like that! I thought you had to have a cellphone. 27:29  – Martin: What does anyone use the CLI for anyways? 27:44 – Martin: I use it for unit tests. 27:52 – Panelist: Another question. 28:30 – Alyssa: You write things out by hand because it’s easier?! 28:44 – Panelist: You copy, and paste and it’s less work. 29:06 – Panelist: It feels easier. 29:22 – Joe: No, I am serious. 29:48 – Joe: Yes, I am amazing. 30:30 – Martin talks about another topic. 30:48 – Alyssa: When you generate a component do you put it into a different file? 31:29 – Panel: We are all friends here and we aren’t shaming anyone here. We are joking here. 32:00 – Alyssa: It’s that he can write it from memory. 33:08 – Panelist: I have been using Vue lately. He also talks about Angular and mentions Sarah Drasner, too. 34:26 – Panelist: Not everyone has a memory like him, though. 35:32 – Panelist: The fourth version of Renderer. 36:28 – Panelist: We are not talking about Nirvana the band, here. 36:46 – Alyssa: It will be the new Renderer. It’s out for you to try. Check out Angular Air. He was trying out IB yourself right now. People are flipping out about it. I am excited to see how my Angular app runs differently now. Here is the code that was generated, here is the code that... I am not sure that there is a promise date. Any secrets heads-up on when it will come out? 38:22 – Panelist: The big question what does this mean for my existing code? Do I have to change my existing code? 38:48 – Alyssa: The Angular team is working so that there are minimal changes. I don’t have a good answer. NGGC. For third-party libraries you run it through and it... I don’t know what that means for the community. 39:49 – Panelist: My hope is that they... 40:03 – Alyssa: For your third-party... 40:18 – Panelist: Question: between your small and large pack? What architectural differences are there? 40:44 – Martin: I have a template edit. 41:03 – Panelist: Come to my... 41:32 – Panel talks about talks that Jon can do. 42:13 – Panelist: True story... The panel is having fun going back and forth with jokes. 43:03 – Panelist: This kind of stuff creeps into production code. That’s the great thing about copy and paste. 43:21 – Panelist: We had a rule, though, if it happens more than once let’s put into our build. 44:20 – It’s 3 hours if you have a CI process, if you don’t... 44:33 – Console.log 44:49 – Martin chimes in. 45:14 – Panelist: Let’s talk about an iFrame in your app? 45:27 – Martin: The point is to be able to do it with any... Make sure that it doesn’t collide. The CSS wasn’t separated. I had to put my application inside an iFrame. 46:27 – Panelist: Thanks for coming on for us, Martin. 46:37 – Picks! 46:44 - Advertisement Links: Martin Jakubik’s Medium How to Copy, Cut, Paste for Beginners by Melanie Pinola Art Joker Blog @AngularMine Cypress Vue Renderer Sponsors: Angular Boot Camp Digital Ocean Get a Coder Job course Picks: Alyssa Question as my pick – About Angular 7...(47:52) True or False? Martin Thank you for having me today. Present your work more. I challenge you all to cook. Blog: Bratislava Angular Ward How to Copy, Cut, and Paste Joe Brian Holt – Eleven Tips to Scale Node.js NPM scripts – I relearned something “new” lately.

adventures medium iron man panel beginners false ward scratch nirvana copy special guests jp console cms panelists ib css paste advertisement cypress vue angular cli digital ocean npm webpack google optimize iframe john papa sarah drasner angular cli brian holt renderer joe eames ward bell coder job angular air martin it panelist you eleven tips angular boot camp melanie pinola panelist let alyssa it panelist it martin there alyssa nicholl alyssa what alyssa how panelist question alyssa you panelist so panelist why martin only panelist not alyssa is
Adventures in Angular
AiA 208: From Custom Webpack Build to Angular CLI with Martin Jakubik

Adventures in Angular

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 25, 2018 54:57


Panel: Alyssa Nicholl Joe Eames John Papa Ward Bell Special Guests: Martin Jakubik In this episode, the Adventures in Angular panel talk with Martin Jakubik and he has been working with Angular for the last three years. He has one large and one small Angular application, which the panel talks about. Show Topics: 2:31 – Alyssa likes to be called... 2:40 – Alyssa: You have a large and small application – what makes it small? Is it the user-base? 2:56 – Martin: It is one module out of ten or twenty components. 2: 59 – Panelist: Only 1 Angular module? 3:47 – Panelist: Joe went off on how much he hates modules. I am sorry JP we had to throw that in that? 4:04 – Joe: I am an anti-modulist. 4:11 – Martin: Just one module. 4:21 – Panelist: When you are building an application with one module – start us from the beginning, what does it look like? 4:38 – Martin: It is actually quite special. It has to run in an iFrame, and all it does it allows the user to add into the experiment. 5:05 – Alyssa: Is it like a CMS? 5:10 – Martin: It is like Google Optimize. The application is quite simple and every component is in that one module. 5:36 – Panelist: How many do you have? 5:44 – Martin: There are less than 10 services and 20 components at most. 5:57 – Panelist: I feel personally, I feel like that I a decent size? 6:11 – Panelist: That makes perfect sense. If there is no routing or nothing... 6:40 – Panelist: Asks a question, and clarifies the question to Martin. 7:48 – Panelist: It is nice and clean. 7:55 – Panelist: I do, too. 8:08 – Alyssa: How new is it? 8:15 – Panelist: June/July? 8:32 – Martin: I am using the new style. 9:01 – Panelist: I am leery of using it. 9:13 - Panelist: I would like to clarify. When you mention you have 20 components... 9:40 - Panelist: Do it. 10:34 – Panelist: Webpack. Can you explain what that is and how you solved it? 10:57 – Martin: I don’t think I did anything special. I wanted to know how it works. I used webpack and used their configurations. Several months into the project then I... 11:40 – Panelist: Why did you decide not to use the CLI? This is like an Iron Man thing. 11:55 – Panelist: I think it’s a pain thing. 12:05 – Martin: I wanted to know how it works. 12:32 – Martin: I started from scratch, I can’t remember. 12:44 – Panelist: Whenever I use webpack it makes my head spin. 12:56 – Martin: The application was very simple. I was doing more blogging. 13:45 – Panelist: It is doing more configurations on the fly for you. It’s wonderful if it works and if it doesn’t work then I don’t know what you’d do. 14:17 – Martin: That’s why I did it, so I can appreciate all the magic. 14:30 – Panelist: How big is big? 14:36 – Martin: Enterprise level. 100 different components. 15:06 – Panelist chimes in. 15:13 – Panelist: That is complex. 15:28 – Panelist: let’s add more modules to add to the complexity... 15:55 – Alyssa: When you took your app to the CLI was that hard? 16:06 – Martin: That took me one whole day. The module is so simple that’s why. 16:32 – Panelist talks about this topic. 17:39 – Panelist asks a question. 17:53 – Panelist: Fixing any problem ... ever work on tooling help people if they have their stuff in the right file name? 18:18 – Martin: I used Cypress. 18:58 – Panelist: Under what situation would you recommend it to anyone? Do it your own webpack configuration? 19:23 – Martin: Only if... 19:51 – Alyssa: What if you wanted to add a watermark to each file, do you have to stop adding the CLI? 20:13 – Panelist: So am I...what are the boundaries, I don’t know what they are? I’m curious. 20:41 – Panelist: Are you asking, Alyssa, how you would customize it? 21:09 – Panelist: You won’t loose all the features that you get. You now elected out of that place where they had it; webpack configurations. 22:12 – Panelist: What happened to it ejecting? How do you get it out of there? 22:26 – Good question! I have – I like to play with scissors. 22:43 – Advertisement 23:32 – Panelist reads a message from the company. How do you get that voice? 24:10 – First you have to have a really deep sinus cold. 25:00 – Panelist: Do you live without eject? I really don’t care. What I care about...Scratch that! I want to know what kinds of things you can’t do with a CLI that would drive you to do your own application? What other things could you not do in webpack. 25:50 – Martin: I wanted to see how it works. 25:56 – Panelist: Now I use CLI and all it’s features except testing. I use Cypress completely separate than CLI. 26:46 – Panelist: I feel like it’s talking to the one person without a cellphone. 27:01 – Panelist: Wow! I had no concept that life could be like that! I thought you had to have a cellphone. 27:29  – Martin: What does anyone use the CLI for anyways? 27:44 – Martin: I use it for unit tests. 27:52 – Panelist: Another question. 28:30 – Alyssa: You write things out by hand because it’s easier?! 28:44 – Panelist: You copy, and paste and it’s less work. 29:06 – Panelist: It feels easier. 29:22 – Joe: No, I am serious. 29:48 – Joe: Yes, I am amazing. 30:30 – Martin talks about another topic. 30:48 – Alyssa: When you generate a component do you put it into a different file? 31:29 – Panel: We are all friends here and we aren’t shaming anyone here. We are joking here. 32:00 – Alyssa: It’s that he can write it from memory. 33:08 – Panelist: I have been using Vue lately. He also talks about Angular and mentions Sarah Drasner, too. 34:26 – Panelist: Not everyone has a memory like him, though. 35:32 – Panelist: The fourth version of Renderer. 36:28 – Panelist: We are not talking about Nirvana the band, here. 36:46 – Alyssa: It will be the new Renderer. It’s out for you to try. Check out Angular Air. He was trying out IB yourself right now. People are flipping out about it. I am excited to see how my Angular app runs differently now. Here is the code that was generated, here is the code that... I am not sure that there is a promise date. Any secrets heads-up on when it will come out? 38:22 – Panelist: The big question what does this mean for my existing code? Do I have to change my existing code? 38:48 – Alyssa: The Angular team is working so that there are minimal changes. I don’t have a good answer. NGGC. For third-party libraries you run it through and it... I don’t know what that means for the community. 39:49 – Panelist: My hope is that they... 40:03 – Alyssa: For your third-party... 40:18 – Panelist: Question: between your small and large pack? What architectural differences are there? 40:44 – Martin: I have a template edit. 41:03 – Panelist: Come to my... 41:32 – Panel talks about talks that Jon can do. 42:13 – Panelist: True story... The panel is having fun going back and forth with jokes. 43:03 – Panelist: This kind of stuff creeps into production code. That’s the great thing about copy and paste. 43:21 – Panelist: We had a rule, though, if it happens more than once let’s put into our build. 44:20 – It’s 3 hours if you have a CI process, if you don’t... 44:33 – Console.log 44:49 – Martin chimes in. 45:14 – Panelist: Let’s talk about an iFrame in your app? 45:27 – Martin: The point is to be able to do it with any... Make sure that it doesn’t collide. The CSS wasn’t separated. I had to put my application inside an iFrame. 46:27 – Panelist: Thanks for coming on for us, Martin. 46:37 – Picks! 46:44 - Advertisement Links: Martin Jakubik’s Medium How to Copy, Cut, Paste for Beginners by Melanie Pinola Art Joker Blog @AngularMine Cypress Vue Renderer Sponsors: Angular Boot Camp Digital Ocean Get a Coder Job course Picks: Alyssa Question as my pick – About Angular 7...(47:52) True or False? Martin Thank you for having me today. Present your work more. I challenge you all to cook. Blog: Bratislava Angular Ward How to Copy, Cut, and Paste Joe Brian Holt – Eleven Tips to Scale Node.js NPM scripts – I relearned something “new” lately.

adventures medium iron man panel beginners false ward scratch nirvana copy special guests jp console cms panelists ib css paste advertisement cypress vue angular cli digital ocean npm webpack google optimize iframe john papa sarah drasner angular cli brian holt renderer joe eames ward bell coder job angular air martin it panelist you eleven tips angular boot camp melanie pinola panelist let alyssa it panelist it martin there alyssa nicholl alyssa what alyssa how panelist question alyssa you panelist so panelist why martin only panelist not alyssa is
Success Smackdown Live with Kat
Being brave enough to start your hustle

Success Smackdown Live with Kat

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 4, 2018 28:36


Katrina Ruth: All right, now we're gonna try and share this. And then we're gonna do the thing. Ah, Mother Fucker. Alyssa: Me? Katrina Ruth: No, not you. Why does this make it so hard? Alyssa: Can I just go and do my business? Katrina Ruth: No, no, no. You gotta stay here for the start of the Livestream. Oh my God. Okay. If I turn it, then it's gonna screw up the thing later. Katrina Ruth: Hello, one person. I'm trying to share this over to my page. I'm gonna try it anyway. I'm gonna probably mess with the system. I can't see anything. Katrina Ruth: Hi, Susan. I'm trying to like exit out of the Facebook screen right now. That's why I'm like hitting the phone. 'Cause, okay ... now I'm gonna try turning this and hopefully Facebook doesn't mess with me. Oh my God. Oh my God. Why does it make it so hard? Okay, can someone share this into the Daily Ask It crew for me? Katrina Ruth: Okay. It's just being so annoying. Maybe I'll have to send you to the car to get my laptop out of the car. I can't share this ... okay, we'll keep that off. Katrina Ruth: Alyssa's starting a little side hustle here. I was gonna go live anyway, 'cause I'm just hanging out in the park. Do you wanna say hi? Alyssa: Hi. Katrina Ruth: What is ... what have you said ... I was gonna go live anyway and I was gonna talk about the Millionaire Mastermind. I hate when I can't see myself on the screen. I was gonna talk about the Millionaire Mastermind and maybe like do my freaking thing, do my launch. Okay, where's your brother? He's over there. Katrina Ruth: Everybody's giving you a love heart shower. You see the love heart shower? It's for you. So, the kids have been playing in the park. Thank you, Susan. Thank you for sharing that. The kids ... Alyssa: [inaudible 00:01:52] Katrina Ruth: Yeah, we're gonna, you're gonna be on camera in a moment. Come here. Be on camera. But you can talk in a minute. So I was gonna go live and tell you the Millionaire Mastermind life and launch that. I did already just casually drop that in this morning. I'll talk about that in a moment. I have many things to say and I wanna answer any questions. Although I probably should like pre-announce if I'm gonna do a Q&A so that people know it's coming. Katrina Ruth: And then Alyssa's sitting here and she's got my journal. And she's made herself a little sign. Do you wanna show your sign? Alyssa: What if they can't see it? Katrina Ruth: Well, it will be backwards, so you can read it to them. But show it to them. Alyssa: Doing gymnastics for money. Katrina Ruth: Okay, so she's made a little sign that says she's doing gymnastics for money. Where are you gonna put the sign? Against the tree? Alyssa: Against that pole. Katrina Ruth: Oh, against the pole over there. Alyssa: So, because people normally walk there. Katrina Ruth: Because that's where the audience is at. That's the platform. The platform is against the pole because that's the walking path where everyone walks past. So, first the sign said ... that's the old sign. First the sign said, "Doing gymnastics for money, please." And then you decided that it shouldn't' say please. Why was that? Alyssa: Because it wouldn't make sense. Katrina Ruth: Because it doesn't make sense. I was like, that's actually true because I wouldn't probably put up a sign on Facebook that says, "Join my Millionaire Mastermind, please," would I? That would just be a little bit weird. I mean, no, I wouldn't. I'd be like, "Join the Millionaire Mastermind [beeotch 00:03:19]. Things I shouldn't say. Alyssa: Bitch. Katrina Ruth: Oh, no. That's really bad. Too late, rewind. [inaudible 00:03:27] different way we can ... You know. Alyssa: Beeitche. Katrina Ruth: Don't say things ... Alyssa: Beeitche. Katrina Ruth: Don't say things on camera that you don't normally say. Alyssa: Beeitche. Beeitche. Beeitche. Katrina Ruth: All right, talk about your business. Talk about your business. Alyssa: What do you mean? Oh, if they don't give me money, I kill them. Katrina Ruth: Why do you always the most bizarre, mixed up stuff as soon as you get on a Livestream? I swear to ... This chick doesn't say stuff like that off camera. And as soon as she gets an opportunity to be on my Livestream, she says things that just make it sound like, I don't know, bad parenting going on. Katrina Ruth: You don't talk like that normally. Talk like your normal self. Alyssa: Oh yeah I do. Katrina Ruth: Doing gymnastics for money. So, you're gonna put the sign against the pole, and then what are you gonna do? Alyssa: I'm just gonna want people give me money. Katrina Ruth: Gonna what? You're gonna wait until they give you money or you gonna do the gymnastics anyway? Are you only doing the gymnastics if they give you money? Alyssa: This is- Katrina Ruth: Or are you doing the gymnastics and hoping that they will then give you money/ Alyssa: This is what I'm gonna do. Katrina Ruth: Talk to the camera, nobody can hear you. Alyssa: I've got hiccups. Katrina Ruth: Okay, what're you gonna do? Alyssa: I'm gonna put- Katrina Ruth: What's your hustle? Alyssa: Shh. I'm ... Shh. Beeitche. Katrina Ruth: Ah, don't. Yeah, tell them. Lisa says we really wanna hear Alyssa's business. Tell them what your hustle is. Look at the people can see you. Alyssa: I'm gonna put this against the pole and then I'm going to hold ... I'm going ... when people come by I'm going to do gymnastics and hopefully they see the sign. Katrina Ruth: And hopefully they give you money. Alyssa: Yeah. Katrina Ruth: All right. Go, go do your business. Alyssa: About like $100. Katrina Ruth: Just $100 per gymnastics move. Alyssa: Yeah. Katrina Ruth: She's very reasonable. Alyssa: No, no, no, a million. Katrina Ruth: What do you ... Let me ... Alyssa: No, no, no, 5000. Katrina Ruth: Okay. Come back. Let me ... Wait, you just downgraded from a million to 5000? It's a bargain. Get in today. Alyssa: I mean 5,000,000. Katrina Ruth: Okay, 5,000,000. 5,000,000 rupiah? So, can I ask you a question? Alyssa: What? Katrina Ruth: Come back to the camera. Alyssa: What, Mr. Poop? Katrina Ruth: Don't talk silly to me. What are you gonna do if people see your sign and they don't actually give you money? What are you gonna do? Are you gonna stop doing gymnastics? Are you gonna cry? Are you gonna get angry? Or are gonna just keep doing your show? Alyssa: I'm gonna do this. I'm gonna do arg. Katrina Ruth: So basically like if somebody watches something on the Internet and then nobody buys it and then that somebody just has a little temper tantrum, hissy fit, how do you think that's gonna work out for them? Alyssa: I call you beeitche. Katrina Ruth: It's reasonable. Alyssa: I call them beeitche. Katrina Ruth: Lisa says she got paid $2 by people when she was paid to dance. So I guess you've upgraded to 5,000,000. Alyssa: Ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha. Katrina Ruth: You're missing the point. No, that's a good thing. She got paid to dance. It was awhile ago. Alyssa: I need $5,000,000. Katrina Ruth: Hush. She needs 5,000,000. She's not getting out of bed for less than 5,000,000. Alyssa: I'm a billionaire. I mean ... Katrina Ruth: Watch the little performance about guys. Alyssa: I gonna need a million and a hundred an hour. Katrina Ruth: Yeah, nearly. No, it's a serious question. Alyssa: Can I just do my thing now. Katrina Ruth: You can. You can answer one more question. Wait. Hold up. Will you just performing and doing your Alyssa [LATOZZO 00:06:37] show if people don't pay your or are you gonna crack it and stop if you don't get paid? Alyssa: First, I'm gonna crack it. Then I'm gonna keep going. Katrina Ruth: Oh, that is a good answer you guys. That's a winner answer, because it's fair. It's okay to crack it. We all crack it when we have a launch where we don't get the results we wante.d I used to have my launches just flop and bomb all the time or I'd get like two people joining or nobody. Katrina Ruth: And then I would crack it a little bit. And then what did I do? Keep going. That's the attitude. Alyssa: Okay, bye. Katrina Ruth: Well, go do it then. Stop talking. Nobody needs to hear when you could be doing. Alyssa: Beeitche. Katrina Ruth: Don't say things you shouldn't say please. She doesn't make anything sitting next to you. Alyssa: Beeitche. [inaudible 00:07:13] Katrina Ruth: Alyssa, inappropriate. Honestly, she just knows when she's on camera. The sun ... Look, there she is, putting her little sign against the tree. Didn't you love that answer? It's such an honest answer. But what are you gonna do if your hustle fails, if nobody pays you to do gymnastics on the side of the park? Well, I'm gonna crack it. Okay, that's fair enough. But then I'm gonna keep going. Katrina Ruth: So, I just showed her some Cirque de Soleil videos, 'cause she's quite Cirque de Soleil freaky. She can do ... you might see it in a minute. She does the backbend and then just stands back up and she can do like waggling her legs in the air and stuff while she's in the background. She's taken over my show. Nathan: Mommy. I'm [inaudible 00:07:53] Katrina Ruth: Awesome, honey. Have fun. There's another one over there. And then, what was I saying? Yeah, so I showed her some Cirque de Soleil videos on You Tube, and she's, 'cause just kinda like, "Ah, I can do that. I can that. I could do that." With all of it. So, just little bad ass, little bad ass attitude over there. Alyssa: Oh, Mommy? Katrina Ruth: Little bit too much attitude over there sometimes. Alyssa: Mother? Katrina Ruth: I'm gonna talk about the Millionaire Mastermind. Alyssa: [crosstalk 00:08:16] What if I go to my friends and I show my boobs? Katrina Ruth: Don't flash at the camera please. Seriously? Alyssa: But what if I do? Katrina Ruth: You're fine. You're a kid playing at a park. Go play. Katrina Ruth: Yeah, it's always a little nerve wracking to bring her on camera, 'cause I swear to God she just saves up the inappropriate things that an eight year old shouldn't say, and then says them as soon as she gets the chance to get on my Livestream. Katrina Ruth: So, what I was going to do though, is I was going to title this Livestream about the Millionaire Mastermind and I was just gonna have a quick chat about my new high vibe as fuck Millionaire Mastermind. The hype, Katrina is high vibe as fuck Millionaire Mastermind just launched this morning. In theory, it launched at 9AM. Can somebody put the link in for me into the comments? It's thekatrinaruthshow.com/millionairemastermind. My phone's not letting me exit out of the screen to grab my comment link or I'd do it myself. So thekatrinaruthshow.com/millionairemastermind. Katrina Ruth: I'm not ... I wanna let you know there is a top 20 bonus which I think might be nearly sold out. I don't have the numbers 'cause I just kind of casually launched it this morning and then went to the gym and stuff. But it will sell out in the next ... It will sell out. Just, if it's not already sold out, it's gonna sell out in the next few hours for sure. Katrina Ruth: There is always gonna be a badass AF, badass as fuck, top 50 bonus, which I haven't even announced yet. So, I'm just letting you know. If you ... oh, it's top 25 anyway, not top 20. If you don't get into the top 25, and I think you can still get into the top 25 now and get that bonus. Alyssa: Mommy, if there's not many people here, I'll go somewhere else. Katrina Ruth: Right, if not many people show up for your launch then, well, you could just stay where you are and trust that you'll magnetise the people to you. Or I guess you could switch to a new platform. Or you could do a bit of both, whatever feels aligned. Right? Either way, I like how I didn't have to coach her to say that she would just keep going, even if nobody paid her, that's what I'm happy to hear. Katrina Ruth: And really, she's gonna just keep going anyway, because she does it for the love it. It's her favourite thing to do. You can't stop her. I have to watch hours and hours of gymnastic shows every single day. She wants us to move house, to live like near the gymnastics place. What's it called, Gymnastics Centre or Coast Gymnastics, so that she can go every day. Do you have anything to say? Nathan: No. Katrina Ruth: Do you wanna talk to the camera? Nathan: No. Katrina Ruth: Okay, he's not performing today. The Nathan Loterzo show's not happening today. There's a lot to be learned from the attitude of a child's hustle, from the attitude of a child who's hustling. There's a lot to be learned for all of us. Katrina Ruth: Okay, so top 25 may already be sold out. I don't think it is. I don't know. I saw people started joining straight away. I totally forgot to launch it this morning. It was supposed to launch at 9AM Brisbane time, I completely forgot about it. And then my brother reminded me, so I quickly just popped it out and that happened. And people started joining right away because the offer itself is fricking incredible. It's my brand new membership programme. Thank you for dropping the link, guys. Katrina Ruth: It is the mindset and the strategy of crushing it online for driven entrepreneurs and crazy creators who just want more. The number one membership programme in the world for those like us who are never gonna be termed, never gonna be leashed up, but will indeed insist on making millions and impacting millions. Alyssa: They're not- Katrina Ruth: Yes? Alyssa: They're not gonna give me money because I'm a kid. Katrina Ruth: That's not a thing. People definitely like to give money to kids. But if you do it for like ... Okay, I'm sorry, I just had to reject a phone call from Billy Jean, which I feel bad about, but he just froze my Livestream. Katrina Ruth: So that's that. I certainly could go on and on about the Millionaire Mastermind. If you ... I've kind of just dropped the biggest launch of the year out there without really doing a lot of lead up to it or explaining much about it. It is a really big deal. It's an incredible new membership programme. And the ... Not only am I doing really cool stuff for this launch, which happens over the next three days to the top 25, top 50, that sort of thing, cools extras and bonuses. But the inaugural members so far, is just out of this world. Katrina Ruth: Obviously I wanted to do something super special for people who are gonna join straight away in the first three days. And then we will shut it down. So when you go to the katrinaruthshow.com/millionairemastermind, you'll see there's a countdown timer at the top. You wanna read through everything. It's about, there's quite a lot to sort of understand there I guess. But the crux of it is that I'm not just the star of this show, I've actually brought my entire team in to create the best membership programme in the world, to support you, to understand and also implement all of the ins and outs of online marketing and try building. But, whilst maintaining the craziness. Katrina Ruth: So my whole team is co-running it and co-leading this programme with me. And we're monthly gonna be taking you behind the scenes of exactly what we do in my business, exactly how it works, the kind of like here and now of the marketing side of things, the funnel side of things, advertising, social media stuff, everything that all the cart ninjas are doing, they'll also be teaching and also supporting you with. Katrina Ruth: So you're getting assistance and mentoring from my team as well as me. It's just like I couldn't be more excited to be getting this out there. We're even including that you'll have Facebook ad support in there, technical support, like I really wanted to make it ... What is everything that maybe would hold you back or get you stuck or take you out of your genius path from doing the creative work that you're here to do. And how can I, well not do it for you obviously, but provide my team to show you what they do and have them support you. So they'll actually be in the group. Katrina Ruth: And this is an ongoing thing, right, not like a one time thing where they [inaudible 00:13:28] but an ongoing thing where they're answering questions, helping, running live trainings, doing Q&A, creating tonnes of resources, monthly report on what we've been doing at the Katrina Ruth Show, how it's working and how you can apply it and even duplicate our sales processes over to your business. So that's a little bit about it. But if you go to thekatrinaruthshow.com/millionairemastermind you can read all about it, get to know some of my team members and see who's there and see what they're doing. Katrina Ruth: And, I will officially announce the top 50 bonus some time this afternoon. I don't when the top 25's gonna sell out. It will probably be within the next hour or two, I'm just guessing. My brother's currently [inaudible 00:14:06] at the top of my phone here. I'm like trying to stay on top of what's going on, so Ill probably get an update quite soon. But, what I'd suggest is that you go and have a read about it after I just off this live. Katrina Ruth: And if you have any questions come up at all, please just message them to me, or put them here or something because I'll do Q&A at some point and really I wanna make sure you understand everything and kind of get everything. But I guess at the end of the day, the new members, I feel like the inaugural launch members offer is so good, it's an over 80% discount off your first month. So a very heavily reduced trial month, where you're gonna pay only about 16.6% of the actual ongoing cost. Katrina Ruth: So you get to experience all of it, and either stay or not stay and either way, is fine. But on top of that, you get the bonuses, we get our first official live training happening with me this Wednesday. And this is the evolved, 2.0 version of the high vibe mastermind, my current membership programme. So, it's not something different, I'm gonna continue with both, we're moving into the Millionaire Mastermind, because I really identified and looked at the fact that me providing my knowledge and resources and teaching you what I'm doing is just such a limited piece of what we can offer at The Katrina Ruth Show if we would bring our whole team in. Katrina Ruth: Okay, Alyssa, what's up? Alyssa: This Chinese guy came up and said, "What's that?" And I said, "It's a sign." And he laughed at me. And it's a little bit annoying 'cause I feel like I'm being weird. Katrina Ruth: Okay, this is a really important question. People here on the Livestream are gonna help you. Alyssa said that somebody came up and saw her sign, her sign saying "Give me money for gymnastics." Alyssa: It does not say that. Katrina Ruth: Well, what does it say? "Doing gymnastics for money." And that he laughed at her. And now, she's feeling like shutting down her hustle because she's worried that maybe she's being weird. I mean, I feel like I couldn't script a better question really. Katrina Ruth: So, who has something to help Alyssa? She feels like someone's being mean to her. She's put herself out there. She's marketing herself in the public space. She's showing up for her hustle and for her message and for her performance and art. Now she feels like somebody thinks being weird or maybe she is being weird. And she feels like maybe he's being mean. Alyssa: I'm not. Katrina Ruth: Wendy says that person is not a soul aligned client. Do you know what that means? Alyssa: No. Katrina Ruth: It means that that person's not your audience. That person was never gonna be your, you know, show attendee or your person who paid you anyway. So when Mommy puts stuff out on Facebook- Alyssa: But what if more people are mean? Katrina Ruth: What do you guys say to this? What if more people laugh at her? It is a perfect example. When Mommy puts stuff out ... You know how Mommy does a lot of videos and a lot of stuff on the Internet? Sometimes people laugh at me. Well some- Alyssa: What about ... Why are they laughing at me? Katrina Ruth: No, well, well, none of us usually like being laughed at, except if it's because we're being funny. What do you think you ... If you were really committed to your show and to keeping on going until you get clients who pay you, do you think you would keep going if somebody laughed at you? Or do you think you'd stop? Alyssa: I'd stop for a minute. Katrina Ruth: Stop for a minute. And then what? Alyssa: And then go back again. Katrina Ruth: And then go back again. Julian says, "Keep doing you, Alyssa." Katrina Ruth: [Leeaura 00:17:13] says embrace your weirdness, no one else is like you. That means it's good to be weird. Do you think I'm weird? Alyssa: Yeah. Katrina Ruth: Yeah. I think that's obvious to everyone. Katrina Ruth: Wendy says, "You can't let the naysayers stop you." Which means that if people say that you shouldn't be doing something or if you think that they're like laughing at you, or that they think you're being silly or whatever, you don't let those people stop you. You be stronger than them, right? Do you think you're stronger on the inside? Alyssa: No, I can punch them. Katrina Ruth: No, it doesn't mean we punch them. It means we be stronger on the inside. Katrina Ruth: Christine says, "Keep going." Hang on, this is a good comment. She says, "Keep going. Your people who wanna see your show are out there ready for you. You can't please everyone, but you can be you. And they'll be many, many people who love you." Alyssa: [inaudible 00:17:58] Katrina Ruth: "Good for you." I can't read it. It's going too fast. Alyssa: But what if- But what if- Katrina Ruth: "Good for you for keep doing you and love your uniqueness." Alyssa: But what if there's not people, not any people who wanna give me money? Katrina Ruth: What if there's not any people who wanna give you money today? Then what are you gonna do? You tell me. Alyssa: I don't know. Katrina Ruth: You said before. You're said you're gonna crack it for a minute and then you're gonna keep going. Do you think that Mommy made money the first time she was trying to make money? Alyssa: No but like what if when we go- Katrina Ruth: Yep. Alyssa: And I didn't get any money? Katrina Ruth: Well, then what are you gonna do? Alyssa: I'm gonna kill them. Katrina Ruth: Don't say silly things. What are you really gonna do? Alyssa: I don't know. Katrina Ruth: Well, do you love gymnastics enough to keep going anyway? Alyssa: Yeah. Katrina Ruth: Do believe that one day people would pay you for you to do a show for them? Alyssa: Yeah, but I wanna come here tomorrow. Katrina Ruth: Yeah. Alyssa: If they're not gonna pay men. Katrina Ruth: So, we'll just come back and do the show again tomorrow. Alyssa: And Daddy's gonna be here. Katrina Ruth: Daddy gets here tomorrow night. Alyssa: Oh. Katrina Ruth: Lekesha says, "That's amazing, keep going." You know who Beyonce is, right? Alyssa: Huh? Katrina Ruth: Do you know who Beyonce is? Let's substitute that for JoJo Siwa. Some people love JoJo Siwa, right? But some people don't. Some people wouldn't give any money to go see JoJo Siwa's show. Can you believe it? Shocking, I know. But there's some people that wouldn't her money and other people that do. So the thing that you gotta do is just keep going until you find the people who love you. Katrina Ruth: "Some people laugh and they walk away and you never have to know them anyways," says Lakesha. "You have to keep going and trust your soul with what you wanna do." Exactly. Alyssa: [inaudible 00:19:22] Well that is true but it feels like they're mean to me. Katrina Ruth: Yeah, but, do you love your gymnastics and believe in yourself enough to keep going anyway? Alyssa: I wanna go seven days a week. Katrina Ruth: You wanna go to gymnastics seven days a week. Well, I told you that might happen. Some people laugh because, that's true. Sometimes adults laugh at kids because they actually think it's really impressive and cute. And then, kids though don't really care for that. Like, kids don't like being laughed at, even when the adults are doing it from a place of, "That's super cool." I've noticed that a lot. A lot of adults do that from a place of, they think it's cool or cute. She does not like that. Katrina Ruth: All right, she's going back out there. You guys have helped her massively. Isn't this a fantastic analogy for online business? Alyssa: The guy's still there. Katrina Ruth: The guy's still there. Where is he? Alyssa: He laughed at me, the Chinese guy. Katrina Ruth: Okay, well, why don't you move? Alyssa: 'Cause he's [inaudible 00:20:12]. Katrina Ruth: Okay, so if some ... What do I do if somebody's like kind of triggering me on Facebook and kind of getting under my skin. Do you know what I do? Alyssa: No. Katrina Ruth: I actually well, if I really feel like they're not aligned, I just unfriend them. But either way, I actually don't pay attention. Alyssa: But they're not my friends. Katrina Ruth: Yeah, so what that- Alyssa: [crosstalk 00:20:28] good they are. Katrina Ruth: So what you could do in this scenario is you could move your sign over there if you wanted to. Or, you could choose to just own your beautiful weirdness and do it wherever you wanna do it anyway. Either way is okay. Alyssa: I wanna [crosstalk 00:20:43]. But can you, but ... Katrina Ruth: "Do you feel good when doing gymnastics?" Says Wendy. Alyssa: Yeah. Katrina Ruth: You love it, right? Alyssa: Yeah. I go every day. Katrina Ruth: So, the main reason to do your art is because you love it, right Alyssa? Alyssa: Yeah, but- Katrina Ruth: And then if you wanna make money from it, you've gotta just commit, yes? Alyssa: Mommy, Mommy, Mommy ... I wanna do it over there now, but I want you to put that thing, the tripod near there so they can see me doing it. Katrina Ruth: You do it over there and I'll turn around and then I'll be able to see you in the background behind me. But, everybody's cheering for you, honey. Alyssa: But, it feels so scary. Katrina Ruth: It does feel scary to put yourself out there. What do we say to a kid who feels scared to put themselves out there, guys? And what do you say to yourself though, is really the whole point that I'm trying to make here, 'cause Alyssa and I talk about this stuff all day long. Katrina Ruth: Okay, now I can't see. Where is she? Is she in the camera? There you go. Now you're in the camera. Maybe I'll just move over there. I'm trying to say where I can see my other kid as well though. Where has he gone? All right. Okay. I think he's adopted himself to somebody else's family. Oh no, there he is. He's playing soccer. He's quite the little soccer ninja, that one. All right, let me sit on the ground so we can sort of see her over there, since that's what she wants. Okay, there she is. Katrina Ruth: They're mean 'cause they're jealous of happiness. That's sometimes true. I don't know if an adult walking past is necessarily judgemental or judge oh sorry, jealous of a kid's happiness, but anything's possible. She's so self aware. I love her. She expresses those feelings. Katrina Ruth: I just think there's so much to be learned from kids, and from the way that they hustle. It's just so funny how she came out with that line, like what would you do if nobody paid you? "I would crack it and then I'd keep going." Well, I guess the true born for entrepreneurs and leaders online, that's what we would do, right? I would crack it. I used to crack it when people, when I'd put my offers out there and sometimes I'd get only two people buying or one person buying. And sometimes no people at all. Katrina Ruth: I know it's easy to look at me where I'm at now and I launch something like my Millionaire Mastermind today and people immediately wanna get on it and they are waiting for it, even though I only pre-launched it two days ago. But, don't forget that there's 12 years of online marketing behind me. And you know, a lot of people might not realise that for me, there was a massive period where people weren't buying, where I was like my daughter now on the side of the road with my sign out, doing my thing. And basically, people were ignoring, or maybe they you know, thought good on her or something like that. But they weren't paying. Katrina Ruth: And so it's okay to crack it, but then you've got to keep going. And weirdly though, so many people online just crack it and then that's it. They crack it and then they stop. Katrina Ruth: You okay? You getting angry? Okay, she's getting angry. See, it's okay to get angry. It's ... I'm gonna move back over here 'cause I can't see anything. It's okay to get shitty at yourself, by the way. I was telling somebody this morning on a message, just get shitty at yourself. That helps sometimes. Katrina Ruth: All right, she sounds just like my Gus, as a kid. Be brave, be beautiful and do what makes you happy. Don't even worry about anyone else. Exactly, exactly. It's funny, 'cause I don't say things to Alyssa like she should go and you know, have a hostile obviously. But she sees the way that I live my life, and she's always trying to come up with ways to make money. Which is very normal for kids I think. I think children are naturally really entrepreneurial. Maybe some more than others. But I was trying to make money from the age of three or four years old. Katrina Ruth: All right, does anyone have any questions about the Millionaire Mastermind or maybe you've not yet had a chance to go check out the sales page. I'm going to be Livestreaming and posting about it all weekend. So you're gonna see a lot of stuff from me coming out. And I guess I'll be explaining more parts but as I go. And just making sure that nobody misses out because it is quite a limited launch time and because I know the top 25, then the top 50 and that sort of thing will go quite quickly. Alyssa: I've got a problem. Katrina Ruth: So I am gonna be posting about it quite a lot over the next few days. And what I really would love is if there's anything that you're not sure about, or anything that you want more clarification on because it's quite a lot of detail on there, just tell me. I think at some point, maybe tomorrow, I'll do a Q&A, and I'll cover all that sort of stuff. Katrina Ruth: What's your problem? Alyssa: My problem is the lady said, "Wow, you're doing really good gymnastics." But then, they didn't probably see the sign. Katrina Ruth: Okay, so the problem is somebody congratulated her on amazing her gymnastics was, but they didn't pay her. But maybe they didn't see the sign. Alyssa: But then maybe ... So I need to [inaudible 00:25:28] Katrina Ruth: So what do you think an ... So what do you think somebody who's in business like Mommy would do if somebody said, like maybe somebody said good job to me on my blogging, like on my writing, on my Livestreaming. If they didn't then sign up for my course, what do you think I would do? Alyssa: I don't know. But I just ... but [inaudible 00:25:48] Katrina Ruth: Well I'd probably just keep going, but maybe I'd make a bigger sign next time. Alyssa: They said, you do really good gymnastics but they probably didn't see the sign. Maybe I have to hold it up. Katrina Ruth: You can't really hold it up whilst doing the gymnastics, but it is a very tiny little sign. Alyssa: No, but, no but, no, but if people see it, I'll put it down and then start doing gymnastics. Katrina Ruth: You could. Or, if you really wanted to keep doing this, then when we go home, you could make a big sign. Alyssa: But that ... but when we go home it's [crosstalk 00:26:16]. Katrina Ruth: And you could tell them that Christina says you could tell them that you're performing for money. Alyssa: But how we gonna do that because it's at Solar building. Katrina Ruth: Don't say exactly where we live, Alyssa. We can make a big sign, like a big poster sign. Alyssa: But where we gonna do it? Katrina Ruth: What do you mean? At home, with your arts and crafts stuff. Alyssa: But where we gonna put it? Katrina Ruth: Against the thing. Look, nobody's gonna see that little sign. That's the reality. Ignore them and keep smiling to show them you don't care what they think. Alyssa: I'm still doing it. Katrina Ruth: Well, nobody's trying to stop you. Go do it then. Stop- Katrina Ruth: All right, I'm gonna jump off this Livestream. Katrina Ruth: Stop it. I sometimes ... I don't know whether to be proud or embarrassed. I swear to God. Don't twerk. Alyssa: I'm twerking. I'm twerking. Katrina Ruth: Please don't twerk. Do not twerk on my Livestream. Yeah, well, if you're putting like a little tiny buy my thing thing on the Internet and nobody sees it, then maybe you gotta shout louder about it and be okay to back yourself and promote yourself, right? Get a bigger freaking' sign. I mean, all this stuff is just really obvious. It's quite funny if you think about it, how many entrepreneurs just walk away crying and having a little temper tantrum or hissy fit. Or then just don't come back the next day because they feel hurt or rejected or whatever. I'm not making fun of it, I'm just saying, get a thicker skin, if you're committed. Keep showing up. Get a bigger sign. Wave the sign around. Get a sign with fricking' lights on it. Create a show. Be the show. That's it. Katrina Ruth: I am The Katrina Ruth Show. Thank you for watching. Go to thekatrinaruthshow.com/millionairemastermind. Check out the brand new, hot off the press membership programme. It did just launch a few hours ago. Top 25 is selling out now. Top 50 hasn't even been announced yet, but there will be a badass top 50 bonus, and I will announce that in the next several hours. The time is on. There are less than, should be less than 72 hours left now until the doors close. But what I'm really doing is doing some badass cool stuff for the people who wanna take fast action from the go, and obviously be amongst the first to sign up. Katrina Ruth: Our first live training for the new Millionaire Mastermind will happen on Wednesday evening. That's all outlined in the sales page. And over on the sales page you can also meet my team. You can see the different things that you'll be receiving each month, the monthly themes, how it all works, what's included. And of course, claim your place now. It's at thekatrinaruthshow.com/millionairemastermind. And it is the high vibers fuck Millionaire Mastermind. Katrina Ruth: Have an amazing day. Don't forget, life is now. Press play.