POPULARITY
What's up everyone, this is Dariusz Kalbarczyk, co-founder of NG Poland, JS Poland, AngularMaster.dev & WorkshopFest.dev. Welcome back to the Angular Master Podcast. Join us in this exclusive Q&A session from the 8th edition of NG Poland, the largest Angular conference in Europe. Hosted by Michael Egger-Zikes, this session features a powerhouse panel from the Angular Core Team. Dive into the insightful discussions with Minko Gechev, Mark Thompson, Emma Twersky, Simona Cotin, Pawel Kozlowski, Alex Rickabaugh, and Matthieu Riegler. https://ng-poland.pl https://js-poland.pl https://angularmaster.dev The session covers a wide range of topics, including the latest developments in Angular, best practices, and the future roadmap. The team shares their expertise, answers pressing questions from the audience, and provides a deeper understanding of Angular's ecosystem. Whether you're an experienced developer or just starting with Angular, this session offers valuable insights and knowledge.Don't miss out on the opportunity to learn from the experts and deepen your understanding of Angular. Subscribe for more content from NG Poland and stay tuned for the next Angular adventure! #Angular #NGPoland #WebDevelopment #JavaScript #QASession #AngularTeam --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/angular-master/message
In this episode, Rob Ocel discusses the present state and future goals of the Angular ecosystem with Mark Thompson, Developer Relations Engineer at Google, and Angular Core Team member. They talk about Angular's most recent accomplishments, like the advancements afforded by Angular v12, and how the Angular team responds to RFCs and other forms of community feedback. Mark also explains how the community should interpret roadmaps, and the spectrum of stages at which an in-development project might be, and how developers and non-developers can contribute to the ecosystem. Rob and Mark also talk about the relationship between third-party solutions and the Angular team's attitude toward potentially rolling these solutions into the core framework. Guest: Mark Thompson (@marktechson) - Developer Relations Engineer, Google Host: Rob Ocel (@robocell) - Architect, This Dot Labs This episode is sponsored by HARMAN & This Dot Labs.
Panel: Charles Max Wood Special Guest: Rodric Haddad Rodric used to be part of the Angular team initially as an intern and eventually a contractor. He is a CTO at Coddict, a startup in Lebanon that manages high traffic in websites like magazines and newspapers. At the age of 14, he aimed to build a tool for a browser-based game he was playing. His brother and best friend who were both into programming helped him do it. Not only did they build tools just for themselves, they also shared it to the community. Rodric got into angular when he was helping his brother build websites. Since the start, he's always been the JavaScript fanatic. Angular soon came into popularity, and he started on it around 2011 or 2012. His purpose for using Angular was for his own projects and helping people in Plunker. He soon moved to Github issues sending per request to the framework. In the NG conference in 2014, he was invited by the Angular team to work with them as an intern. At the beginning, an intern comes for a few months usually around summer. In Rodric's case, he ended up as a contractor back when he was in Montreal, doing some remote work. A full-timer works as a part of the team in Google. In his experience as an intern in the Angular team, he had knowledge on the Angular 1 which made him do similar responsibilities with other team members, particularly working on the core. He realized that it's more about your knowledge than your employment status. He was with the Angular core team around 2014 or 2015. When he released a new version, it had a bug that brought down a lot of tests inside Google. It ended up like the name collision was a library used by many Google's Angular applications used internally. He, along with the team, figured out its naming inclusion and ended up making its property become unique. They added his favorite number to it which was 339. If you look at any element in Angular 1, you would find a property called NG 339. To hear the rest of My Angular Rodric Haddad, download and listen to the entire episode. Get in touch with Rodric and learn more about him by following him on Twitter and by liking his Facebook page Coddict. Don't forget to let Rodric know you heard about him on Devchat.tv's Adventures in Angular My Angular Story! Rodric on Twitter If you're short on time, here are the highlights of My Angular Story Rodric Haddad: How everything in programming started for Rodric? (1:09) How did he become a part of the Angular team as an intern? (1:40) Difference between an intern and full-time Google Engineer? (4:14) Life in the Angular Core Team? (5:30) What is Coddict? (17:28) Coddict's impact on the Lebanese marketplace? (20:31) How he got into Ionic? (24:14) Picks: Charles: Game of War and The 12 Week Year by Brian P. Moran and Michael Lennington
Panel: Charles Max Wood Special Guest: Rodric Haddad Rodric used to be part of the Angular team initially as an intern and eventually a contractor. He is a CTO at Coddict, a startup in Lebanon that manages high traffic in websites like magazines and newspapers. At the age of 14, he aimed to build a tool for a browser-based game he was playing. His brother and best friend who were both into programming helped him do it. Not only did they build tools just for themselves, they also shared it to the community. Rodric got into angular when he was helping his brother build websites. Since the start, he's always been the JavaScript fanatic. Angular soon came into popularity, and he started on it around 2011 or 2012. His purpose for using Angular was for his own projects and helping people in Plunker. He soon moved to Github issues sending per request to the framework. In the NG conference in 2014, he was invited by the Angular team to work with them as an intern. At the beginning, an intern comes for a few months usually around summer. In Rodric's case, he ended up as a contractor back when he was in Montreal, doing some remote work. A full-timer works as a part of the team in Google. In his experience as an intern in the Angular team, he had knowledge on the Angular 1 which made him do similar responsibilities with other team members, particularly working on the core. He realized that it's more about your knowledge than your employment status. He was with the Angular core team around 2014 or 2015. When he released a new version, it had a bug that brought down a lot of tests inside Google. It ended up like the name collision was a library used by many Google's Angular applications used internally. He, along with the team, figured out its naming inclusion and ended up making its property become unique. They added his favorite number to it which was 339. If you look at any element in Angular 1, you would find a property called NG 339. To hear the rest of My Angular Rodric Haddad, download and listen to the entire episode. Get in touch with Rodric and learn more about him by following him on Twitter and by liking his Facebook page Coddict. Don't forget to let Rodric know you heard about him on Devchat.tv's Adventures in Angular My Angular Story! Rodric on Twitter If you're short on time, here are the highlights of My Angular Story Rodric Haddad: How everything in programming started for Rodric? (1:09) How did he become a part of the Angular team as an intern? (1:40) Difference between an intern and full-time Google Engineer? (4:14) Life in the Angular Core Team? (5:30) What is Coddict? (17:28) Coddict's impact on the Lebanese marketplace? (20:31) How he got into Ionic? (24:14) Picks: Charles: Game of War and The 12 Week Year by Brian P. Moran and Michael Lennington
Panel: Charles Max Wood Special Guest: Rodric Haddad Rodric used to be part of the Angular team initially as an intern and eventually a contractor. He is a CTO at Coddict, a startup in Lebanon that manages high traffic in websites like magazines and newspapers. At the age of 14, he aimed to build a tool for a browser-based game he was playing. His brother and best friend who were both into programming helped him do it. Not only did they build tools just for themselves, they also shared it to the community. Rodric got into angular when he was helping his brother build websites. Since the start, he's always been the JavaScript fanatic. Angular soon came into popularity, and he started on it around 2011 or 2012. His purpose for using Angular was for his own projects and helping people in Plunker. He soon moved to Github issues sending per request to the framework. In the NG conference in 2014, he was invited by the Angular team to work with them as an intern. At the beginning, an intern comes for a few months usually around summer. In Rodric's case, he ended up as a contractor back when he was in Montreal, doing some remote work. A full-timer works as a part of the team in Google. In his experience as an intern in the Angular team, he had knowledge on the Angular 1 which made him do similar responsibilities with other team members, particularly working on the core. He realized that it's more about your knowledge than your employment status. He was with the Angular core team around 2014 or 2015. When he released a new version, it had a bug that brought down a lot of tests inside Google. It ended up like the name collision was a library used by many Google's Angular applications used internally. He, along with the team, figured out its naming inclusion and ended up making its property become unique. They added his favorite number to it which was 339. If you look at any element in Angular 1, you would find a property called NG 339. To hear the rest of My Angular Rodric Haddad, download and listen to the entire episode. Get in touch with Rodric and learn more about him by following him on Twitter and by liking his Facebook page Coddict. Don't forget to let Rodric know you heard about him on Devchat.tv's Adventures in Angular My Angular Story! Rodric on Twitter If you're short on time, here are the highlights of My Angular Story Rodric Haddad: How everything in programming started for Rodric? (1:09) How did he become a part of the Angular team as an intern? (1:40) Difference between an intern and full-time Google Engineer? (4:14) Life in the Angular Core Team? (5:30) What is Coddict? (17:28) Coddict's impact on the Lebanese marketplace? (20:31) How he got into Ionic? (24:14) Picks: Charles: Game of War and The 12 Week Year by Brian P. Moran and Michael Lennington
Panel: Charles Max Wood Guest: Stephen Fluin This week on My Angular Story, Charles speaks with Stephen Fluin. Stephen is a developer advocate on the Angular Core Team at Google. His role has two parts: to help developers and organizations be successful with Angular and to reflect the needs of those developers and understand what it’s like to actually build apps in the real world onto the team so that they can make the right product decisions as they continue to build out Angular. He first got into programming when he was 8 years old and he was interested in how computer games were created and started creating his own games in C and C++. In particular, We dive pretty deep on: Stephen intro Tries to be in the “weeds of things” as much as possible How did you first get into programming? Learned originally in C and C++ Built a MUD First discovered the Web in High Shcool PHP, HTML, and CSS in High School Studied Computer Science in College Revisited his MUD in college and made it more complex Ready Player One by Ernest Cline How did you get into JavaScript and Angular? DataTables Loves the simplicity of JavaScript Server-side vs client-side The introduction of phones Disruptors TypeScript How did you get on the Angular team? What does a typical day look like? And much, much more! Links: Angular Angular Core Team Ready Player One by Ernest Cline JavaScript DataTables TypeScript @StephenFluin Stephen’s GitHub Picks: Charles NgConf Ready Player One by Ernest Cline Audible DevChat.tv/YouTube Stephen Troll Attack Angular Update Guide
Panel: Charles Max Wood Guest: Stephen Fluin This week on My Angular Story, Charles speaks with Stephen Fluin. Stephen is a developer advocate on the Angular Core Team at Google. His role has two parts: to help developers and organizations be successful with Angular and to reflect the needs of those developers and understand what it’s like to actually build apps in the real world onto the team so that they can make the right product decisions as they continue to build out Angular. He first got into programming when he was 8 years old and he was interested in how computer games were created and started creating his own games in C and C++. In particular, We dive pretty deep on: Stephen intro Tries to be in the “weeds of things” as much as possible How did you first get into programming? Learned originally in C and C++ Built a MUD First discovered the Web in High Shcool PHP, HTML, and CSS in High School Studied Computer Science in College Revisited his MUD in college and made it more complex Ready Player One by Ernest Cline How did you get into JavaScript and Angular? DataTables Loves the simplicity of JavaScript Server-side vs client-side The introduction of phones Disruptors TypeScript How did you get on the Angular team? What does a typical day look like? And much, much more! Links: Angular Angular Core Team Ready Player One by Ernest Cline JavaScript DataTables TypeScript @StephenFluin Stephen’s GitHub Picks: Charles NgConf Ready Player One by Ernest Cline Audible DevChat.tv/YouTube Stephen Troll Attack Angular Update Guide
Panel: Charles Max Wood Guest: Stephen Fluin This week on My Angular Story, Charles speaks with Stephen Fluin. Stephen is a developer advocate on the Angular Core Team at Google. His role has two parts: to help developers and organizations be successful with Angular and to reflect the needs of those developers and understand what it’s like to actually build apps in the real world onto the team so that they can make the right product decisions as they continue to build out Angular. He first got into programming when he was 8 years old and he was interested in how computer games were created and started creating his own games in C and C++. In particular, We dive pretty deep on: Stephen intro Tries to be in the “weeds of things” as much as possible How did you first get into programming? Learned originally in C and C++ Built a MUD First discovered the Web in High Shcool PHP, HTML, and CSS in High School Studied Computer Science in College Revisited his MUD in college and made it more complex Ready Player One by Ernest Cline How did you get into JavaScript and Angular? DataTables Loves the simplicity of JavaScript Server-side vs client-side The introduction of phones Disruptors TypeScript How did you get on the Angular team? What does a typical day look like? And much, much more! Links: Angular Angular Core Team Ready Player One by Ernest Cline JavaScript DataTables TypeScript @StephenFluin Stephen’s GitHub Picks: Charles NgConf Ready Player One by Ernest Cline Audible DevChat.tv/YouTube Stephen Troll Attack Angular Update Guide
John talks with Juri Strumpflohner, an industry expert and angular trainer; and Rob Wormald, an Angular core development team member, getting into how Angular has evolved with the 2.0 release, powerful new features, their favorite libraries, and where the future is taking it.Angular has gotten much better under the hood. Rob talks about how the Angular team is working on really improving the code while still keeping the public API stable. He also talks about the team's ongoing debate on where to improve the code. Faster? Smaller? Currently, the team has chosen to work on making it smaller and has improved the bundle size of Angular.One of the new things about Angular that people are most excited about is the Elements and CLI Schematics libraries. Juri talks about how Elements opens up a "whole new world," allowing people not to have to resolve the same problems over and over again by letting them create reusable angular components.One of the hardest things to learn with Angular was the design and architecture patterns. Rob goes into how the team has improved the documentation, now actually getting into best practices and giving architecture guidelines.Finally, our guests get into their favorite Angular libraries. NgRx Formly being the big favorite. NgRx Formly is a beautiful library that allows devs to create powerful reactive forms. Rob also highly recommends the Angular Schematics library. It is a powerful low-level tool that allows you to create templates and code generators. You can even use it in conjunction with the Angular CLI to extend it or modify it for your own needs!Transcript"Angular Web Applications with Juri Strumpflohner and Rob Wormald (Angular Core Team)" TranscriptResourcesAngular 2Angular ElementsAngular SchematicsNgRxAngular Reactive FormsRob WormaldTwitterGithubEgghead CoursesJuri StrumpflohnerTwitterBlogEgghead Courses
Episode notes and links available at: https://angularair.com/#episode-94 --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/angularair/support