Podcasts about angular in depth

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Best podcasts about angular in depth

Latest podcast episodes about angular in depth

My Angular Story
MAS 076: Chaz Gatian

My Angular Story

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 3, 2019 41:53


Sponsors Sentry use the code “devchat” for 2 months free on Sentry small plan Triplebyte offers a $1000 signing bonus CacheFly Host: Charles Max Wood Special Guest: Chaz Gatian Episode Summary In this episode of My Angular Story, Charles hosts Chaz Gatian, Principal Architect at Hyland. Listen to Chaz on the podcast Adventures in Angular here. Chaz’s father was a programmer as well so he wanted to major in Computer Science. When he graduated from college, he didn’t have a very high GPA so got an internship at a startup so he could learn web development. He then re-applied to Hyland after developing himself as a programmer for 4 years, and got a job as a developer. Chaz believes the key to being a good programmer lies in adapting it as a lifestyle. Being a member of the developer community, following podcasts and watching YouTube videos regularly will help a programmer be better. Finally, Chaz talks about how he got into Angular, projects he struggled with and how he got through them as well as what he is working on currently. Links Adventures in Angular: 10 Lessons Learned in Enterprise Angular Development with Chaz Gatian Chaz's Twitter Chaz's GitHub Chaz's Medium Chaz's LinkedIn Chaz Gatian – Angular In Depth single-spa buzzsprout https://devchat.tv/my-angular-story/  Picks Chaz Gatian: single-spa GraphQL Inspector Web Accessibility Guide Charles Max Wood: MicroConf Podcast Booths in Conferences- NG-Conf

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MAS 076: Chaz Gatian

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Play Episode Listen Later Apr 3, 2019 41:53


Sponsors Sentry use the code “devchat” for 2 months free on Sentry small plan Triplebyte offers a $1000 signing bonus CacheFly Host: Charles Max Wood Special Guest: Chaz Gatian Episode Summary In this episode of My Angular Story, Charles hosts Chaz Gatian, Principal Architect at Hyland. Listen to Chaz on the podcast Adventures in Angular here. Chaz’s father was a programmer as well so he wanted to major in Computer Science. When he graduated from college, he didn’t have a very high GPA so got an internship at a startup so he could learn web development. He then re-applied to Hyland after developing himself as a programmer for 4 years, and got a job as a developer. Chaz believes the key to being a good programmer lies in adapting it as a lifestyle. Being a member of the developer community, following podcasts and watching YouTube videos regularly will help a programmer be better. Finally, Chaz talks about how he got into Angular, projects he struggled with and how he got through them as well as what he is working on currently. Links Adventures in Angular: 10 Lessons Learned in Enterprise Angular Development with Chaz Gatian Chaz's Twitter Chaz's GitHub Chaz's Medium Chaz's LinkedIn Chaz Gatian – Angular In Depth single-spa buzzsprout https://devchat.tv/my-angular-story/  Picks Chaz Gatian: single-spa GraphQL Inspector Web Accessibility Guide Charles Max Wood: MicroConf Podcast Booths in Conferences- NG-Conf

All Angular Podcasts by Devchat.tv
MAS 076: Chaz Gatian

All Angular Podcasts by Devchat.tv

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 3, 2019 41:53


Sponsors Sentry use the code “devchat” for 2 months free on Sentry small plan Triplebyte offers a $1000 signing bonus CacheFly Host: Charles Max Wood Special Guest: Chaz Gatian Episode Summary In this episode of My Angular Story, Charles hosts Chaz Gatian, Principal Architect at Hyland. Listen to Chaz on the podcast Adventures in Angular here. Chaz’s father was a programmer as well so he wanted to major in Computer Science. When he graduated from college, he didn’t have a very high GPA so got an internship at a startup so he could learn web development. He then re-applied to Hyland after developing himself as a programmer for 4 years, and got a job as a developer. Chaz believes the key to being a good programmer lies in adapting it as a lifestyle. Being a member of the developer community, following podcasts and watching YouTube videos regularly will help a programmer be better. Finally, Chaz talks about how he got into Angular, projects he struggled with and how he got through them as well as what he is working on currently. Links Adventures in Angular: 10 Lessons Learned in Enterprise Angular Development with Chaz Gatian Chaz's Twitter Chaz's GitHub Chaz's Medium Chaz's LinkedIn Chaz Gatian – Angular In Depth single-spa buzzsprout https://devchat.tv/my-angular-story/  Picks Chaz Gatian: single-spa GraphQL Inspector Web Accessibility Guide Charles Max Wood: MicroConf Podcast Booths in Conferences- NG-Conf

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AiA 233: Getting Serious with Schematics with Tomas Trajan

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Play Episode Listen Later Apr 2, 2019 48:14


Sponsors Sentry use the code “devchat” for 2 months free on Sentry small plan Angular Bootcamp TripleByte offers a $1000 signing bonus Cachefly Panel Alyssa Nicoll Aaron Frost Joe Eames Shai Reznik Special Guest: Tomas Trajan Episode Summary In this episode of Adventures in Angular, the panel interviews Tomas Trajan, software developer and Google Developer Expert for Angular from Zurich, Switzerland. Tomas explains what Angular Schematics is and how it simplifies a developer’s life. He goes through cases where Angular Schematics would be great to use. He explains some of the Schematics terminology such as rules and trees. He also explains that Angular CLI uses Schematics as well and that the panel is already using it when they are using Angular CLI. The panel then talks about the setup time and effort  it takes to start a project before they can actually code especially when there are other teams involved. Tomas explains that part of this setup effort could be avoided if companies with multiple developer teams used Schematics.Tomas then describes his own experiences using Schematics. As a final note, Tomas talks about some of the areas where Schematics could be improved. Links Tomas' GitHub Tomas' Medium Tomas' Twitter Tomas' LinkedIN Tomas Trajan – Angular In Depth Tomas Trajan - DEV Community Tomas' Blog Post: How to Create Your First Custom Angular Schematics with Ease https://www.facebook.com/adventuresinangular/ https://twitter.com/angularpodcast Picks Alyssa Nicoll: https://twitter.com/schwarty Schwart Stories by @Schwarty Shai Reznik: NG - BE - YouTube Last Week Tonight with John Oliver Joe Eames: Airtable Aaron Frost: Narwhal Technologies Inc Tomas Trajan: Uphill Conf – Javascript conference in Bern, Switzerland Release Butler  

Adventures in Angular
AiA 233: Getting Serious with Schematics with Tomas Trajan

Adventures in Angular

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 2, 2019 48:14


Sponsors Sentry use the code “devchat” for 2 months free on Sentry small plan Angular Bootcamp TripleByte offers a $1000 signing bonus Cachefly Panel Alyssa Nicoll Aaron Frost Joe Eames Shai Reznik Special Guest: Tomas Trajan Episode Summary In this episode of Adventures in Angular, the panel interviews Tomas Trajan, software developer and Google Developer Expert for Angular from Zurich, Switzerland. Tomas explains what Angular Schematics is and how it simplifies a developer’s life. He goes through cases where Angular Schematics would be great to use. He explains some of the Schematics terminology such as rules and trees. He also explains that Angular CLI uses Schematics as well and that the panel is already using it when they are using Angular CLI. The panel then talks about the setup time and effort  it takes to start a project before they can actually code especially when there are other teams involved. Tomas explains that part of this setup effort could be avoided if companies with multiple developer teams used Schematics.Tomas then describes his own experiences using Schematics. As a final note, Tomas talks about some of the areas where Schematics could be improved. Links Tomas' GitHub Tomas' Medium Tomas' Twitter Tomas' LinkedIN Tomas Trajan – Angular In Depth Tomas Trajan - DEV Community Tomas' Blog Post: How to Create Your First Custom Angular Schematics with Ease https://www.facebook.com/adventuresinangular/ https://twitter.com/angularpodcast Picks Alyssa Nicoll: https://twitter.com/schwarty Schwart Stories by @Schwarty Shai Reznik: NG - BE - YouTube Last Week Tonight with John Oliver Joe Eames: Airtable Aaron Frost: Narwhal Technologies Inc Tomas Trajan: Uphill Conf – Javascript conference in Bern, Switzerland Release Butler  

All Angular Podcasts by Devchat.tv
AiA 233: Getting Serious with Schematics with Tomas Trajan

All Angular Podcasts by Devchat.tv

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 2, 2019 48:14


Sponsors Sentry use the code “devchat” for 2 months free on Sentry small plan Angular Bootcamp TripleByte offers a $1000 signing bonus Cachefly Panel Alyssa Nicoll Aaron Frost Joe Eames Shai Reznik Special Guest: Tomas Trajan Episode Summary In this episode of Adventures in Angular, the panel interviews Tomas Trajan, software developer and Google Developer Expert for Angular from Zurich, Switzerland. Tomas explains what Angular Schematics is and how it simplifies a developer’s life. He goes through cases where Angular Schematics would be great to use. He explains some of the Schematics terminology such as rules and trees. He also explains that Angular CLI uses Schematics as well and that the panel is already using it when they are using Angular CLI. The panel then talks about the setup time and effort  it takes to start a project before they can actually code especially when there are other teams involved. Tomas explains that part of this setup effort could be avoided if companies with multiple developer teams used Schematics.Tomas then describes his own experiences using Schematics. As a final note, Tomas talks about some of the areas where Schematics could be improved. Links Tomas' GitHub Tomas' Medium Tomas' Twitter Tomas' LinkedIN Tomas Trajan – Angular In Depth Tomas Trajan - DEV Community Tomas' Blog Post: How to Create Your First Custom Angular Schematics with Ease https://www.facebook.com/adventuresinangular/ https://twitter.com/angularpodcast Picks Alyssa Nicoll: https://twitter.com/schwarty Schwart Stories by @Schwarty Shai Reznik: NG - BE - YouTube Last Week Tonight with John Oliver Joe Eames: Airtable Aaron Frost: Narwhal Technologies Inc Tomas Trajan: Uphill Conf – Javascript conference in Bern, Switzerland Release Butler  

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MAS 074: Adrian Fâciu

Devchat.tv Master Feed

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 20, 2019 34:14


Sponsors Sentry use the code “devchat” for 2 months free on Sentry small plan Triplebyte offers a $1000 signing bonus CacheFly Host: Charles Max Wood Guest: Adrian Fâciu Episode Summary In this episode of My Angular Story, Charles hosts Adrian Fâciu, a system architect from Romania working for Visma Software. Listen to Adrian on the podcast Adventures in Angular here. Adrian got interested in coding through playing video games in high school. He took coding classes in school but believes that for developers, school only teaches problem solving skills. Real life coding skills are improved by talking to other developers and by trial and error. For example, when he was tackling a particularly difficult project at work, he started attending JavaScript meetups in his local community to connect with other developers. Adrian was able to gain experience in Angular by switching to a different project at his company. He believes that when developers feel stuck, they should communicate this to their employers because most companies will give them chances to work on different products in order to keep them employed. Aside from coding, Adrian also writes blog posts on Angular In Depth. Links Adventures in Angular: NgRx Tips & Tricks with Adrian Fâciu Adrian’s Medium Adrian’s Twitter Adrian’s GitHub Adrian’s Blog Post Adrian’s Article: Testing NgRx Effects https://devchat.tv/adv-in-angular/ https://www.facebook.com/DevChattv https://www.facebook.com/adventuresinangular https://twitter.com/angularpodcast  Picks Adrian Fâciu: revo.js Conference Charles Max Wood: Podfest Charles' Personal Blog https://www.netlify.com

My Angular Story
MAS 074: Adrian Fâciu

My Angular Story

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 20, 2019 34:14


Sponsors Sentry use the code “devchat” for 2 months free on Sentry small plan Triplebyte offers a $1000 signing bonus CacheFly Host: Charles Max Wood Guest: Adrian Fâciu Episode Summary In this episode of My Angular Story, Charles hosts Adrian Fâciu, a system architect from Romania working for Visma Software. Listen to Adrian on the podcast Adventures in Angular here. Adrian got interested in coding through playing video games in high school. He took coding classes in school but believes that for developers, school only teaches problem solving skills. Real life coding skills are improved by talking to other developers and by trial and error. For example, when he was tackling a particularly difficult project at work, he started attending JavaScript meetups in his local community to connect with other developers. Adrian was able to gain experience in Angular by switching to a different project at his company. He believes that when developers feel stuck, they should communicate this to their employers because most companies will give them chances to work on different products in order to keep them employed. Aside from coding, Adrian also writes blog posts on Angular In Depth. Links Adventures in Angular: NgRx Tips & Tricks with Adrian Fâciu Adrian’s Medium Adrian’s Twitter Adrian’s GitHub Adrian’s Blog Post Adrian’s Article: Testing NgRx Effects https://devchat.tv/adv-in-angular/ https://www.facebook.com/DevChattv https://www.facebook.com/adventuresinangular https://twitter.com/angularpodcast  Picks Adrian Fâciu: revo.js Conference Charles Max Wood: Podfest Charles' Personal Blog https://www.netlify.com

All Angular Podcasts by Devchat.tv
MAS 074: Adrian Fâciu

All Angular Podcasts by Devchat.tv

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 20, 2019 34:14


Sponsors Sentry use the code “devchat” for 2 months free on Sentry small plan Triplebyte offers a $1000 signing bonus CacheFly Host: Charles Max Wood Guest: Adrian Fâciu Episode Summary In this episode of My Angular Story, Charles hosts Adrian Fâciu, a system architect from Romania working for Visma Software. Listen to Adrian on the podcast Adventures in Angular here. Adrian got interested in coding through playing video games in high school. He took coding classes in school but believes that for developers, school only teaches problem solving skills. Real life coding skills are improved by talking to other developers and by trial and error. For example, when he was tackling a particularly difficult project at work, he started attending JavaScript meetups in his local community to connect with other developers. Adrian was able to gain experience in Angular by switching to a different project at his company. He believes that when developers feel stuck, they should communicate this to their employers because most companies will give them chances to work on different products in order to keep them employed. Aside from coding, Adrian also writes blog posts on Angular In Depth. Links Adventures in Angular: NgRx Tips & Tricks with Adrian Fâciu Adrian’s Medium Adrian’s Twitter Adrian’s GitHub Adrian’s Blog Post Adrian’s Article: Testing NgRx Effects https://devchat.tv/adv-in-angular/ https://www.facebook.com/DevChattv https://www.facebook.com/adventuresinangular https://twitter.com/angularpodcast  Picks Adrian Fâciu: revo.js Conference Charles Max Wood: Podfest Charles' Personal Blog https://www.netlify.com

My Angular Story
MAS 060: Jia Li

My Angular Story

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 14, 2018 29:36


Panel: Charles Max Wood Guest: Jia Li This week on My Angular Story, Charles speaks with Jia Li who is a passionate programmer, a Zone.js guy, and a full-stack developer at Sylabs.io. Chuck and Jia talk about Zone.js, Jia’s background, and the current projects that Jia is working on right now. Check out today’s episode! In particular, we dive pretty deep on: 0:00 – Advertisement: Get A Coder Job! 0:51 – Chuck: You were on the past AiA Episode 210. Why are you famous? 1:04 – Jia: I have been working on Angular JS for 4 years, and I am from China. I have been working on Zone.js for the past 2½ years. I basically handle everything with Zone.js. That kind of makes me famous in the community. 1:50 – Chuck: It’s the library that... 1:58 – Jia: Yes that is correct. 2:19 – Chuck: Let’s rollback a little bit and talk about your journey into programming? 2:32 – Jia: My major is not Computer Science it’s Communication. My first job, my classmate introduced me to a company that had 5 employees, which was a software company. About 15 years ago, back in China, they were using old software. The founder is using new technologies. So this is cool. That’s how I entered into the development world. 4:15 – Chuck asks a question. 4:22 – Jia: My focus, at the time, was the frontend. 5:10 – Chuck: How did you get into Angular? 5:12 – Angular, React, and jQuery are mentioned by Jia. 6:20 – Jia: We did a big project for 1½ years with a huge team of 500 people. We used...to build the applications. 6:51 – Chuck: How was the transition from Angular to Angular 2? 6:58 – Jia: At first the company had some reservations b/c everything is new. Jia talks about an architect of the company and the knowledge that he offered, at the time, to help. 8:17 – Chuck: You have contributed to Zone.js. People think that they have to be a genius in order to contribute. How did you start contributing to it? 8:44 – Jia: Between Angular 1 to Angular 2 was about a few months in-between. Jia continues to talk. 9:28 – Jia: We get a request from the client and get a certain zone. Each request is managed. Jia talks about his contributions to Zone.js and how he offered his insights, in the beginning, during his spare time. 12:12 – Chuck: This is a project that is used across thousands of Angular applications. And here we are talking about your journey to this open-source. You started off with a bug fix and this leads to helping with code, and finally you are one of the major contributors now! People think they cannot contribute to open-source b/c they aren’t a “genius.” They think that they “aren’t that good.” 13:16 – Jia: I never thought I could do it – meaning contributing to open-source work. I thought you had to have very strong coding skills, but it’s really just starting with the first step. True, you need to start with the code, but you don’t have to have a very strong background. I didn’t have (at the time) a strong JavaScript background, and look...I was able to do it! If you really love it – you can contribute to it. 15:11 – Chuck: You fixed a bug b/c you were using it. There is a difference between people writing it vs. people who are using it. You were fixing a bug b/c you were actually using it. “It should work this way under these circumstances.” If you are using the library then you will find those bugs. 16:35 – Jia: Yes, exactly. Some people are using Zone.js, but they don’t know what it does. 17:24 – Chuck: What are you currently working on now and/or what are you proud of? 17:29 – Jia: I am still working on the Zone.js project. I just changed my job a few months ago. I am starting a startup company to help with technological solutions. I am working (right now) on frontend. It’s very interesting to do some Cloud stuff. 18:50 – Chuck: Where can we find you? 18:55 – Jia. 20:50 – Chuck: What social media platforms do you use? 21:00 – Jia: Twitter! Blog! Jia talks about his current proposal that he is working on. 24:20 – Chuck: Let’s go to Picks! 24:26 – Fresh Books! 25:30 – Picks END – CacheFly Links: jQuery Angular JavaScript Vue React Slack Zone.js GitHub – Zone.js Chuck’s Twitter Chuck’s E-mail: chuck@devchat.tv AiA 210 – Past Episode with Jia Li Jia Li LinkedIn Jia Li Twitter Jia Li Blog Sponsors: Get A Coder Job Fresh Books Cache Fly Picks: Charles Podcast: MFCEO Audible: Extreme Ownership by Willink and Babin Audible: Traveler’s Gift by by Andy Andrews Jia Slack group – posts on Angular – check them out! Angular In-Depth

All Angular Podcasts by Devchat.tv

Panel: Charles Max Wood Guest: Jia Li This week on My Angular Story, Charles speaks with Jia Li who is a passionate programmer, a Zone.js guy, and a full-stack developer at Sylabs.io. Chuck and Jia talk about Zone.js, Jia’s background, and the current projects that Jia is working on right now. Check out today’s episode! In particular, we dive pretty deep on: 0:00 – Advertisement: Get A Coder Job! 0:51 – Chuck: You were on the past AiA Episode 210. Why are you famous? 1:04 – Jia: I have been working on Angular JS for 4 years, and I am from China. I have been working on Zone.js for the past 2½ years. I basically handle everything with Zone.js. That kind of makes me famous in the community. 1:50 – Chuck: It’s the library that... 1:58 – Jia: Yes that is correct. 2:19 – Chuck: Let’s rollback a little bit and talk about your journey into programming? 2:32 – Jia: My major is not Computer Science it’s Communication. My first job, my classmate introduced me to a company that had 5 employees, which was a software company. About 15 years ago, back in China, they were using old software. The founder is using new technologies. So this is cool. That’s how I entered into the development world. 4:15 – Chuck asks a question. 4:22 – Jia: My focus, at the time, was the frontend. 5:10 – Chuck: How did you get into Angular? 5:12 – Angular, React, and jQuery are mentioned by Jia. 6:20 – Jia: We did a big project for 1½ years with a huge team of 500 people. We used...to build the applications. 6:51 – Chuck: How was the transition from Angular to Angular 2? 6:58 – Jia: At first the company had some reservations b/c everything is new. Jia talks about an architect of the company and the knowledge that he offered, at the time, to help. 8:17 – Chuck: You have contributed to Zone.js. People think that they have to be a genius in order to contribute. How did you start contributing to it? 8:44 – Jia: Between Angular 1 to Angular 2 was about a few months in-between. Jia continues to talk. 9:28 – Jia: We get a request from the client and get a certain zone. Each request is managed. Jia talks about his contributions to Zone.js and how he offered his insights, in the beginning, during his spare time. 12:12 – Chuck: This is a project that is used across thousands of Angular applications. And here we are talking about your journey to this open-source. You started off with a bug fix and this leads to helping with code, and finally you are one of the major contributors now! People think they cannot contribute to open-source b/c they aren’t a “genius.” They think that they “aren’t that good.” 13:16 – Jia: I never thought I could do it – meaning contributing to open-source work. I thought you had to have very strong coding skills, but it’s really just starting with the first step. True, you need to start with the code, but you don’t have to have a very strong background. I didn’t have (at the time) a strong JavaScript background, and look...I was able to do it! If you really love it – you can contribute to it. 15:11 – Chuck: You fixed a bug b/c you were using it. There is a difference between people writing it vs. people who are using it. You were fixing a bug b/c you were actually using it. “It should work this way under these circumstances.” If you are using the library then you will find those bugs. 16:35 – Jia: Yes, exactly. Some people are using Zone.js, but they don’t know what it does. 17:24 – Chuck: What are you currently working on now and/or what are you proud of? 17:29 – Jia: I am still working on the Zone.js project. I just changed my job a few months ago. I am starting a startup company to help with technological solutions. I am working (right now) on frontend. It’s very interesting to do some Cloud stuff. 18:50 – Chuck: Where can we find you? 18:55 – Jia. 20:50 – Chuck: What social media platforms do you use? 21:00 – Jia: Twitter! Blog! Jia talks about his current proposal that he is working on. 24:20 – Chuck: Let’s go to Picks! 24:26 – Fresh Books! 25:30 – Picks END – CacheFly Links: jQuery Angular JavaScript Vue React Slack Zone.js GitHub – Zone.js Chuck’s Twitter Chuck’s E-mail: chuck@devchat.tv AiA 210 – Past Episode with Jia Li Jia Li LinkedIn Jia Li Twitter Jia Li Blog Sponsors: Get A Coder Job Fresh Books Cache Fly Picks: Charles Podcast: MFCEO Audible: Extreme Ownership by Willink and Babin Audible: Traveler’s Gift by by Andy Andrews Jia Slack group – posts on Angular – check them out! Angular In-Depth

Devchat.tv Master Feed
MAS 060: Jia Li

Devchat.tv Master Feed

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 14, 2018 29:36


Panel: Charles Max Wood Guest: Jia Li This week on My Angular Story, Charles speaks with Jia Li who is a passionate programmer, a Zone.js guy, and a full-stack developer at Sylabs.io. Chuck and Jia talk about Zone.js, Jia’s background, and the current projects that Jia is working on right now. Check out today’s episode! In particular, we dive pretty deep on: 0:00 – Advertisement: Get A Coder Job! 0:51 – Chuck: You were on the past AiA Episode 210. Why are you famous? 1:04 – Jia: I have been working on Angular JS for 4 years, and I am from China. I have been working on Zone.js for the past 2½ years. I basically handle everything with Zone.js. That kind of makes me famous in the community. 1:50 – Chuck: It’s the library that... 1:58 – Jia: Yes that is correct. 2:19 – Chuck: Let’s rollback a little bit and talk about your journey into programming? 2:32 – Jia: My major is not Computer Science it’s Communication. My first job, my classmate introduced me to a company that had 5 employees, which was a software company. About 15 years ago, back in China, they were using old software. The founder is using new technologies. So this is cool. That’s how I entered into the development world. 4:15 – Chuck asks a question. 4:22 – Jia: My focus, at the time, was the frontend. 5:10 – Chuck: How did you get into Angular? 5:12 – Angular, React, and jQuery are mentioned by Jia. 6:20 – Jia: We did a big project for 1½ years with a huge team of 500 people. We used...to build the applications. 6:51 – Chuck: How was the transition from Angular to Angular 2? 6:58 – Jia: At first the company had some reservations b/c everything is new. Jia talks about an architect of the company and the knowledge that he offered, at the time, to help. 8:17 – Chuck: You have contributed to Zone.js. People think that they have to be a genius in order to contribute. How did you start contributing to it? 8:44 – Jia: Between Angular 1 to Angular 2 was about a few months in-between. Jia continues to talk. 9:28 – Jia: We get a request from the client and get a certain zone. Each request is managed. Jia talks about his contributions to Zone.js and how he offered his insights, in the beginning, during his spare time. 12:12 – Chuck: This is a project that is used across thousands of Angular applications. And here we are talking about your journey to this open-source. You started off with a bug fix and this leads to helping with code, and finally you are one of the major contributors now! People think they cannot contribute to open-source b/c they aren’t a “genius.” They think that they “aren’t that good.” 13:16 – Jia: I never thought I could do it – meaning contributing to open-source work. I thought you had to have very strong coding skills, but it’s really just starting with the first step. True, you need to start with the code, but you don’t have to have a very strong background. I didn’t have (at the time) a strong JavaScript background, and look...I was able to do it! If you really love it – you can contribute to it. 15:11 – Chuck: You fixed a bug b/c you were using it. There is a difference between people writing it vs. people who are using it. You were fixing a bug b/c you were actually using it. “It should work this way under these circumstances.” If you are using the library then you will find those bugs. 16:35 – Jia: Yes, exactly. Some people are using Zone.js, but they don’t know what it does. 17:24 – Chuck: What are you currently working on now and/or what are you proud of? 17:29 – Jia: I am still working on the Zone.js project. I just changed my job a few months ago. I am starting a startup company to help with technological solutions. I am working (right now) on frontend. It’s very interesting to do some Cloud stuff. 18:50 – Chuck: Where can we find you? 18:55 – Jia. 20:50 – Chuck: What social media platforms do you use? 21:00 – Jia: Twitter! Blog! Jia talks about his current proposal that he is working on. 24:20 – Chuck: Let’s go to Picks! 24:26 – Fresh Books! 25:30 – Picks END – CacheFly Links: jQuery Angular JavaScript Vue React Slack Zone.js GitHub – Zone.js Chuck’s Twitter Chuck’s E-mail: chuck@devchat.tv AiA 210 – Past Episode with Jia Li Jia Li LinkedIn Jia Li Twitter Jia Li Blog Sponsors: Get A Coder Job Fresh Books Cache Fly Picks: Charles Podcast: MFCEO Audible: Extreme Ownership by Willink and Babin Audible: Traveler’s Gift by by Andy Andrews Jia Slack group – posts on Angular – check them out! Angular In-Depth

All Angular Podcasts by Devchat.tv
MAS 059: Bonnie Brennan

All Angular Podcasts by Devchat.tv

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 7, 2018 70:23


Panel: Charles Max Wood Guest: Bonnie Brennan This week on My Angular Story, Charles speaks with Bonnie Brennan who is in web technologies and uses Angular. She currently resides in Houston, Texas and Chuck and her discuss her background, past and current projects, ngHouston Meetup, and much more! Check-out today’s episode! In particular, we dive pretty deep on: 1:00 – Chuck: We’ve talked with you in the past, Bonnie. So listeners, check-out those past episodes if you are interested (see links below). There were various topics that we discussed. It’s been a few months since we’ve talked. Tell us how you got into Angular among other things? 1:50 – Guest. 3:19 – Chuck: I want to get a feel for how you got into programming, so tell us about that. 3:40 – Guest: I didn’t start coding until my 30’s. 3:50 – Chuck: Here is a dirty little secret: most people get into coding later in life. 4:25 – Guest. 25:07 – Chuck: Let’s get back on track - How did you get into Angular? 25:10 – Guest. 32:26 – Chuck: I completely agree. As you’ve gone into Angular you’ve done things in the community that makes you well-known. We’ve talked with your child-component, and how she got into coding. Listen back to that. You mentioned NG Houston, how did you get that going? 32:56 – Guest: I was here in Houston... 39:26 – Chuck: I want to change topics here. You mentioned in your consulting that people are running into certain issues. Most consultants that I know, they make a plan and they just build stuff. Seems like you are talking with them and showing them how to make things work better. 39:54 – Guest. 45:11 – Chuck: I have been a freelancer, and how do people hire you? 45:23 – Guest: Twitter is the best way to reach out to me, also my e-mail. 46:59 – Chuck: You have been a GD – how has that been? 47:10 – Guest: I actually love it! GOOGLE DEVELOPER EXPERT = GDE. 49:07 – Chuck: You had a unique experience at the last Summit. Can you talk about that for a minute? 49:17 – Guest. 59:17 – Chuck: We are at the end of our time. Where can people find you? 59:30 – Guest: The YouTube Channel and Twitter. 1:00:54 – Chuck: Let’s do some picks! 1:01:00 – Fresh Books! Links: jQuery Angular JavaScript Vue Chuck’s Twitter Chuck’s E-mail: chuck@devchat.tv Scott Moss’ Twitter Bonnie’s Twitter Bonnie’s GD ngHouston AiA 184 show AiA 146 show MAS 042 show with Sam Brennan Sponsors: Get A Coder Job Fresh Books Cache Fly Picks: Charles Sasqwatch is Real New Show – The DevRev DevChat.Tv Bonnie Blog – ThoughtRam Angular In-Depth NG Houston Angular for the Visual Learner

tv texas google real blog summit panel new shows javascript aia gd vue utf angular freshbooks jquery sam lee cachefly devchat charles max wood scott moss devrev visual learner chuck you my angular story google developer expert gde chuck let get a coder job bonnie brennan chuck here sam brennan nghouston thoughtram wbcjfg d5ni angular in depth
Devchat.tv Master Feed
MAS 059: Bonnie Brennan

Devchat.tv Master Feed

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 7, 2018 70:23


Panel: Charles Max Wood Guest: Bonnie Brennan This week on My Angular Story, Charles speaks with Bonnie Brennan who is in web technologies and uses Angular. She currently resides in Houston, Texas and Chuck and her discuss her background, past and current projects, ngHouston Meetup, and much more! Check-out today’s episode! In particular, we dive pretty deep on: 1:00 – Chuck: We’ve talked with you in the past, Bonnie. So listeners, check-out those past episodes if you are interested (see links below). There were various topics that we discussed. It’s been a few months since we’ve talked. Tell us how you got into Angular among other things? 1:50 – Guest. 3:19 – Chuck: I want to get a feel for how you got into programming, so tell us about that. 3:40 – Guest: I didn’t start coding until my 30’s. 3:50 – Chuck: Here is a dirty little secret: most people get into coding later in life. 4:25 – Guest. 25:07 – Chuck: Let’s get back on track - How did you get into Angular? 25:10 – Guest. 32:26 – Chuck: I completely agree. As you’ve gone into Angular you’ve done things in the community that makes you well-known. We’ve talked with your child-component, and how she got into coding. Listen back to that. You mentioned NG Houston, how did you get that going? 32:56 – Guest: I was here in Houston... 39:26 – Chuck: I want to change topics here. You mentioned in your consulting that people are running into certain issues. Most consultants that I know, they make a plan and they just build stuff. Seems like you are talking with them and showing them how to make things work better. 39:54 – Guest. 45:11 – Chuck: I have been a freelancer, and how do people hire you? 45:23 – Guest: Twitter is the best way to reach out to me, also my e-mail. 46:59 – Chuck: You have been a GD – how has that been? 47:10 – Guest: I actually love it! GOOGLE DEVELOPER EXPERT = GDE. 49:07 – Chuck: You had a unique experience at the last Summit. Can you talk about that for a minute? 49:17 – Guest. 59:17 – Chuck: We are at the end of our time. Where can people find you? 59:30 – Guest: The YouTube Channel and Twitter. 1:00:54 – Chuck: Let’s do some picks! 1:01:00 – Fresh Books! Links: jQuery Angular JavaScript Vue Chuck’s Twitter Chuck’s E-mail: chuck@devchat.tv Scott Moss’ Twitter Bonnie’s Twitter Bonnie’s GD ngHouston AiA 184 show AiA 146 show MAS 042 show with Sam Brennan Sponsors: Get A Coder Job Fresh Books Cache Fly Picks: Charles Sasqwatch is Real New Show – The DevRev DevChat.Tv Bonnie Blog – ThoughtRam Angular In-Depth NG Houston Angular for the Visual Learner

tv texas google real blog summit panel new shows javascript aia gd vue utf angular freshbooks jquery sam lee cachefly devchat charles max wood scott moss devrev visual learner chuck you my angular story google developer expert gde chuck let get a coder job bonnie brennan chuck here sam brennan nghouston thoughtram wbcjfg d5ni angular in depth
My Angular Story
MAS 059: Bonnie Brennan

My Angular Story

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 7, 2018 70:23


Panel: Charles Max Wood Guest: Bonnie Brennan This week on My Angular Story, Charles speaks with Bonnie Brennan who is in web technologies and uses Angular. She currently resides in Houston, Texas and Chuck and her discuss her background, past and current projects, ngHouston Meetup, and much more! Check-out today’s episode! In particular, we dive pretty deep on: 1:00 – Chuck: We’ve talked with you in the past, Bonnie. So listeners, check-out those past episodes if you are interested (see links below). There were various topics that we discussed. It’s been a few months since we’ve talked. Tell us how you got into Angular among other things? 1:50 – Guest. 3:19 – Chuck: I want to get a feel for how you got into programming, so tell us about that. 3:40 – Guest: I didn’t start coding until my 30’s. 3:50 – Chuck: Here is a dirty little secret: most people get into coding later in life. 4:25 – Guest. 25:07 – Chuck: Let’s get back on track - How did you get into Angular? 25:10 – Guest. 32:26 – Chuck: I completely agree. As you’ve gone into Angular you’ve done things in the community that makes you well-known. We’ve talked with your child-component, and how she got into coding. Listen back to that. You mentioned NG Houston, how did you get that going? 32:56 – Guest: I was here in Houston... 39:26 – Chuck: I want to change topics here. You mentioned in your consulting that people are running into certain issues. Most consultants that I know, they make a plan and they just build stuff. Seems like you are talking with them and showing them how to make things work better. 39:54 – Guest. 45:11 – Chuck: I have been a freelancer, and how do people hire you? 45:23 – Guest: Twitter is the best way to reach out to me, also my e-mail. 46:59 – Chuck: You have been a GD – how has that been? 47:10 – Guest: I actually love it! GOOGLE DEVELOPER EXPERT = GDE. 49:07 – Chuck: You had a unique experience at the last Summit. Can you talk about that for a minute? 49:17 – Guest. 59:17 – Chuck: We are at the end of our time. Where can people find you? 59:30 – Guest: The YouTube Channel and Twitter. 1:00:54 – Chuck: Let’s do some picks! 1:01:00 – Fresh Books! Links: jQuery Angular JavaScript Vue Chuck’s Twitter Chuck’s E-mail: chuck@devchat.tv Scott Moss’ Twitter Bonnie’s Twitter Bonnie’s GD ngHouston AiA 184 show AiA 146 show MAS 042 show with Sam Brennan Sponsors: Get A Coder Job Fresh Books Cache Fly Picks: Charles Sasqwatch is Real New Show – The DevRev DevChat.Tv Bonnie Blog – ThoughtRam Angular In-Depth NG Houston Angular for the Visual Learner

tv texas google real blog summit panel new shows javascript aia gd vue utf angular freshbooks jquery sam lee cachefly devchat charles max wood scott moss devrev visual learner chuck you my angular story google developer expert gde chuck let get a coder job bonnie brennan chuck here sam brennan nghouston thoughtram wbcjfg d5ni angular in depth
All Angular Podcasts by Devchat.tv
MAS 058: Lars Gyrup Brink Nielsen

All Angular Podcasts by Devchat.tv

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 31, 2018 36:20


Panel: Charles Max Wood Guest: Lars Gyrup Brink Nielsen This week on My Angular Story, Charles speaks with Lars Nielsen who is a frontend developer, blogger, a tech speaker, and an OSS contributor. He has worked with many different frameworks, but he and Chuck talk in detail about Angular. Finally, they discuss Lars’ programming background and the current projects he is working on. Check out today’s episode to hear more!  In particular, we dive pretty deep on: 0:53 – Guest: Hello from Denmark! 1:00 – Chuck: My great, great, great grandmother is Danish. Introduce yourself, please. 1:20 – Guest: I have been working through various companies through my career. I have focused on frontend development and right now it’s Angular and before it was Angular.js and others. I have been developing C# and started off with PHP. So I really enjoy frontend development the most. 1:58 – Chuck: I am talking with Rob Eisenberg in a few days. 2:04 – Guest: From what I’ve heard he’s a great guy. He worked on the Angular router. He branched out to Greater Zone. 2:28 – Chuck. 2:38 – Guest. 2:45 – Chuck: His episode will come out in 2 weeks! Tell us about you – what got you into programming? 3:00 – Guest: It started when I was 5 years old. My brother and I broke 3-4 computers before they bought us a Nintendo set. That was my first dive into it. Then I went to PCs and back in 1999 I wrote my first website with Notepad. Then later I decided to make a career out of it and studied in college. Then started developing full-stack. 4:53 – Chuck: You mentioned Knockout, Angular.js, and others. What have systems have you built in the backend? 5:03 – Guest: Yes, PHP in the beginning. Then I moved onto... (Guest continues answer Chuck’s question.) 6:30 – Chuck: What was about Angular that you liked? Why did you choose that framework? 6:47 – Guest: I got to choose the frontend framework (at the job I was at), and I chose NOT to use Angular. At the time, I thought it was confusing and overwhelming. Ember was stronger for me back then. But then later I got the opportunity to work with it in my current job, and now I am enjoying it. It’s always a challenge. 8:48 – Chuck: Seeing that transition and like that. I am curious though – what features do Angular have that Knockout and others don’t have for you? 9:08 – Guest: We used Coffee Script back then. Do you know it? 9:36 – Chuck: Yep I know it. 9:45 – Guest: I remember studying typescript, too. Coffee Script removed a lot of the stupid errors. 11:22 – Chuck: I think typescript is the way to go. 11:57 – Guest: It helps with those stupid errors that people make once in a while. It’s a type language. 12:45 – (Guest continues.) 13:14 – Chuck: Making the transition from Angular to Angular.js – what process did you go through? 13:25 – (Guest answers. He talks about starting from scratch to learn the new Angular.) 14:08 – Guest: I wouldn’t want to go back to Angular.js. There is so much to learn about Angular and working in-depth with it, there are still new things to explore every day, it’s a large framework. I guess that’s part of the reason why people use React and other frameworks b/c it can be overwhelming, especially for beginners. I enjoy it now b/c I read it now as a native tongue / native language. That’s what I see now, but that’s not what you see at first b/c there are so many new syntaxes. React is mostly JavaScript. 17:22 – Chuck: What features do you like about Angular over Angular.js? 17:28 – Guest: It’s the performance – it’s important! 18:20 – Chuck: What have you done in Angular that you are proud of? 18:24 – Guest: I am working on a few articles and I am about to release 2 of them. It’s a whole series. I am going to Copenhagen soon and I will be giving a talk. 20:17 – Cuck: What else are you working on? 20:23 – Guest: Yes, the articles. I am finishing those up. There will be 4-5 more in the series on that one topic. I want to focus on one topic at a time. There are 3 main concepts: container components, presentation components, and migration. Yes improving my talk for next month’s conference. I am building a small app, too. Working with new technologies and learning about offline apps and install the apps natively on most platforms now. We aren’t dependent on official App Store now, that’s a thing of the past now. 22:06 – Chuck: Where can people find you online? 22:16 – Guest: I have a few projects through GitHub. Find me there. (See links below.) Read my articles when they are published on Medium. 22:44 – Chuck. 22:48 – Guest: My first published articles will be at Angular In Depth. 23:00 – Chuck: Picks! 23:04 – Fresh Books! 27:13 – Chuck: What is the tech scene like in Denmark? 27:18 – Guest: You have to keep up the pace yourself b/c I live in a very small area. There are only a few cities in Denmark where the jobs are. I will go to Meetups and conferences and I am active on European Slack. That’s how I get to be social in the Angular community. I am mostly working at home. I have twin daughters who are 7 years old. I am mostly at the office, too, building and working there, which is 5 miles away from my home. 29:17 – Chuck: In the past episode I talked with someone from Bulgaria, it sounds similar to what you are saying Lars. I am curious are people willing to hire remote if they are outside of the city? 29:40 – Guest: It depends on the company. 30:25 – Chuck: Working remotely is definitely a skill. 30:44 – Guest: I have worked remotely for some jobs b/c I was driving several hours a day. 31:21 – Chuck: My longest commute was 30 minutes top, but I live in a heavy tech scene where I live. Do most people in Denmark know English? 31:5- Guest: My daughters have been speaking English since 3-4 years old b/c of iPads. They are also taught English and German in the school, too. 32:21 – Chuck: Anything else? Are there things that people don’t think about being a developer in Denmark? 32:40 – Guest: There aren’t that many big companies. It’s difficult to get into the right place. There are small companies in Denmark. 33:51 – Chuck: Does that change the way people find jobs in Denmark? 33:59 – Guest: If you don’t like to work for a bank then you have a problem b/c that’s half the jobs! If you don’t like certain industries that could make it harder to get a job as a programmer. 34:33 – Chuck: I am going to wrap this up – anything else? 34:44 – Guest: Create a blog post or start an open source project. That’s what I do when I get bored. When you teach a subject you have to be an expert to be able to explain it to someone else. 35:37 – (Guest lists the titles of his articles – check it out at this timestamp!) 35:50 – (Chuck discusses future episodes and future guests that he will interview.) Links: jQuery Angular JavaScript Vue C++ C# Angular In Depth Article about Model-View-Presenter with Angular Mastering Reactive JavaScript Angular Router Lars’ Medium Lars’ GitHub Chuck’s Twitter Chuck’s E-mail: chuck@devchat.tv Sponsors: Get A Coder Job Fresh Books Cache Fly Picks: Charles Azure DevOps – It’s free for up to 5-6 team members! Chat System: Mattermost Lars Angular In Depth Book: Mastering Reactive JavaScript by Erich de Souza Oliveira Angular Router Book

english google german medium nintendo panel ipads denmark react danish app store brink copenhagen bulgaria nielsen github pcs javascript knockout erich php oss meetups vue utf angular freshbooks jquery notepad mattermost azure devops cachefly charles max wood lars nielsen chuck you rob eisenberg my angular story chuck anything get a coder job us 2528sem 2529branded 257cexm chuck where chuck picks souza oliveira chuck does eisenbergeffect model view presenter 255bfreshbooks 255d angular router angular in depth
Devchat.tv Master Feed
MAS 058: Lars Gyrup Brink Nielsen

Devchat.tv Master Feed

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 31, 2018 36:20


Panel: Charles Max Wood Guest: Lars Gyrup Brink Nielsen This week on My Angular Story, Charles speaks with Lars Nielsen who is a frontend developer, blogger, a tech speaker, and an OSS contributor. He has worked with many different frameworks, but he and Chuck talk in detail about Angular. Finally, they discuss Lars’ programming background and the current projects he is working on. Check out today’s episode to hear more!  In particular, we dive pretty deep on: 0:53 – Guest: Hello from Denmark! 1:00 – Chuck: My great, great, great grandmother is Danish. Introduce yourself, please. 1:20 – Guest: I have been working through various companies through my career. I have focused on frontend development and right now it’s Angular and before it was Angular.js and others. I have been developing C# and started off with PHP. So I really enjoy frontend development the most. 1:58 – Chuck: I am talking with Rob Eisenberg in a few days. 2:04 – Guest: From what I’ve heard he’s a great guy. He worked on the Angular router. He branched out to Greater Zone. 2:28 – Chuck. 2:38 – Guest. 2:45 – Chuck: His episode will come out in 2 weeks! Tell us about you – what got you into programming? 3:00 – Guest: It started when I was 5 years old. My brother and I broke 3-4 computers before they bought us a Nintendo set. That was my first dive into it. Then I went to PCs and back in 1999 I wrote my first website with Notepad. Then later I decided to make a career out of it and studied in college. Then started developing full-stack. 4:53 – Chuck: You mentioned Knockout, Angular.js, and others. What have systems have you built in the backend? 5:03 – Guest: Yes, PHP in the beginning. Then I moved onto... (Guest continues answer Chuck’s question.) 6:30 – Chuck: What was about Angular that you liked? Why did you choose that framework? 6:47 – Guest: I got to choose the frontend framework (at the job I was at), and I chose NOT to use Angular. At the time, I thought it was confusing and overwhelming. Ember was stronger for me back then. But then later I got the opportunity to work with it in my current job, and now I am enjoying it. It’s always a challenge. 8:48 – Chuck: Seeing that transition and like that. I am curious though – what features do Angular have that Knockout and others don’t have for you? 9:08 – Guest: We used Coffee Script back then. Do you know it? 9:36 – Chuck: Yep I know it. 9:45 – Guest: I remember studying typescript, too. Coffee Script removed a lot of the stupid errors. 11:22 – Chuck: I think typescript is the way to go. 11:57 – Guest: It helps with those stupid errors that people make once in a while. It’s a type language. 12:45 – (Guest continues.) 13:14 – Chuck: Making the transition from Angular to Angular.js – what process did you go through? 13:25 – (Guest answers. He talks about starting from scratch to learn the new Angular.) 14:08 – Guest: I wouldn’t want to go back to Angular.js. There is so much to learn about Angular and working in-depth with it, there are still new things to explore every day, it’s a large framework. I guess that’s part of the reason why people use React and other frameworks b/c it can be overwhelming, especially for beginners. I enjoy it now b/c I read it now as a native tongue / native language. That’s what I see now, but that’s not what you see at first b/c there are so many new syntaxes. React is mostly JavaScript. 17:22 – Chuck: What features do you like about Angular over Angular.js? 17:28 – Guest: It’s the performance – it’s important! 18:20 – Chuck: What have you done in Angular that you are proud of? 18:24 – Guest: I am working on a few articles and I am about to release 2 of them. It’s a whole series. I am going to Copenhagen soon and I will be giving a talk. 20:17 – Cuck: What else are you working on? 20:23 – Guest: Yes, the articles. I am finishing those up. There will be 4-5 more in the series on that one topic. I want to focus on one topic at a time. There are 3 main concepts: container components, presentation components, and migration. Yes improving my talk for next month’s conference. I am building a small app, too. Working with new technologies and learning about offline apps and install the apps natively on most platforms now. We aren’t dependent on official App Store now, that’s a thing of the past now. 22:06 – Chuck: Where can people find you online? 22:16 – Guest: I have a few projects through GitHub. Find me there. (See links below.) Read my articles when they are published on Medium. 22:44 – Chuck. 22:48 – Guest: My first published articles will be at Angular In Depth. 23:00 – Chuck: Picks! 23:04 – Fresh Books! 27:13 – Chuck: What is the tech scene like in Denmark? 27:18 – Guest: You have to keep up the pace yourself b/c I live in a very small area. There are only a few cities in Denmark where the jobs are. I will go to Meetups and conferences and I am active on European Slack. That’s how I get to be social in the Angular community. I am mostly working at home. I have twin daughters who are 7 years old. I am mostly at the office, too, building and working there, which is 5 miles away from my home. 29:17 – Chuck: In the past episode I talked with someone from Bulgaria, it sounds similar to what you are saying Lars. I am curious are people willing to hire remote if they are outside of the city? 29:40 – Guest: It depends on the company. 30:25 – Chuck: Working remotely is definitely a skill. 30:44 – Guest: I have worked remotely for some jobs b/c I was driving several hours a day. 31:21 – Chuck: My longest commute was 30 minutes top, but I live in a heavy tech scene where I live. Do most people in Denmark know English? 31:5- Guest: My daughters have been speaking English since 3-4 years old b/c of iPads. They are also taught English and German in the school, too. 32:21 – Chuck: Anything else? Are there things that people don’t think about being a developer in Denmark? 32:40 – Guest: There aren’t that many big companies. It’s difficult to get into the right place. There are small companies in Denmark. 33:51 – Chuck: Does that change the way people find jobs in Denmark? 33:59 – Guest: If you don’t like to work for a bank then you have a problem b/c that’s half the jobs! If you don’t like certain industries that could make it harder to get a job as a programmer. 34:33 – Chuck: I am going to wrap this up – anything else? 34:44 – Guest: Create a blog post or start an open source project. That’s what I do when I get bored. When you teach a subject you have to be an expert to be able to explain it to someone else. 35:37 – (Guest lists the titles of his articles – check it out at this timestamp!) 35:50 – (Chuck discusses future episodes and future guests that he will interview.) Links: jQuery Angular JavaScript Vue C++ C# Angular In Depth Article about Model-View-Presenter with Angular Mastering Reactive JavaScript Angular Router Lars’ Medium Lars’ GitHub Chuck’s Twitter Chuck’s E-mail: chuck@devchat.tv Sponsors: Get A Coder Job Fresh Books Cache Fly Picks: Charles Azure DevOps – It’s free for up to 5-6 team members! Chat System: Mattermost Lars Angular In Depth Book: Mastering Reactive JavaScript by Erich de Souza Oliveira Angular Router Book

english google german medium nintendo panel ipads denmark react danish app store brink copenhagen bulgaria nielsen github pcs javascript knockout erich php oss meetups vue utf angular freshbooks jquery notepad mattermost azure devops cachefly charles max wood lars nielsen chuck you rob eisenberg my angular story chuck anything get a coder job us 2528sem 2529branded 257cexm chuck where chuck picks souza oliveira chuck does eisenbergeffect model view presenter 255bfreshbooks 255d angular router angular in depth
My Angular Story
MAS 058: Lars Gyrup Brink Nielsen

My Angular Story

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 31, 2018 36:20


Panel: Charles Max Wood Guest: Lars Gyrup Brink Nielsen This week on My Angular Story, Charles speaks with Lars Nielsen who is a frontend developer, blogger, a tech speaker, and an OSS contributor. He has worked with many different frameworks, but he and Chuck talk in detail about Angular. Finally, they discuss Lars’ programming background and the current projects he is working on. Check out today’s episode to hear more!  In particular, we dive pretty deep on: 0:53 – Guest: Hello from Denmark! 1:00 – Chuck: My great, great, great grandmother is Danish. Introduce yourself, please. 1:20 – Guest: I have been working through various companies through my career. I have focused on frontend development and right now it’s Angular and before it was Angular.js and others. I have been developing C# and started off with PHP. So I really enjoy frontend development the most. 1:58 – Chuck: I am talking with Rob Eisenberg in a few days. 2:04 – Guest: From what I’ve heard he’s a great guy. He worked on the Angular router. He branched out to Greater Zone. 2:28 – Chuck. 2:38 – Guest. 2:45 – Chuck: His episode will come out in 2 weeks! Tell us about you – what got you into programming? 3:00 – Guest: It started when I was 5 years old. My brother and I broke 3-4 computers before they bought us a Nintendo set. That was my first dive into it. Then I went to PCs and back in 1999 I wrote my first website with Notepad. Then later I decided to make a career out of it and studied in college. Then started developing full-stack. 4:53 – Chuck: You mentioned Knockout, Angular.js, and others. What have systems have you built in the backend? 5:03 – Guest: Yes, PHP in the beginning. Then I moved onto... (Guest continues answer Chuck’s question.) 6:30 – Chuck: What was about Angular that you liked? Why did you choose that framework? 6:47 – Guest: I got to choose the frontend framework (at the job I was at), and I chose NOT to use Angular. At the time, I thought it was confusing and overwhelming. Ember was stronger for me back then. But then later I got the opportunity to work with it in my current job, and now I am enjoying it. It’s always a challenge. 8:48 – Chuck: Seeing that transition and like that. I am curious though – what features do Angular have that Knockout and others don’t have for you? 9:08 – Guest: We used Coffee Script back then. Do you know it? 9:36 – Chuck: Yep I know it. 9:45 – Guest: I remember studying typescript, too. Coffee Script removed a lot of the stupid errors. 11:22 – Chuck: I think typescript is the way to go. 11:57 – Guest: It helps with those stupid errors that people make once in a while. It’s a type language. 12:45 – (Guest continues.) 13:14 – Chuck: Making the transition from Angular to Angular.js – what process did you go through? 13:25 – (Guest answers. He talks about starting from scratch to learn the new Angular.) 14:08 – Guest: I wouldn’t want to go back to Angular.js. There is so much to learn about Angular and working in-depth with it, there are still new things to explore every day, it’s a large framework. I guess that’s part of the reason why people use React and other frameworks b/c it can be overwhelming, especially for beginners. I enjoy it now b/c I read it now as a native tongue / native language. That’s what I see now, but that’s not what you see at first b/c there are so many new syntaxes. React is mostly JavaScript. 17:22 – Chuck: What features do you like about Angular over Angular.js? 17:28 – Guest: It’s the performance – it’s important! 18:20 – Chuck: What have you done in Angular that you are proud of? 18:24 – Guest: I am working on a few articles and I am about to release 2 of them. It’s a whole series. I am going to Copenhagen soon and I will be giving a talk. 20:17 – Cuck: What else are you working on? 20:23 – Guest: Yes, the articles. I am finishing those up. There will be 4-5 more in the series on that one topic. I want to focus on one topic at a time. There are 3 main concepts: container components, presentation components, and migration. Yes improving my talk for next month’s conference. I am building a small app, too. Working with new technologies and learning about offline apps and install the apps natively on most platforms now. We aren’t dependent on official App Store now, that’s a thing of the past now. 22:06 – Chuck: Where can people find you online? 22:16 – Guest: I have a few projects through GitHub. Find me there. (See links below.) Read my articles when they are published on Medium. 22:44 – Chuck. 22:48 – Guest: My first published articles will be at Angular In Depth. 23:00 – Chuck: Picks! 23:04 – Fresh Books! 27:13 – Chuck: What is the tech scene like in Denmark? 27:18 – Guest: You have to keep up the pace yourself b/c I live in a very small area. There are only a few cities in Denmark where the jobs are. I will go to Meetups and conferences and I am active on European Slack. That’s how I get to be social in the Angular community. I am mostly working at home. I have twin daughters who are 7 years old. I am mostly at the office, too, building and working there, which is 5 miles away from my home. 29:17 – Chuck: In the past episode I talked with someone from Bulgaria, it sounds similar to what you are saying Lars. I am curious are people willing to hire remote if they are outside of the city? 29:40 – Guest: It depends on the company. 30:25 – Chuck: Working remotely is definitely a skill. 30:44 – Guest: I have worked remotely for some jobs b/c I was driving several hours a day. 31:21 – Chuck: My longest commute was 30 minutes top, but I live in a heavy tech scene where I live. Do most people in Denmark know English? 31:5- Guest: My daughters have been speaking English since 3-4 years old b/c of iPads. They are also taught English and German in the school, too. 32:21 – Chuck: Anything else? Are there things that people don’t think about being a developer in Denmark? 32:40 – Guest: There aren’t that many big companies. It’s difficult to get into the right place. There are small companies in Denmark. 33:51 – Chuck: Does that change the way people find jobs in Denmark? 33:59 – Guest: If you don’t like to work for a bank then you have a problem b/c that’s half the jobs! If you don’t like certain industries that could make it harder to get a job as a programmer. 34:33 – Chuck: I am going to wrap this up – anything else? 34:44 – Guest: Create a blog post or start an open source project. That’s what I do when I get bored. When you teach a subject you have to be an expert to be able to explain it to someone else. 35:37 – (Guest lists the titles of his articles – check it out at this timestamp!) 35:50 – (Chuck discusses future episodes and future guests that he will interview.) Links: jQuery Angular JavaScript Vue C++ C# Angular In Depth Article about Model-View-Presenter with Angular Mastering Reactive JavaScript Angular Router Lars’ Medium Lars’ GitHub Chuck’s Twitter Chuck’s E-mail: chuck@devchat.tv Sponsors: Get A Coder Job Fresh Books Cache Fly Picks: Charles Azure DevOps – It’s free for up to 5-6 team members! Chat System: Mattermost Lars Angular In Depth Book: Mastering Reactive JavaScript by Erich de Souza Oliveira Angular Router Book

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All Angular Podcasts by Devchat.tv
AiA 158: Teaching Angular with Paul Spears and John Baur

All Angular Podcasts by Devchat.tv

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 3, 2017 53:50


Panel:  Ward Bell Joe Eames Shai Reznik Alyssa Nicoll Charles Max Wood Special Guests:  Paul Spears and John Baur Paul and John both work at Oasis Digital Solutions in St. Louis. Paul is the lead curriculum author for the Angular Bootcamp course.  Both, Paul and John teach Angular to companies, public, private, and offer consulting to their customers. Paul and John speak about specific ways they approach teaching. Both teachers have a wide range of experience in teaching Angular. Paul and John speak about the most current best practices of teaching and learning Angular. In particular, we dive pretty deep on: Teach newcomers Angular, the proper approach. Starting fresh with the Bootcamp as an already experienced developer. You should know the basics of JS, HTML, CSS, etc. Enterprise background? Using dot net with Angular How do you bring people along with single page apps, as they have different backgrounds CLI and tooling to help get people moving along with Angular Where do people get hung up? EG Module Dumping everything in one module or Lazy Routing and much more! Links:  AngularBootCamp.com @bps3 @johnrbuar Oasis Digital Solutions Picks: Shai Angular In-Depth Angular Performance Checklist Angular Basics 1 Alyssa Active Power Mode Joe Better Off Ted Charles Low Carb Cheese Cake Paul Angular Performance Playground  Stencil JS  John Terraforming Mars

starting teaching teach panel enterprise special guests bootcamp html css dumping js shai angular cli terraforming mars better off ted charles max wood joe eames ward bell shai reznik john baur alyssa nicoll angular boot camp paul spears angular in depth
Devchat.tv Master Feed
AiA 158: Teaching Angular with Paul Spears and John Baur

Devchat.tv Master Feed

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 3, 2017 53:50


Panel:  Ward Bell Joe Eames Shai Reznik Alyssa Nicoll Charles Max Wood Special Guests:  Paul Spears and John Baur Paul and John both work at Oasis Digital Solutions in St. Louis. Paul is the lead curriculum author for the Angular Bootcamp course.  Both, Paul and John teach Angular to companies, public, private, and offer consulting to their customers. Paul and John speak about specific ways they approach teaching. Both teachers have a wide range of experience in teaching Angular. Paul and John speak about the most current best practices of teaching and learning Angular. In particular, we dive pretty deep on: Teach newcomers Angular, the proper approach. Starting fresh with the Bootcamp as an already experienced developer. You should know the basics of JS, HTML, CSS, etc. Enterprise background? Using dot net with Angular How do you bring people along with single page apps, as they have different backgrounds CLI and tooling to help get people moving along with Angular Where do people get hung up? EG Module Dumping everything in one module or Lazy Routing and much more! Links:  AngularBootCamp.com @bps3 @johnrbuar Oasis Digital Solutions Picks: Shai Angular In-Depth Angular Performance Checklist Angular Basics 1 Alyssa Active Power Mode Joe Better Off Ted Charles Low Carb Cheese Cake Paul Angular Performance Playground  Stencil JS  John Terraforming Mars

starting teaching teach panel enterprise special guests bootcamp html css dumping js shai angular cli terraforming mars better off ted charles max wood joe eames ward bell shai reznik john baur alyssa nicoll angular boot camp paul spears angular in depth
Adventures in Angular
AiA 158: Teaching Angular with Paul Spears and John Baur

Adventures in Angular

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 3, 2017 53:50


Panel:  Ward Bell Joe Eames Shai Reznik Alyssa Nicoll Charles Max Wood Special Guests:  Paul Spears and John Baur Paul and John both work at Oasis Digital Solutions in St. Louis. Paul is the lead curriculum author for the Angular Bootcamp course.  Both, Paul and John teach Angular to companies, public, private, and offer consulting to their customers. Paul and John speak about specific ways they approach teaching. Both teachers have a wide range of experience in teaching Angular. Paul and John speak about the most current best practices of teaching and learning Angular. In particular, we dive pretty deep on: Teach newcomers Angular, the proper approach. Starting fresh with the Bootcamp as an already experienced developer. You should know the basics of JS, HTML, CSS, etc. Enterprise background? Using dot net with Angular How do you bring people along with single page apps, as they have different backgrounds CLI and tooling to help get people moving along with Angular Where do people get hung up? EG Module Dumping everything in one module or Lazy Routing and much more! Links:  AngularBootCamp.com @bps3 @johnrbuar Oasis Digital Solutions Picks: Shai Angular In-Depth Angular Performance Checklist Angular Basics 1 Alyssa Active Power Mode Joe Better Off Ted Charles Low Carb Cheese Cake Paul Angular Performance Playground  Stencil JS  John Terraforming Mars

starting teaching teach panel enterprise special guests bootcamp html css dumping js shai angular cli terraforming mars better off ted charles max wood joe eames ward bell shai reznik john baur alyssa nicoll angular boot camp paul spears angular in depth