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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 Mike Hartington Mike is an Ionic Developer Advocate. He's been a guest in Adventures in Angular (Episode 64 and 109) and Java Script Jabber, and he spoke in Angular Remote Conference. Tune in to My Angular Story Mike Hartington to know more about how he started in programming. His first dive in programming was simply out of necessity. He took Intro to Computer Science in high school where he did visual basic. He really didn't think of pushing it through college, and he was into craft design courses instead. When he had his last semester course on web design, that was the first time he went back into programming and web technology after high school. He fell in love with Flash before JavaScript. He found it to be so awesome because it's interactive and it's so much fun. When he got out of school, he did marketing and design at a company. One of the requirements were to do interactive product demos and create resources for sales team. They were provided with iPads to do the task, but Flash doesn't run in iPads. Being the case, he had to relearn JavaScript. When he got hired in a company as a designer working with developers, he initially that it would look great. But eventually he didn't want to do the job because it would take him forever. He also had this boss who was very much of a visual person. When he showed him something in the computer, he was asked about how that particular thing would work. Not having Sketch back then, he didn't have the newer UI mockup tools. He recoded all the interactions, and his boss was pleased. Being a designer before has somewhat been an influence to Mike's life as a programmer. He helps other developers handle issues and figure better solutions just like how a designer would do. The main goal of designing is producing an output that appears as if it's done the only way it should. In the end, the product would seem to a natural fit. Charles agrees with Mike's idea in how to solve a problem. Using API for instance, Mike doesn't want to think over about how to use it. He wants to keep things simple. The API should be materialized the way it should have been done. To hear the rest of My Angular Mike Hartington, download and listen to the entire episode. Get in touch with Mike and learn more about him by following him on Twitter. Don't forget to let Mike know you heard about him on Devchat.tv's Adventures in Angular My Angular Story! Mike on Twitter If you're short on time, here are the highlights of My Angular Story Mike Hartington: How did Mike get into programming? (07:03) What led him back to programming? (09:50) How does designing influence programming? (12:21) How did Mike get into Angular? (14:06) Mike's other open source projects? (17:31) Mike's basis in deciding to contribute in a project? (19:17) How did he get into Ionic? (24:14) Picks: Mike Chuck from Angular Team for awesome language plugin, Westworld Charles ActiveCampaign, KSL Classifieds, Who book
Panel Charles Max Wood Mike Hartington Mike is an Ionic Developer Advocate. He's been a guest in Adventures in Angular (Episode 64 and 109) and Java Script Jabber, and he spoke in Angular Remote Conference. Tune in to My Angular Story Mike Hartington to know more about how he started in programming. His first dive in programming was simply out of necessity. He took Intro to Computer Science in high school where he did visual basic. He really didn't think of pushing it through college, and he was into craft design courses instead. When he had his last semester course on web design, that was the first time he went back into programming and web technology after high school. He fell in love with Flash before JavaScript. He found it to be so awesome because it's interactive and it's so much fun. When he got out of school, he did marketing and design at a company. One of the requirements were to do interactive product demos and create resources for sales team. They were provided with iPads to do the task, but Flash doesn't run in iPads. Being the case, he had to relearn JavaScript. When he got hired in a company as a designer working with developers, he initially that it would look great. But eventually he didn't want to do the job because it would take him forever. He also had this boss who was very much of a visual person. When he showed him something in the computer, he was asked about how that particular thing would work. Not having Sketch back then, he didn't have the newer UI mockup tools. He recoded all the interactions, and his boss was pleased. Being a designer before has somewhat been an influence to Mike's life as a programmer. He helps other developers handle issues and figure better solutions just like how a designer would do. The main goal of designing is producing an output that appears as if it's done the only way it should. In the end, the product would seem to a natural fit. Charles agrees with Mike's idea in how to solve a problem. Using API for instance, Mike doesn't want to think over about how to use it. He wants to keep things simple. The API should be materialized the way it should have been done. To hear the rest of My Angular Mike Hartington, download and listen to the entire episode. Get in touch with Mike and learn more about him by following him on Twitter. Don't forget to let Mike know you heard about him on Devchat.tv's Adventures in Angular My Angular Story! Mike on Twitter If you're short on time, here are the highlights of My Angular Story Mike Hartington: How did Mike get into programming? (07:03) What led him back to programming? (09:50) How does designing influence programming? (12:21) How did Mike get into Angular? (14:06) Mike's other open source projects? (17:31) Mike's basis in deciding to contribute in a project? (19:17) How did he get into Ionic? (24:14) Picks: Mike Chuck from Angular Team for awesome language plugin, Westworld Charles ActiveCampaign, KSL Classifieds, Who book
Panel Charles Max Wood Mike Hartington Mike is an Ionic Developer Advocate. He's been a guest in Adventures in Angular (Episode 64 and 109) and Java Script Jabber, and he spoke in Angular Remote Conference. Tune in to My Angular Story Mike Hartington to know more about how he started in programming. His first dive in programming was simply out of necessity. He took Intro to Computer Science in high school where he did visual basic. He really didn't think of pushing it through college, and he was into craft design courses instead. When he had his last semester course on web design, that was the first time he went back into programming and web technology after high school. He fell in love with Flash before JavaScript. He found it to be so awesome because it's interactive and it's so much fun. When he got out of school, he did marketing and design at a company. One of the requirements were to do interactive product demos and create resources for sales team. They were provided with iPads to do the task, but Flash doesn't run in iPads. Being the case, he had to relearn JavaScript. When he got hired in a company as a designer working with developers, he initially that it would look great. But eventually he didn't want to do the job because it would take him forever. He also had this boss who was very much of a visual person. When he showed him something in the computer, he was asked about how that particular thing would work. Not having Sketch back then, he didn't have the newer UI mockup tools. He recoded all the interactions, and his boss was pleased. Being a designer before has somewhat been an influence to Mike's life as a programmer. He helps other developers handle issues and figure better solutions just like how a designer would do. The main goal of designing is producing an output that appears as if it's done the only way it should. In the end, the product would seem to a natural fit. Charles agrees with Mike's idea in how to solve a problem. Using API for instance, Mike doesn't want to think over about how to use it. He wants to keep things simple. The API should be materialized the way it should have been done. To hear the rest of My Angular Mike Hartington, download and listen to the entire episode. Get in touch with Mike and learn more about him by following him on Twitter. Don't forget to let Mike know you heard about him on Devchat.tv's Adventures in Angular My Angular Story! Mike on Twitter If you're short on time, here are the highlights of My Angular Story Mike Hartington: How did Mike get into programming? (07:03) What led him back to programming? (09:50) How does designing influence programming? (12:21) How did Mike get into Angular? (14:06) Mike's other open source projects? (17:31) Mike's basis in deciding to contribute in a project? (19:17) How did he get into Ionic? (24:14) Picks: Mike Chuck from Angular Team for awesome language plugin, Westworld Charles ActiveCampaign, KSL Classifieds, Who book
Panel Charles Max Wood Special Guests: Joe Eames Joe is both into JavaScript Jabber and Adventures in Angular. Tune in to My Angular Story Joe Eames to learn more about his journey into getting where he is now. When he was 16, Joe had a class in high school which required him to go to the University of Utah. Everyday he took half day in high school and traveled to the university to attend class. Since he was up there, he thought that he needed a job to earn money for dates and stuff just like any other kids. He worked in a movie theater, but got suspended because he had an argument with his boss. He looked for another job, and landed onto one in the university where he was studying. He did data entry and dBase maintenance. That was his first programming job. When he turned 19 and graduated from high school, Joe served 2 years in LDS mission. When he came back, he worked in a restaurant for 5 weeks, but moved to Portland because of some knee problems. He spent 2 years there. When he came home, he needed a new job. He found a technical job in a computer company which did data entry. He got hired and was assigned in doing wiring and the like. One manager came to his manager asking for one programmer for a project. Since he was available and had a background on programming, he was recommended for the job. He was then handed with FoxPro books, and started reading them as a head start. He bought a couple of JavaScript books back then. Then there came an emergent technology which he found so cool and awesome called DHTML. Some people in his office were doing it, but he was confused about it. He kind of got it, but he didn't really do much with it. For years he has been doing dot net and programming. He got to the point where he wanted to do something different. He enjoyed doing web technology stuff, but he wanted to get heavier into JavaScript. He decided to leave everything and pursued his profound interest for JS. To hear the rest of My Angular Story Joe Eames, download and listen to the entire episode. Get in touch with Joe and learn more about him by following him on Twitter. Don't forget to let Joe know you heard about him on Devchat.tv's Adventures in Angular My Angular Story! Joe on Twitter If you're short on time, here are the highlights of My Angular Story Joe Eames: How did Joe get into programming? (00:45) His journey to JavaScript? (06:15) How Joe came to Angular? (15:47) Experience as JavaScript Jabber panelist? (21:16) The birth of NG conference? (27:11) Joe's current projects? (39:36) Picks: Joe's Costa Vida NG Cruise Charles' Pick: Air BNB
Panel Charles Max Wood Special Guests: Joe Eames Joe is both into JavaScript Jabber and Adventures in Angular. Tune in to My Angular Story Joe Eames to learn more about his journey into getting where he is now. When he was 16, Joe had a class in high school which required him to go to the University of Utah. Everyday he took half day in high school and traveled to the university to attend class. Since he was up there, he thought that he needed a job to earn money for dates and stuff just like any other kids. He worked in a movie theater, but got suspended because he had an argument with his boss. He looked for another job, and landed onto one in the university where he was studying. He did data entry and dBase maintenance. That was his first programming job. When he turned 19 and graduated from high school, Joe served 2 years in LDS mission. When he came back, he worked in a restaurant for 5 weeks, but moved to Portland because of some knee problems. He spent 2 years there. When he came home, he needed a new job. He found a technical job in a computer company which did data entry. He got hired and was assigned in doing wiring and the like. One manager came to his manager asking for one programmer for a project. Since he was available and had a background on programming, he was recommended for the job. He was then handed with FoxPro books, and started reading them as a head start. He bought a couple of JavaScript books back then. Then there came an emergent technology which he found so cool and awesome called DHTML. Some people in his office were doing it, but he was confused about it. He kind of got it, but he didn't really do much with it. For years he has been doing dot net and programming. He got to the point where he wanted to do something different. He enjoyed doing web technology stuff, but he wanted to get heavier into JavaScript. He decided to leave everything and pursued his profound interest for JS. To hear the rest of My Angular Story Joe Eames, download and listen to the entire episode. Get in touch with Joe and learn more about him by following him on Twitter. Don't forget to let Joe know you heard about him on Devchat.tv's Adventures in Angular My Angular Story! Joe on Twitter If you're short on time, here are the highlights of My Angular Story Joe Eames: How did Joe get into programming? (00:45) His journey to JavaScript? (06:15) How Joe came to Angular? (15:47) Experience as JavaScript Jabber panelist? (21:16) The birth of NG conference? (27:11) Joe's current projects? (39:36) Picks: Joe's Costa Vida NG Cruise Charles' Pick: Air BNB
Panel Charles Max Wood Special Guests: Joe Eames Joe is both into JavaScript Jabber and Adventures in Angular. Tune in to My Angular Story Joe Eames to learn more about his journey into getting where he is now. When he was 16, Joe had a class in high school which required him to go to the University of Utah. Everyday he took half day in high school and traveled to the university to attend class. Since he was up there, he thought that he needed a job to earn money for dates and stuff just like any other kids. He worked in a movie theater, but got suspended because he had an argument with his boss. He looked for another job, and landed onto one in the university where he was studying. He did data entry and dBase maintenance. That was his first programming job. When he turned 19 and graduated from high school, Joe served 2 years in LDS mission. When he came back, he worked in a restaurant for 5 weeks, but moved to Portland because of some knee problems. He spent 2 years there. When he came home, he needed a new job. He found a technical job in a computer company which did data entry. He got hired and was assigned in doing wiring and the like. One manager came to his manager asking for one programmer for a project. Since he was available and had a background on programming, he was recommended for the job. He was then handed with FoxPro books, and started reading them as a head start. He bought a couple of JavaScript books back then. Then there came an emergent technology which he found so cool and awesome called DHTML. Some people in his office were doing it, but he was confused about it. He kind of got it, but he didn't really do much with it. For years he has been doing dot net and programming. He got to the point where he wanted to do something different. He enjoyed doing web technology stuff, but he wanted to get heavier into JavaScript. He decided to leave everything and pursued his profound interest for JS. To hear the rest of My Angular Story Joe Eames, download and listen to the entire episode. Get in touch with Joe and learn more about him by following him on Twitter. Don't forget to let Joe know you heard about him on Devchat.tv's Adventures in Angular My Angular Story! Joe on Twitter If you're short on time, here are the highlights of My Angular Story Joe Eames: How did Joe get into programming? (00:45) His journey to JavaScript? (06:15) How Joe came to Angular? (15:47) Experience as JavaScript Jabber panelist? (21:16) The birth of NG conference? (27:11) Joe's current projects? (39:36) Picks: Joe's Costa Vida NG Cruise Charles' Pick: Air BNB
Panel Charles Max Wood Special Guest: Tero Parviainen Tero is a content developer from Helsinki, Finland. He's not new to the Adventures in Angular audience. Tero was a guest in episodes 51 and 117. He has been doing a lot of Angular in the last 3-4 years working as an independent contractor with many companies around the world. Tero also writes and speaks about his work. Tero has been doing a lot of Angular in the last 3-4 years working as an independent contractor with many companies around the world. Tero also writes and speaks about his work.Tero has his first introduction to programming when he was about 7 or 8 years old. He and his brother received a Commodore 64 computer which they used for mostly for playing games. On that computer was a basic interpreter and basic programming language which Tero played with a bit. He had some basic code language books for creating some basic adventure games. Tero would painstakingly copy that code but he really had no idea what code was about.In his early twenties, Tero took an internship for software development in 2001. It was in the middle of the big IT bubble. Good timing for Tero because IT companies were hiring everyone. His first stint was as a Java programmer. Tero was beginning a new project and was trying to decide what framework to use. The choice came down to Angular or Ember Backbone.Tero chose Angular because it was the most popular at the time and it felt safe to him.The data binding was intriguing to him. He had learned how to wire things together using Backbone to get model changes shown in the views and making it all work in a clean way. He jumped into Angular to do the same.To hear the rest of My Angular Story Tero Parviainen, download and listen to the entire episode.You can connect with Tero and see what he's excited about at the following links. Don't forget to let Tero know you heard about him on Devchat.tv's Adventures in Angular My Angular Story! Build Your Own Angular JS Tero's Website Tero on Twitter Email Tero If you're short on time, here are the highlights of My Angular Story Tero Parviainen: Who is Tero Parviainen? (:49) How did Tero get into Angular? (5:55) Angular v Ember (8:30) Tero Teaches Angular (10:43) The NG Comp Talk (17:30) What is Tero working on now? (21:51) Picks Tero Functional Programming Javascript Functional and Reactive Domain Modeling Charles Star Wars Rogue One Powering the Death Star CES 2017
Panel Charles Max Wood Special Guest: Tero Parviainen Tero is a content developer from Helsinki, Finland. He's not new to the Adventures in Angular audience. Tero was a guest in episodes 51 and 117. He has been doing a lot of Angular in the last 3-4 years working as an independent contractor with many companies around the world. Tero also writes and speaks about his work. Tero has been doing a lot of Angular in the last 3-4 years working as an independent contractor with many companies around the world. Tero also writes and speaks about his work.Tero has his first introduction to programming when he was about 7 or 8 years old. He and his brother received a Commodore 64 computer which they used for mostly for playing games. On that computer was a basic interpreter and basic programming language which Tero played with a bit. He had some basic code language books for creating some basic adventure games. Tero would painstakingly copy that code but he really had no idea what code was about.In his early twenties, Tero took an internship for software development in 2001. It was in the middle of the big IT bubble. Good timing for Tero because IT companies were hiring everyone. His first stint was as a Java programmer. Tero was beginning a new project and was trying to decide what framework to use. The choice came down to Angular or Ember Backbone.Tero chose Angular because it was the most popular at the time and it felt safe to him.The data binding was intriguing to him. He had learned how to wire things together using Backbone to get model changes shown in the views and making it all work in a clean way. He jumped into Angular to do the same.To hear the rest of My Angular Story Tero Parviainen, download and listen to the entire episode.You can connect with Tero and see what he's excited about at the following links. Don't forget to let Tero know you heard about him on Devchat.tv's Adventures in Angular My Angular Story! Build Your Own Angular JS Tero's Website Tero on Twitter Email Tero If you're short on time, here are the highlights of My Angular Story Tero Parviainen: Who is Tero Parviainen? (:49) How did Tero get into Angular? (5:55) Angular v Ember (8:30) Tero Teaches Angular (10:43) The NG Comp Talk (17:30) What is Tero working on now? (21:51) Picks Tero Functional Programming Javascript Functional and Reactive Domain Modeling Charles Star Wars Rogue One Powering the Death Star CES 2017
Panel Charles Max Wood Special Guest: Tero Parviainen Tero is a content developer from Helsinki, Finland. He's not new to the Adventures in Angular audience. Tero was a guest in episodes 51 and 117. He has been doing a lot of Angular in the last 3-4 years working as an independent contractor with many companies around the world. Tero also writes and speaks about his work. Tero has been doing a lot of Angular in the last 3-4 years working as an independent contractor with many companies around the world. Tero also writes and speaks about his work.Tero has his first introduction to programming when he was about 7 or 8 years old. He and his brother received a Commodore 64 computer which they used for mostly for playing games. On that computer was a basic interpreter and basic programming language which Tero played with a bit. He had some basic code language books for creating some basic adventure games. Tero would painstakingly copy that code but he really had no idea what code was about.In his early twenties, Tero took an internship for software development in 2001. It was in the middle of the big IT bubble. Good timing for Tero because IT companies were hiring everyone. His first stint was as a Java programmer. Tero was beginning a new project and was trying to decide what framework to use. The choice came down to Angular or Ember Backbone.Tero chose Angular because it was the most popular at the time and it felt safe to him.The data binding was intriguing to him. He had learned how to wire things together using Backbone to get model changes shown in the views and making it all work in a clean way. He jumped into Angular to do the same.To hear the rest of My Angular Story Tero Parviainen, download and listen to the entire episode.You can connect with Tero and see what he's excited about at the following links. Don't forget to let Tero know you heard about him on Devchat.tv's Adventures in Angular My Angular Story! Build Your Own Angular JS Tero's Website Tero on Twitter Email Tero If you're short on time, here are the highlights of My Angular Story Tero Parviainen: Who is Tero Parviainen? (:49) How did Tero get into Angular? (5:55) Angular v Ember (8:30) Tero Teaches Angular (10:43) The NG Comp Talk (17:30) What is Tero working on now? (21:51) Picks Tero Functional Programming Javascript Functional and Reactive Domain Modeling Charles Star Wars Rogue One Powering the Death Star CES 2017