Podcast appearances and mentions of atul gawandi

  • 3PODCASTS
  • 6EPISODES
  • 48mAVG DURATION
  • ?INFREQUENT EPISODES
  • Mar 5, 2019LATEST

POPULARITY

20172018201920202021202220232024


Best podcasts about atul gawandi

Latest podcast episodes about atul gawandi

Devchat.tv Master Feed
AiA 229: Deploying to Firebase with CircleCI with Andrew Evans

Devchat.tv Master Feed

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 5, 2019 51:17


Sponsors Sentry– use the code “devchat” for $100 credit Triplebyte - offers a $1000 signing bonus Panel Alyssa Nicoll Joe Eames Charles Wood Special Guest – Andrew Evans Episode Summary Charles Wood, Alyssa Nicholl, and Joe Eames discuss guest speaker, Andrew Evans’s article on “How to Deploy to Firebase”.  The article discusses how Continuous Integration and Delivery (CircleCI) and Firebase serve as alternatives to older pipeline technologies such as Jenkins and AWS. Andrew Evans talks about the versatility of Firebase CLI utility and its use as a platform for younger developers with little experience on CI/CD or any type of cloud deployment. It took Andrew a year to get proficient in Jenkins whereas with CircleCI he had a much easier learning curve. Andrew then mentions another article he wrote entitled “How the AngularFire Library makes Firebase feel like Magic”. They also discuss whether CircleCI matches up to Jenkins on a larger scale workflow deployment. Andrew gives the example of a weather app named “Goose Weather” he is working on that uses “NgRx” that has a more robust workflow. He mentions that initially he was working on it for a CapitalOne blog but then took it up as a side project and started working on it by himself. They decide that even though Jenkins owns the market on large scale workflows, CircleCI’s ease of use is a very strong feature. Andrew also mentions that although he didn’t have a chance to test CircleCI on a high-level enterprise project, he feels that it would be a good experience. They also briefly compare the Jenkins and CircleCI on ease of rollbacks and license fees. Shai shares his own experience of how he also really likes Netlify because it automates the commit process like CircleCI. They briefly touch on DevOps. Andrew shares his own experience using CircleCI to do deployments to AWS. He feels the documentation and the blogs really help with the learning process. Andrew explains the meaning of: EWS: Elastic Container Service ALB: Application Load Balancer ELB: Elastic Load Balancer” The panelists jokingly wonder whether Andrew should give them 50% of his profits from the weather app Goose Weather because he basically outed himself to CapitalOne on the show by revealing he was working on it on the side.      Links Deploying to Firebase with CircleCI https://blog.angularindepth.com/how-the-angular-fire-library-makes-firebase-feel-like-magic-1fda375966bb https://goose-weather.firebaseapp.com/weather https://github.com/andrewevans02 https://twitter.com/AndrewEvans0102 https://rhythmandbinary.com/ https://medium.com/@andrew_evans AIA-099-firebase-and-angularfire2-with-david-east-and-jeff-cross/ Picks Shai Resnick: http://exploringjs.com https://youtu.be/gwlevtaC-u0 Joe Eames: Movie: Alita: Battle Angel https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w7pYhpJaJW8 Charles Wood: The Checklist Manifesto: How to Get Things Right by Atul Gawandi The Effective Executive by Peter Drucker https://www.2000books.com/-by-Mani-Vaya Andrew Evans: Artemis by Andy Weir https://www.traversymedia.com/  

magic panel jenkins artemis aws devops capital one deploy deploying shai aia peter drucker andy weir sentry ci cd firebase continuous integration netlify circleci get things right andrew evans charles wood triplebyte mani vaya checklist manifesto how things right joe eames ngrx alyssa nicoll w7pyhpjajw8 artemis novel andy weir alyssa nicholl firebase cli alb application load balancer atul gawandi
All Angular Podcasts by Devchat.tv
AiA 229: Deploying to Firebase with CircleCI with Andrew Evans

All Angular Podcasts by Devchat.tv

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 5, 2019 51:17


Sponsors Sentry– use the code “devchat” for $100 credit Triplebyte - offers a $1000 signing bonus Panel Alyssa Nicoll Joe Eames Charles Wood Special Guest – Andrew Evans Episode Summary Charles Wood, Alyssa Nicholl, and Joe Eames discuss guest speaker, Andrew Evans’s article on “How to Deploy to Firebase”.  The article discusses how Continuous Integration and Delivery (CircleCI) and Firebase serve as alternatives to older pipeline technologies such as Jenkins and AWS. Andrew Evans talks about the versatility of Firebase CLI utility and its use as a platform for younger developers with little experience on CI/CD or any type of cloud deployment. It took Andrew a year to get proficient in Jenkins whereas with CircleCI he had a much easier learning curve. Andrew then mentions another article he wrote entitled “How the AngularFire Library makes Firebase feel like Magic”. They also discuss whether CircleCI matches up to Jenkins on a larger scale workflow deployment. Andrew gives the example of a weather app named “Goose Weather” he is working on that uses “NgRx” that has a more robust workflow. He mentions that initially he was working on it for a CapitalOne blog but then took it up as a side project and started working on it by himself. They decide that even though Jenkins owns the market on large scale workflows, CircleCI’s ease of use is a very strong feature. Andrew also mentions that although he didn’t have a chance to test CircleCI on a high-level enterprise project, he feels that it would be a good experience. They also briefly compare the Jenkins and CircleCI on ease of rollbacks and license fees. Shai shares his own experience of how he also really likes Netlify because it automates the commit process like CircleCI. They briefly touch on DevOps. Andrew shares his own experience using CircleCI to do deployments to AWS. He feels the documentation and the blogs really help with the learning process. Andrew explains the meaning of: EWS: Elastic Container Service ALB: Application Load Balancer ELB: Elastic Load Balancer” The panelists jokingly wonder whether Andrew should give them 50% of his profits from the weather app Goose Weather because he basically outed himself to CapitalOne on the show by revealing he was working on it on the side.      Links Deploying to Firebase with CircleCI https://blog.angularindepth.com/how-the-angular-fire-library-makes-firebase-feel-like-magic-1fda375966bb https://goose-weather.firebaseapp.com/weather https://github.com/andrewevans02 https://twitter.com/AndrewEvans0102 https://rhythmandbinary.com/ https://medium.com/@andrew_evans AIA-099-firebase-and-angularfire2-with-david-east-and-jeff-cross/ Picks Shai Resnick: http://exploringjs.com https://youtu.be/gwlevtaC-u0 Joe Eames: Movie: Alita: Battle Angel https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w7pYhpJaJW8 Charles Wood: The Checklist Manifesto: How to Get Things Right by Atul Gawandi The Effective Executive by Peter Drucker https://www.2000books.com/-by-Mani-Vaya Andrew Evans: Artemis by Andy Weir https://www.traversymedia.com/  

magic panel jenkins artemis aws devops capital one deploy deploying shai aia peter drucker andy weir sentry ci cd firebase continuous integration netlify circleci get things right andrew evans charles wood triplebyte mani vaya checklist manifesto how things right joe eames ngrx alyssa nicoll w7pyhpjajw8 artemis novel andy weir alyssa nicholl firebase cli alb application load balancer atul gawandi
Adventures in Angular
AiA 229: Deploying to Firebase with CircleCI with Andrew Evans

Adventures in Angular

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 5, 2019 51:17


Sponsors Sentry– use the code “devchat” for $100 credit Triplebyte - offers a $1000 signing bonus Panel Alyssa Nicoll Joe Eames Charles Wood Special Guest – Andrew Evans Episode Summary Charles Wood, Alyssa Nicholl, and Joe Eames discuss guest speaker, Andrew Evans’s article on “How to Deploy to Firebase”.  The article discusses how Continuous Integration and Delivery (CircleCI) and Firebase serve as alternatives to older pipeline technologies such as Jenkins and AWS. Andrew Evans talks about the versatility of Firebase CLI utility and its use as a platform for younger developers with little experience on CI/CD or any type of cloud deployment. It took Andrew a year to get proficient in Jenkins whereas with CircleCI he had a much easier learning curve. Andrew then mentions another article he wrote entitled “How the AngularFire Library makes Firebase feel like Magic”. They also discuss whether CircleCI matches up to Jenkins on a larger scale workflow deployment. Andrew gives the example of a weather app named “Goose Weather” he is working on that uses “NgRx” that has a more robust workflow. He mentions that initially he was working on it for a CapitalOne blog but then took it up as a side project and started working on it by himself. They decide that even though Jenkins owns the market on large scale workflows, CircleCI’s ease of use is a very strong feature. Andrew also mentions that although he didn’t have a chance to test CircleCI on a high-level enterprise project, he feels that it would be a good experience. They also briefly compare the Jenkins and CircleCI on ease of rollbacks and license fees. Shai shares his own experience of how he also really likes Netlify because it automates the commit process like CircleCI. They briefly touch on DevOps. Andrew shares his own experience using CircleCI to do deployments to AWS. He feels the documentation and the blogs really help with the learning process. Andrew explains the meaning of: EWS: Elastic Container Service ALB: Application Load Balancer ELB: Elastic Load Balancer” The panelists jokingly wonder whether Andrew should give them 50% of his profits from the weather app Goose Weather because he basically outed himself to CapitalOne on the show by revealing he was working on it on the side.      Links Deploying to Firebase with CircleCI https://blog.angularindepth.com/how-the-angular-fire-library-makes-firebase-feel-like-magic-1fda375966bb https://goose-weather.firebaseapp.com/weather https://github.com/andrewevans02 https://twitter.com/AndrewEvans0102 https://rhythmandbinary.com/ https://medium.com/@andrew_evans AIA-099-firebase-and-angularfire2-with-david-east-and-jeff-cross/ Picks Shai Resnick: http://exploringjs.com https://youtu.be/gwlevtaC-u0 Joe Eames: Movie: Alita: Battle Angel https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w7pYhpJaJW8 Charles Wood: The Checklist Manifesto: How to Get Things Right by Atul Gawandi The Effective Executive by Peter Drucker https://www.2000books.com/-by-Mani-Vaya Andrew Evans: Artemis by Andy Weir https://www.traversymedia.com/  

magic panel jenkins artemis aws devops capital one deploy deploying shai aia peter drucker andy weir sentry ci cd firebase continuous integration netlify circleci andrew evans get things right charles wood triplebyte mani vaya checklist manifesto how things right joe eames ngrx alyssa nicoll w7pyhpjajw8 artemis novel andy weir alyssa nicholl firebase cli alb application load balancer atul gawandi
Devchat.tv Master Feed
AiA 228: Issues with the Title, Front End Web Dev

Devchat.tv Master Feed

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 26, 2019 45:56


Sponsors Sentry use the code “devchat” for 2 months free on Sentry small plan TripleByte offers a $1000 signing bonus Panel Alyssa Nicoll Joe Eames Charles Wood Episode Summary This weeks panel, Charles Wood, Alyssa Nicholl, and Joe Eames discuss 2 articles: 1st The Great Divide by Chris Coyier and 2nd Tales of a Non-Unicorn by Laura Schenk. These articles tell of the broad meaning for “Front-End Web Developer” talking of how “HTML + CSS along with JavaScript” all fall under the same title causing confusion with job interviews and even once a developer gets into the job. It is neat to hear perspectives of Alyssa Nicholl and Joe Eames together as Alyssa is more on the HTML/CSS side of Web Dev and Joe Eames is more with the JavaScript side. The panel also discusses difficulties with interviewing for jobs. Charles Wood leads a discussion on what the interviewers could improve on in hiring the people they actually want. The panel shares experiences of not getting jobs for reasons that are not super valid. They also touch on the pay difference between the 2 sides of the “WebDev” job description. Links The Great Divide by Chris Coyier The Refactoring UI Youtube Tales of a Non-Unicorn: A Story About The Trouble with Job Titles and Descriptions Why Everyone Is Fighting About CSS/UX and JS Economics CodePen Job Posting Picks Joe Eames: The Refactoring UI Youtube The Refactoring UI Steve Schoger Twitter NestJS Charles Wood: The Checklist Manifesto: How to Get Things Right by Atul Gawandi Alyssa Nicoll: 100 Days CSS Challenge

tales economics panel javascript js great divide descriptions frontend sentry job titles web dev chris coyier get things right html css charles wood triplebyte refactoring ui checklist manifesto how things right joe eames nestjs front end web developer alyssa nicoll alyssa nicholl atul gawandi
All Angular Podcasts by Devchat.tv
AiA 228: Issues with the Title, Front End Web Dev

All Angular Podcasts by Devchat.tv

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 26, 2019 45:56


Sponsors Sentry use the code “devchat” for 2 months free on Sentry small plan TripleByte offers a $1000 signing bonus Panel Alyssa Nicoll Joe Eames Charles Wood Episode Summary This weeks panel, Charles Wood, Alyssa Nicholl, and Joe Eames discuss 2 articles: 1st The Great Divide by Chris Coyier and 2nd Tales of a Non-Unicorn by Laura Schenk. These articles tell of the broad meaning for “Front-End Web Developer” talking of how “HTML + CSS along with JavaScript” all fall under the same title causing confusion with job interviews and even once a developer gets into the job. It is neat to hear perspectives of Alyssa Nicholl and Joe Eames together as Alyssa is more on the HTML/CSS side of Web Dev and Joe Eames is more with the JavaScript side. The panel also discusses difficulties with interviewing for jobs. Charles Wood leads a discussion on what the interviewers could improve on in hiring the people they actually want. The panel shares experiences of not getting jobs for reasons that are not super valid. They also touch on the pay difference between the 2 sides of the “WebDev” job description. Links The Great Divide by Chris Coyier The Refactoring UI Youtube Tales of a Non-Unicorn: A Story About The Trouble with Job Titles and Descriptions Why Everyone Is Fighting About CSS/UX and JS Economics CodePen Job Posting Picks Joe Eames: The Refactoring UI Youtube The Refactoring UI Steve Schoger Twitter NestJS Charles Wood: The Checklist Manifesto: How to Get Things Right by Atul Gawandi Alyssa Nicoll: 100 Days CSS Challenge

tales economics panel javascript js great divide descriptions frontend sentry job titles web dev chris coyier get things right html css charles wood triplebyte refactoring ui checklist manifesto how things right joe eames nestjs front end web developer alyssa nicoll alyssa nicholl atul gawandi
Adventures in Angular
AiA 228: Issues with the Title, Front End Web Dev

Adventures in Angular

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 26, 2019 45:56


Sponsors Sentry use the code “devchat” for 2 months free on Sentry small plan TripleByte offers a $1000 signing bonus Panel Alyssa Nicoll Joe Eames Charles Wood Episode Summary This weeks panel, Charles Wood, Alyssa Nicholl, and Joe Eames discuss 2 articles: 1st The Great Divide by Chris Coyier and 2nd Tales of a Non-Unicorn by Laura Schenk. These articles tell of the broad meaning for “Front-End Web Developer” talking of how “HTML + CSS along with JavaScript” all fall under the same title causing confusion with job interviews and even once a developer gets into the job. It is neat to hear perspectives of Alyssa Nicholl and Joe Eames together as Alyssa is more on the HTML/CSS side of Web Dev and Joe Eames is more with the JavaScript side. The panel also discusses difficulties with interviewing for jobs. Charles Wood leads a discussion on what the interviewers could improve on in hiring the people they actually want. The panel shares experiences of not getting jobs for reasons that are not super valid. They also touch on the pay difference between the 2 sides of the “WebDev” job description. Links The Great Divide by Chris Coyier The Refactoring UI Youtube Tales of a Non-Unicorn: A Story About The Trouble with Job Titles and Descriptions Why Everyone Is Fighting About CSS/UX and JS Economics CodePen Job Posting Picks Joe Eames: The Refactoring UI Youtube The Refactoring UI Steve Schoger Twitter NestJS Charles Wood: The Checklist Manifesto: How to Get Things Right by Atul Gawandi Alyssa Nicoll: 100 Days CSS Challenge

tales economics panel javascript js great divide descriptions frontend sentry job titles web dev chris coyier get things right html css charles wood triplebyte refactoring ui checklist manifesto how things right joe eames nestjs front end web developer alyssa nicoll alyssa nicholl atul gawandi