POPULARITY
The 10x Coder is often positioned as a mythical developer who can always save the day. Saron and Clive investigate how much of that myth is grounded in truth. Greg Sadetsky argues that coding is much like professional sports—some athletes are bound to be much better than those starting out. Brianna Wu and Bonnie Eisenman pick apart the myth by sharing how much they have had to clean up after supposed 10x Coders. Jonathan Solórzano-Hamilton recounts the story of "Rick," a self-proclaimed rockstar developer who assumed too much. And everyone considers the benefits of the 1x Coders—because what use is code without ideas and experiences to guide development? If you want to read up on some of our research on 10x coders, you can check out all our bonus material over at redhat.com/commandlineheroes. Follow along with the episode transcript.
There are a lot of ways out there to build your mobile apps, and React Native offers an interesting way to take your React skills on the web and apply them to building fully native apps across plenty of different platforms. These aren't just hybrid apps running in a browser, so join us as we talk to Bonnie Eisenman about what React Native is, how it works, and how you can get started using it! Special Guest: Bonnie Eisenman.
Soroush interviews Chris about his experience at this year’s Strange Loop conference.Strange LoopStrange Loop Schedule (currently showing the 2017 schedule)Alex Miller"Just-So Stories For AI: Explaining Black-Box Predictions" By Sam RitchieDecision Tree LearningRandom Forest""It Me": Under The Hood Of Web Authentication" By Yan Zhu, Garrett RobinsonLito Nikolai"Level Up Your Concurrency Skills With Rust" By David SullinsSwift Ownership ManifestoCity Museum"To Serve The People: Public Interest Technologists" By Matt Mitchell"Redux: Architecting And Scaling A New Web App At The Ny Times" By Juan Carlos Montemayor Elosua"The Holy Grail Of Systems Analysis: From What To Where To Why" By Daniel Spoonhower"Biomaterials As Ui" By Ruthie NachmanyTalks Chris hasn’t watched yet, but wants to"Keeping Time In Real Systems" By Kavya Joshi"Stop Rate Limiting! Capacity Management Done Right" By Jon Moore"Dependent Types In Haskell" By Stephanie Weirich"Observability For Emerging Infra: What Got You Here Won't Get You There" By Charity Majors"The Security of Classic Game Consoles" by Kevin Shekleton"Key to the City: Writing Code to Induce Social Change" by Jurnell Cockhren"The Future is Now" by Rachel White"Experimental Creative Writing with the Vectorized Word" by Allison Parrish"Antics, drift, and chaos" by Lorin Hochstein"Lazy Defenses: Using Scaled TTLs to Keep Your Cache Correct" by Bonnie Eisenman"Promise and Pitfalls of Persistent Memory" by Rob DickinsonPre-ShowChris’s Aircraft Radar Alexa skillSelfridge Air National Guard BaseYankee Air Museum (Ypsilanti, MI)Get a new Fatal Error episode every week by becoming a supporter at patreon.com/fatalerror.
We sit down with Bonnie Eisenman, author of Learning React Native and Software Engineer at Twitter, to discuss her journey into both programming as well as React Native
We sit down with Bonnie Eisenman, author of Learning React Native and Software Engineer at Twitter, to discuss her journey into both programming as well as React Native
We talk with Bonnie Eisenman, author of Learning React Native, about React Native, Big Company open source, book writing, and not-programming. Learning React Native ChucK, music programming language SuperCollider Data Garden NYC Resistor Let's Play The Information
Josh Owens and Ben Strahan talk with special guest Bonnie Eisenman about her new book Learning React Native.