Podcast appearances and mentions of Brian Holt

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Best podcasts about Brian Holt

Latest podcast episodes about Brian Holt

Front End Happy Hour
Episode 208 - Why most new developers struggle: The missing skills you need

Front End Happy Hour

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 2, 2024 49:52


In this episode of Front End Happy Hour, Ryan Burgess, Jem Young, Brian Holt, and Dan DiGangi dive deep into the challenges faced by junior developers as they embark on their coding journeys. From the importance of curiosity and continuous learning to the often overlooked non-technical skills, our panelists discuss the common gaps that new developers experience. Whether you're a beginner looking to navigate your first job or a senior engineer mentoring others, this conversation offers valuable insights to help bridge the gap between education and real-world success. Guests: Brian Holt - @holtbt Dan DiGangi - @dandigangi Panelists: Ryan Burgess - @burgessdryan Jem Young - @JemYoung Picks: Ryan Burgess - Ikigai: The Japanese Secret to a Long and Happy Life https://www.amazon.com/Ikigai-Japanese-Secret-Long-Happy/dp/0143130722?&_encoding=UTF8&tag=frontendhappy-20&linkCode=ur2&linkId=e062900575dea0ba9cf089cbcf0633eb&camp=1789&creative=9325 Ryan Burgess - Jem Young - Scaling People: Tactics for Management and Company Building https://www.amazon.com/Scaling-People-Tactics-Management-Building/dp/1953953212?&_encoding=UTF8&tag=frontendhappy-20&linkCode=ur2&linkId=e062900575dea0ba9cf089cbcf0633eb&camp=1789&creative=9325 Jem Young - Movement, Before All Flowers - Max Richter https://open.spotify.com/album/1HrFsljwk4wUHrPPOGkSbN Brian Holt - Minnesota State Fair https://www.mnstatefair.org/ Brian Holt - Dungeons & Degenerate Gamblers https://store.steampowered.com/app/2400510/Dungeons__Degenerate_Gamblers/ Brian Holt - Electric SQL https://electric-sql.com/ Dan DiGangi - Waking Up: A Guide to Spirituality Without Religion https://www.amazon.com/Waking-Up-Spirituality-Without-Religion/dp/1451636024?&_encoding=UTF8&tag=frontendhappy-20&linkCode=ur2&linkId=e062900575dea0ba9cf089cbcf0633eb&camp=1789&creative=9325 Episode transcript: https://www.frontendhappyhour.com/episodes/why-most-new-developers-struggle-the-missing-skills-you-need

Front End Happy Hour
Episode 198 - Leveraging SQLite in the Cloud

Front End Happy Hour

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 24, 2024 41:46


In this episode of the Front End Happy Hour podcast, we are excited to welcome special guests Brian Holt and Marco Bambini. Join us as we delve into the advantages of leveraging SQLite in the cloud. Discover how this powerful database technology can enhance your projects with its simplicity, efficiency, and flexibility. Brian and Marco share their expertise, real-world examples, and best practices to help you get the most out of SQLite in your cloud-based applications. Whether you're a seasoned developer or just starting, this episode is packed with valuable insights and tips you won't want to miss.

Syntax - Tasty Web Development Treats
779: Why SQLite is Taking Over with Brian Holt & Marco Bambini

Syntax - Tasty Web Development Treats

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 7, 2024 50:31


Scott and CJ dive into the world of SQLite Cloud with special guests Brian Holt and Marco Bambini. They explore why SQLite is gaining traction, its unique features, and the misconceptions surrounding its use—let's get into it! Show Notes 00:00 Welcome to Syntax! 01:20 Who is Brian Holt? 02:26 Who is Marco Bambini? 05:12 Why are people starting to talk so much about SQLite now? 08:47 What makes SQLite special or interesting? 09:46 What is a big misconception about SQLite? 11:13 Installed by default in operating systems. 12:03 A perception that SQLite is intended for single users. 13:36 Convincing developers it's a full-featured solution. 15:11 What does SQLite do better than Postgres or MySQL? 17:30 SQLite Cloud & local first features. 20:38 Where does SQLite store the offline information? 23:08 Are you typically reaching for ORMs? 25:00 What is SQLite Cloud? 27:29 What makes for an approachable software? 29:18 What make SQLite cloud different from other hosted SQLite options? 32:13 Is SQLite still evolving? 34:40 What about branching? 37:37 What is the GA timeline? 40:04 How does SQLite actually work? 41:19 Questions about security. 44:28 But does it scale? 45:52 Sick Picks + Shameless Plugs. Sick Picks Brian: Trainer Road Marco: Tennis Shameless Plugs Brian: SQLite Cloud, Frontend Masters - Containers. Hit us up on Socials! Syntax: X Instagram Tiktok LinkedIn Threads Wes: X Instagram Tiktok LinkedIn Threads Scott:X Instagram Tiktok LinkedIn Threads Randy: X Instagram YouTube Threads

Aussie LawnStars
Newcastle has the oldest and longest serving with Brian Holt

Aussie LawnStars

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 7, 2024 85:26


Brian Holt shares the secrets that have kept him in business and happy to continue for over 30 years. You will love his story and his successes. From choosing the type of work that allows him to keep working to being truly profitable.

DragonLance Saga
The Journals of Kaz the Minotaur: The Lost Colony Review

DragonLance Saga

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 28, 2023 33:58


Join me as I review The Journals of Kaz the Minotaur: The Lost Colony by Richard A Knaak, Charles Martinell, Edward Mekeel, William Richardson, Timothy Shiflet, Trampas Whiteman, Brian Holt, Dragonlance Nexus, live! Share your thoughts on this sourcebook and adventure released on December 16, 2023 by Dragonlance Nexus.

The Frontend Masters Podcast
Brian Holt: Dev at Reddit, Netflix, Microsoft to Product Manager | Frontend Masters Podcast Ep.1

The Frontend Masters Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 13, 2023 76:54


(Video Podcast available on Spotify and Youtube) In this first episode of the podcast, we dive deep into the life and career of Brian Holt, a front-end engineering veteran and educator. We discuss everything from classroom antics and tattoos inspired by Baroque art, to early experiences with computing shaped by family influences. The conversation also delves into Brian launching React code at Reddit, shedding light on the complexities of career growth, work-life balance, and the ethical dilemma of "burnout culture" in tech. Whether you're interested in JavaScript frameworks, DevOps, or the human stories behind tech professionals, this episode offers a well-rounded exploration valuable to anyone in the field. Check out Brian's Frontend Masters courses online here: https://frontendmasters.com/teachers/brian-holt/Find Frontend Masters Online: Twitter: https://twitter.com/FrontendMasters LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/frontend-masters/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/FrontendMasters Instagram: https://instagram.com/FrontendMastersAbout Us: Advance your skills with in-depth, modern front-end engineering courses — our 150+ high-quality courses and 18 curated learning paths will guide you from mid-level to senior developer! https://frontendmasters.com/

Front End Happy Hour
Episode 156 - Sidebar interview with Brian Holt

Front End Happy Hour

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 2, 2022 56:12


Our sidebar interview specials interview our panelists individually to learn more about their backgrounds and careers. In this episode, we interview Brian Holt, to learn more about his background and career. Panelists: Ryan Burgess - @burgessdryan Brian Holt - @holtbt Episode transcript: https://www.frontendhappyhour.com/episodes/sidebar-interview-with-brian-holt

SAE Tomorrow Today
127. Shaping a New Era of Intelligent Parking

SAE Tomorrow Today

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 15, 2022 34:30


Reducing the hassle of parking with technology. That's the mission of Parkopedia, a global leader in digital parking services. . Using real-time and prediction-based parking space information, Parkopedia has mapped over 90 million off- and on-street parking spaces across 90 countries. Their technology helps drivers find parking quickly and conveniently, including EV charging spaces. With the ability to instantly book and pay in one seamless transaction, world-class companies from Audi to Volkswagen are offering the technology within their connected services. . We sat down with Dr. Brian Holt, Chief Technology Officer, to discuss Parkopedia's data collection and indoor mapping technology, their “park and charge” EV initiative, and future plans to scale the company. One day, your car may even drop you off and park itself! . We'd love to hear from you. Share your comments, questions and ideas for future topics and guests to podcast@sae.org. Don't forget to take a moment to follow SAE Tomorrow Today (and give us a review) on your preferred podcasting platform. . Follow SAE on LinkedIn, Instagram, Facebook, Twitter, and YouTube. Follow host Grayson Brulte on LinkedIn, Twitter, and Instagram.

Real Talk JavaScript
Episode 196: Developer Experience and Tools with Brian Holt

Real Talk JavaScript

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 11, 2022 41:50


Recording date: 7/14/2022John Papa @John_PapaWard Bell @WardBellDan Wahlin @DanWahlinCraig Shoemaker @craigshoemakerBrian Holt @HoltbtBrought to you byAG GridIdeaBladeResources:Stripe API DocumentationPayment GatewayStripe ShellBrian Holt classes on Front End MastersFigmaRust programming languageGo programming languageStripe Multi-Language Documentation/ExamplesPayment Methods APIWhat does a software Product Manager Do?Azure App ServiceSarah DrasnerAzure Developer CLIBrian Holt's AZ EZFrontend MastersTimejumps00:59 Guest introduction02:11 What is it about developer tools that you enjoy?05:19 What problems are you seeing day to day at Stripe?08:24 Sponsor: Ag Grid09:31 How much of developer tooling do you connect with?12:44 Convention over configuration?14:35 What's the hardest part to get right?18:40 How do you know what users really want?22:35 Sponsor: IdeaBlade23:28 What's been your journey to PM role?32:03 In what ways did being an engineer help you as a PM?37:31 Final thoughtsPodcast editing on this episode done by Chris Enns of Lemon Productions.

Redeemer Bible Church Sermon Audio

Luke 15:1-32 | What is the heart of God toward those who wander? Have you ever been so focused on the task in front of you that everything else fades so far into the background and you miss something important? In Luke 15, Jesus responds to the grumbling of the Pharisees: “This man receives sinners and eats with them.” Jesus tells three parables that reveal what they missed, leading us to ask: “What is the heart of God toward those who wander?” And more importantly, “Do you have it?”

Beats, Brews & Buddies
Brian Holt "Boston's Brian Holt" | Beats, Brews & Buddies | Ep. 8

Beats, Brews & Buddies

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 14, 2022 71:50


Brian is a guitarist, bassist, and songwriter based in Roanoke, VA. He is currently playing with Rutledge, a country based band from Virginia. He also tours with Cowboy-the Kid Rock Tribute and has played arenas, festivals, and clubs across the country. His group Lowlife was featured on the TV show Full Throttle Saloon for their performance at the 2014 Sturgis Bike Rally in South Dakota. Brian also plays jazz and fusion with the Elmer Col Jazz group and works as a session musician on guitar and bass for numerous artists in all genres of music. Brian also teaches private lessons and serves as an adjunct lecturer for Roanoke College and Hollins University. In 2011 Brian was honored with the Melody Haven Award for Music Educator of the Year. In his musical ventures, Brian had had the pleasure of sharing stages with Montgomery Gentry, LoCash, Cassadee Pope, Eli Young Band, Brett Michaels, Ted Nugent, Jackyl, Theory of a Deadman, Aztec Trip, Cowboy Crush, Pete Best (orginal drummer of the Beatles, Southern Culture on the Skids, Edwin McCain, Steve Lippia, Dave Brockey, and Albert Bouchard of Blue Oyster Cult, to name a few.

NuDirections
Funkinsoul - May Show

NuDirections

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 2, 2022 117:01


Welcome to the funkinsoul show with me JB on NuDirections FM. This month's show is full of new music with new tracks from The Potash Twins, Shunaji, Black Party and more. We are on a soul, hip hop, jazz and Latin tip Music: 1. The Potash Twins – hornagraphy 2. Shunaji - why don't you 3. Dangerous, Black Thought - no gold teeth 4. Guru, Bahamadia, Ramsey Lewis, Brian Holt and DJ Scratch - respect the architect 5. Black Party – hotline 6. Thundercats - them changes 7. Womack and Womack - conscious of my conscience 8. Magic in Threes - rancho relax 9. Jean Carn, Adrian Younge and Ali Shaheed Muhammed - the summertime 10. Yaya Bey – alright 11. Surprise Chef – velodrome 12. Raashan Ahmad - pain away 13. Bah Samba, Galera - Black Blood (Galera's rainy city mix) 14. Quasimode - Ipe Amarelo 15. Dames Brown, Amp Fiddler, Andres - what would you do? 16. Louie Vega, Moodzman - seven mile 17. Shaun Escoffery - days like this (Spinna and Ticklah mix) 18. Anderson Paak, Schoolboy Q - am I wrong 19. The Blackbirds - rock creek park 20. Brian Jackson - little orphan boy 21. Brass Construction – moovin 22. Cameo – flirt 23. Lady Wray - joy and pain 24. Lilblackkids, Georgia Muldrow and Keith Rice – Church

Redeemer Bible Church Sermon Audio
Creating a Life of Gospel Magnetism

Redeemer Bible Church Sermon Audio

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 20, 2022


1 Timothy 2:1-7 | Have you ever been at a restaurant when the server walks by with a fresh tray of fajitas? The steam rising off of the platter. The scent of deliciously marinated meats and peppers wafting past. The crackling sizzle of the hot plate. I swear they walk through the whole place just so everyone else wants fajitas too. Seeing that food when you're this hungry, makes you want to choose it. This is the call for every Christ-follower. We are called to pray and live in such a way that others are drawn to the gospel of Jesus Christ. Believers are charged to live with gospel magnetism. Open up to 1 Timothy 2 as we see 3 factors that will help equip us and motivate us to live a life of gospel magnetism.

Break Things On Purpose
Unpopular Opinions

Break Things On Purpose

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 11, 2022 5:46


In this episode, we cover: 00:00:00 - Intro 00:00:38 - Death to VPNs 00:02:45 - “I do not like React hooks.” 00:03:50 - A Popular (?) Opinion TranscriptPat: Good thing you're putting that on our SRE focused pod.Brian: Yeah, well, they can take that to their front end developers and say, well, Brian Holt told me that hooks suck.Jason: Welcome to break things on purpose, an opinionated podcast about reliability and technology. As we launch into 2022, we thought it would be fun to ask some of our previous guests about their unpopular opinions.Zack butcher joined the show in August, 2021, to chat about his work on the Istio service mesh and its role in building more reliable, distributed systems. Here's his unpopular opinion on network security.Zack: I mean, can I talk about how I'm going to kill all the VPNs in the world? Uh, VPNs don't need to exist anymore. and that's stuff that I've actually been saying for years now. So it's so funny. We're finally realizing multi cluster Kubernetes. Right? I was so excited maybe two years ago at Kubecon and I finally heard people talk about multi cluster and I was like, oh, we finally arrived! It's not a toy anymore! Because when you have one, it's a toy, we have multiple, you're actually doing things. However, how do people facilitate that? I had demos four years ago of multicluster routing and traffic management on Istio. It was horrendous to write. It was awful. It's way better the way we do now. But, you know, the whole point that almost that entire time, I would tell people like, I'm going to kill VPN, there's no need for VPNs.There's a small need for like user privacy things. Right? That's a different category. But by and large, when organizations use a VPN, it's really about extending their network, right. It's about a network based trust model. And so I know that when you have reachability, that is that authorization, right? That's the old paradigm. VPNs enabled that. Fundamentally that doesn't work with the world that we live in anymore. it just doesn't, that's just not how security works, sorry. Uh, in, in these highly dynamic environments that we live in now. and so I actually think at this point in time, for the most part, actually VPNs probably cause more problems than solutions given the other tools that we have around.So yeah, so my unpopular opinion is that I want them to go away and be replaced with Envoy sidecars doing the encryption for all kinds of stuff. I would love to see that on your machine too. Right. I would love to see, you know, I'm, I'm talking to you on a Mac book. I would love for there to be a small sidebar there that actually is proxying that and doing things like identity and credential exchange in some way. Because that's a much stronger way to do security and to build your system, then things like a VPN.Jason: In April, 2021, Brian Holt shared some insightful, and hilarious, incidents and his perspective on Frontend Chaos Engineering. He shared his unpopular opinion with host Pat HigginsBrian: My unpopular opinion is that I do not like react hooks. And if you get people from the react community there's going to be some people that are legitimately going to be upset by that.I think they demo really well. And like the first time you show me some of that, it's just amazing and fascinating, but maintaining the large code bases full of hooks just quickly devolves into a performance mess, you get into like weird edge cases. And long-term, I think they actually have more cognitive load because you have to understand closures , really well to understand hooks really well. Whereas the opposite way, which is doing with react components. You have to understand this in context a little bit, but not a lot. So anyway, that's my very unpopular react opinion is that I like hooks and I wish we didn't have them.Pat: Good thing you're putting that on our SRE focused pod.Brian: Yeah, well, they can take that to their front end developers and say, well, Brian Holt told me that hooks suck.Jason: In November, Gustavo Franco dropped by to chat about building an SRE program at VMWare and the early days of Chaos Engineering at Google, we suspect his strongly held opinion is in fact, quite popular.Gustavo: About technology in general, the first thing that comes to mind, like the latest pet peeve in my head is really AIOps, as a term. It really bothers me. I think it's giving a name to something that is not there yet. It may come one day.So I could rant about AIOps forever. But the thing I would say is that, I dunno, folks selling AIOps solutions, like, look into improving, statistics functions in your products first. Yeah, it's, it's just a pet peeve. I know it doesn't really change anything to me day to day basis just every time I see something related to AIOps or people asking me, you know, if my teams ever implement AIOps it bothers me.Maybe about technology at large, just quickly, is kind of the same realm and how everything is artificial intelligence now. Even when people are not using machine learning at all. So everything quote unquote is an AI like queries and keyword matching for things. And people were like, oh, this is like an AI. This is more like for journalists, right? Like, I don't know if any journalists ever listen to this, but if they do, not everything that uses keyword matching's AI or machine learning.The computers are not learning, people! The computers are not learning! Calm down!Jason: The computers are not learning, but we are. And we hope that you'll learn along with us.To hear more from these guests and listen to all of our previous episodes. Visit our website at gremlin.com/podcast. You can automatically receive all of our new episodes by subscribing to the Break Things on Purpose podcast on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or your favorite podcast app. Our theme song is called Battle of Pogs by Komiku and is available on loyaltyfreakmusic.com.

Redeemer Bible Church Sermon Audio

Mark 2:1-12 | For the past month or more, you've been inundated with Christmas movies, Christmas music, Christmas parties, gifts, and the celebration of the Advent of Jesus Christ. And what a tremendous celebration it is! But once the calendar flips from December 25thto December 26th, routine sets back in. The gifts are all open. The wrapping paper has been stuffed into trash bags. Things get back to “normal” and you start thinking about Monday or next week. We've rightly spent most of December focused on the birth of Jesus Christ, but what comes next? In this sermon, we'll go from the first weeks of Jesus' birth to the first weeks of Jesus' ministry. What happens when Jesus makes an impact, not just on Christmas morning, but every morning? We'll look at the faith of 5 unnamed men who met Jesus and walked away changed forever.

Redeemer Bible Church Sermon Audio

Ephesians 6:1–4 | As we continue in our verse-by-verse series through Ephesians, we've entered a section dealing with relationships dynamics in the home. And this week, the parent/child relationship is up! Let's be honest – parenting is hard! Sleepless nights caring for the physical needs of infant babies turn into sleepless nights waiting up for teenagers to come home by curfew. So much of parenting is difficult, but it is so, so good. Every second you invest and every effort you make is worthy of the time and energy. In talking with parents, most feel like they're doing a bad job. It's like baking a cake that you have to wait 25 years to see if you put in the right ingredients and the cake keeps deciding stuff for itself. If you open the oven and look today, of course, it's still gooey in the middle! It's not fully baked yet. So let's start with this question: how do you honestly evaluate your parenting? What is it that makes you feel like you're doing a good job? Or a bad job? More importantly, what do you really want for your children? And what environment is going to cultivate it? What makes the home spiritually healthy?

Redeemer Bible Church Sermon Audio

Ephesians 4:17–32 | They say a tiger can't change his stripes. That a leopard can't change his spots. These sayings (actually derived from an Old Testament passage) are used to mean that one cannot change his or her essential nature. Tigers are always tigers and will always act like tigers. Leopards are always leopards and will always act like leopards. We think this about ourselves and other people sometimes. "I'll always be like this." "This is just who I am." "He'll never change." In many ways, it's probably true...but what if a tiger was no longer a tiger? What if a tiger became something entirely different? What would it do then? And what if WE became something totally different, what would we do then? Open up to Ephesians 4 this week and find out.

Let’s Go There with Shira & Ryan
9/8 Is #FreeBritney Actually Here

Let’s Go There with Shira & Ryan

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 9, 2021 77:43


We had a special show today! Our boss, Brian Holt  guest host!  We get into if Britney Spears is actually free. What biromantic means? How tattoos have evolved to become a powerful expression of political resistance, plus we have a special Yass Queen and so much more. Let's go there!    Special guests: Sonia Rao -- Pop Culture reporter at The Washington Post. Emily Stewart - Senior Reporter at VOX . Allison Hawn- instructional faculty at both Arizona State University and Phoenix College. Courtney D'Allaird - Assistant Director, Office of Intercultural Student Engagement State University of New York at Albany. Jake Streder - High School Student. Tony Moore - Host of Moore and Please and Dishin Days, Pop Culture Enthusiast, TV Commentator    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

dialogep's podcast
Annies Adventures 09 07 2021S3 E13 Amano Gallery Wierdoughs

dialogep's podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 8, 2021 43:50


Annie talks with Susan Ely Gonzalez and Brian Holt from Amano Art gallery about all that is going on there,  And she also talked to Andrea Andujo of Weirdough Bakery about all the sweet stuff the bake,  Enjoy...........

Redeemer Bible Church Sermon Audio
The Heart Wants What It Wants

Redeemer Bible Church Sermon Audio

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 11, 2021


Matthew 5:8 | "Blessed are the pure in heart, for they shall see God." The sixth Beatitude statement from Jesus' Sermon on the mount.

Break Things On Purpose
The Hill You'll Die On

Break Things On Purpose

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 29, 2021 5:38


Podcast Twitter: https://twitter.com/BTOPPodPodcast email: podcast@gremlin.comEpisode guests: Brian Holt (@holtbt): https://www.gremlin.com/blog/podcast-break-things-on-purpose-brian-holt-principal-program-manager-at-microsoft Jérôme Petazzoni (@jpetazzo): https://www.gremlin.com/blog/podcast-break-things-on-purpose-jerome-petazzoni-tinkerer-and-container-technology-educator J Paul Reed (@jpaulreed): https://www.gremlin.com/blog/blog/podcast-break-things-on-purpose-j-paul-reed-sr-applied-resilience-engineer-at-netflix Episode transcript: https://www.gremlin.com/blog/podcast-break-things-on-purpose-the-hill-youll-die-on/

Redeemer Bible Church Sermon Audio
Fortunate are the Unfortunate

Redeemer Bible Church Sermon Audio

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 13, 2021


Matthew 5:4 | Consider for a moment those times in life when you feel alright –when you feel at peace. What are the conditions that cause that or allow for that? Next, think about the times in your life when you don't feel alright –when you don't feel at peace. What's gone wrong? Now, for our final query, how much time do you spend trying to be in the first category and not the second? If you're like most of us, you spend much of your waking energy trying to build a life that keeps you feeling alright and at peace. We want to be ok. We want to live at peace. So imagine the shock and surprise you'd experience if Jesus walked up to you and turned that all around by saying, “Happy are those who experience deep sadness.” It's counter-intuitive and it goes against everything we're striving so hard for. How could it possibly be true?

Break Things On Purpose

Podcast Twitter: https://twitter.com/BTOPPodPodcast email: podcast@gremlin.comBrian's Twitter: https://twitter.com/holtbtEpisode highlights: The importance of reliability in dev tooling (1:57) Chaos at Reddit (4:03) Frontend perspectives on Chaos Engineering (15:09) Episode transcript: https://www.gremlin.com/blog/podcast-break-things-on-purpose-brian-holt-principal-program-manager-at-microsoft

Redeemer Bible Church Sermon Audio
A Terrible, Terrible Story (Teaching on Genesis 34)

Redeemer Bible Church Sermon Audio

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 9, 2021


Genesis 34:1-31 | Walkthrough Genesis 34 with Pastor Brian. A terrible, terrible story but the grace of God abounds.

Drive On Podcast
Art After Combat

Drive On Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 16, 2021 36:36


Brian Holt is an Army veteran who is spreading the message of healing through artwork and is on a mission to help veterans use art to express themselves.

Redeemer Bible Church Sermon Audio
Faith in the Uncertainty

Redeemer Bible Church Sermon Audio

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 31, 2021


Genesis 22 | We hate uncertainty. Uncertainty can be disorienting, confusing, and discouraging. We long for clarity! We long for certainty!But where then, if everything is clear, easy, and certain, is faith? Sometimes God takes us down a path where we know the destination, but we have no idea how we're going to get there. Even worse, it can sometimes feel like obeying God will take us further from the blessings He promised. If you've ever experienced that, you're in good company. After finally giving him the child of the promise in Isaac, God is going to test Abraham's faith. We'll see how he responds this week as we continue our study in the book of Genesis.

Redeemer Bible Church Sermon Audio
And Then There Were Eight

Redeemer Bible Church Sermon Audio

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 18, 2020


Genesis 6:1-22 | It seems like the world is getting worse by the year. More compromise. More sin. Fewer and fewer people following God. Even those who used to follow God have been falling away.  Sound familiar?  This is the world in Genesis 6. We're now 10 generations after creation and the world is getting worse with every passing one. What is God going to do? And how should we respond? Come this week as we dive in and continue our series in the book of Genesis.

Six Feet Under Podcast
Puro Emberflow! Art By Brian Holt (Part 2)

Six Feet Under Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 16, 2020 52:39


The flow is still going strong, were back with Part 2 this week with our good buddy Emberflow who dropped by to talk to us about some pretty awesome work he's been doing that not only highlights his talent but also shares an important message. This episode we also tackle some subjects that are a bit more shall we say political? But hey, seeing the state of things, we all believe its important to discuss, especially with Brian's experience as a member of our service, its great to take his opinions and experiences and out them into perspective. Take a listen and hear from this amazing artist spreading such a powerful message! Follow Brian aka Emberflow: https://www.instagram.com/emberflow_art/ Support our amazing Sponsors: Old SheepDog Brewery Located 3900 Rosa Ave. El Paso Texas 79905 Vitolas Inc. 216 W. Franklin Ave. El Paso Texas 79901 

Six Feet Under Podcast
Puro Emberflow! Art By Brian Holt (Part 1)

Six Feet Under Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 9, 2020 69:49


Were definitely in a flow now, this week our good buddy Emberflow dropped by to talk to us about some pretty awesome work he's been doing that not only highlights his talent but also shares an important message. His work spreads an awesome message that its okay to talk about the taboo that is depression, mental health and suicide. Its okay to be sad and its okay to feel alone. Remember you aren't alone, everyone fades into the darkness sometimes, but that doesn't mean you cant find the light! Take a listen and hear from this amazing artist spreading such a powerful message!  As always thank you to our sponsors: Old Sheepdog Brewery located at 3900 Rosa Ave, El Paso, Texas 79905 Vitola Cigar & Whiskey located at 216 West Franklin Ave, El Paso, Texas 79901

Relentless Forward Progress with Mike Ubaldini
RFP Podcast Episode #191 – Societal Perspective with Brian Holt

Relentless Forward Progress with Mike Ubaldini

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 15, 2020 50:43


Today’s episode we are grateful to be joined by Brian Holt. Brian and I attended Drexel University together and were both very involved with our fraternity, Sigma Alpha Epsilon while there. Today we catch up a bit and also dive into his story. We touch on topics about political and societal division, parenting, and ways to possibly create peaceful change in our country. Really enjoyed catching up with Brian and appreciate him jumping on the show.

Redeemer Bible Church Sermon Audio
The Parable of the Good Samaritan

Redeemer Bible Church Sermon Audio

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 6, 2020


Luke 10:25–37 | Have you ever used the phrase “where the rubber meets the road?” It's a fascinating idiom. It's first credited to Firestone Tires in the 1950s, though it's possible it was used earlier than that. It couldn't have been too much earlier though, because the automobile manufacturers hadn't been too concerned about traction or tires until around this point. Cars were getting bigger. Faster. More powerful. More maneuverable. Yet, all that power and engineering came to a single (or four) point(s) of contact - the tires. Literally everything about a car is channeled to where the rubber meets the road. If there's a failure there - no amount of horsepower matters. In our final parable of this series, Jesus encounters a brilliant expert in the law. He knows everything that he's supposed to know - and can parse it out at a moment's notice. What Jesus will ask him next, however, will reveal whether he's got it where it counts. He's got the knowledge. But what happens when the rubber meets the road?

Redeemer Bible Church Sermon Audio
The Parable of the Talents

Redeemer Bible Church Sermon Audio

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 9, 2020


Matthew 25:14–30 | Imagine you're a teenager. Your mom has just left you at home alone for the weekend and you're in charge of the house. You can't believe you finally get to decide for yourself what to do. The possibilities are endless! Mom has just a few chores for you. Of course, you can decide when to do them, but they will obviously need to be done before she gets back. What's your first move? Do you get right to the chores? Do you go off and have a good time and hopefully remember in time? Or do you just decide to forget about it and hope you don't get into too much trouble? We'd all probably agree which of those is the most responsible choice. We'd probably also agree that we wouldn't all have chosen that one! But what do you think you would choose today? And what does that have to do with your faith in Jesus? Join us this week as we continue our study in the parables with “The Parable of the Talents” from Matthew 25.

Redeemer Bible Church Sermon Audio
How to Live As A Believer

Redeemer Bible Church Sermon Audio

Play Episode Listen Later May 24, 2020


1 Peter 2:11-25 | Have you ever been in a situation where you felt abnormal - like you're the odd one out? Maybe it's when you were in-line at a coffee shop and didn't understand the specifics of each drink. Maybe it was when you were traveling and it seemed like everyone else understood the language and customs. Or perhaps it was when you saw many people making poor choices and you decided to stand up for what was right.  Last week, Pastor Brock showed us from 1 Peter “who we are + what we do” as believers. This week, Peter is going to take that same idea of “who we are” and apply it to living in a world that doesn't yet believe. As believers, we're going to be the odd ones out. When you come to Christ, you become part of His family, a citizen of heaven - and citizens of heaven have very different priorities. So how should we live as believers in an unbelieving world? How should we interact with people, with our government, and with our employers? Find out this week as we continue our series in 1 Peter, Grace + Peace.

Redeemer Bible Church Sermon Audio
The Generations Must Know

Redeemer Bible Church Sermon Audio

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 29, 2020


Deuteronomy 6:4–25 | Every family is different. We all grew up with different traditions and different norms. Our childhoods taught us what was normal, what was expected of us, and even what to believe. We're doing the same for our children. We're teaching them by what we say and by what they observe in us. So what are they learning? It is the responsibility of every generation of believers to pass their faith along to the next generation. This isn't limited to parents, grandparents, aunts, and uncles. This is a responsibility that each of us have as followers of Christ. It's a call to all believers in our church. So how do we help the next generation (either by age or by maturity), become like Christ? This week we are going to see Moses instruct the people of Israel - and we're going to listen.

Riggs Off The Radio
#MENtalHealthMonday - Part 3 of 4 - Farmers Have Feelings: 150 Years of Dairy farming with Brian Holt

Riggs Off The Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 17, 2020 30:00


It's ANOTHER Road Trip, so grab some more snacks...and some cheese.  This week we go to Elkhorn, Wisconsin to visit Brian Holt - whose family has been farming for 150 years!  Imagine the amount of pressure that comes with a family history that runs that deep.  Find out how Brian manages daily life, not getting too lonely, what he does with his "free time", and how he has a significant amount of "survivor guilt" from the amount of farms that go under. Hang out for part 3 of 4 in the "Farmers Have Feelings" series.  And we get to meet a pony named Buddy.  So that's pretty dope.  

Riggs Off The Radio
#MENtalHealthMonday - Part 3 of 4 - Farmers Have Feelings: 150 Years of Dairy farming with Brian Holt

Riggs Off The Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 17, 2020 29:59


It's ANOTHER Road Trip, so grab some more snacks...and some cheese.  This week we go to Elkhorn, Wisconsin to visit Brian Holt - whose family has been farming for 150 years!  Imagine the amount of pressure that comes with a family history that runs that deep.  Find out how Brian manages daily life, not getting too lonely, what he does with his "free time", and how he has a significant amount of "survivor guilt" from the amount of farms that go under. Hang out for part 3 of 4 in the "Farmers Have Feelings" series.  And we get to meet a pony named Buddy.  So that’s pretty dope.  

Redeemer Bible Church Sermon Audio

1 John 5:1–5 | Breakthrough (noun): a sudden and important development or an instance of achieving success in a particular activity. I'm sure you've noticed that one of the recurring themes in the book of 1 John is love. Truthfully, it's nearly impossible to study a chapter in 1 John without hearing about the love of God and a love for others. We've seen this beautiful picture of love presented throughout this series - a deep, selfless, unshakeable love that God commands and exemplifies. But how do we get to the place where we love like that? 

Redeemer Bible Church Sermon Audio

When we were young, it was much easier to know that we know things. The confidence that comes from simple knowledge is undeniable. As a child, you didn’t say, “I think my daddy is a doctor.” You were confident, “My daddy is a doctor.” But as we age, it’s much harder to have that same confidence. We move from “I know I know.” to “I think I know.” to simply, “I think.” This happens as our world gets more complex and the explanations get harder to understand. And, unfortunately, this also happens with our faith. I know that I know God. I think that I know God. I think about God. This week as we continue our study in 1 John, we’re going to look at the marks of a true believer. What should be true of all of us, if we are truly in Jesus Christ? And most importantly, we’ll answer the question: How can you know that you know God?

Redeemer Bible Church Sermon Audio

1 John 2:3–6 | When we were young, it was much easier to know that we know things. The confidence that comes from simple knowledge is undeniable. As a child, you didn't say, “I think my daddy is a doctor.” You were confident, “My daddy is a doctor.” But as we age, it's much harder to have that same confidence. We move from “I know I know.” to “I think I know.” to simply, “I think.” This happens as our world gets more complex and the explanations get harder to understand. And, unfortunately, this also happens with our faith. I know that I know God. I think that I know God. I think about God. This week as we continue our study in 1 John, we're going to look at the marks of a true believer. What should be true of all of us, if we are truly in Jesus Christ? And most importantly, we'll answer the question: How can you know that you know God?

Harvest Indy South Sermon Audio

When we were young, it was much easier to know that we know things. The confidence that comes from simple knowledge is undeniable. As a child, you didn’t say, “I think my daddy is a doctor.” You were confident, “My daddy is a doctor.” But as we age...

Hear For It
Episode 1: The One Without Our Producer

Hear For It

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 29, 2019 63:39


Sean "Grape Juice" Jensen and Zachary Christensen debut the newest Wrestling-centric(ish) with guest Brian Holt. The boys talk AEW, Luchasaurus markdom, the Trials and Perils of the current WWE product, and have a round of quick fire. Special thanks to Daniel Adams and the Bad Mamma Jammas for the use of Dissidence as our opening theme. Find the BMJ on all streaming sites Special thanks to Zach McAllister for our official Logo. Like, Rate, Share, and Subscribe. Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/HFIPod/ Twitter: @HearForItPod --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/HFI/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/HFI/support

Five Things  - Channel 9
Five Magical Ways VS Code Can Work with Azure

Five Things - Channel 9

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 16, 2019 8:31


Refined. Genteel. Sophisticated. In this episode, Burke is joined by the great JavaScript connoisseur, Brian Holt to bring you five magical ways that VS Code can work with Azure. These are all the classiest VS Code extensions for the discerning cloud palette.Links from the show...Brian Holt on TwitterAzure App Service ExtensionAzure Cosmos DB ExtensionAzure Event Grid ExtensionAzure Functions ExtensionAzure Storage ExtensionLearn more at aka.ms/5things-azureTo watch more episodes go to Five Things PlaylistFollow Hosts Burke Holland and John Papa on Twitter

Real Talk JavaScript
Episode 1: Scaling React with Brian Holt

Real Talk JavaScript

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 2, 2018 44:16


Recording date: 2018-09-11 Tweet John Papa https://twitter.com/john_papa Ward Bell https://twitter.com/wardbell Brian Holt https://twitter.com/holtbt (0:01:23) "Lady Gaga" writes in for the mailbag (0:03:25) How do we tackle the challenges we face in web development (0:05:55) Brian discusses his view on scaling to human teams (0:06:20) Defining "large" applications, and application size (0:07:10) How the human dimension plays into scale (0:07:15) Scaling Angular http://angular.io/ at Reddit (0:08:10) Brian discusses how you don't miss a business deadline (0:09:40) Communication between engineers, product teams, design teams, and C levels is important (0:09:59) Ward asks how to balance process vs getting things done (0:11:15) Brian talks about his experience with process at Netflix (0:12:57) LinkedIN and having a real Jira expert to set up the process and investing in their tools (0:15:36) DevOps experiences can be very different for Node.js (0:16:25) Brian talks about the importance of getting a full CI pipeline and high code quality (0:17:10) Brian says code doesn't age well, so tools like ESLint help create guidelines (0:17:45) Brian talks about how he uses TypeScript with React https://reactjs.org/ (0:20:55) Brian states "that which you cannot automate, you cannot enforce" (0:22:30) Nit picks and their effect on development (0:23:52) John asks Brian about the usage of Flow https://reactjs.org/docs/static-type-checking.html and TypeScript https://www.typescriptlang.org/ in React (0:29:20) Brian discusses when to delete code and keeping code easier to read (0:30:50) Brian loves opening PRs with more deletion that additions (0:32:00) Ward asks Brian how communication works up and down, and across the component trees in React (0:33:01) Brian talks about Prop drilling https://reactjs.org/docs/components-and-props.html (0:33:37) Brian talks about Flux http://facebook.github.io/flux/docs/overview.html#content and Redux https://redux.js.org/ (0:35:00) Brian tells us about something that's better for data state management (Suspense) (0:35:00) Dan Abramov https://twitter.com/dan_abramov and Suspense in React https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6g3g0Q_XVb4 (0:37:00) Brian says most of the time context https://reactjs.org/docs/context.html will serve you better than Redux (0:38:30) John says someone to follow is Max Koretskyi - https://twitter.com/maxim_koretskyi https://blog.angularindepth.com/ (0:39:12) Ward says someone to follow is Rick Strahl https://twitter.com/RickStrahl (0:39:12) Rick has a blog post questioning if css/html has evolved far enough https://weblog.west- wind.com/posts/2018/May/31/Web-Code-is-a-solved-Problem-How-about-fixing-Web-UI-next (0:40:39) Brian says someone to follow is Necoline Hubner https://twitter.com/necolinehubner More Resources react https://reactjs.org/ redux https://redux.js.org/ ngrx (redux in Angular) https://medium.com/ngrx vuex (redux in Vue) https://vuex.vuejs.org/ Webpack https://webpack.js.org/ Parcel https://parceljs.org/ React's context API: https://reactjs.org/docs/context.html React’s forthcoming “timeslice” and “suspense” APIs: https://blog.pusher.com/time-slice-suspense-api-react-17/ Maxim Koretsky ("ngWizard”) https://blog.angularindepth.com/@maxim.koretskyi

Adventures in Angular
AiA 208: From Custom Webpack Build to Angular CLI with Martin Jakubik

Adventures in Angular

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 25, 2018 54:57


Panel: Alyssa Nicholl Joe Eames John Papa Ward Bell Special Guests: Martin Jakubik In this episode, the Adventures in Angular panel talk with Martin Jakubik and he has been working with Angular for the last three years. He has one large and one small Angular application, which the panel talks about. Show Topics: 2:31 – Alyssa likes to be called... 2:40 – Alyssa: You have a large and small application – what makes it small? Is it the user-base? 2:56 – Martin: It is one module out of ten or twenty components. 2: 59 – Panelist: Only 1 Angular module? 3:47 – Panelist: Joe went off on how much he hates modules. I am sorry JP we had to throw that in that? 4:04 – Joe: I am an anti-modulist. 4:11 – Martin: Just one module. 4:21 – Panelist: When you are building an application with one module – start us from the beginning, what does it look like? 4:38 – Martin: It is actually quite special. It has to run in an iFrame, and all it does it allows the user to add into the experiment. 5:05 – Alyssa: Is it like a CMS? 5:10 – Martin: It is like Google Optimize. The application is quite simple and every component is in that one module. 5:36 – Panelist: How many do you have? 5:44 – Martin: There are less than 10 services and 20 components at most. 5:57 – Panelist: I feel personally, I feel like that I a decent size? 6:11 – Panelist: That makes perfect sense. If there is no routing or nothing... 6:40 – Panelist: Asks a question, and clarifies the question to Martin. 7:48 – Panelist: It is nice and clean. 7:55 – Panelist: I do, too. 8:08 – Alyssa: How new is it? 8:15 – Panelist: June/July? 8:32 – Martin: I am using the new style. 9:01 – Panelist: I am leery of using it. 9:13 - Panelist: I would like to clarify. When you mention you have 20 components... 9:40 - Panelist: Do it. 10:34 – Panelist: Webpack. Can you explain what that is and how you solved it? 10:57 – Martin: I don’t think I did anything special. I wanted to know how it works. I used webpack and used their configurations. Several months into the project then I... 11:40 – Panelist: Why did you decide not to use the CLI? This is like an Iron Man thing. 11:55 – Panelist: I think it’s a pain thing. 12:05 – Martin: I wanted to know how it works. 12:32 – Martin: I started from scratch, I can’t remember. 12:44 – Panelist: Whenever I use webpack it makes my head spin. 12:56 – Martin: The application was very simple. I was doing more blogging. 13:45 – Panelist: It is doing more configurations on the fly for you. It’s wonderful if it works and if it doesn’t work then I don’t know what you’d do. 14:17 – Martin: That’s why I did it, so I can appreciate all the magic. 14:30 – Panelist: How big is big? 14:36 – Martin: Enterprise level. 100 different components. 15:06 – Panelist chimes in. 15:13 – Panelist: That is complex. 15:28 – Panelist: let’s add more modules to add to the complexity... 15:55 – Alyssa: When you took your app to the CLI was that hard? 16:06 – Martin: That took me one whole day. The module is so simple that’s why. 16:32 – Panelist talks about this topic. 17:39 – Panelist asks a question. 17:53 – Panelist: Fixing any problem ... ever work on tooling help people if they have their stuff in the right file name? 18:18 – Martin: I used Cypress. 18:58 – Panelist: Under what situation would you recommend it to anyone? Do it your own webpack configuration? 19:23 – Martin: Only if... 19:51 – Alyssa: What if you wanted to add a watermark to each file, do you have to stop adding the CLI? 20:13 – Panelist: So am I...what are the boundaries, I don’t know what they are? I’m curious. 20:41 – Panelist: Are you asking, Alyssa, how you would customize it? 21:09 – Panelist: You won’t loose all the features that you get. You now elected out of that place where they had it; webpack configurations. 22:12 – Panelist: What happened to it ejecting? How do you get it out of there? 22:26 – Good question! I have – I like to play with scissors. 22:43 – Advertisement 23:32 – Panelist reads a message from the company. How do you get that voice? 24:10 – First you have to have a really deep sinus cold. 25:00 – Panelist: Do you live without eject? I really don’t care. What I care about...Scratch that! I want to know what kinds of things you can’t do with a CLI that would drive you to do your own application? What other things could you not do in webpack. 25:50 – Martin: I wanted to see how it works. 25:56 – Panelist: Now I use CLI and all it’s features except testing. I use Cypress completely separate than CLI. 26:46 – Panelist: I feel like it’s talking to the one person without a cellphone. 27:01 – Panelist: Wow! I had no concept that life could be like that! I thought you had to have a cellphone. 27:29  – Martin: What does anyone use the CLI for anyways? 27:44 – Martin: I use it for unit tests. 27:52 – Panelist: Another question. 28:30 – Alyssa: You write things out by hand because it’s easier?! 28:44 – Panelist: You copy, and paste and it’s less work. 29:06 – Panelist: It feels easier. 29:22 – Joe: No, I am serious. 29:48 – Joe: Yes, I am amazing. 30:30 – Martin talks about another topic. 30:48 – Alyssa: When you generate a component do you put it into a different file? 31:29 – Panel: We are all friends here and we aren’t shaming anyone here. We are joking here. 32:00 – Alyssa: It’s that he can write it from memory. 33:08 – Panelist: I have been using Vue lately. He also talks about Angular and mentions Sarah Drasner, too. 34:26 – Panelist: Not everyone has a memory like him, though. 35:32 – Panelist: The fourth version of Renderer. 36:28 – Panelist: We are not talking about Nirvana the band, here. 36:46 – Alyssa: It will be the new Renderer. It’s out for you to try. Check out Angular Air. He was trying out IB yourself right now. People are flipping out about it. I am excited to see how my Angular app runs differently now. Here is the code that was generated, here is the code that... I am not sure that there is a promise date. Any secrets heads-up on when it will come out? 38:22 – Panelist: The big question what does this mean for my existing code? Do I have to change my existing code? 38:48 – Alyssa: The Angular team is working so that there are minimal changes. I don’t have a good answer. NGGC. For third-party libraries you run it through and it... I don’t know what that means for the community. 39:49 – Panelist: My hope is that they... 40:03 – Alyssa: For your third-party... 40:18 – Panelist: Question: between your small and large pack? What architectural differences are there? 40:44 – Martin: I have a template edit. 41:03 – Panelist: Come to my... 41:32 – Panel talks about talks that Jon can do. 42:13 – Panelist: True story... The panel is having fun going back and forth with jokes. 43:03 – Panelist: This kind of stuff creeps into production code. That’s the great thing about copy and paste. 43:21 – Panelist: We had a rule, though, if it happens more than once let’s put into our build. 44:20 – It’s 3 hours if you have a CI process, if you don’t... 44:33 – Console.log 44:49 – Martin chimes in. 45:14 – Panelist: Let’s talk about an iFrame in your app? 45:27 – Martin: The point is to be able to do it with any... Make sure that it doesn’t collide. The CSS wasn’t separated. I had to put my application inside an iFrame. 46:27 – Panelist: Thanks for coming on for us, Martin. 46:37 – Picks! 46:44 - Advertisement Links: Martin Jakubik’s Medium How to Copy, Cut, Paste for Beginners by Melanie Pinola Art Joker Blog @AngularMine Cypress Vue Renderer Sponsors: Angular Boot Camp Digital Ocean Get a Coder Job course Picks: Alyssa Question as my pick – About Angular 7...(47:52) True or False? Martin Thank you for having me today. Present your work more. I challenge you all to cook. Blog: Bratislava Angular Ward How to Copy, Cut, and Paste Joe Brian Holt – Eleven Tips to Scale Node.js NPM scripts – I relearned something “new” lately.

adventures medium iron man panel beginners false ward scratch nirvana copy special guests jp console cms panelists ib css paste advertisement cypress vue angular cli digital ocean npm webpack google optimize iframe john papa sarah drasner angular cli brian holt renderer joe eames ward bell coder job angular air martin it panelist you eleven tips angular boot camp melanie pinola panelist let alyssa it panelist it martin there alyssa nicholl alyssa what alyssa how panelist question alyssa you panelist so panelist why martin only panelist not alyssa is
Devchat.tv Master Feed
AiA 208: From Custom Webpack Build to Angular CLI with Martin Jakubik

Devchat.tv Master Feed

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 25, 2018 54:57


Panel: Alyssa Nicholl Joe Eames John Papa Ward Bell Special Guests: Martin Jakubik In this episode, the Adventures in Angular panel talk with Martin Jakubik and he has been working with Angular for the last three years. He has one large and one small Angular application, which the panel talks about. Show Topics: 2:31 – Alyssa likes to be called... 2:40 – Alyssa: You have a large and small application – what makes it small? Is it the user-base? 2:56 – Martin: It is one module out of ten or twenty components. 2: 59 – Panelist: Only 1 Angular module? 3:47 – Panelist: Joe went off on how much he hates modules. I am sorry JP we had to throw that in that? 4:04 – Joe: I am an anti-modulist. 4:11 – Martin: Just one module. 4:21 – Panelist: When you are building an application with one module – start us from the beginning, what does it look like? 4:38 – Martin: It is actually quite special. It has to run in an iFrame, and all it does it allows the user to add into the experiment. 5:05 – Alyssa: Is it like a CMS? 5:10 – Martin: It is like Google Optimize. The application is quite simple and every component is in that one module. 5:36 – Panelist: How many do you have? 5:44 – Martin: There are less than 10 services and 20 components at most. 5:57 – Panelist: I feel personally, I feel like that I a decent size? 6:11 – Panelist: That makes perfect sense. If there is no routing or nothing... 6:40 – Panelist: Asks a question, and clarifies the question to Martin. 7:48 – Panelist: It is nice and clean. 7:55 – Panelist: I do, too. 8:08 – Alyssa: How new is it? 8:15 – Panelist: June/July? 8:32 – Martin: I am using the new style. 9:01 – Panelist: I am leery of using it. 9:13 - Panelist: I would like to clarify. When you mention you have 20 components... 9:40 - Panelist: Do it. 10:34 – Panelist: Webpack. Can you explain what that is and how you solved it? 10:57 – Martin: I don’t think I did anything special. I wanted to know how it works. I used webpack and used their configurations. Several months into the project then I... 11:40 – Panelist: Why did you decide not to use the CLI? This is like an Iron Man thing. 11:55 – Panelist: I think it’s a pain thing. 12:05 – Martin: I wanted to know how it works. 12:32 – Martin: I started from scratch, I can’t remember. 12:44 – Panelist: Whenever I use webpack it makes my head spin. 12:56 – Martin: The application was very simple. I was doing more blogging. 13:45 – Panelist: It is doing more configurations on the fly for you. It’s wonderful if it works and if it doesn’t work then I don’t know what you’d do. 14:17 – Martin: That’s why I did it, so I can appreciate all the magic. 14:30 – Panelist: How big is big? 14:36 – Martin: Enterprise level. 100 different components. 15:06 – Panelist chimes in. 15:13 – Panelist: That is complex. 15:28 – Panelist: let’s add more modules to add to the complexity... 15:55 – Alyssa: When you took your app to the CLI was that hard? 16:06 – Martin: That took me one whole day. The module is so simple that’s why. 16:32 – Panelist talks about this topic. 17:39 – Panelist asks a question. 17:53 – Panelist: Fixing any problem ... ever work on tooling help people if they have their stuff in the right file name? 18:18 – Martin: I used Cypress. 18:58 – Panelist: Under what situation would you recommend it to anyone? Do it your own webpack configuration? 19:23 – Martin: Only if... 19:51 – Alyssa: What if you wanted to add a watermark to each file, do you have to stop adding the CLI? 20:13 – Panelist: So am I...what are the boundaries, I don’t know what they are? I’m curious. 20:41 – Panelist: Are you asking, Alyssa, how you would customize it? 21:09 – Panelist: You won’t loose all the features that you get. You now elected out of that place where they had it; webpack configurations. 22:12 – Panelist: What happened to it ejecting? How do you get it out of there? 22:26 – Good question! I have – I like to play with scissors. 22:43 – Advertisement 23:32 – Panelist reads a message from the company. How do you get that voice? 24:10 – First you have to have a really deep sinus cold. 25:00 – Panelist: Do you live without eject? I really don’t care. What I care about...Scratch that! I want to know what kinds of things you can’t do with a CLI that would drive you to do your own application? What other things could you not do in webpack. 25:50 – Martin: I wanted to see how it works. 25:56 – Panelist: Now I use CLI and all it’s features except testing. I use Cypress completely separate than CLI. 26:46 – Panelist: I feel like it’s talking to the one person without a cellphone. 27:01 – Panelist: Wow! I had no concept that life could be like that! I thought you had to have a cellphone. 27:29  – Martin: What does anyone use the CLI for anyways? 27:44 – Martin: I use it for unit tests. 27:52 – Panelist: Another question. 28:30 – Alyssa: You write things out by hand because it’s easier?! 28:44 – Panelist: You copy, and paste and it’s less work. 29:06 – Panelist: It feels easier. 29:22 – Joe: No, I am serious. 29:48 – Joe: Yes, I am amazing. 30:30 – Martin talks about another topic. 30:48 – Alyssa: When you generate a component do you put it into a different file? 31:29 – Panel: We are all friends here and we aren’t shaming anyone here. We are joking here. 32:00 – Alyssa: It’s that he can write it from memory. 33:08 – Panelist: I have been using Vue lately. He also talks about Angular and mentions Sarah Drasner, too. 34:26 – Panelist: Not everyone has a memory like him, though. 35:32 – Panelist: The fourth version of Renderer. 36:28 – Panelist: We are not talking about Nirvana the band, here. 36:46 – Alyssa: It will be the new Renderer. It’s out for you to try. Check out Angular Air. He was trying out IB yourself right now. People are flipping out about it. I am excited to see how my Angular app runs differently now. Here is the code that was generated, here is the code that... I am not sure that there is a promise date. Any secrets heads-up on when it will come out? 38:22 – Panelist: The big question what does this mean for my existing code? Do I have to change my existing code? 38:48 – Alyssa: The Angular team is working so that there are minimal changes. I don’t have a good answer. NGGC. For third-party libraries you run it through and it... I don’t know what that means for the community. 39:49 – Panelist: My hope is that they... 40:03 – Alyssa: For your third-party... 40:18 – Panelist: Question: between your small and large pack? What architectural differences are there? 40:44 – Martin: I have a template edit. 41:03 – Panelist: Come to my... 41:32 – Panel talks about talks that Jon can do. 42:13 – Panelist: True story... The panel is having fun going back and forth with jokes. 43:03 – Panelist: This kind of stuff creeps into production code. That’s the great thing about copy and paste. 43:21 – Panelist: We had a rule, though, if it happens more than once let’s put into our build. 44:20 – It’s 3 hours if you have a CI process, if you don’t... 44:33 – Console.log 44:49 – Martin chimes in. 45:14 – Panelist: Let’s talk about an iFrame in your app? 45:27 – Martin: The point is to be able to do it with any... Make sure that it doesn’t collide. The CSS wasn’t separated. I had to put my application inside an iFrame. 46:27 – Panelist: Thanks for coming on for us, Martin. 46:37 – Picks! 46:44 - Advertisement Links: Martin Jakubik’s Medium How to Copy, Cut, Paste for Beginners by Melanie Pinola Art Joker Blog @AngularMine Cypress Vue Renderer Sponsors: Angular Boot Camp Digital Ocean Get a Coder Job course Picks: Alyssa Question as my pick – About Angular 7...(47:52) True or False? Martin Thank you for having me today. Present your work more. I challenge you all to cook. Blog: Bratislava Angular Ward How to Copy, Cut, and Paste Joe Brian Holt – Eleven Tips to Scale Node.js NPM scripts – I relearned something “new” lately.

adventures medium iron man panel beginners false ward scratch nirvana copy special guests jp console cms panelists ib css paste advertisement cypress vue angular cli digital ocean npm webpack google optimize iframe john papa sarah drasner angular cli brian holt renderer joe eames ward bell coder job angular air martin it panelist you eleven tips angular boot camp melanie pinola panelist let alyssa it panelist it martin there alyssa nicholl alyssa what alyssa how panelist question alyssa you panelist so panelist why martin only panelist not alyssa is
All Angular Podcasts by Devchat.tv
AiA 208: From Custom Webpack Build to Angular CLI with Martin Jakubik

All Angular Podcasts by Devchat.tv

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 25, 2018 54:57


Panel: Alyssa Nicholl Joe Eames John Papa Ward Bell Special Guests: Martin Jakubik In this episode, the Adventures in Angular panel talk with Martin Jakubik and he has been working with Angular for the last three years. He has one large and one small Angular application, which the panel talks about. Show Topics: 2:31 – Alyssa likes to be called... 2:40 – Alyssa: You have a large and small application – what makes it small? Is it the user-base? 2:56 – Martin: It is one module out of ten or twenty components. 2: 59 – Panelist: Only 1 Angular module? 3:47 – Panelist: Joe went off on how much he hates modules. I am sorry JP we had to throw that in that? 4:04 – Joe: I am an anti-modulist. 4:11 – Martin: Just one module. 4:21 – Panelist: When you are building an application with one module – start us from the beginning, what does it look like? 4:38 – Martin: It is actually quite special. It has to run in an iFrame, and all it does it allows the user to add into the experiment. 5:05 – Alyssa: Is it like a CMS? 5:10 – Martin: It is like Google Optimize. The application is quite simple and every component is in that one module. 5:36 – Panelist: How many do you have? 5:44 – Martin: There are less than 10 services and 20 components at most. 5:57 – Panelist: I feel personally, I feel like that I a decent size? 6:11 – Panelist: That makes perfect sense. If there is no routing or nothing... 6:40 – Panelist: Asks a question, and clarifies the question to Martin. 7:48 – Panelist: It is nice and clean. 7:55 – Panelist: I do, too. 8:08 – Alyssa: How new is it? 8:15 – Panelist: June/July? 8:32 – Martin: I am using the new style. 9:01 – Panelist: I am leery of using it. 9:13 - Panelist: I would like to clarify. When you mention you have 20 components... 9:40 - Panelist: Do it. 10:34 – Panelist: Webpack. Can you explain what that is and how you solved it? 10:57 – Martin: I don’t think I did anything special. I wanted to know how it works. I used webpack and used their configurations. Several months into the project then I... 11:40 – Panelist: Why did you decide not to use the CLI? This is like an Iron Man thing. 11:55 – Panelist: I think it’s a pain thing. 12:05 – Martin: I wanted to know how it works. 12:32 – Martin: I started from scratch, I can’t remember. 12:44 – Panelist: Whenever I use webpack it makes my head spin. 12:56 – Martin: The application was very simple. I was doing more blogging. 13:45 – Panelist: It is doing more configurations on the fly for you. It’s wonderful if it works and if it doesn’t work then I don’t know what you’d do. 14:17 – Martin: That’s why I did it, so I can appreciate all the magic. 14:30 – Panelist: How big is big? 14:36 – Martin: Enterprise level. 100 different components. 15:06 – Panelist chimes in. 15:13 – Panelist: That is complex. 15:28 – Panelist: let’s add more modules to add to the complexity... 15:55 – Alyssa: When you took your app to the CLI was that hard? 16:06 – Martin: That took me one whole day. The module is so simple that’s why. 16:32 – Panelist talks about this topic. 17:39 – Panelist asks a question. 17:53 – Panelist: Fixing any problem ... ever work on tooling help people if they have their stuff in the right file name? 18:18 – Martin: I used Cypress. 18:58 – Panelist: Under what situation would you recommend it to anyone? Do it your own webpack configuration? 19:23 – Martin: Only if... 19:51 – Alyssa: What if you wanted to add a watermark to each file, do you have to stop adding the CLI? 20:13 – Panelist: So am I...what are the boundaries, I don’t know what they are? I’m curious. 20:41 – Panelist: Are you asking, Alyssa, how you would customize it? 21:09 – Panelist: You won’t loose all the features that you get. You now elected out of that place where they had it; webpack configurations. 22:12 – Panelist: What happened to it ejecting? How do you get it out of there? 22:26 – Good question! I have – I like to play with scissors. 22:43 – Advertisement 23:32 – Panelist reads a message from the company. How do you get that voice? 24:10 – First you have to have a really deep sinus cold. 25:00 – Panelist: Do you live without eject? I really don’t care. What I care about...Scratch that! I want to know what kinds of things you can’t do with a CLI that would drive you to do your own application? What other things could you not do in webpack. 25:50 – Martin: I wanted to see how it works. 25:56 – Panelist: Now I use CLI and all it’s features except testing. I use Cypress completely separate than CLI. 26:46 – Panelist: I feel like it’s talking to the one person without a cellphone. 27:01 – Panelist: Wow! I had no concept that life could be like that! I thought you had to have a cellphone. 27:29  – Martin: What does anyone use the CLI for anyways? 27:44 – Martin: I use it for unit tests. 27:52 – Panelist: Another question. 28:30 – Alyssa: You write things out by hand because it’s easier?! 28:44 – Panelist: You copy, and paste and it’s less work. 29:06 – Panelist: It feels easier. 29:22 – Joe: No, I am serious. 29:48 – Joe: Yes, I am amazing. 30:30 – Martin talks about another topic. 30:48 – Alyssa: When you generate a component do you put it into a different file? 31:29 – Panel: We are all friends here and we aren’t shaming anyone here. We are joking here. 32:00 – Alyssa: It’s that he can write it from memory. 33:08 – Panelist: I have been using Vue lately. He also talks about Angular and mentions Sarah Drasner, too. 34:26 – Panelist: Not everyone has a memory like him, though. 35:32 – Panelist: The fourth version of Renderer. 36:28 – Panelist: We are not talking about Nirvana the band, here. 36:46 – Alyssa: It will be the new Renderer. It’s out for you to try. Check out Angular Air. He was trying out IB yourself right now. People are flipping out about it. I am excited to see how my Angular app runs differently now. Here is the code that was generated, here is the code that... I am not sure that there is a promise date. Any secrets heads-up on when it will come out? 38:22 – Panelist: The big question what does this mean for my existing code? Do I have to change my existing code? 38:48 – Alyssa: The Angular team is working so that there are minimal changes. I don’t have a good answer. NGGC. For third-party libraries you run it through and it... I don’t know what that means for the community. 39:49 – Panelist: My hope is that they... 40:03 – Alyssa: For your third-party... 40:18 – Panelist: Question: between your small and large pack? What architectural differences are there? 40:44 – Martin: I have a template edit. 41:03 – Panelist: Come to my... 41:32 – Panel talks about talks that Jon can do. 42:13 – Panelist: True story... The panel is having fun going back and forth with jokes. 43:03 – Panelist: This kind of stuff creeps into production code. That’s the great thing about copy and paste. 43:21 – Panelist: We had a rule, though, if it happens more than once let’s put into our build. 44:20 – It’s 3 hours if you have a CI process, if you don’t... 44:33 – Console.log 44:49 – Martin chimes in. 45:14 – Panelist: Let’s talk about an iFrame in your app? 45:27 – Martin: The point is to be able to do it with any... Make sure that it doesn’t collide. The CSS wasn’t separated. I had to put my application inside an iFrame. 46:27 – Panelist: Thanks for coming on for us, Martin. 46:37 – Picks! 46:44 - Advertisement Links: Martin Jakubik’s Medium How to Copy, Cut, Paste for Beginners by Melanie Pinola Art Joker Blog @AngularMine Cypress Vue Renderer Sponsors: Angular Boot Camp Digital Ocean Get a Coder Job course Picks: Alyssa Question as my pick – About Angular 7...(47:52) True or False? Martin Thank you for having me today. Present your work more. I challenge you all to cook. Blog: Bratislava Angular Ward How to Copy, Cut, and Paste Joe Brian Holt – Eleven Tips to Scale Node.js NPM scripts – I relearned something “new” lately.

adventures medium iron man panel beginners false ward scratch nirvana copy special guests jp console cms panelists ib css paste advertisement cypress vue angular cli digital ocean npm webpack google optimize iframe john papa sarah drasner angular cli brian holt renderer joe eames ward bell coder job angular air martin it panelist you eleven tips angular boot camp melanie pinola panelist let alyssa it panelist it martin there alyssa nicholl alyssa what alyssa how panelist question alyssa you panelist so panelist why martin only panelist not alyssa is
All JavaScript Podcasts by Devchat.tv
MJS 071: Kye Hohenberger

All JavaScript Podcasts by Devchat.tv

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 25, 2018 19:18


Panel: Charles Max Wood Guest: Kye Hohenberger This week on My JavaScript Story, Charles speaks with Kye Hohenberger. Kye is a senior front-end engineer at Gremlin, where they do chaos as a service and break your stuff on purpose so that you can fix it and it hopefully won’t happen again. He also created the Emotion library, which is a CSS-in-JS library. He first got into programming because his Grandpa was always working on computers and Kye was curious about how they worked. They talk about how he got into JavaScript, what he's built in JavaScript that he’s proud of, what he’s working on now, and more! In particular, we dive pretty deep on: JavaScript Jabber Episode 286 Kye intro Works at Gremlin as a front-end engineer How did you first get into programming? Always had a burning curiosity for computers Worked on HTML first Worked with flash in High School Tried to major in Computer Science and dropped out of it Job in IT Wordpress maintenance Hooked on wanting to learn more Python with Django What was it that caught your attention? How did you get into JavaScript? Job at cPanel What led you to build something like Emotion? Didn’t like having to use the Sass compiler What problem were you trying to solve? Have you worked on anything else in JavaScript that you’re proud of? What are you working on now? APIs from Java to Node Wrote Qordoba apps for 2 years What made you switch from Angular to React? Learning WebPack And much, much more! Links: JavaScript Jabber Episode 286 Emotion Wordpress Python Django JavaScript cPanel Sass Node Angular React WebPack @tkh44 Kye’s GitHub Kye’s Medium Sponsors: Loot Crate FreshBooks Picks Charles Home Depot Tool Rentals Framework Summit Podcast Movement Kye The Console Log Brian Holt on Frontend Masters Emotion Team

Devchat.tv Master Feed
MJS 071: Kye Hohenberger

Devchat.tv Master Feed

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 25, 2018 19:18


Panel: Charles Max Wood Guest: Kye Hohenberger This week on My JavaScript Story, Charles speaks with Kye Hohenberger. Kye is a senior front-end engineer at Gremlin, where they do chaos as a service and break your stuff on purpose so that you can fix it and it hopefully won’t happen again. He also created the Emotion library, which is a CSS-in-JS library. He first got into programming because his Grandpa was always working on computers and Kye was curious about how they worked. They talk about how he got into JavaScript, what he's built in JavaScript that he’s proud of, what he’s working on now, and more! In particular, we dive pretty deep on: JavaScript Jabber Episode 286 Kye intro Works at Gremlin as a front-end engineer How did you first get into programming? Always had a burning curiosity for computers Worked on HTML first Worked with flash in High School Tried to major in Computer Science and dropped out of it Job in IT Wordpress maintenance Hooked on wanting to learn more Python with Django What was it that caught your attention? How did you get into JavaScript? Job at cPanel What led you to build something like Emotion? Didn’t like having to use the Sass compiler What problem were you trying to solve? Have you worked on anything else in JavaScript that you’re proud of? What are you working on now? APIs from Java to Node Wrote Qordoba apps for 2 years What made you switch from Angular to React? Learning WebPack And much, much more! Links: JavaScript Jabber Episode 286 Emotion Wordpress Python Django JavaScript cPanel Sass Node Angular React WebPack @tkh44 Kye’s GitHub Kye’s Medium Sponsors: Loot Crate FreshBooks Picks Charles Home Depot Tool Rentals Framework Summit Podcast Movement Kye The Console Log Brian Holt on Frontend Masters Emotion Team

My JavaScript Story
MJS 071: Kye Hohenberger

My JavaScript Story

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 25, 2018 19:18


Panel: Charles Max Wood Guest: Kye Hohenberger This week on My JavaScript Story, Charles speaks with Kye Hohenberger. Kye is a senior front-end engineer at Gremlin, where they do chaos as a service and break your stuff on purpose so that you can fix it and it hopefully won’t happen again. He also created the Emotion library, which is a CSS-in-JS library. He first got into programming because his Grandpa was always working on computers and Kye was curious about how they worked. They talk about how he got into JavaScript, what he's built in JavaScript that he’s proud of, what he’s working on now, and more! In particular, we dive pretty deep on: JavaScript Jabber Episode 286 Kye intro Works at Gremlin as a front-end engineer How did you first get into programming? Always had a burning curiosity for computers Worked on HTML first Worked with flash in High School Tried to major in Computer Science and dropped out of it Job in IT Wordpress maintenance Hooked on wanting to learn more Python with Django What was it that caught your attention? How did you get into JavaScript? Job at cPanel What led you to build something like Emotion? Didn’t like having to use the Sass compiler What problem were you trying to solve? Have you worked on anything else in JavaScript that you’re proud of? What are you working on now? APIs from Java to Node Wrote Qordoba apps for 2 years What made you switch from Angular to React? Learning WebPack And much, much more! Links: JavaScript Jabber Episode 286 Emotion Wordpress Python Django JavaScript cPanel Sass Node Angular React WebPack @tkh44 Kye’s GitHub Kye’s Medium Sponsors: Loot Crate FreshBooks Picks Charles Home Depot Tool Rentals Framework Summit Podcast Movement Kye The Console Log Brian Holt on Frontend Masters Emotion Team

Front End Happy Hour
Episode 060 - Shots to growlers - finding the right size drink

Front End Happy Hour

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 25, 2018 57:20


In this episode, we are joined by Shirley Wu and Brian Holt to talk with us about the various experiences we’ve had with startups, large companies, agencies, and freelance work. Guests: Shirley Wu - @sxywu Brian Holt - @holtbt Panelists: Ryan Burgess - @burgessdryan Augustus Yuan - @augburto Jem Young - @JemYoung Mars Jullian - @marsjosephine Stacy London - @stacylondoner Picks: Shirley Wu - Team Lab Brian Holt - Kubernetes Ryan Burgess - Evil Genius Augustus Yuan - Model Zoo Augustus Yuan - Human Benchark Jem Young - Google Doubleclick Mozilla Jem Young - The Strong Web Mars Jullian - Hiya Mars Jullian - Explained on Netflix Stacy London - CSS Conf - Laura Schneck algorithms of CSS talk Stacy London - JS Conf EU - Beaker browser by Tara Vancil Stacy London - JS Conf EU - Empathy driven development by Marcy Sutton

Sports Palooza Radio Show
Into the Cosmos - Episode 12

Sports Palooza Radio Show

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 7, 2016 52:00


This week on #IntotheCosmos, hosts Ej Garr and Frank Dell'Apa review the opening weekend of the fall portion of the 2016 campaign, in which the Cosmos came away with a 2 - 1 win against the Ottawa Fury last weekend. Brian Holt joins us after picking up the win in net for the Cosmos, and we discuss his college days at Creighton University, where he still sits among the team leaders in the history of the school. The Cosmos face Miami this weekend in the Sunshine State, and have a gruelling schedule over the month of July, which amounts to seven games to be played as the summer heats up. Ticket packages to see the Cosmos at Shuart Stadium are at a premium, as the team offers multiple deals to see your Cosmos live and in person. From a $77 package for every home game left on the schedule in the Fall, to the $5 kids tickets for the upcoming game against Jacksonville on the 13th. Be sure to tune in to One World Sports to see the match against Miami at 8 PM ET on Saturday, and Vamos Cosmos!

Northland Outdoors
Episode 27.2: CO Brian Holt Recaps the Mississippi River Kayak Rescue

Northland Outdoors

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 9, 2016 12:04


Open Source – Software Engineering Daily
Falcor at Netflix with Brian Holt

Open Source – Software Engineering Daily

Play Episode Listen Later May 2, 2016 38:50


At Netflix, building a user interface requires data about movies, actors, users, accounts, and much more. If each piece of data is coming from a different source, a programmer has to call each of the services that has access to that data. Falcor is a piece of technology designed at Netflix to solve this problem. The post Falcor at Netflix with Brian Holt appeared first on Software Engineering Daily.

Ringgold Band
A history lesson of the musical instruments of Ringgold Band

Ringgold Band

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 10, 2015 12:10


Listen as Brian Holt (the best percussionist in the U.S. - according to Jim Seidel) talks about the rich history of the musical instruments used by the Ringgold Band!

SUNDAY MORNING SERVICE
THANK GOD RIGHTLY

SUNDAY MORNING SERVICE

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 28, 2014 39:01


Brian Holt visits Bangor Maine to share an uplifting sermon about Jesus.

Ringgold Band
Meet Brian Holt!

Ringgold Band

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 21, 2014 16:11


Toni Reece talks to Brian Holt about his journey with the Ringgold Band. Brian is the longest playing member of the band and leading percussionist in the country on the playing and interpretation of Sousa marches!