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Special guests Burke Holland and Harald Kirschner from Microsoft join us on this episode to share the new GitHub Copilot features coming to VS Code and beyond.First up: agent mode is now available to all users in VS Code. GitHub Copilot gets a serious upgrade as it can now create new apps from scratch, handle complex changes to existing code across multiple files, run (and debug) tests from the command line, and guide you through its reasoning. Additionally, VS Code and GH Copilot now offer MCP (model context protocol) for agent mode. This means that GitHub Copilot can use context tools and services while building an application. There's a host of already available community-standard MCP servers available on github.com or devs can build their own and GH Copilot will be able to use it to enhance its knowledge and capabilities.Next Edit Suggestions (NES) lands in GH Copilot as well, so when devs make one change to a file Copilot predicts the changes that follow and presents them in sequence. Not only are ghost-text suggestions faster to appear to users in VS Code, but Copilot is also better at understanding what other changes are needed to support the new code.Special Guests:Burke Holland, Principal Developer Advocate at Microsoft running the VS Code developer community teamHarald Kirschner, Principal Product Manager at Microsoft for VS Code and GitHub CopilotRelevant Links:VS Code Timeline viewBurke's WebsiteBurke on GitHubBurke on TwitterBurke on YouTubeBurke on TikTokBurke on LinkedInHarald's WebsiteHarald on GitHubHarald on TwitterHarald on LinkedInWhat Makes Us Happy this Week:Paige - Apple AirPods Pro Gen 2Jack - Star Trek: Strange New Worlds season 3TJ - Trip to the Grand Canyon and Zion National ParkBurke - Insta 360 webcamHarald - Springtime in CAThanks as always to our sponsor, the Blue Collar Coder channel on YouTube. You can join us in our Discord channel, explore our website and reach us via email, or talk to us on X, Bluesky, or YouTube.Front-end Fire websiteBlue Collar Coder on YouTubeBlue Collar Coder on DiscordReach out via emailTweet at us on X @front_end_fireFollow us on Bluesky @front-end-fire.comSubscribe to our YouTube channel @Front-EndFirePodcast
2021-07-13 Weekly News - Episode 111Watch the video version on YouTube at https://youtu.be/NzjspE5TDrU Hosts: Gavin Pickin - Senior Developer for Ortus SolutionsBrad Wood - Senior Developer for Ortus SolutionsThanks to our Sponsor - Ortus SolutionsThe makers of ColdBox, CommandBox, ForgeBox, TestBox and almost every other Box out there. A few ways to say thanks back to Ortus Solutions: Like and subscribe to our videos on YouTube. Sign up for a free or paid account on CFCasts, which is releasing new content every week Buy Ortus's new Book - 102 ColdBox HMVC Quick Tips and Tricks on GumRoad (http://gum.co/coldbox-tips) Patreon SupportWe have 38 patreons providing 100% of the funding for our Modernize or Die Podcasts via our Patreon site: https://www.patreon.com/ortussolutions. We are now 41% of the way to our next goal, fully funding the ForgeBox.io site.Now offering Annual Memberships, pay for the year and save 10% - great for businesses.News and EventsColdBox 6.5.0 ReleasedToday we are excited to release ColdBox v6.5.0 and its standalone companion libraries: CacheBox, LogBox and WireBox. This release has focused on stability and making sure all bugs are addressed especially when using our schedulers and asynchronous processes.https://coldbox.ortusbooks.com/intro/release-history/whats-new-with-6.5.0 https://www.ortussolutions.com/blog/coldbox-650-released CFConfig 1.4.0 ReleasedToday we've released a new version of CFConfig-- your friendly neighborhood CLI for configuring Adobe and Lucee servers. CFConfig sees a lot of little releases that we don't announce, but they are usually very small little releases adding a single setting here or there. Today's release has a nice collection of brand new features that seemed worth talking about.https://www.ortussolutions.com/blog/cfconfig-140-released Last chance to get your Into the Box Topic Submissions in Deadline for Call for Speakers JULY 15 - so submit ASAPhttps://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLScXkZe7W-frEV5M4Id28Cz0wSr7meyJQfOnYEXgj7lzhcEA6g/viewform SUPER EARLY BIRD TICKETS STILL AVAILABLEGreat to see people taking advantage of this alreadyhttps://intothebox.orghttps://itb2021.eventbrite.comContentBox CLI Release and 5RC ReleaseContentBox 5 development is moving along nicely. 5.0.0-rc.2+34 was released July 6th and ContentBox-CLI was released June 30th.https://www.forgebox.io/view/contentbox-cli#versions https://www.forgebox.io/view/contentbox#versions Ortus Webinar for July - Building API Integrations with Hyper -Michael BornWednesday, July 21st Time: 11:00 AM CTLearn how to connect to a public API using Hyper in this webinar by Michael Born, where he'll cover API integrations from storing secrets to writing unit tests, to publishing the finished, reusable library on ForgeBox.Register https://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZ0rf-GurjMpE9cX63bZoFA-SqC4OXzDw6wK https://www.ortussolutions.com/events/webinars Adobe Developer Week Videos - Coming SoonAdobe announced the Dev Week videos would be appearing soon on their ColdFusion Portal site, on their video page. No official timeline on when they would be there, but we'll let you know as soon as we know.They have also added more of the API series videos there as well, 6 from that series, up from 2 videos last time we mentioned it.https://coldfusion.adobe.com/videos/ ICYMI - Lucee 5.3.8 ReleasedThis has been a very long release cycle, a massive thank you to everyone who has been helping us test and address regressions and performance problems…We have done a lot of work in 5.3.8 to optimise memory usage, the main two areas being improved was the template cache handling and parallel functionality.Highlights: structValueArray Array methods: shift(), unshift(), push(), pop(), splice() Reevaluate performance of locking overhead in pc.initApplicationContext() for every request Query of Query performance is very bad and single threaded for complex SQL https://dev.lucee.org/t/new-stable-release-5-3-8-189/8484Reminder - State of the CF Union SurveyHelp us find out the state of the CF Union – what versions of CFML Engine do people use, what frameworks, tools etc. We will share the summary results with everyone who completes the survey so that you can see how you compare with other CF developers.Spread the news so we can get as many responses as possible.https://teratech.com/state-of-the-cf-union-2021-survey 317 Results: https://teratech.com/state-of-the-cf-union-2021-results CFCasts Content Updateshttps://www.cfcasts.com Just Released Object-Oriented Programming with Nolan Erck (https://cfcasts.com/series/oop-series) NOW WITH CAPTIONS! CFC Docs with DocBox for Documentation Coding Guidelines and CFFormat Last videos of the series. Don't forget - the first 4 videos in this series are FREE Using DocBox Configuring DocBox Writing Great Documentation with DocBox Coming this weekQuick Workshop Videos with Eric PetersonComing up soon More What's new with ColdBox 6 More What's new in qb 8 More Using DocBox LogBox 101 What's new in Content 5 Send your suggestions at https://cfcasts.com/supportConferences and TrainingInto the Box 2021 - live in Person in Texas.September 23rd and 24th.No workshops this year.Deadline for Call for Speakers JULY 15 - so submit ASAP - https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLScXkZe7W-frEV5M4Id28Cz0wSr7meyJQfOnYEXgj7lzhcEA6g/viewformSelection Committee Meeting this week and Next - Speakers and or Schedule coming soon.SUPER EARLY BIRD TICKETS STILL AVAILABLEhttps://intothebox.orghttps://itb2021.eventbrite.comITB Latam 2021 - live in personDecember 2nd or 3rd 2021 (confirming dates asap)More conferencesNeed more conferences, this site has a huge list of conferences for almost any language/community.https://confs.tech/CFML is now on the list - https://confs.tech/conferences/new Blogs, Tweets and Videos of the WeekBlog - Brad Wood - Ortus Solutions - CFConfig 1.4.0 released!Today we've released a new version of CFConfig-- your friendly neighborhood CLI for configuring Adobe and Lucee servers. CFConfig sees a lot of little releases that we don't announce, but they are usually very small little releases adding a single setting here or there. Today's release has a nice collection of brand new features that seemed worth talking about.https://www.ortussolutions.com/blog/cfconfig-140-released Tweet - Brad Wood - CFConfig EnhancementsFinishing some exciting enhancements to CFConfig. You'll soon be able to include/exclude(w/ wildcards) config to transfer. Also choose to append data instead of overwrite & automatic replacements of ${ENV_VAR} placeholders in your JSON on export! #CFML #ColdFusion #CommandBoxhttps://twitter.com/bdw429s/status/1414707390885371908https://twitter.com/bdw429sBlog - Luis Majano - Ortus Solutions - ColdBox 6.5.0 ReleasedToday we are excited to release ColdBox v6.5.0 and its standalone companion libraries: CacheBox, LogBox and WireBox. This release has focused on stability and making sure all bugs are addressed especially when using our schedulers and asynchronous processes.https://www.ortussolutions.com/blog/coldbox-650-released Blog - Charlie Arehart - ColdFusion Portal - ColdFusion Security Code Analyzer now works with CF2021 Standard and Developer editionsIf you may not have used or even considered the CF Security Code Analyzer because it worked only with CF Enterprise, check out this change in CF2021. It now works with any CF2021 edition. And you may have a free license of CF Builder you could use for this.Whether you may be currently using the ColdFusion Security Code Analyzer feature or have never known of it or used it, this is a newsworthy discovery: the tool now works with ColdFusion 2021 when running even as the free Developer edition or Standard edition/license. Prior to CF2021, it worked only with CF's Enterprise license or Trial edition, and specifically NOT with a Standard license or the free Developer edition.https://coldfusion.adobe.com/2021/07/coldfusion-security-analyzer-works-with-standard-and-developer/ Blog - Charlie Arehart - ColdFusion Portal - What to try when Adobe site downloads or form submissions fail to work properlyHave you perhaps tried to download ColdFusion from the Adobe site, only to find after you fill out the CF dev/trial download form that the download would not start? You're just left at a page which offers no other means to download (Adobe could and should fix that by offering links on that page in case this could happen).Or perhaps you've tried to file a bug report at the Adobe Tracker site, only to find that the bug report fails to be submitted and you instead get an error, “Bug Submission Failed“. Even trying to file a blog post on this very portal can sometimes be met with “submission failed“.WOW COOKIEShttps://coldfusion.adobe.com/2021/07/try-adobe-site-downloads-form-submissions-fail-work-properly/ Tweet - Ben Nadel - Gif SkillsPracticing my #GIF skills this morning with #Camtasia. Mostly, I just wanted to use this adorable quokka photo :D I love #ColdFusion. Deal with it
If you're working on a Line of Business application, a Software as a Service application, or an entirely different category of application, you can bring your apps directly into Teams and provide a more productive way for users to get work done. In this session Burke Holland and Dan Wahlin will demonstrate key benefits your users will experience by integrating Web apps into Teams such as Single Sign-On, Teams tab access, interactive bots (with AI capabilities), mobile access to your apps through Teams, and more.Learn more about Teams app development here: Develop apps for Microsoft Teams – AssociateGitHub here: https://github.com/microsoft/DevAppsForTeams
Burke Holland works for Microsoft on the Azure team in developer relations. He starts the show talking about how he got started in serverless. He’s careful to note that just because things are marketed as serverless doesn’t always make them so. In order for something to be serverless, it must be sufficiently abstracted in terms of technology, only require payment for what is used, and infinitely scalable. He talks about the statelessness of serverless, and the panel discusses what it means to be stateless. Burke reminds listeners that serverless is not for long-lived operations, but there are features in serverless providers that can help you get around this. Burke talks about how writing serverless code differs from standard or previous coding approaches and practices. He advises that serverless functions are best kept small, and talks about how to fit them in with other kinds of APIs. The panelists talk about the multi-cloud and why people would want to be on multiple cloud servers. Burke talks about what Microsoft has done with Serverless Frameworks to accomplish multi-cloud compatibility. The JavaScript experts discuss the advantages and disadvantages of picking JavaScript over other languages, and Burke talks about why he prefers TypeScript and the Easy-Off feature. They talk about speed on a serverless platform, especially concerning the cold start time, which Azure is relentlessly trying to lower. He does talk about some things that can be done to decrease load time and about premium functions. The panel discusses how to debug serverless functions and tools that are available, such as the Azure Functions extension. They talk about ways to set up more secure functions to keep things from racking up charges. Burke talks about some things Microsoft does internally to control cloud costs, such as sending monthly reports with reminders to delete and using tools like Azure Reaper to delete short-lived projects. Azure can also put spending caps on subscriptions, but when you hit that cap you can’t serve any more requests. Burke concludes by saying that most of the time, going serverless is a lower-cost way to improve productivity, and because it’s event-driven, it allows you to tie into things that you’re already doing in the cloud. Serverless almost always justifies itself from an ease of use point of view and a cost point of view. Panelists Aimee Knight Steve Edwards Dan Shapir AJ O’Neal Charles Max Wood Guest Burke Holland Sponsors G2i Split ____________________________ > "The MaxCoders Guide to Finding Your Dream Developer Job" by Charles Max Wood is now available on Amazon. Get Your Copy Today! ____________________________________________________________ Links Microsoft Azure Swagger GraphQL Kong Serverless Frameworks TypeScript Serverless Doesn’t Have to Be an Infuriating Black Box Azure Functions CosmoDB Is Serverless Really as Cheap as Everyone Claims? Azure Reaper Picks Steve Edwards: Louis L'Amour books, especially The Lonesome Gods Ultra Sabers Azure Reaper Burke Holland: Follow Burke on Github Dan Shapir: Taking a vacation AJ O’Neal: Hello World by Hannah Fry Ikea Kallax Charles Max Wood: The MaxCoders Guide to Finding Your Dream Developer Job Buy Me a Coffee Devchat is looking for show hosts and sponsors!
Burke Holland works for Microsoft on the Azure team in developer relations. He starts the show talking about how he got started in serverless. He’s careful to note that just because things are marketed as serverless doesn’t always make them so. In order for something to be serverless, it must be sufficiently abstracted in terms of technology, only require payment for what is used, and infinitely scalable. He talks about the statelessness of serverless, and the panel discusses what it means to be stateless. Burke reminds listeners that serverless is not for long-lived operations, but there are features in serverless providers that can help you get around this. Burke talks about how writing serverless code differs from standard or previous coding approaches and practices. He advises that serverless functions are best kept small, and talks about how to fit them in with other kinds of APIs. The panelists talk about the multi-cloud and why people would want to be on multiple cloud servers. Burke talks about what Microsoft has done with Serverless Frameworks to accomplish multi-cloud compatibility. The JavaScript experts discuss the advantages and disadvantages of picking JavaScript over other languages, and Burke talks about why he prefers TypeScript and the Easy-Off feature. They talk about speed on a serverless platform, especially concerning the cold start time, which Azure is relentlessly trying to lower. He does talk about some things that can be done to decrease load time and about premium functions. The panel discusses how to debug serverless functions and tools that are available, such as the Azure Functions extension. They talk about ways to set up more secure functions to keep things from racking up charges. Burke talks about some things Microsoft does internally to control cloud costs, such as sending monthly reports with reminders to delete and using tools like Azure Reaper to delete short-lived projects. Azure can also put spending caps on subscriptions, but when you hit that cap you can’t serve any more requests. Burke concludes by saying that most of the time, going serverless is a lower-cost way to improve productivity, and because it’s event-driven, it allows you to tie into things that you’re already doing in the cloud. Serverless almost always justifies itself from an ease of use point of view and a cost point of view. Panelists Aimee Knight Steve Edwards Dan Shapir AJ O’Neal Charles Max Wood Guest Burke Holland Sponsors G2i Split ____________________________ > "The MaxCoders Guide to Finding Your Dream Developer Job" by Charles Max Wood is now available on Amazon. Get Your Copy Today! ____________________________________________________________ Links Microsoft Azure Swagger GraphQL Kong Serverless Frameworks TypeScript Serverless Doesn’t Have to Be an Infuriating Black Box Azure Functions CosmoDB Is Serverless Really as Cheap as Everyone Claims? Azure Reaper Picks Steve Edwards: Louis L'Amour books, especially The Lonesome Gods Ultra Sabers Azure Reaper Burke Holland: Follow Burke on Github Dan Shapir: Taking a vacation AJ O’Neal: Hello World by Hannah Fry Ikea Kallax Charles Max Wood: The MaxCoders Guide to Finding Your Dream Developer Job Buy Me a Coffee Devchat is looking for show hosts and sponsors!
Burke Holland works for Microsoft on the Azure team in developer relations. He starts the show talking about how he got started in serverless. He’s careful to note that just because things are marketed as serverless doesn’t always make them so. In order for something to be serverless, it must be sufficiently abstracted in terms of technology, only require payment for what is used, and infinitely scalable. He talks about the statelessness of serverless, and the panel discusses what it means to be stateless. Burke reminds listeners that serverless is not for long-lived operations, but there are features in serverless providers that can help you get around this. Burke talks about how writing serverless code differs from standard or previous coding approaches and practices. He advises that serverless functions are best kept small, and talks about how to fit them in with other kinds of APIs. The panelists talk about the multi-cloud and why people would want to be on multiple cloud servers. Burke talks about what Microsoft has done with Serverless Frameworks to accomplish multi-cloud compatibility. The JavaScript experts discuss the advantages and disadvantages of picking JavaScript over other languages, and Burke talks about why he prefers TypeScript and the Easy-Off feature. They talk about speed on a serverless platform, especially concerning the cold start time, which Azure is relentlessly trying to lower. He does talk about some things that can be done to decrease load time and about premium functions. The panel discusses how to debug serverless functions and tools that are available, such as the Azure Functions extension. They talk about ways to set up more secure functions to keep things from racking up charges. Burke talks about some things Microsoft does internally to control cloud costs, such as sending monthly reports with reminders to delete and using tools like Azure Reaper to delete short-lived projects. Azure can also put spending caps on subscriptions, but when you hit that cap you can’t serve any more requests. Burke concludes by saying that most of the time, going serverless is a lower-cost way to improve productivity, and because it’s event-driven, it allows you to tie into things that you’re already doing in the cloud. Serverless almost always justifies itself from an ease of use point of view and a cost point of view. Panelists Aimee Knight Steve Edwards Dan Shapir AJ O’Neal Charles Max Wood Guest Burke Holland Sponsors G2i Split ____________________________ > "The MaxCoders Guide to Finding Your Dream Developer Job" by Charles Max Wood is now available on Amazon. Get Your Copy Today! ____________________________________________________________ Links Microsoft Azure Swagger GraphQL Kong Serverless Frameworks TypeScript Serverless Doesn’t Have to Be an Infuriating Black Box Azure Functions CosmoDB Is Serverless Really as Cheap as Everyone Claims? Azure Reaper Picks Steve Edwards: Louis L'Amour books, especially The Lonesome Gods Ultra Sabers Azure Reaper Burke Holland: Follow Burke on Github Dan Shapir: Taking a vacation AJ O’Neal: Hello World by Hannah Fry Ikea Kallax Charles Max Wood: The MaxCoders Guide to Finding Your Dream Developer Job Buy Me a Coffee Devchat is looking for show hosts and sponsors!
Burke Holland is a Nashville-based Developer Advocate for Microsoft. He's one of the rare people who's had a developer advocate position since way back in 2011, so I asked him about his path to what we now have started calling Dev Rel. In this episode Burke answers questions like what is a developer advocate? What does a developer advocate do? And even how to become one. We also talked about finding your own authentic writing voice and how to grow your advocacy platform through writing. Finally, I asked Burke to run me through some of the most exciting features of Microsoft Azure that every developer should be aware of including the VS Code IDE, Azure Cognitive Services, and Cosmos DB. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Chantastic asks Burke Holland about Five Things, VS Code can do that?!, and what brought him to computers. They discuss Windows 98 UI, React at Microsoft, the gateway drug to TypeScript, React Food Truck, and how how he discovered the identity of horse_js.
Panel: Ward Bell Alyssa Nicoll John Papa Joe Eames Charles Max Wood Special Guests: Peter Bacon Darwin and Megan Kingdom-Davies In the episode of Adventures in Angular the panel speaks with Peter Bacon Darwin and Megan Kingdom-Davies. Peter is an Angular Developer, known for maintaining AngularJS and the creator of Jammy. Megan is an event organizer with White October Events in the UK and has organized the Angular Connect Event. The panel and guest discuss the great environment of the conference and the business and community connections they form during the conference. In particular, we dive pretty deep on: •Angular Connect Conference details and what it is about Who is it for? What is the selling point? Creating contacts and connections Office hours of the conference Informal conference events Meeting new people in the community Closed Captioning Diversity and inclusion of the community Facilities available for gender, religious, physical, and psychological specifics How many attendees and how big is the conference - 1100 attendees/ 60 speakers Big announcements? Angular Elements Mobex Chicken Dance and much more! Links: Megan Kingdom-Davies Peter Bacon Darwin http://www.bacondarwin.com angularconnect.com Picks: Charles Why are you using AngularJS? Email or Tweet ar @cmaxw Joe •NG Conf. Cabin Pressure Joe’s Plural Sight Course on Migration Ward Burke Holland How to uppercase a stray envious code Peter Video talking about Jenny https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VkSmaFAuaH4 John Psych Shai Solid Principles of OO Peter Stack Blitz Soonish
Panel: Ward Bell Alyssa Nicoll John Papa Joe Eames Charles Max Wood Special Guests: Peter Bacon Darwin and Megan Kingdom-Davies In the episode of Adventures in Angular the panel speaks with Peter Bacon Darwin and Megan Kingdom-Davies. Peter is an Angular Developer, known for maintaining AngularJS and the creator of Jammy. Megan is an event organizer with White October Events in the UK and has organized the Angular Connect Event. The panel and guest discuss the great environment of the conference and the business and community connections they form during the conference. In particular, we dive pretty deep on: •Angular Connect Conference details and what it is about Who is it for? What is the selling point? Creating contacts and connections Office hours of the conference Informal conference events Meeting new people in the community Closed Captioning Diversity and inclusion of the community Facilities available for gender, religious, physical, and psychological specifics How many attendees and how big is the conference - 1100 attendees/ 60 speakers Big announcements? Angular Elements Mobex Chicken Dance and much more! Links: Megan Kingdom-Davies Peter Bacon Darwin http://www.bacondarwin.com angularconnect.com Picks: Charles Why are you using AngularJS? Email or Tweet ar @cmaxw Joe •NG Conf. Cabin Pressure Joe’s Plural Sight Course on Migration Ward Burke Holland How to uppercase a stray envious code Peter Video talking about Jenny https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VkSmaFAuaH4 John Psych Shai Solid Principles of OO Peter Stack Blitz Soonish
Panel: Ward Bell Alyssa Nicoll John Papa Joe Eames Charles Max Wood Special Guests: Peter Bacon Darwin and Megan Kingdom-Davies In the episode of Adventures in Angular the panel speaks with Peter Bacon Darwin and Megan Kingdom-Davies. Peter is an Angular Developer, known for maintaining AngularJS and the creator of Jammy. Megan is an event organizer with White October Events in the UK and has organized the Angular Connect Event. The panel and guest discuss the great environment of the conference and the business and community connections they form during the conference. In particular, we dive pretty deep on: •Angular Connect Conference details and what it is about Who is it for? What is the selling point? Creating contacts and connections Office hours of the conference Informal conference events Meeting new people in the community Closed Captioning Diversity and inclusion of the community Facilities available for gender, religious, physical, and psychological specifics How many attendees and how big is the conference - 1100 attendees/ 60 speakers Big announcements? Angular Elements Mobex Chicken Dance and much more! Links: Megan Kingdom-Davies Peter Bacon Darwin http://www.bacondarwin.com angularconnect.com Picks: Charles Why are you using AngularJS? Email or Tweet ar @cmaxw Joe •NG Conf. Cabin Pressure Joe’s Plural Sight Course on Migration Ward Burke Holland How to uppercase a stray envious code Peter Video talking about Jenny https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VkSmaFAuaH4 John Psych Shai Solid Principles of OO Peter Stack Blitz Soonish
AiA 143 Kendo UI with Burke Holland Charles Max Wood and Burke Holland discuss Kendo UI. Burke Holland is on the Developer Tools Division at Progress. The discussion ranges from the introduction of Kendo UI to tests used for Angular apps. Stay tuned to discover what Kendo UI can do for you! [00:01:50] Shutout for Angular Remote Conf Charles will be picking speakers really soon so get your ticket at the early bird price. [00:02:15] – Introduction to Burke Holland Burke Holland is working for Progress in the Developer Tools Division on the Developer Relations Team. They work on products like NativeScript, KendoUI and all the developer tools that Progress makes, which is mostly UI components and mobile frameworks Questions for Burke Holland [00:03:00] – What is Kendo UI? Kendo UI is a Javascript UI library. It has open source components (Kendo UI Core), but it’s primarily commercial. It’s more on heavy lifting text scenarios like grid that has sorting and filtering, drag and drop, grouping, scheduler, robust calendar interface, pivot grids, Gantt charts, data visualizations. We’ve rebuilt Kendo UI from the ground up using Angular components. It’s the Kendo UI Core Angular that was released last January. [00:08:00] – How are Kendo UI elements pulled for use into an app? There’s a private npm repo that you would just pull in and bundle some of the widgets together. Inputs can be a drop down list, a combo box, autocomplete, etc. Using npm and install -@progress/kendo-angular-input, you get all of those inside your npm modules folder. We and the team are pushing to move to the public npm repo so that people don’t have to register for an account. [00:13:00] What about mobile development? Does this work with NativeScript? Kendo UI widgets do not work inside of NativeScript for mobile apps. However, we are looking for a possibility of merging their NativeScript UI library with Kendo UI so that you can build a website, a progressive web app, a NativeScript app, etc. [00:16:00] Do you also have to pull in some CSS? Kendo UI has their own CSS that is based on Sass. It has a theme builder to customize themes that you can pre-select from. Integration for Bootstrap 4 was also built because Kendo UI does not have a layout system so it doesn’t provide you with any grid system for layouts or for responsive design. [00:19:00] Do you just import it into my app and then use the components, is it that simple? It is recommended to use Angular CLI to use Kendo UI’s components and import it into an app. First step is to create a new project with the Angular CLI because Kendo UI is designed to work with it. You can work with SystemJS, instead, but it requires some tweaking. Next, you would need to add the private npm repo which registers the end point on the terminal. And then, npm-install to install the components. After that, you can include them in your app module file. Import Kendo grid from @progress/kendo-angular-grid. Then, you can import them into your module so you use it in your templates. [00:23:00] – Can I tie a chart to a grid, update the chart and have the grid change? Everything that Angular updates, Kendo UI just updates too. If you buy two components to the same array and you update that array, both of those components are going to update because they’re using Angular’s binding. [00:24:00] – Does Kendo UI work with the older versions of Angular? Kendo UI works with Angular 1.x. By the way, AngularJS means Angular 1.x. Meanwhile, Angular means Angular 2 and up. Directives for Angular 1.x wrap Kendo UI components. [00:28:00] – When moving my component in AngularJS to Modern Angular, do I have to include both of those in the product? I can’t provide any guidance here, other than I wouldn’t do that. If you migrate, you’re going to be firing up a new project but you should be able to move your application logic over pretty well. However, we still have this idea of services and injection and those things are transferable. And then, when you use Kendo UI components, the only thing that’s really transferable there is the configuration settings. [00:29:00] – How do you write tests if you’re testing Angular app? Are there other things that you should be testing? That would mean there’s some sort of functional testing and unit testing. If we’re talking about unit testing, you should just test the way that you would normally test Angular. For functional test, you need a functional testing tool like Selenium or Test Studio. [00:30:00] – Is there anything else that people need to know about Kendo UI? We’ve got a lot of other components coming so stay tuned on that. We’re also working on some React stuff. We always love to get feedback. We have a github repo. Picks Burke Holland: Server list Azure Functions Challenge Medium article on Samsung’s weird emoji Twitter at @burkeholland Twitter of Tara Z. Manicsic Charles Max Wood: Serverless library in npm AWS Lambda Slack room for the podcast (adventuresinangular.com/slack) Angular Remote Conf Get A Coder Job Stack for Slack automation MemberPress on WordPress
AiA 143 Kendo UI with Burke Holland Charles Max Wood and Burke Holland discuss Kendo UI. Burke Holland is on the Developer Tools Division at Progress. The discussion ranges from the introduction of Kendo UI to tests used for Angular apps. Stay tuned to discover what Kendo UI can do for you! [00:01:50] Shutout for Angular Remote Conf Charles will be picking speakers really soon so get your ticket at the early bird price. [00:02:15] – Introduction to Burke Holland Burke Holland is working for Progress in the Developer Tools Division on the Developer Relations Team. They work on products like NativeScript, KendoUI and all the developer tools that Progress makes, which is mostly UI components and mobile frameworks Questions for Burke Holland [00:03:00] – What is Kendo UI? Kendo UI is a Javascript UI library. It has open source components (Kendo UI Core), but it’s primarily commercial. It’s more on heavy lifting text scenarios like grid that has sorting and filtering, drag and drop, grouping, scheduler, robust calendar interface, pivot grids, Gantt charts, data visualizations. We’ve rebuilt Kendo UI from the ground up using Angular components. It’s the Kendo UI Core Angular that was released last January. [00:08:00] – How are Kendo UI elements pulled for use into an app? There’s a private npm repo that you would just pull in and bundle some of the widgets together. Inputs can be a drop down list, a combo box, autocomplete, etc. Using npm and install -@progress/kendo-angular-input, you get all of those inside your npm modules folder. We and the team are pushing to move to the public npm repo so that people don’t have to register for an account. [00:13:00] What about mobile development? Does this work with NativeScript? Kendo UI widgets do not work inside of NativeScript for mobile apps. However, we are looking for a possibility of merging their NativeScript UI library with Kendo UI so that you can build a website, a progressive web app, a NativeScript app, etc. [00:16:00] Do you also have to pull in some CSS? Kendo UI has their own CSS that is based on Sass. It has a theme builder to customize themes that you can pre-select from. Integration for Bootstrap 4 was also built because Kendo UI does not have a layout system so it doesn’t provide you with any grid system for layouts or for responsive design. [00:19:00] Do you just import it into my app and then use the components, is it that simple? It is recommended to use Angular CLI to use Kendo UI’s components and import it into an app. First step is to create a new project with the Angular CLI because Kendo UI is designed to work with it. You can work with SystemJS, instead, but it requires some tweaking. Next, you would need to add the private npm repo which registers the end point on the terminal. And then, npm-install to install the components. After that, you can include them in your app module file. Import Kendo grid from @progress/kendo-angular-grid. Then, you can import them into your module so you use it in your templates. [00:23:00] – Can I tie a chart to a grid, update the chart and have the grid change? Everything that Angular updates, Kendo UI just updates too. If you buy two components to the same array and you update that array, both of those components are going to update because they’re using Angular’s binding. [00:24:00] – Does Kendo UI work with the older versions of Angular? Kendo UI works with Angular 1.x. By the way, AngularJS means Angular 1.x. Meanwhile, Angular means Angular 2 and up. Directives for Angular 1.x wrap Kendo UI components. [00:28:00] – When moving my component in AngularJS to Modern Angular, do I have to include both of those in the product? I can’t provide any guidance here, other than I wouldn’t do that. If you migrate, you’re going to be firing up a new project but you should be able to move your application logic over pretty well. However, we still have this idea of services and injection and those things are transferable. And then, when you use Kendo UI components, the only thing that’s really transferable there is the configuration settings. [00:29:00] – How do you write tests if you’re testing Angular app? Are there other things that you should be testing? That would mean there’s some sort of functional testing and unit testing. If we’re talking about unit testing, you should just test the way that you would normally test Angular. For functional test, you need a functional testing tool like Selenium or Test Studio. [00:30:00] – Is there anything else that people need to know about Kendo UI? We’ve got a lot of other components coming so stay tuned on that. We’re also working on some React stuff. We always love to get feedback. We have a github repo. Picks Burke Holland: Server list Azure Functions Challenge Medium article on Samsung’s weird emoji Twitter at @burkeholland Twitter of Tara Z. Manicsic Charles Max Wood: Serverless library in npm AWS Lambda Slack room for the podcast (adventuresinangular.com/slack) Angular Remote Conf Get A Coder Job Stack for Slack automation MemberPress on WordPress
AiA 143 Kendo UI with Burke Holland Charles Max Wood and Burke Holland discuss Kendo UI. Burke Holland is on the Developer Tools Division at Progress. The discussion ranges from the introduction of Kendo UI to tests used for Angular apps. Stay tuned to discover what Kendo UI can do for you! [00:01:50] Shutout for Angular Remote Conf Charles will be picking speakers really soon so get your ticket at the early bird price. [00:02:15] – Introduction to Burke Holland Burke Holland is working for Progress in the Developer Tools Division on the Developer Relations Team. They work on products like NativeScript, KendoUI and all the developer tools that Progress makes, which is mostly UI components and mobile frameworks Questions for Burke Holland [00:03:00] – What is Kendo UI? Kendo UI is a Javascript UI library. It has open source components (Kendo UI Core), but it’s primarily commercial. It’s more on heavy lifting text scenarios like grid that has sorting and filtering, drag and drop, grouping, scheduler, robust calendar interface, pivot grids, Gantt charts, data visualizations. We’ve rebuilt Kendo UI from the ground up using Angular components. It’s the Kendo UI Core Angular that was released last January. [00:08:00] – How are Kendo UI elements pulled for use into an app? There’s a private npm repo that you would just pull in and bundle some of the widgets together. Inputs can be a drop down list, a combo box, autocomplete, etc. Using npm and install -@progress/kendo-angular-input, you get all of those inside your npm modules folder. We and the team are pushing to move to the public npm repo so that people don’t have to register for an account. [00:13:00] What about mobile development? Does this work with NativeScript? Kendo UI widgets do not work inside of NativeScript for mobile apps. However, we are looking for a possibility of merging their NativeScript UI library with Kendo UI so that you can build a website, a progressive web app, a NativeScript app, etc. [00:16:00] Do you also have to pull in some CSS? Kendo UI has their own CSS that is based on Sass. It has a theme builder to customize themes that you can pre-select from. Integration for Bootstrap 4 was also built because Kendo UI does not have a layout system so it doesn’t provide you with any grid system for layouts or for responsive design. [00:19:00] Do you just import it into my app and then use the components, is it that simple? It is recommended to use Angular CLI to use Kendo UI’s components and import it into an app. First step is to create a new project with the Angular CLI because Kendo UI is designed to work with it. You can work with SystemJS, instead, but it requires some tweaking. Next, you would need to add the private npm repo which registers the end point on the terminal. And then, npm-install to install the components. After that, you can include them in your app module file. Import Kendo grid from @progress/kendo-angular-grid. Then, you can import them into your module so you use it in your templates. [00:23:00] – Can I tie a chart to a grid, update the chart and have the grid change? Everything that Angular updates, Kendo UI just updates too. If you buy two components to the same array and you update that array, both of those components are going to update because they’re using Angular’s binding. [00:24:00] – Does Kendo UI work with the older versions of Angular? Kendo UI works with Angular 1.x. By the way, AngularJS means Angular 1.x. Meanwhile, Angular means Angular 2 and up. Directives for Angular 1.x wrap Kendo UI components. [00:28:00] – When moving my component in AngularJS to Modern Angular, do I have to include both of those in the product? I can’t provide any guidance here, other than I wouldn’t do that. If you migrate, you’re going to be firing up a new project but you should be able to move your application logic over pretty well. However, we still have this idea of services and injection and those things are transferable. And then, when you use Kendo UI components, the only thing that’s really transferable there is the configuration settings. [00:29:00] – How do you write tests if you’re testing Angular app? Are there other things that you should be testing? That would mean there’s some sort of functional testing and unit testing. If we’re talking about unit testing, you should just test the way that you would normally test Angular. For functional test, you need a functional testing tool like Selenium or Test Studio. [00:30:00] – Is there anything else that people need to know about Kendo UI? We’ve got a lot of other components coming so stay tuned on that. We’re also working on some React stuff. We always love to get feedback. We have a github repo. Picks Burke Holland: Server list Azure Functions Challenge Medium article on Samsung’s weird emoji Twitter at @burkeholland Twitter of Tara Z. Manicsic Charles Max Wood: Serverless library in npm AWS Lambda Slack room for the podcast (adventuresinangular.com/slack) Angular Remote Conf Get A Coder Job Stack for Slack automation MemberPress on WordPress
Check out Angular Remote Conf! Buy tickets! Submit a CFP! Check out the speakers! 03:00 - The Origin Story and Success of Adventures in Angular ng-conf Angular Air Podcast 14:00 - The Angular Community 17:30 - Where is Angular heading? Suggest A Guest! Microsoft Build Conference 24:39 - Favorite Episodes NativeScript Episode #74: NativeScript with Burke Holland and TJ VanToll Episode #90: NativeScript Part 2 with TJ VanToll Episode #16: NG 1.3 and 2.0 with Brad Green, Igor Minar, and Miško Hevery Dan Wahlin Episode #20: Structuring Code in an AngularJS App with Dan Wahlin Episode #41: TypeScript with Dan Wahlin Episode #96: Angular 2 and TypeScript with Dan Wahlin Episode #59: Learning Resources Episode #34: LIVE! from ng-conf 2015 Episode #94: LIVE! from ng-conf 2016 Episode #99: Firebase and AngularFire2 with David East and Jeff Cross Episode #77: 2016 Year Predictions Episode #70: Holiday Pick List Episode #51: The Angular 1 Compiler with Tero Parviainen Episode #17: AtScript with Miško Hevery Episode #55: Promises Picks NativeScript (John) Snap Power Chargers (John) Stellaris (Joe) ng-conf 2017 (Joe) Burke Holland (Aaron) AngularConnect (Aaron) Rocket League (Chuck) Zig Ziglar (Chuck) Going offline (Chuck) Shooting firearms (Chuck) Angular Remote Conf (Chuck)
Check out Angular Remote Conf! Buy tickets! Submit a CFP! Check out the speakers! 03:00 - The Origin Story and Success of Adventures in Angular ng-conf Angular Air Podcast 14:00 - The Angular Community 17:30 - Where is Angular heading? Suggest A Guest! Microsoft Build Conference 24:39 - Favorite Episodes NativeScript Episode #74: NativeScript with Burke Holland and TJ VanToll Episode #90: NativeScript Part 2 with TJ VanToll Episode #16: NG 1.3 and 2.0 with Brad Green, Igor Minar, and Miško Hevery Dan Wahlin Episode #20: Structuring Code in an AngularJS App with Dan Wahlin Episode #41: TypeScript with Dan Wahlin Episode #96: Angular 2 and TypeScript with Dan Wahlin Episode #59: Learning Resources Episode #34: LIVE! from ng-conf 2015 Episode #94: LIVE! from ng-conf 2016 Episode #99: Firebase and AngularFire2 with David East and Jeff Cross Episode #77: 2016 Year Predictions Episode #70: Holiday Pick List Episode #51: The Angular 1 Compiler with Tero Parviainen Episode #17: AtScript with Miško Hevery Episode #55: Promises Picks NativeScript (John) Snap Power Chargers (John) Stellaris (Joe) ng-conf 2017 (Joe) Burke Holland (Aaron) AngularConnect (Aaron) Rocket League (Chuck) Zig Ziglar (Chuck) Going offline (Chuck) Shooting firearms (Chuck) Angular Remote Conf (Chuck)
Check out Angular Remote Conf! Buy tickets! Submit a CFP! Check out the speakers! 03:00 - The Origin Story and Success of Adventures in Angular ng-conf Angular Air Podcast 14:00 - The Angular Community 17:30 - Where is Angular heading? Suggest A Guest! Microsoft Build Conference 24:39 - Favorite Episodes NativeScript Episode #74: NativeScript with Burke Holland and TJ VanToll Episode #90: NativeScript Part 2 with TJ VanToll Episode #16: NG 1.3 and 2.0 with Brad Green, Igor Minar, and Miško Hevery Dan Wahlin Episode #20: Structuring Code in an AngularJS App with Dan Wahlin Episode #41: TypeScript with Dan Wahlin Episode #96: Angular 2 and TypeScript with Dan Wahlin Episode #59: Learning Resources Episode #34: LIVE! from ng-conf 2015 Episode #94: LIVE! from ng-conf 2016 Episode #99: Firebase and AngularFire2 with David East and Jeff Cross Episode #77: 2016 Year Predictions Episode #70: Holiday Pick List Episode #51: The Angular 1 Compiler with Tero Parviainen Episode #17: AtScript with Miško Hevery Episode #55: Promises Picks NativeScript (John) Snap Power Chargers (John) Stellaris (Joe) ng-conf 2017 (Joe) Burke Holland (Aaron) AngularConnect (Aaron) Rocket League (Chuck) Zig Ziglar (Chuck) Going offline (Chuck) Shooting firearms (Chuck) Angular Remote Conf (Chuck)
01:56 - TJ VanToll Introduction Twitter GitHub Blog Telerik 03:08 - Code Sharing Adventures in Angular Episode #74: NativeScript with Burke Holland and TJ VanToll 06:35 - Components and Directives 13:09 - NativeScript and Electron 15:02 - Business Model 16:07 - Compatability; Multi/Cross-Platform Capability 17:31 - Why Use NativeScript? 26:41 - Performance and Usability; Hybrid and Native 30:21 - iOS Concerns; Xamarin 37:23 - Where is NativeScript heading? (Future Visions and Plans) 38:21 - Getting Started with NativeScript Getting Started Guide Building Apps with NativeScript and Angular 2 Angular for NativeScript Picks Things Organized Neatly (Jules) House of Cards: A Tale of Hubris and Wretched Excess on Wall Street by William D. Cohan (Ward) AngularFire - Firebase (Joe) Zootopia (Joe) Rogue One Star Wars Trailer (John) HoloLens (Chuck) .NET Rocks! (Chuck) MicroConf (Chuck) Build a Raspberry Pi-Powered DIY Amazon Echo (Chuck) The 5th Wave Book Series (TJ) Red Rising Series (TJ)
01:56 - TJ VanToll Introduction Twitter GitHub Blog Telerik 03:08 - Code Sharing Adventures in Angular Episode #74: NativeScript with Burke Holland and TJ VanToll 06:35 - Components and Directives 13:09 - NativeScript and Electron 15:02 - Business Model 16:07 - Compatability; Multi/Cross-Platform Capability 17:31 - Why Use NativeScript? 26:41 - Performance and Usability; Hybrid and Native 30:21 - iOS Concerns; Xamarin 37:23 - Where is NativeScript heading? (Future Visions and Plans) 38:21 - Getting Started with NativeScript Getting Started Guide Building Apps with NativeScript and Angular 2 Angular for NativeScript Picks Things Organized Neatly (Jules) House of Cards: A Tale of Hubris and Wretched Excess on Wall Street by William D. Cohan (Ward) AngularFire - Firebase (Joe) Zootopia (Joe) Rogue One Star Wars Trailer (John) HoloLens (Chuck) .NET Rocks! (Chuck) MicroConf (Chuck) Build a Raspberry Pi-Powered DIY Amazon Echo (Chuck) The 5th Wave Book Series (TJ) Red Rising Series (TJ)
01:56 - TJ VanToll Introduction Twitter GitHub Blog Telerik 03:08 - Code Sharing Adventures in Angular Episode #74: NativeScript with Burke Holland and TJ VanToll 06:35 - Components and Directives 13:09 - NativeScript and Electron 15:02 - Business Model 16:07 - Compatability; Multi/Cross-Platform Capability 17:31 - Why Use NativeScript? 26:41 - Performance and Usability; Hybrid and Native 30:21 - iOS Concerns; Xamarin 37:23 - Where is NativeScript heading? (Future Visions and Plans) 38:21 - Getting Started with NativeScript Getting Started Guide Building Apps with NativeScript and Angular 2 Angular for NativeScript Picks Things Organized Neatly (Jules) House of Cards: A Tale of Hubris and Wretched Excess on Wall Street by William D. Cohan (Ward) AngularFire - Firebase (Joe) Zootopia (Joe) Rogue One Star Wars Trailer (John) HoloLens (Chuck) .NET Rocks! (Chuck) MicroConf (Chuck) Build a Raspberry Pi-Powered DIY Amazon Echo (Chuck) The 5th Wave Book Series (TJ) Red Rising Series (TJ)
Get your JS Remote Conf tickets! Freelance’ Remote Conf’s schedule is shaping up! Head over here to check it out! 02:17 - Jessica Lord Introduction Twitter GitHub Blog 02:40 - Amy Palamountain Introduction Twitter GitHub Blog 03:14 - Electron Atom 04:55 - Cross-platform Compatibility 05:55 - Electron/Atom + GitHub 07:16 - Electron/Atom + React ? 07:57 - Use Cases for Electron muan/mojibar mafintosh/playback npm-scripts-gui Amy Palamountain: Building native applications with Electron @ Nordic.js 2015 15:09 - Creating Electron Apps on Phones 17:25 - Running a Service Inside of Electron Visual Studio Code Adventures in Angular Episode #44: Visual Studio Code with Erich Gamma and Chris Dias 19:46 - Making an Electron App Photon conors/photon Photon Components N1 24:09 - Sharing Code 27:40 - Plugins for Functionality electron-accelerator electron-packager electron-prebuilt 31:08 - Keeping Up-to-date/Adding Features 33:14 - Pain Points NuGet 36:22 - Using Electron for Native JavaScript Jabber Episode #186: JSJ NativeScript with TJ VanToll and Burke Holland PhoneGap Reactive Native NativeScript 39:48 - What is a “webview”? 42:12 - Getting Started with Electron 43:28 - Robotics/Hardware Hacking with Electron JIBO Picks Autolux - Future Perfect (Jamison) Move Fast and Break Nothing (Aimee) [egghead.io] Getting Started with Redux (Dave) Destructuring and parameter handling in ECMAScript 6 (Dave) JS Remote Conf (Chuck) Freelance Remote Conf (Chuck) React Remote Conf (Chuck) Pebble Time Steel (Chuck) UglyBaby Etsy Shop (Amy) Jimmy Fallon: Kid Theater with Tom Hanks (Jessica)
Get your JS Remote Conf tickets! Freelance’ Remote Conf’s schedule is shaping up! Head over here to check it out! 02:17 - Jessica Lord Introduction Twitter GitHub Blog 02:40 - Amy Palamountain Introduction Twitter GitHub Blog 03:14 - Electron Atom 04:55 - Cross-platform Compatibility 05:55 - Electron/Atom + GitHub 07:16 - Electron/Atom + React ? 07:57 - Use Cases for Electron muan/mojibar mafintosh/playback npm-scripts-gui Amy Palamountain: Building native applications with Electron @ Nordic.js 2015 15:09 - Creating Electron Apps on Phones 17:25 - Running a Service Inside of Electron Visual Studio Code Adventures in Angular Episode #44: Visual Studio Code with Erich Gamma and Chris Dias 19:46 - Making an Electron App Photon conors/photon Photon Components N1 24:09 - Sharing Code 27:40 - Plugins for Functionality electron-accelerator electron-packager electron-prebuilt 31:08 - Keeping Up-to-date/Adding Features 33:14 - Pain Points NuGet 36:22 - Using Electron for Native JavaScript Jabber Episode #186: JSJ NativeScript with TJ VanToll and Burke Holland PhoneGap Reactive Native NativeScript 39:48 - What is a “webview”? 42:12 - Getting Started with Electron 43:28 - Robotics/Hardware Hacking with Electron JIBO Picks Autolux - Future Perfect (Jamison) Move Fast and Break Nothing (Aimee) [egghead.io] Getting Started with Redux (Dave) Destructuring and parameter handling in ECMAScript 6 (Dave) JS Remote Conf (Chuck) Freelance Remote Conf (Chuck) React Remote Conf (Chuck) Pebble Time Steel (Chuck) UglyBaby Etsy Shop (Amy) Jimmy Fallon: Kid Theater with Tom Hanks (Jessica)
Get your JS Remote Conf tickets! Freelance’ Remote Conf’s schedule is shaping up! Head over here to check it out! 02:17 - Jessica Lord Introduction Twitter GitHub Blog 02:40 - Amy Palamountain Introduction Twitter GitHub Blog 03:14 - Electron Atom 04:55 - Cross-platform Compatibility 05:55 - Electron/Atom + GitHub 07:16 - Electron/Atom + React ? 07:57 - Use Cases for Electron muan/mojibar mafintosh/playback npm-scripts-gui Amy Palamountain: Building native applications with Electron @ Nordic.js 2015 15:09 - Creating Electron Apps on Phones 17:25 - Running a Service Inside of Electron Visual Studio Code Adventures in Angular Episode #44: Visual Studio Code with Erich Gamma and Chris Dias 19:46 - Making an Electron App Photon conors/photon Photon Components N1 24:09 - Sharing Code 27:40 - Plugins for Functionality electron-accelerator electron-packager electron-prebuilt 31:08 - Keeping Up-to-date/Adding Features 33:14 - Pain Points NuGet 36:22 - Using Electron for Native JavaScript Jabber Episode #186: JSJ NativeScript with TJ VanToll and Burke Holland PhoneGap Reactive Native NativeScript 39:48 - What is a “webview”? 42:12 - Getting Started with Electron 43:28 - Robotics/Hardware Hacking with Electron JIBO Picks Autolux - Future Perfect (Jamison) Move Fast and Break Nothing (Aimee) [egghead.io] Getting Started with Redux (Dave) Destructuring and parameter handling in ECMAScript 6 (Dave) JS Remote Conf (Chuck) Freelance Remote Conf (Chuck) React Remote Conf (Chuck) Pebble Time Steel (Chuck) UglyBaby Etsy Shop (Amy) Jimmy Fallon: Kid Theater with Tom Hanks (Jessica)
Get your JS Remote Conf tickets! 02:20 - Burke Holland Introduction Twitter GitHub Blog Telerik 02:40 - TJ VanToll Introduction Twitter GitHub Blog Telerik 03:04 - NativeScript + Angular; The DOM @nativescript Sebastian Witalec: Building native mobile apps with Angular 2 0 and NativeScript @ AngularConnect 2015 JavaScript Jabber Episode #186: NativeScript with TJ VanToll and Burke Holland 07:04 - Getting Started/Setting Up a New Application NativeScript Getting Started Guide Plugins and npm modules plugins.telerik.com Power Features: Skill Reuse 10:34 - Code Reuse Data Models Components 17:00 - Platform Specific Customization 22:12 - Plugins (Cont’d) Telerik's Verified Plugin Marketplace Podfile 27:36 - Doing Things with Angular + NativeScript Animation ngAnimate TypeScript IDEs 34:14 - Testing github.com/NativeScript/NativeScript/tree/master/apps/tests Appium 37:08 - What’s coming down the pipeline? Documentation, Samples 39:19 - Comparing Angular + NativeScript to React Native The iPhreaks Show Episode #128: JavaScriptCore with Cesare Rocchi 42:31 - UI for NativeScript Picks Pebble Time Steel (Chuck) Fathead (Chuck) Apple Photos (TJ) Michigan State (TJ) Buy albums you love to support music artists (Burke)
Get your JS Remote Conf tickets! 02:20 - Burke Holland Introduction Twitter GitHub Blog Telerik 02:40 - TJ VanToll Introduction Twitter GitHub Blog Telerik 03:04 - NativeScript + Angular; The DOM @nativescript Sebastian Witalec: Building native mobile apps with Angular 2 0 and NativeScript @ AngularConnect 2015 JavaScript Jabber Episode #186: NativeScript with TJ VanToll and Burke Holland 07:04 - Getting Started/Setting Up a New Application NativeScript Getting Started Guide Plugins and npm modules plugins.telerik.com Power Features: Skill Reuse 10:34 - Code Reuse Data Models Components 17:00 - Platform Specific Customization 22:12 - Plugins (Cont’d) Telerik's Verified Plugin Marketplace Podfile 27:36 - Doing Things with Angular + NativeScript Animation ngAnimate TypeScript IDEs 34:14 - Testing github.com/NativeScript/NativeScript/tree/master/apps/tests Appium 37:08 - What’s coming down the pipeline? Documentation, Samples 39:19 - Comparing Angular + NativeScript to React Native The iPhreaks Show Episode #128: JavaScriptCore with Cesare Rocchi 42:31 - UI for NativeScript Picks Pebble Time Steel (Chuck) Fathead (Chuck) Apple Photos (TJ) Michigan State (TJ) Buy albums you love to support music artists (Burke)
Get your JS Remote Conf tickets! 02:20 - Burke Holland Introduction Twitter GitHub Blog Telerik 02:40 - TJ VanToll Introduction Twitter GitHub Blog Telerik 03:04 - NativeScript + Angular; The DOM @nativescript Sebastian Witalec: Building native mobile apps with Angular 2 0 and NativeScript @ AngularConnect 2015 JavaScript Jabber Episode #186: NativeScript with TJ VanToll and Burke Holland 07:04 - Getting Started/Setting Up a New Application NativeScript Getting Started Guide Plugins and npm modules plugins.telerik.com Power Features: Skill Reuse 10:34 - Code Reuse Data Models Components 17:00 - Platform Specific Customization 22:12 - Plugins (Cont’d) Telerik's Verified Plugin Marketplace Podfile 27:36 - Doing Things with Angular + NativeScript Animation ngAnimate TypeScript IDEs 34:14 - Testing github.com/NativeScript/NativeScript/tree/master/apps/tests Appium 37:08 - What’s coming down the pipeline? Documentation, Samples 39:19 - Comparing Angular + NativeScript to React Native The iPhreaks Show Episode #128: JavaScriptCore with Cesare Rocchi 42:31 - UI for NativeScript Picks Pebble Time Steel (Chuck) Fathead (Chuck) Apple Photos (TJ) Michigan State (TJ) Buy albums you love to support music artists (Burke)
On this episode of Eat Sleep Code, guest Burke Holland reviews the good, bad and ugly of software development in 2015 and make predictions on what 2016 will bring.
Check out JS Remote Conf! Buy a ticket! Submit a CFP! 03:07 - Burke Holland Introduction Twitter GitHub Blog 04:01 - TJ Van Toll Introduction Twitter GitHub Blog 04:33 - Telerik Telerik Platform 04:57 - NativeScript JavaScriptCore JavaScript Jabber #128: JavaScriptCore with Cesare Rocchi React Native 07:41 - The Views 10:07 - Customizability, Styling, and Standardization 16:19 - React Native vs NativeScript 18:37 - APIs CocoaPods 21:17 - How NativeScript Works 23:04 - Edgecases? Message Passing Marshalling (Mapping) 26:12 - Memory Management 27:06 - UITableView 29:59 - NativeScript and Angular AngularConnect Talks on YouTube Sebastian Witalec: Building native mobile apps with Angular 2 0 and NativeScript 33:22 - Adding NativeScript to Existing Projects 33:51 - Building for Wearables and AppleTV Burke Holland: Apple Watch and the Cross-Platform Crisis 35:59 - Building Universal Applications 37:14 - Creating NativeScript Kendo UI 39:42 - Use Cases nativescript.org/app-samples-with-code 41:01 - Are there specific things NativeScript isn’t good for? npmjs.com search: nativescript 42:54 - Testing and Debugging 48:35 - Data Storage Picks Caddy (AJ) OC ReMix #505: Top Gear 'Track 1 (Final Nitro Mix)' by Rayza (AJ) Jamie Talbot: What are Bloom filters? A tale of code, dinner, and a favour with unexpected consequences (Aimee) Mike Gehard (@mikegehard) (Aimee) Joe Eames: Becoming Betazoid: How to Listen and Empathize with Others in the Workplace @ AngularConnect 2015 (Dave) Exercise (Chuck) Sleep (Chuck) electron (Aaron) The Synchronicity War Series by Dietmar Wehr (Aaron) PAUSE (Burke) Outlander (TJ)
Check out JS Remote Conf! Buy a ticket! Submit a CFP! 03:07 - Burke Holland Introduction Twitter GitHub Blog 04:01 - TJ Van Toll Introduction Twitter GitHub Blog 04:33 - Telerik Telerik Platform 04:57 - NativeScript JavaScriptCore JavaScript Jabber #128: JavaScriptCore with Cesare Rocchi React Native 07:41 - The Views 10:07 - Customizability, Styling, and Standardization 16:19 - React Native vs NativeScript 18:37 - APIs CocoaPods 21:17 - How NativeScript Works 23:04 - Edgecases? Message Passing Marshalling (Mapping) 26:12 - Memory Management 27:06 - UITableView 29:59 - NativeScript and Angular AngularConnect Talks on YouTube Sebastian Witalec: Building native mobile apps with Angular 2 0 and NativeScript 33:22 - Adding NativeScript to Existing Projects 33:51 - Building for Wearables and AppleTV Burke Holland: Apple Watch and the Cross-Platform Crisis 35:59 - Building Universal Applications 37:14 - Creating NativeScript Kendo UI 39:42 - Use Cases nativescript.org/app-samples-with-code 41:01 - Are there specific things NativeScript isn’t good for? npmjs.com search: nativescript 42:54 - Testing and Debugging 48:35 - Data Storage Picks Caddy (AJ) OC ReMix #505: Top Gear 'Track 1 (Final Nitro Mix)' by Rayza (AJ) Jamie Talbot: What are Bloom filters? A tale of code, dinner, and a favour with unexpected consequences (Aimee) Mike Gehard (@mikegehard) (Aimee) Joe Eames: Becoming Betazoid: How to Listen and Empathize with Others in the Workplace @ AngularConnect 2015 (Dave) Exercise (Chuck) Sleep (Chuck) electron (Aaron) The Synchronicity War Series by Dietmar Wehr (Aaron) PAUSE (Burke) Outlander (TJ)
Check out JS Remote Conf! Buy a ticket! Submit a CFP! 03:07 - Burke Holland Introduction Twitter GitHub Blog 04:01 - TJ Van Toll Introduction Twitter GitHub Blog 04:33 - Telerik Telerik Platform 04:57 - NativeScript JavaScriptCore JavaScript Jabber #128: JavaScriptCore with Cesare Rocchi React Native 07:41 - The Views 10:07 - Customizability, Styling, and Standardization 16:19 - React Native vs NativeScript 18:37 - APIs CocoaPods 21:17 - How NativeScript Works 23:04 - Edgecases? Message Passing Marshalling (Mapping) 26:12 - Memory Management 27:06 - UITableView 29:59 - NativeScript and Angular AngularConnect Talks on YouTube Sebastian Witalec: Building native mobile apps with Angular 2 0 and NativeScript 33:22 - Adding NativeScript to Existing Projects 33:51 - Building for Wearables and AppleTV Burke Holland: Apple Watch and the Cross-Platform Crisis 35:59 - Building Universal Applications 37:14 - Creating NativeScript Kendo UI 39:42 - Use Cases nativescript.org/app-samples-with-code 41:01 - Are there specific things NativeScript isn’t good for? npmjs.com search: nativescript 42:54 - Testing and Debugging 48:35 - Data Storage Picks Caddy (AJ) OC ReMix #505: Top Gear 'Track 1 (Final Nitro Mix)' by Rayza (AJ) Jamie Talbot: What are Bloom filters? A tale of code, dinner, and a favour with unexpected consequences (Aimee) Mike Gehard (@mikegehard) (Aimee) Joe Eames: Becoming Betazoid: How to Listen and Empathize with Others in the Workplace @ AngularConnect 2015 (Dave) Exercise (Chuck) Sleep (Chuck) electron (Aaron) The Synchronicity War Series by Dietmar Wehr (Aaron) PAUSE (Burke) Outlander (TJ)
The panelists discuss jQuery vs KendoUI with Burke Holland and TJ VanToll.
The panelists discuss jQuery vs KendoUI with Burke Holland and TJ VanToll.
The panelists discuss jQuery vs KendoUI with Burke Holland and TJ VanToll.
Carl and Richard talk to Burke Holland about building mobile apps. But the conversation starts out with an announcement - Telerik's KendoUI is going open source! Burke talks a bit about the history of KendoUI and how it has evolved over the years, including a KendoUI Mobile (which is also open source). That leads to a discussion about mobile development as a whole, including his preferred tools and styles for building apps across different mobile platforms, comparing native, hybrid and web development on the smartphone and where tablets fit into this story.Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/net-rocks/donations
Carl and Richard talk to Burke Holland about building mobile apps. But the conversation starts out with an announcement - Telerik's KendoUI is going open source! Burke talks a bit about the history of KendoUI and how it has evolved over the years, including a KendoUI Mobile (which is also open source). That leads to a discussion about mobile development as a whole, including his preferred tools and styles for building apps across different mobile platforms, comparing native, hybrid and web development on the smartphone and where tablets fit into this story.Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/net-rocks/donations