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Felix Lee shares how ADPList is democratising mentorship, the lessons he's learned from failure and resilience, and why clarity beats cleverness in design. Highlights include: 02:14 - How did you come to own uber.com? 15:27 - What does performance have to do with UX? 28:54 - How do you identify the best executive champion for performance? 35:24 - Is measuring the business impact of performance as easy as it sounds? 46:37 - Why aren't designers more involved in performance? ====== Who is Tammy Everts? Tammy is the Chief Experience Officer at SpeedCurve—a platform that enables organisations to unlock the full potential of their web performance. In her role, Tammy champions the connection between site speed, user experience, and business success, working closely with customers to deepen their understanding of how people use with their websites. Tammy's career journey also includes senior UX roles at Soasta and Radware, and over two decades of pioneering research involving EEG headsets, facial action coding, and advanced machine learning. She is the author of “Time is Money: The Business Value of Web Performance” and a sought-after speaker, having shared her expertise at prominent events like Chrome Dev Summit, Smashing Conference, and Beyond Tellerand. Tammy also co-chairs the annual performance.now() conference in Amsterdam and co-curates WPO Stats, a valuable resource of web performance case studies. Find Tammy here: LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/tammyeverts/ Website: https://tammyeverts.wordpress.com/ Mastodon: https://webperf.social/@tammy X: https://x.com/tameverts ====== Subscribe to Brave UX Liked what you heard and want to hear more? Subscribe and support the show by leaving a review on Apple Podcasts (or wherever you listen). Apple Podcast Spotify YouTube Podbean Follow us on our other social channels for more great Brave UX content! LinkedIn TikTok Instagram Brendan Jarvis hosts the Show, and you can find him here: Brendan Jarvis on LinkedIn The Space InBetween Website
In this episode, we have an update about Facebook's Facial Recognition system, and then we get into You.com, which calls itself “the world's first open search engine.” Then we speak with Stephanie Eckles, software engineer at Microsoft and author of ModernCSS.dev about exciting new CSS updates that were just announced at Chrome Dev Summit 2021. Show Notes DevDiscuss (sponsor) CodeNewbie (sponsor) HackAtom (DevNews) (sponsor) Microsoft 30 Days to Learn It (DevNews) (sponsor) Facebook is backing away from facial recognition. Meta isn't. AI-driven search engine You.com takes on Google with $20M You Everything announced at Chrome Dev Summit 2021 Modern CSS Solutions
Carter Morgan and Guillaume Laforge co-host this week’s episode about what it took to develop the Google I/O Adventure Game. Our guest Valentin Deleplace and Guillaume introduce us to the game designed to encourage interaction with I/O attendees at the virtual conference held this year. Adventure takes the look of a 90s role-playing game. The online world facilitates the meeting of hundreds of conference attendees and presenters to mimic the in-person conference setting and facilitate meaningful conversations. With avatars, text chatting capabilities, and mini games, attendees’ experiences go beyond simply watching online technical presentations. The development of Adventure Game required scalability to handle varying attendee numbers. It takes advantage of many GCP products, including Compute Engine and Cloud Run. Valentin describes why he and the team chose Cloud Run and how they used it to to stress test the game. He talks about challenges the team faced and how they overcame them to produce a smooth, enjoyable experience for conference-goers. Being a game that’s live for specific periods of time rather than indefinitely presented different challenges as well. Valentin explains that scaling down, for example, is treated differently for this type of game. Adventure will be available at future conferences. Valentin Deleplace Valentin Deleplace is a developer advocate at Google. He’s also a senior cloud backend engineer, interested in performance and UX, and an enthusiast Gopher. Cool things of the week New Cloud Functions min instances reduces serverless cold starts blog What’s the key to a more secure Cloud Function? It’s a secret! blog Shift security left with on-demand vulnerability scanning blog All you need to know about Cloud Storage blog Interview Google I/O site Chrome Dev Summit site Join the Adventure at Google I/O video Google's I/O Adventure was almost as good as being there article Set Snail site Compute Engine site Cloud Run site Using WebSockets docs App Engine site Agones site What’s something cool you’re working on? Carter is working VM End to End. Guillaume is working on new features for Cloud Workflows and helping with the Serverless Expeditions videos.
A w tym tygodniu w JS news: - Duże zmiany w Svelte - Co na Chrome Dev Summit? - Chrome 87, FF 83, Safari 14 - Firefox public DOH rollout - Electron 11 - Śmieszna historia z VSCode stories ### Prowadzący: Juliusz Jakubowski https://www.linkedin.com/in/juliusz-jakubowski/ Łukasz Chludziński https://www.linkedin.com/in/lukasz-app/ ### Słuchaj jak Ci wygodnie Spotify http://bit.ly/devspresso_spotify Google Podcast http://bit.ly/devspresso_google_podcast iTunes http://bit.ly/devspresso_itunes Youtube http://bit.ly/devspresso_youtube SoundCloud http://bit.ly/devspresso_soundcloud ### Źródła https://svelte.dev/blog/whats-the-deal-with-sveltekit https://developer.chrome.com/devsummit/ https://webkit.org/blog/11340/new-webkit-features-in-safari-14/ https://developers.google.com/web/updates/2020/11/nic87 https://blog.mozilla.org/security/2020/11/17/firefox-83-introduces-https-only-mode/ https://www.zdnet.com/article/fearing-drama-mozilla-opens-public-consultation-before-worldwide-firefox-doh-rollout/ https://www.electronjs.org/releases/stable#11.0.0 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ApR-kNXxLUs&t=1s https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CHO316LKnZw
Melanjutkan liputan gw sekilas dari acara Chrome Dev Summit 2019 Extended di Jakarta, kali ini gw senang sekali bisa berkesempatan ngobrol bareng Friska Nathaniel untuk membahas lebih lanjut presentasinya di acara itu. Beliau cerita pengalamannya bersama rekan-rekannya di Blibli.com mendongkrak performa web, mulai dari percakapan sederhana, ide, sampai dengan perubahan pola pikir dan kesatuan tujuan utama dalam hasil kerja yang dihasilkan antar tim. Lihat devmuslim.id/episode111 untuk catatan dan link yang dibahas di episode ini. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/devmuslimid/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/devmuslimid/support
Melanjutkan liputan gw sekilas dari acara Chrome Dev Summit 2019 Extended di Jakarta, kali ini gw senang sekali bisa berkesempatan ngobrol bareng Friska Nathaniel untuk membahas lebih lanjut presentasinya di acara itu. Beliau cerita pengalamannya bersama rekan-rekannya di Blibli.com mendongkrak performa web, mulai dari percakapan sederhana, ide, sampai dengan perubahan pola pikir dan kesatuan tujuan utama dalam hasil kerja yang dihasilkan antar tim. Lihat devmuslim.id/episode111 untuk catatan dan link yang dibahas di episode ini. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/devmuslimid/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/devmuslimid/support
Kali ini gw berbagi catatan & pengalaman gw hadir ke Chrome Dev Summit 2019 Extended di Jakarta. Semoga yang berhalangan hadir bisa merasakan sedikit dan pengurus komunitas yang mendengarkan ini bisa dapat kesempatan untuk mengadakan acara serupa di tahun 2020. Dengerin sampai habis saat Yohan Totting ngasih tahu gimana caranya. Lihat devmuslim.id/episode110 untuk catatan dan link yang dibahas di episode ini. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/devmuslimid/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/devmuslimid/support
Kali ini gw berbagi catatan & pengalaman gw hadir ke Chrome Dev Summit 2019 Extended di Jakarta. Semoga yang berhalangan hadir bisa merasakan sedikit dan pengurus komunitas yang mendengarkan ini bisa dapat kesempatan untuk mengadakan acara serupa di tahun 2020. Dengerin sampai habis saat Yohan Totting ngasih tahu gimana caranya. Lihat devmuslim.id/episode110 untuk catatan dan link yang dibahas di episode ini. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/devmuslimid/support
Добрый день уважаемые слушатели. Представляем новый выпуск подкаста RWpod. В этом выпуске: Ruby 10 New Things in Active Record, Pulling the trigger: How to update counter caches in your Rails app without Active Record callbacks и Similarity in Postgres and Rails using Trigrams Chatwoot - a simple and elegant live chat software, Ruby Next - makes modern Ruby code run in older versions and alternative implementations и Testing Times & Dates with Rails (video) Web Announcing core Node.js support for ECMAScript modules, 30 Tips & Tricks with the Firefox Developer Tools и I created the exact same app in React and Svelte. Here are the differences Postwoman - API request builder, GraphQuill - a VS Code extension that performs GraphQL API endpoint testing, SiriwaveJS - The Apple Siri wave-form replicated in a JS library, My Notes - Chrome Extension that turns your “New Tab” into a note taking tool и Faster apps with JSON.parse (Chrome Dev Summit 2019)
Una recently spoke at Chrome Dev Summit and Chris... Chris watched a bunch of the videos. We chat about our favourite new things showcased at CDS
Vitali Zaidman is a full stack developer who works for WellDone Software Solutions and is currently working on a SEO project. Today’s show is about SEO for developers. SEO stands for search engine optimization, which helps your website appear higher on search engines. SEO has changed a lot in the past 10 years. It has become much more regulated, and the “dirty tricks” of the past will actually penalize you, so it is important to do it properly. Today the best way to promote yourself on Google besides making good content is for developers to optimize the content, make it small, operational, secure, accessible, and operate on mobile. Much of it goes back to using semantic HTML since Google looks at it before looking at the structure of your website, how valuable it is, and how users interact with it. Having good semantics helps Google determine how valuable it is, so semantic HTML should be a top priority. Semantic HTML can also make your site more accessible to users, which will in turn give you a larger audience. The panel talks about some of the challenges of SEO faced by companies. While bigger companies have the privilege of dedicated SEO teams, small companies often lack these specialists. Thankfully, Google has made their guidelines for SEO very accessible and gives you a lot of tools to track your optimization. The panel talks about different methods of SEO, such as including FAQ at the bottom of the web page, optimizing page speed, and image optimization. Structured data like questions and answers enriches the data that is shown for users on the search results page. To score your website’s SEO, Google released the tool PageSpeed Insights, which will assign your website a performance score. Google uses two main tools to track a website’s SEO. First, they use real field data. If you opt in to ‘help improve Chrome’s features and performance’ when you install Chrome, it tracks how fast websites load on your Chrome, and they collect this information to understand how webpages load. It is required that your website has a certain amount of visitors to be tracked and added to the database. Second, Google has their own devices that will check your website. Currently, they are using a Moto G4 to test for mobile access, and a slow internet connection. Because of this, it is pretty easy to get a good score on desktop, but difficult to get a good score on mobile. The technology that drives all this is called Lighthouse. Overall, performance is the main thing users look for, so aim for good performance and fast websites. The panel discusses the correlation between performance and SEO. For example, Fox News and CNN are two of the top search results for ‘news’, but they have a dismal Google PSI score. They conclude that performance shouldn’t be ignored, but be careful about directly correlating performance and SEO. They also caution against getting obsessed over certain aspects of SEO by themselves. Panelists Dan Shapir Aimee Knight Charles Max Wood With special guest: Vitali Zaidman Sponsors Tidelift Sentry use the code “devchat” for 2 months free on Sentry’s small plan Elixir Mix Links SEO JSON Google Webmaster guidelines Google PageSpeed Insights Chrome CrUX Lighthouse Here's How the Google Speed Update Will Impact Your Site SEO for Developers - A Quick Overview Google Quality Guidelines Follow DevChatTV on Facebook and Twitter Picks Aimee Knight: Spotify CLI Dan Shapir: Chrome Dev Summit 2019 Dan Shapir on Twitter The Anubis Gates Charles Max Wood: St. George Marathon Vitali Zaidman: Vitali’s website Arzamas Academy Follow Vitali on Medium and Twitter
Vitali Zaidman is a full stack developer who works for WellDone Software Solutions and is currently working on a SEO project. Today’s show is about SEO for developers. SEO stands for search engine optimization, which helps your website appear higher on search engines. SEO has changed a lot in the past 10 years. It has become much more regulated, and the “dirty tricks” of the past will actually penalize you, so it is important to do it properly. Today the best way to promote yourself on Google besides making good content is for developers to optimize the content, make it small, operational, secure, accessible, and operate on mobile. Much of it goes back to using semantic HTML since Google looks at it before looking at the structure of your website, how valuable it is, and how users interact with it. Having good semantics helps Google determine how valuable it is, so semantic HTML should be a top priority. Semantic HTML can also make your site more accessible to users, which will in turn give you a larger audience. The panel talks about some of the challenges of SEO faced by companies. While bigger companies have the privilege of dedicated SEO teams, small companies often lack these specialists. Thankfully, Google has made their guidelines for SEO very accessible and gives you a lot of tools to track your optimization. The panel talks about different methods of SEO, such as including FAQ at the bottom of the web page, optimizing page speed, and image optimization. Structured data like questions and answers enriches the data that is shown for users on the search results page. To score your website’s SEO, Google released the tool PageSpeed Insights, which will assign your website a performance score. Google uses two main tools to track a website’s SEO. First, they use real field data. If you opt in to ‘help improve Chrome’s features and performance’ when you install Chrome, it tracks how fast websites load on your Chrome, and they collect this information to understand how webpages load. It is required that your website has a certain amount of visitors to be tracked and added to the database. Second, Google has their own devices that will check your website. Currently, they are using a Moto G4 to test for mobile access, and a slow internet connection. Because of this, it is pretty easy to get a good score on desktop, but difficult to get a good score on mobile. The technology that drives all this is called Lighthouse. Overall, performance is the main thing users look for, so aim for good performance and fast websites. The panel discusses the correlation between performance and SEO. For example, Fox News and CNN are two of the top search results for ‘news’, but they have a dismal Google PSI score. They conclude that performance shouldn’t be ignored, but be careful about directly correlating performance and SEO. They also caution against getting obsessed over certain aspects of SEO by themselves. Panelists Dan Shapir Aimee Knight Charles Max Wood With special guest: Vitali Zaidman Sponsors Tidelift Sentry use the code “devchat” for 2 months free on Sentry’s small plan Elixir Mix Links SEO JSON Google Webmaster guidelines Google PageSpeed Insights Chrome CrUX Lighthouse Here's How the Google Speed Update Will Impact Your Site SEO for Developers - A Quick Overview Google Quality Guidelines Follow DevChatTV on Facebook and Twitter Picks Aimee Knight: Spotify CLI Dan Shapir: Chrome Dev Summit 2019 Dan Shapir on Twitter The Anubis Gates Charles Max Wood: St. George Marathon Vitali Zaidman: Vitali’s website Arzamas Academy Follow Vitali on Medium and Twitter
Vitali Zaidman is a full stack developer who works for WellDone Software Solutions and is currently working on a SEO project. Today’s show is about SEO for developers. SEO stands for search engine optimization, which helps your website appear higher on search engines. SEO has changed a lot in the past 10 years. It has become much more regulated, and the “dirty tricks” of the past will actually penalize you, so it is important to do it properly. Today the best way to promote yourself on Google besides making good content is for developers to optimize the content, make it small, operational, secure, accessible, and operate on mobile. Much of it goes back to using semantic HTML since Google looks at it before looking at the structure of your website, how valuable it is, and how users interact with it. Having good semantics helps Google determine how valuable it is, so semantic HTML should be a top priority. Semantic HTML can also make your site more accessible to users, which will in turn give you a larger audience. The panel talks about some of the challenges of SEO faced by companies. While bigger companies have the privilege of dedicated SEO teams, small companies often lack these specialists. Thankfully, Google has made their guidelines for SEO very accessible and gives you a lot of tools to track your optimization. The panel talks about different methods of SEO, such as including FAQ at the bottom of the web page, optimizing page speed, and image optimization. Structured data like questions and answers enriches the data that is shown for users on the search results page. To score your website’s SEO, Google released the tool PageSpeed Insights, which will assign your website a performance score. Google uses two main tools to track a website’s SEO. First, they use real field data. If you opt in to ‘help improve Chrome’s features and performance’ when you install Chrome, it tracks how fast websites load on your Chrome, and they collect this information to understand how webpages load. It is required that your website has a certain amount of visitors to be tracked and added to the database. Second, Google has their own devices that will check your website. Currently, they are using a Moto G4 to test for mobile access, and a slow internet connection. Because of this, it is pretty easy to get a good score on desktop, but difficult to get a good score on mobile. The technology that drives all this is called Lighthouse. Overall, performance is the main thing users look for, so aim for good performance and fast websites. The panel discusses the correlation between performance and SEO. For example, Fox News and CNN are two of the top search results for ‘news’, but they have a dismal Google PSI score. They conclude that performance shouldn’t be ignored, but be careful about directly correlating performance and SEO. They also caution against getting obsessed over certain aspects of SEO by themselves. Panelists Dan Shapir Aimee Knight Charles Max Wood With special guest: Vitali Zaidman Sponsors Tidelift Sentry use the code “devchat” for 2 months free on Sentry’s small plan Elixir Mix Links SEO JSON Google Webmaster guidelines Google PageSpeed Insights Chrome CrUX Lighthouse Here's How the Google Speed Update Will Impact Your Site SEO for Developers - A Quick Overview Google Quality Guidelines Follow DevChatTV on Facebook and Twitter Picks Aimee Knight: Spotify CLI Dan Shapir: Chrome Dev Summit 2019 Dan Shapir on Twitter The Anubis Gates Charles Max Wood: St. George Marathon Vitali Zaidman: Vitali’s website Arzamas Academy Follow Vitali on Medium and Twitter
JavaScript Jabber celebrates its 400th episode with former host Dave Smith and some other familiar voices. Each of the panelists talks about what they’ve been up to. Dave hasn’t been on the show for 3 years, but he and Jameson Dance have started a podcast called Soft Skills Engineering where they answer questions about the non-technical side of engineering. When he left the show he was the director of engineering on Hire View, and currently he works for Amazon on Alexa. Christopher Buecheler has been on several JSJ, RRU, and MJS episodes. His time is divided between contracting for startups and his own company closebrace.com, a tutorial and resource site for JavaScript developers. Dan Shapir has also been on JSJ as a guest, and is currently works for Wix doing performance tech. He enjoys speaking at conferences, such as JS Camp in Bucharest, Romania and the YGLF conference. Steve Edwards was previously on MJS 078. He started on Drupal in the PHP world, switched to JavaScript, and then a few years ago he started looking at Vue. Now he does Vue fulltime for ImageWare Systems. As for Charles, his primary focus is the podcasts, since DevChat.tv produces around 20 episodes per week. 5 new shows were started in July, and he talks about some of the challenges that that brought. One of his most popular shows recently was JSJ 389: What makes a 10x Engineer? This helped him realize that he wants to help teach people how to be a successful engineer, so he’s working on launching a new show about it. The panelists share some of their favorite JSJ episodes. They discuss the tendency of JSJ to get early access to these fascinating people when the conversation was just beginning, such as the inventor of Redux Dan Abramov, before their rise to stardom. The talk about the rise in popularity of podcasting in general. They agree that even though JavaScript is evolving and changing quickly, it’s still helpful to listen to old episodes. Charles talks about the influence JavaScript Jabber has had on other podcasts. It has spawned several spinoffs, including My JavaScript Story. He’s had several hosts start their own DevChat.tv shows based off JavaScript Jabber, including Adventures in Angular and The DevEd Podcast. JavaScript Jabber has also been the inspiration for other podcasts that aren’t part of DevChat.tv. There aren’t many podcast companies that produce as many shows as they do and they’re developing their own tools. DevChat.tv moved off of WordPress and is in the process of moving over to Podwrench. Charles talks about all the new shows that have been launched, and his view on ‘competing’ podcasts. Charles is also considering doing an audio drama that happens in a programming office, so if you would like to write and/or voice that show, he invites you to contact him. The show concludes with the panel talking about the projects they’ve been working on that they want listeners to check out. Christopher invites listeners to check out closebrace.com. He also has plans to write a short ebook on unit testing with jest, considered doing his own podcast, and invites people to check out his fiction books on his website. Dan talks about his involvement with Wix, a drag and drop website service, that recently released a technology called Corvid which lets you write JS into the website you build with Wix. This means you can design your user interface using Wix, but then automate it, add events functionality, etc. Dan is also going to be at the Chrome Dev Summit conference. Dave invites listeners to check out the Soft Skills Engineering podcast, and Charles invites listeners to subscribe to his new site maxcoders.io. Panelists Dan Shapir Christopher Buecheler Steve Edwards Dave Smith Charles Max Wood Sponsors Tidelift Sentry use the code “devchat” for 2 months free on Sentry’s small plan Adventures in .NET Links The Dev Rev MJS 099: Christopher Buecheler JSJ 338: It's Supposed to Hurt. Get Outside of Your Comfort Zone to Master Your Craft with Christopher Buecheler RRU 029: Christopher Buecheler Getting Ready to Teach Lessons Learned from Building an 84 Tutorial Software Course MJS 108: Dan Shapir JSJ 334: Web Performance API with Dan Shapir JSJ 371: The Benefits and Challenges of Server Side Rendering with Dan Shapir MJS 078: Steve Edwards JSJ 179: Redux and React with Dan Abramov JSJ 187: Vue.js with Evan You JSJ 383: What is JavaScript? JSJ 385: What Can You Build with JavaScript JSJ 390: Transposit with Adam Leventhal JSJ 395: The New Ember with Mike North JSJ 220: Teaching JavaScript with Kyle Simpson JSJ 313: Light Functional JavaScript with Kyle Simpson JSJ 124: The Origin of JavaScript with Brendan Eich JSJ 073: React with Pete Hunt and Jordan Walke JSJ 392: The Murky Past and Misty Future of JavaScript with Douglas Crockford JSJ 391: Debugging with Todd Gardner JSJ 389: What Makes a 10x Engineer? cwbuecheler.com Closebrace.com Corvid by Wix Soft Skills Engineering podcast maxcoders.io Follow DevChatTV on Facebook and Twitter Picks Steve Edwards: form.io Christopher Buecheler: Apollo GraphQL Playground @TheTimeCowboy Jake Lawrence Charles Max Wood: St. George Marathon GU Energy Original Sports Nutrition Energy Gel Vrbo devchat.tv/15minutes Dan Shapir: Revolutions by Mike Duncan podcast The Winter of the World book series Dave Smith: 13 Minutes to the Moon podcast by BBC The Mind
JavaScript Jabber celebrates its 400th episode with former host Dave Smith and some other familiar voices. Each of the panelists talks about what they’ve been up to. Dave hasn’t been on the show for 3 years, but he and Jameson Dance have started a podcast called Soft Skills Engineering where they answer questions about the non-technical side of engineering. When he left the show he was the director of engineering on Hire View, and currently he works for Amazon on Alexa. Christopher Buecheler has been on several JSJ, RRU, and MJS episodes. His time is divided between contracting for startups and his own company closebrace.com, a tutorial and resource site for JavaScript developers. Dan Shapir has also been on JSJ as a guest, and is currently works for Wix doing performance tech. He enjoys speaking at conferences, such as JS Camp in Bucharest, Romania and the YGLF conference. Steve Edwards was previously on MJS 078. He started on Drupal in the PHP world, switched to JavaScript, and then a few years ago he started looking at Vue. Now he does Vue fulltime for ImageWare Systems. As for Charles, his primary focus is the podcasts, since DevChat.tv produces around 20 episodes per week. 5 new shows were started in July, and he talks about some of the challenges that that brought. One of his most popular shows recently was JSJ 389: What makes a 10x Engineer? This helped him realize that he wants to help teach people how to be a successful engineer, so he’s working on launching a new show about it. The panelists share some of their favorite JSJ episodes. They discuss the tendency of JSJ to get early access to these fascinating people when the conversation was just beginning, such as the inventor of Redux Dan Abramov, before their rise to stardom. The talk about the rise in popularity of podcasting in general. They agree that even though JavaScript is evolving and changing quickly, it’s still helpful to listen to old episodes. Charles talks about the influence JavaScript Jabber has had on other podcasts. It has spawned several spinoffs, including My JavaScript Story. He’s had several hosts start their own DevChat.tv shows based off JavaScript Jabber, including Adventures in Angular and The DevEd Podcast. JavaScript Jabber has also been the inspiration for other podcasts that aren’t part of DevChat.tv. There aren’t many podcast companies that produce as many shows as they do and they’re developing their own tools. DevChat.tv moved off of WordPress and is in the process of moving over to Podwrench. Charles talks about all the new shows that have been launched, and his view on ‘competing’ podcasts. Charles is also considering doing an audio drama that happens in a programming office, so if you would like to write and/or voice that show, he invites you to contact him. The show concludes with the panel talking about the projects they’ve been working on that they want listeners to check out. Christopher invites listeners to check out closebrace.com. He also has plans to write a short ebook on unit testing with jest, considered doing his own podcast, and invites people to check out his fiction books on his website. Dan talks about his involvement with Wix, a drag and drop website service, that recently released a technology called Corvid which lets you write JS into the website you build with Wix. This means you can design your user interface using Wix, but then automate it, add events functionality, etc. Dan is also going to be at the Chrome Dev Summit conference. Dave invites listeners to check out the Soft Skills Engineering podcast, and Charles invites listeners to subscribe to his new site maxcoders.io. Panelists Dan Shapir Christopher Buecheler Steve Edwards Dave Smith Charles Max Wood Sponsors Tidelift Sentry use the code “devchat” for 2 months free on Sentry’s small plan Adventures in .NET Links The Dev Rev MJS 099: Christopher Buecheler JSJ 338: It's Supposed to Hurt. Get Outside of Your Comfort Zone to Master Your Craft with Christopher Buecheler RRU 029: Christopher Buecheler Getting Ready to Teach Lessons Learned from Building an 84 Tutorial Software Course MJS 108: Dan Shapir JSJ 334: Web Performance API with Dan Shapir JSJ 371: The Benefits and Challenges of Server Side Rendering with Dan Shapir MJS 078: Steve Edwards JSJ 179: Redux and React with Dan Abramov JSJ 187: Vue.js with Evan You JSJ 383: What is JavaScript? JSJ 385: What Can You Build with JavaScript JSJ 390: Transposit with Adam Leventhal JSJ 395: The New Ember with Mike North JSJ 220: Teaching JavaScript with Kyle Simpson JSJ 313: Light Functional JavaScript with Kyle Simpson JSJ 124: The Origin of JavaScript with Brendan Eich JSJ 073: React with Pete Hunt and Jordan Walke JSJ 392: The Murky Past and Misty Future of JavaScript with Douglas Crockford JSJ 391: Debugging with Todd Gardner JSJ 389: What Makes a 10x Engineer? cwbuecheler.com Closebrace.com Corvid by Wix Soft Skills Engineering podcast maxcoders.io Follow DevChatTV on Facebook and Twitter Picks Steve Edwards: form.io Christopher Buecheler: Apollo GraphQL Playground @TheTimeCowboy Jake Lawrence Charles Max Wood: St. George Marathon GU Energy Original Sports Nutrition Energy Gel Vrbo devchat.tv/15minutes Dan Shapir: Revolutions by Mike Duncan podcast The Winter of the World book series Dave Smith: 13 Minutes to the Moon podcast by BBC The Mind
JavaScript Jabber celebrates its 400th episode with former host Dave Smith and some other familiar voices. Each of the panelists talks about what they’ve been up to. Dave hasn’t been on the show for 3 years, but he and Jameson Dance have started a podcast called Soft Skills Engineering where they answer questions about the non-technical side of engineering. When he left the show he was the director of engineering on Hire View, and currently he works for Amazon on Alexa. Christopher Buecheler has been on several JSJ, RRU, and MJS episodes. His time is divided between contracting for startups and his own company closebrace.com, a tutorial and resource site for JavaScript developers. Dan Shapir has also been on JSJ as a guest, and is currently works for Wix doing performance tech. He enjoys speaking at conferences, such as JS Camp in Bucharest, Romania and the YGLF conference. Steve Edwards was previously on MJS 078. He started on Drupal in the PHP world, switched to JavaScript, and then a few years ago he started looking at Vue. Now he does Vue fulltime for ImageWare Systems. As for Charles, his primary focus is the podcasts, since DevChat.tv produces around 20 episodes per week. 5 new shows were started in July, and he talks about some of the challenges that that brought. One of his most popular shows recently was JSJ 389: What makes a 10x Engineer? This helped him realize that he wants to help teach people how to be a successful engineer, so he’s working on launching a new show about it. The panelists share some of their favorite JSJ episodes. They discuss the tendency of JSJ to get early access to these fascinating people when the conversation was just beginning, such as the inventor of Redux Dan Abramov, before their rise to stardom. The talk about the rise in popularity of podcasting in general. They agree that even though JavaScript is evolving and changing quickly, it’s still helpful to listen to old episodes. Charles talks about the influence JavaScript Jabber has had on other podcasts. It has spawned several spinoffs, including My JavaScript Story. He’s had several hosts start their own DevChat.tv shows based off JavaScript Jabber, including Adventures in Angular and The DevEd Podcast. JavaScript Jabber has also been the inspiration for other podcasts that aren’t part of DevChat.tv. There aren’t many podcast companies that produce as many shows as they do and they’re developing their own tools. DevChat.tv moved off of WordPress and is in the process of moving over to Podwrench. Charles talks about all the new shows that have been launched, and his view on ‘competing’ podcasts. Charles is also considering doing an audio drama that happens in a programming office, so if you would like to write and/or voice that show, he invites you to contact him. The show concludes with the panel talking about the projects they’ve been working on that they want listeners to check out. Christopher invites listeners to check out closebrace.com. He also has plans to write a short ebook on unit testing with jest, considered doing his own podcast, and invites people to check out his fiction books on his website. Dan talks about his involvement with Wix, a drag and drop website service, that recently released a technology called Corvid which lets you write JS into the website you build with Wix. This means you can design your user interface using Wix, but then automate it, add events functionality, etc. Dan is also going to be at the Chrome Dev Summit conference. Dave invites listeners to check out the Soft Skills Engineering podcast, and Charles invites listeners to subscribe to his new site maxcoders.io. Panelists Dan Shapir Christopher Buecheler Steve Edwards Dave Smith Charles Max Wood Sponsors Tidelift Sentry use the code “devchat” for 2 months free on Sentry’s small plan Adventures in .NET Links The Dev Rev MJS 099: Christopher Buecheler JSJ 338: It's Supposed to Hurt. Get Outside of Your Comfort Zone to Master Your Craft with Christopher Buecheler RRU 029: Christopher Buecheler Getting Ready to Teach Lessons Learned from Building an 84 Tutorial Software Course MJS 108: Dan Shapir JSJ 334: Web Performance API with Dan Shapir JSJ 371: The Benefits and Challenges of Server Side Rendering with Dan Shapir MJS 078: Steve Edwards JSJ 179: Redux and React with Dan Abramov JSJ 187: Vue.js with Evan You JSJ 383: What is JavaScript? JSJ 385: What Can You Build with JavaScript JSJ 390: Transposit with Adam Leventhal JSJ 395: The New Ember with Mike North JSJ 220: Teaching JavaScript with Kyle Simpson JSJ 313: Light Functional JavaScript with Kyle Simpson JSJ 124: The Origin of JavaScript with Brendan Eich JSJ 073: React with Pete Hunt and Jordan Walke JSJ 392: The Murky Past and Misty Future of JavaScript with Douglas Crockford JSJ 391: Debugging with Todd Gardner JSJ 389: What Makes a 10x Engineer? cwbuecheler.com Closebrace.com Corvid by Wix Soft Skills Engineering podcast maxcoders.io Follow DevChatTV on Facebook and Twitter Picks Steve Edwards: form.io Christopher Buecheler: Apollo GraphQL Playground @TheTimeCowboy Jake Lawrence Charles Max Wood: St. George Marathon GU Energy Original Sports Nutrition Energy Gel Vrbo devchat.tv/15minutes Dan Shapir: Revolutions by Mike Duncan podcast The Winter of the World book series Dave Smith: 13 Minutes to the Moon podcast by BBC The Mind
Your favorite Marks Mirchandani and Mandel are back hosting this week to touch base with Angela Yu about recent updates in Google Maps. As Angela describes Google Maps at a high level, it is your window into the real world, with coverage of Earth’s land and oceans. Google works hard to keep that information updated with satellite pictures, street view Google vehicles, and even backpacks for hikers to record hard to reach areas. The Google Maps API makes it easy for developers to use Maps data in their own projects. It can be used for something as simple as showing location to something more complicated, for example showing the user specific things around them to help them make decisions. Game developers can create rich experiences by building real-world gaming situations with Maps and augmented reality. Using the Places API can display parks, government buildings, and other interesting places beyond streets. And the Routes API can expand the user experience by providing directions, tracking drivers in real time, etc. Maps and Google Cloud together work well with BigQuery to search huge amounts of data and visualize them on a map. In the future, Angela is particularly excited about how ridesharing apps will continue to use Maps and Routes to optimize their businesses. She also looks forward to more augmented reality projects beyond gaming, where data, directions, and more are overlaid on the physical world. Angela Yu Angela Yu is a developer advocate for Google Maps Platform. Throughout her career, she has geeked out on voice recognition, mobile app development, and IoT. You can find her trapped in escape rooms or on Twitter. Cool things of the week Google to acquire Looker blog New Translate API capabilities can help localization experts and global enterprises blog Google Cloud networking in depth: Cloud CDN blog Save money by stopping and starting Compute Engine instances on schedule blog An update on Sunday’s service disruption blog Interview Google Maps Platform site blog docs Google Maps Places site Google Maps Routes site Google Maps Treks site Visualizing data from Firebase on a Google Map site Google Maps Platform Codelabs site BigQuery site BigQuery Public Datasets docs Deck.GL site Google Maps SDK for Android Beta site Popular Antipodes on Google Maps site The True Size of countries site Google Maps on Github site Google Maps Client Libraries site StreetView Gallery site Earth Engine site xkcd: Map Projections site Beautiful data visualizations using deck.gl on Google Maps demo and docs Question of the week What is helm, and how do I use it? GCP Podcast Episode 50: Helm with Michelle Noorali and Matthew Butcher podcast Kubernetes Podcast podcast and twitter Kuberenetes twitter Where can you find us next? Angela will be at the Chrome Dev Summit. Mark Man will be at Tokyo Next. Mark Mirch will be customer filming for Stack Chat in NYC. Sound Effect Attribution “Striking a Match” by Nebulousflynn of Freesound.org “Bad Beep” by RICHERIandTV of Freesound.org “Correct” by Tristan_Lohengrin of Freesound.org “Spaceship Atmosphere 02” by RICHERIandTV of Freesound.org “At the jazz concert Crowd laugh.wav” by Ftom_woysky of Freesound.org
Di episode bonus ini saya akan bercerita tentang pengalaman pertama saya menghadiri Chrome Dev Summit 2018. Sehari sebelum acara Chrome Dev Summit, saya bertemu dengan Mas Ariya Hidayat yang memang domisili di San Jose, dekat dengan lokasi hotel dan venue Experts Summit. Dan saya diberi bocoran bahwa Chrome Dev Summititu serunya adalah bagian networking-nya karena untuk sesi talks-nya dapat dinikmati secara live-streaming via youtube. Dan itulah yang saya lakukan! Pastinya banyak developer kelas dunia berseliweran disana, sebagian besar karyawan Google sih, beberapa idola saya. Jadi sekalian berburu selfie atau sekedar say hi. Setelah nonton beberapa sesi, terutama sesi yang dibawakan oleh pak Paul Irish tentang performa dan tools lighthouse.. eh, ternyata pak Paul malah nongkrong jaga stand lighthouse. Ngga kebayang sih, orang sepenting beliau masih sempat ikutan jaga stand. Ya mumpung beliau idola saya sejak HTML5 Boilerplate, say hi dan foto bareng tentunya. Saat dulu diminta untuk membawakan materi tentang Progressive Web Apps di TechInAsia Product Development Conference 2017 saya banyak belajar topik tersebut dari online course ini. Instrukturnya Pete LePage yang sangat, sangat lucu dan membawakan materi dengan menarik. Jauh dari kata boring. Saya yakin beberapa teman-teman di Indonesia pernah bertemu atau melihat bapak Pete ini karena beliau pernah datang ke Indonesia untuk mengisi materi workshop PWA. Di hari kedua CDS sekilas saya melihat sosok tersebut. Awalnya saya lupa namanya sampai harus googling dulu supaya ingat namanya. Kemudian tentu, saya bertemu dengan Jeff Posnick yang menginterview saya dan meloloskan saya menjadi GDE. Menariknya, saya sempat bertemu pak Jeff ini dihari pertama, tapi saya ngga ngeh kalo itu dia. Beda banget tampilannya di video call dengan aslinya, jadi pangling saya. Ketika ngobrol dengan Mas Yohan saya bilang pengen ketemu pak Jeff, dia kaget. “Lah, yang kemaren sebelah gue i Lalu di hari kedua atau hari terakhir, saya bisa bertemu developer heroes seperti pak Ben Galbraith, pak Dion Almaer, ibu Elizabeth Sweeny, bang Addy Osmanidan om Alex Russell! Itu dia cerita singkatnya. Oh iya, agar tidak ketinggalan informasi terbaru dari podcast ini, silakan subscribe ke email newsletter disini.
web.dev is a new developer resource released at Chrome Dev Summit last year to help developers with topics such as fast load times, network resilience, SEO and more. With integrated lighthouse, the automated performance auditing tool, it can analyse your sites and provide deep insight into what you can do to improve. Join us this week with Rob Dodson to talk all about how web.dev came about, why it is so important, all its great features and what could be coming in the future. Oh! and listen for a chance to WIN a FREE ticket to React Amsterdam, the largest React conference worldwide! Visit the website for This Week in Web, resources & more: https://thewebplatformpodcast.com/180-webdev Follow The Web Platform podcast on Twitter for regular updates @TheWebPlatform.
This week we cover many of the great things announced at Chrome Dev Summit 2018. We talk about some of the exciting new things coming to the web, the new resource for web developers (web.dev) how the Squoosh app brings together all of the latest modern best practices including web workers, web assembly and PWA techniques to deliver a great experience and Justin opens with a priceless Santa impression - what more could you need to kick off your December? Visit the website for This Week in Web, resources & more: https://thewebplatformpodcast.com/178-chrome-dev-summit-recap Follow The Web Platform podcast on Twitter for regular updates @TheWebPlatform.
Feeling empowered to design on the web can be a challenge. With the recently demoed Project VisBug by Adam Argyle (@argyleink) at Chrome Dev Summit, that's changing. VisBug allows any website to become an artboard to be shaped, allowing designers and developers alike a new set of freedom to find joy with designing on the web. In this episode, we dive into the challenges of designing for the web, how VisBug helps alleviate some of the pain points, and just what's next for the latest in punk rock web development tools. Visit the website for This Week in Web, resources & more: https://thewebplatformpodcast.com/176-visbug Follow The Web Platform podcast on Twitter for regular updates @TheWebPlatform.
We plow through the highlights of Chrome Dev Summit and talk about some really cool new things launched during the conference
En este episodio hablamos sobre el ecosistema Chrome que ha dado lugar a muchos proyectos diferentes, tanto que incluso tiene su propio evento, la Chrome Dev Summit de la cuál repasamos algunas de sus presentaciones. Para más información: https://www.programaresunamierda.com/2018/11/episodio-36-chrome-y-sus-cositas.html Música de : www.dilo.org
En este episodio hablamos sobre el ecosistema Chrome que ha dado lugar a muchos proyectos diferentes, tanto que incluso tiene su propio evento, la Chrome Dev Summit de la cuál repasamos algunas de sus presentaciones. Para más información: https://www.programaresunamierda.com/2018/11/episodio-36-chrome-y-sus-cositas.html Música de : www.dilo.org
Добрый день уважаемые слушатели. Представляем новый выпуск подкаста RWpod. В этом выпуске: Ruby Announcing Hanami v1.1.0, Ruby 2.5 allows rescue/else/ensure inside do/end blocks и Ruby Hash[key] Showdown :symbol vs “string” Scaling the GitLab database, Transactions in Ruby on Rails and Atomic Bugs и WTF is a Thread Implementing OCR using a Random Forest Classifier in Ruby, How to Be Good at Turbolinks 5 и Sample Data with Factory Bot and Faker JavaScript DOS security vulnerability, October 2017, Saying Goodbye to Firebug и I Watched All of the Chrome Dev Summit 2017 Videos So You Don't Have To Modern JavaScript Explained For Dinosaurs и Success with CSS React-mosaic - a full-featured React Tiling Window Manager, Webpack-dashboard - a CLI dashboard for your webpack dev server, HEML - an open source markup language for building responsive email и Light Modal - a simple light-weight yet powerful and customizable css modal for content and images
及川卓也さんをゲストに迎えて、Google I/O, Assistant, Lens, Kotlin, Android O, 機械学習などについて話しました。 Show Notes 第189回 及川卓也(2012年1月23日放送)| NHK プロフェッショナル 仕事の流儀 Google I/O 2017 Google Cloud Next Android Meets TensorFlow: How to Accelerate Your App with AI Rebuild: Supporter Developer Keynote (Google I/O '17) Google Home、日本で年内発売へ 源義朝 Intel Buys Mobileye in $15.3 Billion Bid to Lead Self-Driving Car Market Tango Windows Mixed Reality Google Lens Turns Your Camera Into a Search Box Microsoft Office Lens Introducing Echo Show - Amazon Official Site Google Assistant SDK Here’s how to use the CIA’s ‘weeping angel’ smart TV hack Kotlin on Android. Now official Everything new in Android O Android O notification channels, notification snooze and how they work Chrome Dev Summit 2016 Building for Your Next Billion Users (Google I/O '17) Android Go is a lightweight version of Android for crazy cheap phones Android Instant Apps Chromer - Browser Of course Google is killing off Spaces Standards body warned SMS 2FA is insecure and nobody listened Google goes after Slack and splits Hangouts into Chat and Meet Google Is Finally Killing Picasa Past, Present and Future of AI / Machine Learning (Google I/O '17) ATAP goes AWOL at Google I/O Kill Google AMP before it KILLS the web
Go check out JS Remote Conf! 02:14 - Pascal Precht Introduction Twitter GitHub Blog 03:03 - Getting Involved with the Angular 2 Documentation thoughtram Blog 05:10 - Deciding Where to Contribute 06:16 - Contributors and Contributions Dependency Injection (DI) 15:41 - APIs 18:02 - Reactions to Trainings 20:15 - ngUpgrade @teropa (Tero Parviainen) 25:34 - View Caching 26:53 - “Chapters” (Documentation Format) angular.io/docs/ Developer Guides 29:26 - Giving the Broad Overview of Angular 2 32:02 - Approaching Documentation 34:18 - Contributing to the Documentation Project wardb@ideablade.com Picks Heart of a Dog (Ward) Chrome Dev Summit codelabs (Aaron) Toastmasters (Chuck) Nexus 5X (Pascal) @robwormald (Pascal) thoughtram Blog (Ward)
Go check out JS Remote Conf! 02:14 - Pascal Precht Introduction Twitter GitHub Blog 03:03 - Getting Involved with the Angular 2 Documentation thoughtram Blog 05:10 - Deciding Where to Contribute 06:16 - Contributors and Contributions Dependency Injection (DI) 15:41 - APIs 18:02 - Reactions to Trainings 20:15 - ngUpgrade @teropa (Tero Parviainen) 25:34 - View Caching 26:53 - “Chapters” (Documentation Format) angular.io/docs/ Developer Guides 29:26 - Giving the Broad Overview of Angular 2 32:02 - Approaching Documentation 34:18 - Contributing to the Documentation Project wardb@ideablade.com Picks Heart of a Dog (Ward) Chrome Dev Summit codelabs (Aaron) Toastmasters (Chuck) Nexus 5X (Pascal) @robwormald (Pascal) thoughtram Blog (Ward)
Go check out JS Remote Conf! 02:14 - Pascal Precht Introduction Twitter GitHub Blog 03:03 - Getting Involved with the Angular 2 Documentation thoughtram Blog 05:10 - Deciding Where to Contribute 06:16 - Contributors and Contributions Dependency Injection (DI) 15:41 - APIs 18:02 - Reactions to Trainings 20:15 - ngUpgrade @teropa (Tero Parviainen) 25:34 - View Caching 26:53 - “Chapters” (Documentation Format) angular.io/docs/ Developer Guides 29:26 - Giving the Broad Overview of Angular 2 32:02 - Approaching Documentation 34:18 - Contributing to the Documentation Project wardb@ideablade.com Picks Heart of a Dog (Ward) Chrome Dev Summit codelabs (Aaron) Toastmasters (Chuck) Nexus 5X (Pascal) @robwormald (Pascal) thoughtram Blog (Ward)