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Simple Programmer is now BACK with a brand new YouTube Channel- SUBSCRIBE HERE: https://simpleprogrammer.com/subscribespyt
Simple Programmer is now BACK with a brand new YouTube Channel- SUBSCRIBE HERE: https://simpleprogrammer.com/subscribespyt
A² The Show - Ep 270 Feat. John "The Bulldog" Sonmez John @thebulldogminset is the founder of Bulldog Mindset, focused on helping people transition from the victim mindset to the Bulldog Mindset to empower their lives and transform themselves to reach their highest potential in life. He is the author of the best-selling book "Soft Skills: The Software Developer's Life Manual," and WSJ best-selling book "The Complete Software Developer's Career Guide." He is a life-coach and motivational speaker and entrepreneur who helps people become better at their jobs, make more money, and live better lives. He also likes to run marathons. Get the A2 limited (5 remaining shirts) at https://teespring.com/a2theshirt Follow the podcast hosts on social media: @a2theshow Hosts Ali Haejl @scoobz.mp4 alihaejl.com Ali Al Shammari @freshprinceofmishref Social Media Management @crooked.pearl & @nad16er --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/a2theshow/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/a2theshow/support
Today the panel talks with Matt Holt who works full time on the Caddy Web Server. The panel discusses things such as how it compares to other popular tools as well as lessons learned while working on it. Sponsors Faithlife | Now Hiring Software Developers The Complete Software Developer’s Career Guide – Grab a Copy Today Audible.com CacheFly Panel AJ ONeal Aimee Knight Charles Max Wood Special Guest Matthew Holt Links https://www.papaparse.com/ OSI model https://apilayer.com/ https://github.com/mholt Picks Aimee Cloud flare ball indication section Learning about other cultures AJ https://webinstall.dev/caddy/ https://webinstall.dev/serviceman/ https://insights.stackoverflow.com/survey/2020 https://www.beyondcodebootcamp.com/ Charles Most Valuable Programmer (MVP Program) https://podcastplaybook.co Lightbringer series Matthew Holt Sourcegraph Follow JavaScript Jabber on Twitter: @JSJabber
Today the panel talks with Matt Holt who works full time on the Caddy Web Server. The panel discusses things such as how it compares to other popular tools as well as lessons learned while working on it. Sponsors Faithlife | Now Hiring Software Developers The Complete Software Developer’s Career Guide – Grab a Copy Today Audible.com CacheFly Panel AJ ONeal Aimee Knight Charles Max Wood Special Guest Matthew Holt Links https://www.papaparse.com/ OSI model https://apilayer.com/ https://github.com/mholt Picks Aimee Cloud flare ball indication section Learning about other cultures AJ https://webinstall.dev/caddy/ https://webinstall.dev/serviceman/ https://insights.stackoverflow.com/survey/2020 https://www.beyondcodebootcamp.com/ Charles Most Valuable Programmer (MVP Program) https://podcastplaybook.co Lightbringer series Matthew Holt Sourcegraph Follow JavaScript Jabber on Twitter: @JSJabber
Today the panel talks with Matt Holt who works full time on the Caddy Web Server. The panel discusses things such as how it compares to other popular tools as well as lessons learned while working on it. Sponsors Faithlife | Now Hiring Software Developers The Complete Software Developer’s Career Guide – Grab a Copy Today Audible.com CacheFly Panel AJ ONeal Aimee Knight Charles Max Wood Special Guest Matthew Holt Links https://www.papaparse.com/ OSI model https://apilayer.com/ https://github.com/mholt Picks Aimee Cloud flare ball indication section Learning about other cultures AJ https://webinstall.dev/caddy/ https://webinstall.dev/serviceman/ https://insights.stackoverflow.com/survey/2020 https://www.beyondcodebootcamp.com/ Charles Most Valuable Programmer (MVP Program) https://podcastplaybook.co Lightbringer series Matthew Holt Sourcegraph Follow JavaScript Jabber on Twitter: @JSJabber
Ran Levy, a well known and prolific technology podcaster joins the show to talk with the panel about software bugs. Topics of discussion include the inevitability of software bugs – are they an intrinsic part of software development? Also, can they be minimized and their impact mitigated? And what can software companies, and the developers themselves, do in order to deliver properly working software. Sponsors Raygun | Click here to get started on your free 14-day trial The Complete Software Developer’s Career Guide – Grab a Copy Today Faithlife | Now Hiring Software Developers CacheFly Panel Charles Max Wood AJ ONeal Aimee Knight Dan Shappir Steve Edwards Special Guest Ran Levi Links Are Software Bugs Inevitable? The Wix Engineering Podcast Picks Dan The Explosion of the Ariane 5 Mars Climate Orbiter AJ Magic Keyboard & Trackpad 2 Final Fantasy 1 GameCube + GBA + HDMI Homebrew Guide Charles Max Wood MUD List of MUDs Follow JavaScript Jabber on Twitter: @JSJabber
Ran Levy, a well known and prolific technology podcaster joins the show to talk with the panel about software bugs. Topics of discussion include the inevitability of software bugs – are they an intrinsic part of software development? Also, can they be minimized and their impact mitigated? And what can software companies, and the developers themselves, do in order to deliver properly working software. Sponsors Raygun | Click here to get started on your free 14-day trial The Complete Software Developer’s Career Guide – Grab a Copy Today Faithlife | Now Hiring Software Developers CacheFly Panel Charles Max Wood AJ ONeal Aimee Knight Dan Shappir Steve Edwards Special Guest Ran Levi Links Are Software Bugs Inevitable? The Wix Engineering Podcast Picks Dan The Explosion of the Ariane 5 Mars Climate Orbiter AJ Magic Keyboard & Trackpad 2 Final Fantasy 1 GameCube + GBA + HDMI Homebrew Guide Charles Max Wood MUD List of MUDs Follow JavaScript Jabber on Twitter: @JSJabber
Ran Levy, a well known and prolific technology podcaster joins the show to talk with the panel about software bugs. Topics of discussion include the inevitability of software bugs – are they an intrinsic part of software development? Also, can they be minimized and their impact mitigated? And what can software companies, and the developers themselves, do in order to deliver properly working software. Sponsors Raygun | Click here to get started on your free 14-day trial The Complete Software Developer’s Career Guide – Grab a Copy Today Faithlife | Now Hiring Software Developers CacheFly Panel Charles Max Wood AJ ONeal Aimee Knight Dan Shappir Steve Edwards Special Guest Ran Levi Links Are Software Bugs Inevitable? The Wix Engineering Podcast Picks Dan The Explosion of the Ariane 5 Mars Climate Orbiter AJ Magic Keyboard & Trackpad 2 Final Fantasy 1 GameCube + GBA + HDMI Homebrew Guide Charles Max Wood MUD List of MUDs Follow JavaScript Jabber on Twitter: @JSJabber
For Web apps to be useful and successfully compete with native applications, they need to be able to access device features, such as the camera, local file system, Bluetooth, and more. Obviously such a mechanism needs to be secure and respect user privacy. In this episode Thomas Steiner, a Developer Advocate for the Web at Google, joins to discuss Project Fugu, and the benefits and capabilities that it already provides, and will provide in the future. Thomas, who is actively involved in this project, explains the design and development process for this project, and how it’s being rolled out and tested. Sponsors Raygun | Click here to get started on your free 14-day trial The Complete Software Developer’s Career Guide – Grab a Copy Today Audible.com CacheFly Panel Charles Max Wood AJ ONeal Aimee Knight Dan Shappir Steve Edwards Special Guest Thomas Steiner Links WICG Wake Lock Chrome Origin Trials Gatekeeping Microsoft Origin Trials WebOTP Picks Aimee Knight https://github.com/lebinh/nginx-conf Steve God’s Battalions: The Case for the Crusades AJ webinstall.dev/comrak Thomas https://excalidraw.com/ xxx Follow JavaScript Jabber on Twitter: @JSJabber
For Web apps to be useful and successfully compete with native applications, they need to be able to access device features, such as the camera, local file system, Bluetooth, and more. Obviously such a mechanism needs to be secure and respect user privacy. In this episode Thomas Steiner, a Developer Advocate for the Web at Google, joins to discuss Project Fugu, and the benefits and capabilities that it already provides, and will provide in the future. Thomas, who is actively involved in this project, explains the design and development process for this project, and how it’s being rolled out and tested. Sponsors Raygun | Click here to get started on your free 14-day trial The Complete Software Developer’s Career Guide – Grab a Copy Today Audible.com CacheFly Panel Charles Max Wood AJ ONeal Aimee Knight Dan Shappir Steve Edwards Special Guest Thomas Steiner Links WICG Wake Lock Chrome Origin Trials Gatekeeping Microsoft Origin Trials WebOTP Picks Aimee Knight https://github.com/lebinh/nginx-conf Steve God’s Battalions: The Case for the Crusades AJ webinstall.dev/comrak Thomas https://excalidraw.com/ xxx Follow JavaScript Jabber on Twitter: @JSJabber
For Web apps to be useful and successfully compete with native applications, they need to be able to access device features, such as the camera, local file system, Bluetooth, and more. Obviously such a mechanism needs to be secure and respect user privacy. In this episode Thomas Steiner, a Developer Advocate for the Web at Google, joins to discuss Project Fugu, and the benefits and capabilities that it already provides, and will provide in the future. Thomas, who is actively involved in this project, explains the design and development process for this project, and how it’s being rolled out and tested. Sponsors Raygun | Click here to get started on your free 14-day trial The Complete Software Developer’s Career Guide – Grab a Copy Today Audible.com CacheFly Panel Charles Max Wood AJ ONeal Aimee Knight Dan Shappir Steve Edwards Special Guest Thomas Steiner Links WICG Wake Lock Chrome Origin Trials Gatekeeping Microsoft Origin Trials WebOTP Picks Aimee Knight https://github.com/lebinh/nginx-conf Steve God’s Battalions: The Case for the Crusades AJ webinstall.dev/comrak Thomas https://excalidraw.com/ xxx Follow JavaScript Jabber on Twitter: @JSJabber
In this episode the panel discusses various programming topics, and whether or not they are required knowledge for JavaScript programmers. This includes topics such as scopes and hoisting, closures, the event-loop, and the behavior of this. For each such topic, the panel discusses whether or not JavaScript devs are required to know and understand them in order to write better code, or pass job interviews, or to understand existing codebases. Alternatively, if these are topics that JavaScript developers don’t need to know, and maybe should even avoid. Sponsors Audible.com The Complete Software Developer’s Career Guide – Grab a Copy Today CacheFly Panel AJ ONeal Charles Max Wood Dan Shappir Steve Edwards Links 10 Interview Questions Every JavaScript Developer Should Know – AKA: The Keys to JavaScript Mastery https://kentcdodds.com/blog/newspaper-code-structure https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Closures Your Coffee Shop Doesn’t Use Two-Phase Commit Picks AJ Crock on JS Follow JavaScript Jabber on Twitter: @JSJabber
In this episode the panel discusses various programming topics, and whether or not they are required knowledge for JavaScript programmers. This includes topics such as scopes and hoisting, closures, the event-loop, and the behavior of this. For each such topic, the panel discusses whether or not JavaScript devs are required to know and understand them in order to write better code, or pass job interviews, or to understand existing codebases. Alternatively, if these are topics that JavaScript developers don’t need to know, and maybe should even avoid. Sponsors Audible.com The Complete Software Developer’s Career Guide – Grab a Copy Today CacheFly Panel AJ ONeal Charles Max Wood Dan Shappir Steve Edwards Links 10 Interview Questions Every JavaScript Developer Should Know – AKA: The Keys to JavaScript Mastery https://kentcdodds.com/blog/newspaper-code-structure https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Closures Your Coffee Shop Doesn’t Use Two-Phase Commit Picks AJ Crock on JS Follow JavaScript Jabber on Twitter: @JSJabber
In this episode the panel discusses various programming topics, and whether or not they are required knowledge for JavaScript programmers. This includes topics such as scopes and hoisting, closures, the event-loop, and the behavior of this. For each such topic, the panel discusses whether or not JavaScript devs are required to know and understand them in order to write better code, or pass job interviews, or to understand existing codebases. Alternatively, if these are topics that JavaScript developers don’t need to know, and maybe should even avoid. Sponsors Audible.com The Complete Software Developer’s Career Guide – Grab a Copy Today CacheFly Panel AJ ONeal Charles Max Wood Dan Shappir Steve Edwards Links 10 Interview Questions Every JavaScript Developer Should Know – AKA: The Keys to JavaScript Mastery https://kentcdodds.com/blog/newspaper-code-structure https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Closures Your Coffee Shop Doesn’t Use Two-Phase Commit Picks AJ Crock on JS Follow JavaScript Jabber on Twitter: @JSJabber
MongoDB is a popular option for databases which provides objects that look and act like JavaScript Objects. We brought an expert, Joe Karlsson to clear up some of the confusion on how to arrange your data in MongoDB. Joe provides a rundown on how to think about your data with a smaller dataset, a medium sized dataset, and a large dataset. The panel also dives into how the database works and how things are managed and arranged by the MongoDB database engine. Sponsors The Complete Software Developer’s Career Guide – Grab a Copy Today CacheFly Panel Charles Max Wood Aimee Knight Dan Shappir AJ ONeal Special Guest Joe Karlsson Links M320: Data Modeling developer.mongodb.com Picks Chuck Leadership in Turbulent Times Aimee ProsourceFit Acupressure Mat AJ Acupuncture Mat SQL vs NoSQL Chiron Beta Prime ssh-pubkey Ars Technica War Stories: Ultima Online (about sharding) Joe Karlsson Stamped From the Beginning
In this episode of the iPhreaks Show, the panel discusses iOS and other development books that are great resources to help during the course of the iOS developers’ journey. Sponsor CacheFly Panel Alex Bush Charles Wood Links iOS Programming: The Big Nerd Ranch Guide Cocoa Design Patterns Pragmatic Programmer Soft Skills Complete Software Developer’s Career Guide MaxCoder’s Guid to Finding Your Dream Developer Job Refactoring Working Effectively with Legacy Code Clean Code Design Patterns Clean Architecture Structure and Interpretation of Computer Programs Growing Object Oriented Programming, Guided by Tests Reactive Programming with RxJS Practical Object-Oriented Design Using Ruby Test Driven Development by Example SmallTalk Best Practice Patterns Extreme Programming Explained Picks Alex Bush: Robert Heinlein, Author Charles Wood: Breath of the Wild The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints Follow iPhreaks Show on Twitter > @iphreaks
MongoDB is a popular option for databases which provides objects that look and act like JavaScript Objects. We brought an expert, Joe Karlsson to clear up some of the confusion on how to arrange your data in MongoDB. Joe provides a rundown on how to think about your data with a smaller dataset, a medium sized dataset, and a large dataset. The panel also dives into how the database works and how things are managed and arranged by the MongoDB database engine. Sponsors The Complete Software Developer’s Career Guide – Grab a Copy Today CacheFly Panel Charles Max Wood Aimee Knight Dan Shappir AJ ONeal Special Guest Joe Karlsson Links M320: Data Modeling developer.mongodb.com Picks Chuck Leadership in Turbulent Times Aimee ProsourceFit Acupressure Mat AJ Acupuncture Mat SQL vs NoSQL Chiron Beta Prime ssh-pubkey Ars Technica War Stories: Ultima Online (about sharding) Joe Karlsson Stamped From the Beginning
MongoDB is a popular option for databases which provides objects that look and act like JavaScript Objects. We brought an expert, Joe Karlsson to clear up some of the confusion on how to arrange your data in MongoDB. Joe provides a rundown on how to think about your data with a smaller dataset, a medium sized dataset, and a large dataset. The panel also dives into how the database works and how things are managed and arranged by the MongoDB database engine. Sponsors The Complete Software Developer’s Career Guide – Grab a Copy Today CacheFly Panel Charles Max Wood Aimee Knight Dan Shappir AJ ONeal Special Guest Joe Karlsson Links M320: Data Modeling developer.mongodb.com Picks Chuck Leadership in Turbulent Times Aimee ProsourceFit Acupressure Mat AJ Acupuncture Mat SQL vs NoSQL Chiron Beta Prime ssh-pubkey Ars Technica War Stories: Ultima Online (about sharding) Joe Karlsson Stamped From the Beginning
In this episode of the iPhreaks Show, the panel discusses iOS and other development books that are great resources to help during the course of the iOS developers’ journey. Sponsor CacheFly Panel Alex Bush Charles Wood Links iOS Programming: The Big Nerd Ranch Guide Cocoa Design Patterns Pragmatic Programmer Soft Skills Complete Software Developer’s Career Guide MaxCoder’s Guid to Finding Your Dream Developer Job Refactoring Working Effectively with Legacy Code Clean Code Design Patterns Clean Architecture Structure and Interpretation of Computer Programs Growing Object Oriented Programming, Guided by Tests Reactive Programming with RxJS Practical Object-Oriented Design Using Ruby Test Driven Development by Example SmallTalk Best Practice Patterns Extreme Programming Explained Picks Alex Bush: Robert Heinlein, Author Charles Wood: Breath of the Wild The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints Follow iPhreaks Show on Twitter > @iphreaks
Our guest is Daniel Lathrop, a freelance investigative data journalist and educator, and formerly a newspaper reporter and Professor of Journalism and Media informatics at the University of Iowa. On this show, Daniel describes how JavaScript is a great choice for doing data analysis and data science, potentially even more so than other languages which are often used for this purpose, such as Python and R. Daniel also provides information about lots of useful tools and techniques to use in this context. Sponsors The Complete Software Developer’s Career Guide – Grab a Copy Today CacheFly Panel AJ ONeal Aimee Knight Dan Shappir Special Guest Daniel Lathrop Links https://daniel.buzz/ Picks Aimee Forecasting at Scale Dan Shappir https://www.data-forge-notebook.com AJ Propaganda in Nazi Germany Daniel Lathrop https://www.data-forge-notebook.com https://www.claudiajs.com https://js4ds.org/ Follow JavaScript Jabber on Twitter > @JSJabber
Our guest is Daniel Lathrop, a freelance investigative data journalist and educator, and formerly a newspaper reporter and Professor of Journalism and Media informatics at the University of Iowa. On this show, Daniel describes how JavaScript is a great choice for doing data analysis and data science, potentially even more so than other languages which are often used for this purpose, such as Python and R. Daniel also provides information about lots of useful tools and techniques to use in this context. Sponsors The Complete Software Developer’s Career Guide – Grab a Copy Today CacheFly Panel AJ ONeal Aimee Knight Dan Shappir Special Guest Daniel Lathrop Links https://daniel.buzz/ Picks Aimee Forecasting at Scale Dan Shappir https://www.data-forge-notebook.com AJ Propaganda in Nazi Germany Daniel Lathrop https://www.data-forge-notebook.com https://www.claudiajs.com https://js4ds.org/ Follow JavaScript Jabber on Twitter > @JSJabber
Our guest is Daniel Lathrop, a freelance investigative data journalist and educator, and formerly a newspaper reporter and Professor of Journalism and Media informatics at the University of Iowa. On this show, Daniel describes how JavaScript is a great choice for doing data analysis and data science, potentially even more so than other languages which are often used for this purpose, such as Python and R. Daniel also provides information about lots of useful tools and techniques to use in this context. Sponsors The Complete Software Developer’s Career Guide – Grab a Copy Today CacheFly Panel AJ ONeal Aimee Knight Dan Shappir Special Guest Daniel Lathrop Links https://daniel.buzz/ Picks Aimee Forecasting at Scale Dan Shappir https://www.data-forge-notebook.com AJ Propaganda in Nazi Germany Daniel Lathrop https://www.data-forge-notebook.com https://www.claudiajs.com https://js4ds.org/ Follow JavaScript Jabber on Twitter > @JSJabber
Our guest is Daniel Lathrop, a freelance investigative data journalist and educator, and formerly a newspaper reporter and Professor of Journalism and Media informatics at the University of Iowa. On this show, Daniel describes how JavaScript is a great choice for doing data analysis and data science, potentially even more so than other languages which are often used for this purpose, such as Python and R. Daniel also provides information about lots of useful tools and techniques to use in this context. Sponsors The Complete Software Developer’s Career Guide – Grab a Copy Today CacheFly Panel AJ ONeal Aimee Knight Dan Shappir Special Guest Daniel Lathrop Links https://daniel.buzz/ Picks Aimee Forecasting at Scale Dan Shappir https://www.data-forge-notebook.com AJ Propaganda in Nazi Germany Daniel Lathrop https://www.data-forge-notebook.com https://www.claudiajs.com https://js4ds.org/ Follow JavaScript Jabber on Twitter > @JSJabber
Our guest is Daniel Lathrop, a freelance investigative data journalist and educator, and formerly a newspaper reporter and Professor of Journalism and Media informatics at the University of Iowa. On this show, Daniel describes how JavaScript is a great choice for doing data analysis and data science, potentially even more so than other languages which are often used for this purpose, such as Python and R. Daniel also provides information about lots of useful tools and techniques to use in this context. Sponsors The Complete Software Developer’s Career Guide – Grab a Copy Today CacheFly Panel AJ ONeal Aimee Knight Dan Shappir Special Guest Daniel Lathrop Links https://daniel.buzz/ Picks Aimee Forecasting at Scale Dan Shappir https://www.data-forge-notebook.com AJ Propaganda in Nazi Germany Daniel Lathrop https://www.data-forge-notebook.com https://www.claudiajs.com https://js4ds.org/ Follow JavaScript Jabber on Twitter > @JSJabber
Our guest is Daniel Lathrop, a freelance investigative data journalist and educator, and formerly a newspaper reporter and Professor of Journalism and Media informatics at the University of Iowa. On this show, Daniel describes how JavaScript is a great choice for doing data analysis and data science, potentially even more so than other languages which are often used for this purpose, such as Python and R. Daniel also provides information about lots of useful tools and techniques to use in this context. Sponsors The Complete Software Developer’s Career Guide – Grab a Copy Today CacheFly Panel AJ ONeal Aimee Knight Dan Shappir Special Guest Daniel Lathrop Links https://daniel.buzz/ Picks Aimee Forecasting at Scale Dan Shappir https://www.data-forge-notebook.com AJ Propaganda in Nazi Germany Daniel Lathrop https://www.data-forge-notebook.com https://www.claudiajs.com https://js4ds.org/ Follow JavaScript Jabber on Twitter > @JSJabber
The reality of Covid-19 has changed the way that many people work, working remotely from home instead of coming into the office. Achieving work-life balance can always be a challenge in tech, but can be especially challenging when work and life mix in the same location. In this episode the panel discusses this important topic, and how it has impacted their own lives and careers. Also, how it changes over time and during a career. Sponsors The Complete Software Developer's Career Guide - Grab a Copy Today Panel AJ O’Neal Aimee Knight Charles Max Wood Steve Edwards Dan Shappir Links https://www.figma.comJ SJ 431: Personal Branding for Developers with Morad Stern GPT3() - The spreadsheet function to rule them all. I built a React dice component with GPT-3 Picks Steve How Does The Internet Work? AJ https://blerp.com https://webinstall.dev/curlie Dan Wear Masks https://github.com/openai/gpt-3
The reality of Covid-19 has changed the way that many people work, working remotely from home instead of coming into the office. Achieving work-life balance can always be a challenge in tech, but can be especially challenging when work and life mix in the same location. In this episode the panel discusses this important topic, and how it has impacted their own lives and careers. Also, how it changes over time and during a career. Sponsors The Complete Software Developer's Career Guide - Grab a Copy Today Panel AJ O’Neal Aimee Knight Charles Max Wood Steve Edwards Dan Shappir Links https://www.figma.comJ SJ 431: Personal Branding for Developers with Morad Stern GPT3() - The spreadsheet function to rule them all. I built a React dice component with GPT-3 Picks Steve How Does The Internet Work? AJ https://blerp.com https://webinstall.dev/curlie Dan Wear Masks https://github.com/openai/gpt-3
The reality of Covid-19 has changed the way that many people work, working remotely from home instead of coming into the office. Achieving work-life balance can always be a challenge in tech, but can be especially challenging when work and life mix in the same location. In this episode the panel discusses this important topic, and how it has impacted their own lives and careers. Also, how it changes over time and during a career. Sponsors The Complete Software Developer's Career Guide - Grab a Copy Today Panel AJ O’Neal Aimee Knight Charles Max Wood Steve Edwards Dan Shappir Links https://www.figma.comJ SJ 431: Personal Branding for Developers with Morad Stern GPT3() - The spreadsheet function to rule them all. I built a React dice component with GPT-3 Picks Steve How Does The Internet Work? AJ https://blerp.com https://webinstall.dev/curlie Dan Wear Masks https://github.com/openai/gpt-3
Connell has been working on Universal AR, a cross-platform Augmented Reality kit for Mobile Browsers delivering native-level performance using only JavaScript (and a bit of WASM under the hood). We talk about what AR actually is, some of its use cases, as well as the fascinating details as to how the Zap.works team is delivering near native performance and accuracy without IR, LiDAR, or any other of the common advanced AR sensors - just the good ol' phone camera and advanced Computer Visual trickery. Sponsors Scout APM | We'll donate $5 to the open source project of your choice when you deploy Scout The Complete Software Developer's Career Guide - Grab a Copy Today Do you code in .NET? Check out Adventures in .NET Panel AJ ONeal Steve Edwards Special Guest Connell Gauld Links Universal AR Zappar content development tools Picks Steve Looney Tunes AJ ripgrep Connell Dark on Netflix
Connell has been working on Universal AR, a cross-platform Augmented Reality kit for Mobile Browsers delivering native-level performance using only JavaScript (and a bit of WASM under the hood). We talk about what AR actually is, some of its use cases, as well as the fascinating details as to how the Zap.works team is delivering near native performance and accuracy without IR, LiDAR, or any other of the common advanced AR sensors - just the good ol' phone camera and advanced Computer Visual trickery. Sponsors Scout APM | We'll donate $5 to the open source project of your choice when you deploy Scout The Complete Software Developer's Career Guide - Grab a Copy Today Do you code in .NET? Check out Adventures in .NET Panel AJ ONeal Steve Edwards Special Guest Connell Gauld Links Universal AR Zappar content development tools Picks Steve Looney Tunes AJ ripgrep Connell Dark on Netflix
Connell has been working on Universal AR, a cross-platform Augmented Reality kit for Mobile Browsers delivering native-level performance using only JavaScript (and a bit of WASM under the hood). We talk about what AR actually is, some of its use cases, as well as the fascinating details as to how the Zap.works team is delivering near native performance and accuracy without IR, LiDAR, or any other of the common advanced AR sensors - just the good ol' phone camera and advanced Computer Visual trickery. Sponsors Scout APM | We'll donate $5 to the open source project of your choice when you deploy Scout The Complete Software Developer's Career Guide - Grab a Copy Today Do you code in .NET? Check out Adventures in .NET Panel AJ ONeal Steve Edwards Special Guest Connell Gauld Links Universal AR Zappar content development tools Picks Steve Looney Tunes AJ ripgrep Connell Dark on Netflix
In this episode of JavaScript Jabber we interview Neha Sharma about the importance of coding front-end JavaScript with accessibility in mind. She explains practical methods in which to generate accessible UX when using front-end frameworks, such as React and Angular. For example, the importance of generating proper semantic markup, and considering behaviors and responses to user interactions. Panel AJ O’Neal Aimee Knight Dan Shappir Guest Neha Sharma Sponsors Scout APM | We'll donate $5 to the open source project of your choice when you deploy Scout The Complete Software Developer's Career Guide - Grab a Copy Today React Native Remote Conf 2020 Picks Neha Sharma: Follow Neha on Twitter > @hellonehha Nader Dabit (@dabit3) AJ O’Neal: Microservices Parody AHA Programming Windows 10: tar, ssh, curl, pwsh Yellowstone webinstall.dev Aimee Knight: Software should be designed to last Dan Shappir: #javascriptriddle Follow JavaScript Jabber on Twitter > @JSJabber
In this episode of JavaScript Jabber we interview Neha Sharma about the importance of coding front-end JavaScript with accessibility in mind. She explains practical methods in which to generate accessible UX when using front-end frameworks, such as React and Angular. For example, the importance of generating proper semantic markup, and considering behaviors and responses to user interactions. Panel AJ O’Neal Aimee Knight Dan Shappir Guest Neha Sharma Sponsors Scout APM | We'll donate $5 to the open source project of your choice when you deploy Scout The Complete Software Developer's Career Guide - Grab a Copy Today React Native Remote Conf 2020 Picks Neha Sharma: Follow Neha on Twitter > @hellonehha Nader Dabit (@dabit3) AJ O’Neal: Microservices Parody AHA Programming Windows 10: tar, ssh, curl, pwsh Yellowstone webinstall.dev Aimee Knight: Software should be designed to last Dan Shappir: #javascriptriddle Follow JavaScript Jabber on Twitter > @JSJabber
In this episode of JavaScript Jabber we interview Neha Sharma about the importance of coding front-end JavaScript with accessibility in mind. She explains practical methods in which to generate accessible UX when using front-end frameworks, such as React and Angular. For example, the importance of generating proper semantic markup, and considering behaviors and responses to user interactions. Panel AJ O’Neal Aimee Knight Dan Shappir Guest Neha Sharma Sponsors Scout APM | We'll donate $5 to the open source project of your choice when you deploy Scout The Complete Software Developer's Career Guide - Grab a Copy Today React Native Remote Conf 2020 Picks Neha Sharma: Follow Neha on Twitter > @hellonehha Nader Dabit (@dabit3) AJ O’Neal: Microservices Parody AHA Programming Windows 10: tar, ssh, curl, pwsh Yellowstone webinstall.dev Aimee Knight: Software should be designed to last Dan Shappir: #javascriptriddle Follow JavaScript Jabber on Twitter > @JSJabber
GUEST BIO: Phil Burgess is an independent consultant who helps companies to implement software applications and systems that support their business objectives. Phil has worked for independent software houses as well as large corporate companies across industry sectors including finance, utilities, legal and fine art. In 2017, Phil launched the I.T. Career Energizer podcast with the goal of helping others to start, develop and grow successful careers in tech. PRESENTER BIO: John Sonmez is a software developer who founded SimpleProgrammer.com to help software developers and other technical professionals advance their careers and to live happier lives. John is author of the best-selling books “Soft Skills: The Developer’s Life Manual” and “The Complete Software Developer’s Career Guide” as well as host of the Simple Programmer podcast.’ EPISODE DESCRIPTION: Today’s episode of the I.T. Career Energizer Podcast is the 100th in the series, so it is a bit different, something special. Today, it is Phil Burgess himself who is being interviewed by John Sonmez. Phil first got involved in the IT industry in the mid-90s. He has developed and implemented new systems across numerous industries. Today, his focus is on helping others to develop their IT careers. He does so for everyone from absolute beginners to seasoned professionals. KEY TAKEAWAYS: (00.31) – Phil starts, by introducing John Sonmez, who was his very first podcast guest. Today, it is John who is going to be asking the questions and Phil who will be answering them. (1.32) – John starts by congratulating Phil on his 100th episode. A remarkable achievement, especially when you consider that most podcasters only record around 7 episodes before giving up. John thanks Phil for inspiring so many in the coding and development industry. (3.24) – In true I.T. Career Energizer podcast tradition, John asks Phil to share a unique career tip. Phil says that it is vital to look at your plans and goals, so that you can understand where your career is going. He encourages people to put together a five-year plan. Of course, no IT career is linear and the industry moves fast. So, the plan is just a guide to give you some direction and a way of recognizing where you are. Setting a guiding goal will help you to navigate through the ever-changing world of IT. Particularly, when you regularly review and tweak your plan. Phil explains that pairing a long-term plan with short-term goals is especially helpful. Short-term goals like learning a language, taking on a public speaking engagement, attending more conferences or writing articles are all helpful. Setting goals like these will help you to identify the best ways to grow your skills, network and ultimately move your career forward. (5.24) – At this point, Phil is asked to share his worst career moment. For Phil 4 or 5 years into his career he attended a meeting with senior management and a director. The project was not going well, so the director was trying to motivate everyone and identify the issues. At one point, the director asked a technical question that had clearly been fed to him. When Phil answered it became apparent that the director had no real understanding of the issue, so could not really follow the response. Instead of seeking more understanding, the director tried to belittle Phil in front of about 15 senior managers. It felt terrible. But, it taught Phil the importance of understanding your audience. John says he has had a few similar experiences. It reminds him of one of Robert Greene’s 48 Laws of Power, one of which is “never outshine the master”. (8.25) – How about your career highlight? For Phil being able to help others with their careers is the thing he enjoys the most. Running the podcast has enabled him to do this for more people, so for him this has been a career highlight. He has also enjoyed meeting and speaking to so many great professionals. As well as getting feedback from his audience and answering their questions. (11.18) – John asks Phil to share one thing that excites him about the future of a career in IT. Phil says the fact that the possibilities are limitless is the most exciting thing. He went on to say that “the genie is out of the bottle”. In the future, there will be opportunities that we cannot even conceive of right now. John concurs, for example, the idea of a driverless car would have been inconceivable up until a few years ago. Phil commented on the fact that technology touches every aspect of our lives and moves really fast. He goes on to speak about the amazing rate at which the motor car replaced the horse-drawn carriage. In just over a decade, a New York City road went from having one car and dozens of horses on it, in a photo, to being full of Model T. Fords. A strong example of just how fast technology changes our lives. (13.19) – What first attracted you to a career in IT? Phil explains that at university he did a building survey course, something that had nothing to do with technology, whatsoever. As part of the course he was introduced to AutoCAD which was running on Unix systems. For him, it was fascinating. By the time he left university, he was torn between pursuing an IT career working in the building surveyor field. Phil did not know what to do, so he took a local job with a pharmaceutical company. Fortunately, they were in the process of implementing a brand new system that a small software house had built for them. Phil got involved and off the back of that he was offered work by the software firm. That was it, Phil had officially commenced his IT career. (14.50) – What is the best career advice you were given? Phil paraphrased the best piece of advice he has received, so far, by saying - “It's all about the delivery of the message and be able to bring your message to life.” Someone he has worked for, a few times, explained to him that he needed to use stories and examples to add color to the message you are delivering. You have to make it come alive to catch people’s attention and help them to understand and recognize the importance of your message. (15.49) – If you were to start your IT career again, right now, what would you do? Says he would be trying out as many things as he can before settling on something more specific. In particular, he would attend as many conferences as possible, listening, learning and evaluating. He also said that he would focus more on solving problems rather than the actual technology used. (16.31) – What career objectives are you focusing on? Phil wants to grow his reach and influence so that he can help as many people as possible. He is also keen to finish his first book and get it published. Phil also says he wants to make sure that he keeps his podcast going strong. (17.20) – What’s the number one non-technical skill that has helped you in your career? Listening is Phil’s number one non-technical skill. Really listening, rather than simply waiting for the break in the conversation, so you can make your point. Actually, hearing, absorbing and understanding what the other person is trying to say, then, taking the time to think before giving your response. (18.23) – John asks Phil for a parting piece of advice. Phil says you need to remember that “it’s your career.” Of course, you need to achieve the appraisal goals set out by the company you work for. But, you also need to make sure that what you achieve your own goals. It is up to you to progress your career, to learn what you need to know and make sure that you work on the right projects. BEST MOMENTS: (1.05) JOHN – “The IT industry is growing fast and going through a heap of challenges and it won't get better by accident. Thank you so much for playing your part.” (4.21) PHIL – “People need to set maybe a five-year plan in place, in terms of where they're going.” (6.49) PHIL – “Understand your audience when you're actually responding to things like questions.” (8.57) PHIL – “I'm quite keen to empower people.” (17.37) PHIL – “The ability to actually listen and think about what you're hearing before responding, is a really good skill to develop.” (19.25) PHIL – “Think about what you want. Take ownership and responsibility of your own career.” CONTACT PHIL BURGESS: Twitter: https://twitter.com/PhilTechCareer LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/philburgess/ Website: https://itcareerenergizer.com
John Sonmez, the Founder of Simple Programmer and author of “Soft Skills: The Software Developer’s Life Manual“ and “The Complete Software Developer’s Career Guide” joins me on today’s podcast! John originally started Simple Programmer in 2009 as a personal blog where he tried to distill what he was learning into simple, easily understandable content. Today, Simple […] The post 23: Improve Your Career and Live A Better Life with John Sonmez appeared first on Jeremy Callahan.
Panel: Chris Fritz Erik Hanchett Divya Sasidharan Joe Eames Special Guests: Dan Pastori In this episode of Views on Vue, the panelists discuss re-using VueJS mixins and filtering Google Map data with Dan Pastori. Dan currently is a developer working with VueJS and Laravel development. They talk about what Laravel is, why they would recommend using it in conjunction with Vue, and the role Vue can hold in a Laravel application. They also touch on why Vue became popular in the Laravel community, the direction of Laravel in the future, and much more! In particular, we dive pretty deep on: Framework Summit Dan intro What is Laravel? History of Laravel and Vue working together Laracasts What would you recommend about Laravel? Laravel documentation Laravel Elixir Very minimal setup VueCasts.com What role does Vue have in a Laravel application? What is a single-page application? Building applications Vue can take over everything or just certain parts depending on what you want Built in Laravel tools to create API Why Vue became popular in the Laravel community Vue is straightforward and flexible Changes coming Direction or Laravel in the future Hybrid single-page applications And much, much more! Links: Framework Summit Vue Laravel Laracasts Laravel documentation Laravel Elixir VueCasts.com @danpastori DanPastori.com Dan’s GitHub Dan’s Medium Picks: Chris Pebble 2 Watch Codenames Vue Contributor Days Divya Oil Painting using HTML and CSS Video: Designing Tools for CSS Grid and Variable fonts Erik The Complete Software Developer's Career Guide by John Sonmez Crushing It! by Gary Vaynerchuk Joe Casio Outdoor Smart Watch Barking Up the Wrong Tree by Eric Barker Dan The Subtle Art of Not Giving a F*ck by Mark Manson Tribe of Mentors by Timothy Ferriss
Panel: Chris Fritz Erik Hanchett Divya Sasidharan Joe Eames Special Guests: Dan Pastori In this episode of Views on Vue, the panelists discuss re-using VueJS mixins and filtering Google Map data with Dan Pastori. Dan currently is a developer working with VueJS and Laravel development. They talk about what Laravel is, why they would recommend using it in conjunction with Vue, and the role Vue can hold in a Laravel application. They also touch on why Vue became popular in the Laravel community, the direction of Laravel in the future, and much more! In particular, we dive pretty deep on: Framework Summit Dan intro What is Laravel? History of Laravel and Vue working together Laracasts What would you recommend about Laravel? Laravel documentation Laravel Elixir Very minimal setup VueCasts.com What role does Vue have in a Laravel application? What is a single-page application? Building applications Vue can take over everything or just certain parts depending on what you want Built in Laravel tools to create API Why Vue became popular in the Laravel community Vue is straightforward and flexible Changes coming Direction or Laravel in the future Hybrid single-page applications And much, much more! Links: Framework Summit Vue Laravel Laracasts Laravel documentation Laravel Elixir VueCasts.com @danpastori DanPastori.com Dan’s GitHub Dan’s Medium Picks: Chris Pebble 2 Watch Codenames Vue Contributor Days Divya Oil Painting using HTML and CSS Video: Designing Tools for CSS Grid and Variable fonts Erik The Complete Software Developer's Career Guide by John Sonmez Crushing It! by Gary Vaynerchuk Joe Casio Outdoor Smart Watch Barking Up the Wrong Tree by Eric Barker Dan The Subtle Art of Not Giving a F*ck by Mark Manson Tribe of Mentors by Timothy Ferriss
Don't let the name of this show (or book, The Complete Software Developers Career Guide), fool you. Having this conversation with John Sonmez, one of the co-authors of the book, was a little bit of a shift for me in term of what I talk about on the show but it's also one of my favorite topics. We talked a lot about self-development, personal productivity, books that changed John's life and how you can take a different perspective on all of this. The amazing thing about John is that he's got both sides of the equation when it comes to what he calls 'soft skills' as well as the tangible skills you need to have as a software developer (basic overview of things like 'what is source control, what is unit testing, what is continuous integration, etc.). He's also devoted an entire chapter to women in tech, which is awesome. We covered SO much in this interview! Even if you're not a software developer, you're going to gain a ton from this conversation. John is a huge inspiration and the book is definitely worth grabbing! Questions I Asked John Before we jump into your new book, The Complete Software Developer's Career Guide, can you share your story with the listeners? Was there one specific thing or incident that brought on this shift for you in your business? From software developer to performance coach? How did you step into 'act as if'? Pulling in the mindset and self-development into the software development space isn't common. How did the book come about? Were there any epiphanies or things that have come out of writing the book that surprised you? Are you running paid traffic to promote the book? You're producing a LOT of content, how big is your team? What You're Going to Learn How John went from a shy kid to software development to performance coach What book kept showing up in John's life that changed everything How John multi-purposed his blog posts into the book (and how you can too) How John used the Pomodoro timer to get the book written How John marketed the book What John means by 'Unmortgage Your Life" Where to Connect with John Website | YouTube | Twitter Links from this episode The Complete Software Developer's Career Guide Book Simple Programmer Think & Grow Rich As A Man Thinketh Psycho-Cybernetics
John Sonmez joins us on this episode of The Innovation Engine to discuss whether coding is a skill everyone should learn, how to lead a team of developers when you find yourself in a leadership position, and what the programming language (or languages) of the future will be. John is the Founder of Simple Programmer, a website where he tirelessly pursues his vision of transforming complex issues into simple solutions, and the author of newly-released The Complete Software Developer's Career Guide. He also helps software engineers, programmers, and other technical professionals boost their careers and live more fulfilled lives. John is launching The Complete Software Developer's Career Guide at a special price of $0.99 for the Kindle version on launch day, July 19th, 2017. Go to SimpleProgrammer.com/careerguide to get something special in addition to the $0.99 price. Resources: Learn more at Simple Programmer Read John's books: The Complete Software Developer's Career Guide Soft Skills: The Software Developer's Life Manual
How To Self-Publish A Book? A lot of people dream of writing a book. A few years ago, I would say that this was almost impossible. There were a lot of difficulties, you had to get a publishing company, they had to accept you, you had to have an audience for you to sell, etc. Too many things to think and to take care for just one person. Nowadays, things are much easier. There is a new modality called "self-publishing", in which you can publish your book without needing a publishing company to get everything done for you. However, this raises a lot of questions. "How can I self-publish a book?", "Where do I start looking for things?", "What will I need in order to self-publish my book?". Well, in this video I'll take you step-by-step in the process of self-publishing a book, showing that you can do that too. Watch this video to find out how to publish your own book. Visit: http://simpleprogrammer.com/ How To Market Yourself Course: http://simpleprogrammer.com/howtomarketyourself Soft Skills Book: http://simpleprogrammer.com/softskills The Complete Software Developer’s Career Guide: https://simpleprogrammer.com/2016/07/04/complete-software-developers-career-guide-introduction/