Podcasts about connect tech

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Best podcasts about connect tech

Latest podcast episodes about connect tech

Happy Work
#1572 - Tout savoir sur... De l'onboarding à la fidélisation - Interview de Noëmie Loiseau - DRH SNCF Connect & Tech

Happy Work

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 16, 2024 22:10


Attirer les meilleurs candidats, bien les accueillir, les fidéliser... pas simple dans la période que nous vivons, n'est-ce pas ? En tant qu'observateur du monde du travail depuis bientôt 10 ans, je dois bien vous avouer que cela me fait toujours plaisir quand je croise un.e dirigeant.e ou une DRH qui, au lieu d'être fataliste, agit, mais surtout, qui n'a pas attendu la crise du recrutement pour le faire.C'est le cas de Noëmie Loiseau, la DRH de SNCF Connect & Tech qui m'a expliqué sa vision sur ces sujets et, surtout, ses actions concrètes. J'ai appris énormément pendant cette interview et j'espère qu'il en sera de même pour vous.Bonne écoute,GSoutenez ce podcast http://supporter.acast.com/happy-work. Hébergé par Acast. Visitez acast.com/privacy pour plus d'informations.

Le Panier
#287 - SNCF Connect & Tech - Activer 15 millions d'acheteurs avec la bonne offre au bon moment

Le Panier

Play Episode Listen Later May 17, 2024 53:03


“On ne maîtrise pas le prix des billets. Via l'animation commerciale, on pousse les offres disponibles et on développe des services complémentaires pour optimiser la vente de l'ensemble des mobilités”. Laurent Kretz échange avec Julia Etaix, directrice commerciale et membre du Comex de SNCF Connect & Tech. Elle nous explique comment l'application grand public s'est imposée comme le premier e-commerçant de France avec 210 millions de billets vendus en 2023. Pour comprendre cette explosion des ventes, Julia nous aide à décrypter les tendances de consommation en matière de mobilité durable. Elle nous explique également comment elle a élargi son offre pour favoriser une expérience de bout en bout. Dans ce nouvel épisode du Panier, vous trouverez des clés pour : 00:00:00 - Intro 00:05:55- Innover pour rendre la mobilité durable accessible à tous ; 00:12:0O - Toucher 1 français sur 3 en proposant un service tout en un ; 00:14:30 - Étendre son offre au-delà des best-sellers en favorisant l'expérience de bout en bout ; 00:26:00 - Nouer un partenariat pour étendre son offre à des services complémentaires ; 00:35:40 - Gérer la robustesse tech pour absorber 1,5 millions de transactions en une journée ; 00:40:30 - Jouer sur d'autres leviers que le prix en poussant la bonne offres au bon moment ; 00:45:20 - Offrir le meilleur service client en France et s'en servir comme d'un levier d'optimisation et d'innovation ; 00:50:10 - Élargir son champ des possibles en allant vers plus de personnalisation et en internationalisant son offre. Pour en savoir plus sur les références abordées dans l'épisode : HS 1 to 1 Biarritz : Quelle place pour l'IA quand on a 1 milliard de visites par an SNCF Connect & Tech élu meilleur service client de l'année Et quelques dernières infos à vous partager : Suivez Le Panier sur Instagram lepanier.podcast ! Inscrivez- vous à la newsletter sur leanier.io pour cartonner en e-comm ! Écoutez les épisodes sur Apple Podcasts, Spotify ou encore Podcast Addict Le Panier est un podcast produit par CosaVostra, du label Orso Media.

Le Panier
[Extrait] - Comment anticiper ses volumes de ventes - SNCF Connect & Tech

Le Panier

Play Episode Listen Later May 16, 2024 5:27


Pour découvrir l'épisode en entier, écoutez l'épisode 287, disponible dès le 17/05/24 sur votre plateforme d'écoute.

Le Panier
HS 1 to 1 Biarritz : Quelle place pour l'IA quand tu as 5M d'utilisateurs quotidien, avec David Nedzela de SNCF Connect & Tech

Le Panier

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 10, 2023 21:26


“Il ne faut pas tomber dans l'IA pour l'IA. Elle doit répondre à des "use cases”. Dans le cadre de la série spéciale organisée en marge du 1 : 1 à Biarritz sur le thème de “l'Éthique c'est chic”, Laurent Kretz échange avec David Nedzela, Chief Marketing & Customer Officer pour SNCF Connect & Tech. Ensemble, ils réfléchissent aux bons usages de l'IA générative et de sa place dans le parcours client. David nous partage des clés pour choisir les bons services alimentés par l'IA en fonction des services qu'ils peuvent rendre à ses équipes comme à ses utilisateurs. Dans cet épisode, on parle de : Pousser l'IA générative en interne en montrant les services qu'elle peut rendre aux équipes [07”40] ; Reconnecter les parcours clients grâce à une barre de recherche universelle alimentée par l'IA [10”50] ; Sélection uniquement les usages de l'IA qui répondent à des besoins concrets [15”30] ; Invisibiliser les outils de l'IA (notifications, informations voyageur) dans le parcours utilisateur [17”40]. Pour en savoir plus sur les références abordées dans l'épisode : Le non sens cohérent de l'IA générative Le fond Google pour les médias (DNI) Et quelques dernières infos à vous partager : Suivez Le Panier sur Instagram @lepanier.podcast ! Inscrivez- vous à la newsletter sur leanier.io pour cartonner en e-comm ! Écoutez les épisodes sur Apple Podcasts, Spotify ou encore Podcast Addict Le Panier est un podcast produit par CosaVostra, du label Orso Media. Photo créditée à Magali Delporte ©.

Modern Web
S10E01- Developing an API is Like Building Legos with Ray Gesualdo

Modern Web

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 4, 2023 31:58


In this episode, Rob Ocel is joined by Ray Gesualdo, live at Connect Tech 2022, to discuss API development and how the process is a lot like building with the internationally famous toy, Legos. They share some fond memories of growing up and now raising kids around Legos, talk about the traits and characteristics of the best component and service APIs, and show how some of the great victories and lasting lessons of Lego apply to building more resilient, modular, reusable, and consistent software.   Host Rob Ocel- Software Architect and Engineering Lead at This Dot Labs   Guest Ray Gesualdo- Staff Software Architect at SalesLoft   Sponsored by This Dot Labs

Modern Web
S09E24- React: Past, Present, & Future with Cory House

Modern Web

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 28, 2022 44:33


In this episode, Rob Ocel and Jesse Tomchak are joined by Cory House at Connect Tech 2022 to discuss the past, present, and future of React. They talk about: lessons learned from 7 years of React (featuring discussions of coupling, testing, and hooks), how to pick a React meta-framework, and what pillars they think successful developers should prioritize.   Hosts Rob Ocel- Software Architect and Team Lead at This Dot Labs Jesse Tomchak- Software Architect at This Dot Labs   Guest Cory House- Founder of ReactJS Consulting   Sponsored by This Dot Labs

Modern Web
S09E22- When the World Ends, We Need Documentation with Jeremy Meiss

Modern Web

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 14, 2022 40:16


In this episode, Rob Ocel and Jesse Tomchak are joined by Jeremy Meiss live at Connect Tech 2022. They talk about the table stakes of CI/CD and having a high performing team, and the vast array of options available to run DevOps and be successful. They also dive into the topic of mentorship and documentation, and how it benefits teams and the industry at large.   Hosts Rob Ocel- Software Architect and Engineering Lead at This Dot Labs Jesse Tomchak- Software Architect at This Dot Labs   Guest Jeremy Meiss- Director of DevRel at CircleCI   Sponsored by This Dot Labs

IT Visionaries
Getting Our Health Together: How to Connect Tech and Humanity

IT Visionaries

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 14, 2021 52:29


Some people are super health conscious, with their days driven by early-morning trips to the gym and kale smoothies. Others try their very best to avoid thinking about anything health-related at all, pushing thoughts of vegetables or long walks right out of their minds. Regardless of which camp you fall in, your overall health is important and your medical history is critical data. So why is it so difficult to get access to important health information for ourselves and those we love? Is the onus on us? Or is it due to a breakdown within the system? Either way, we clearly need systems and technology that support our health. Vijay Anand is the EVP of Engineering at Castlight Health, and he believes that technology combined with the human touch can increase everyone's health.“What we actually do is a combination of things. [We] certainly help you with content that helps you understand, why is that important? And what is it? But it's also about now using the power of high touch, right? This is essentially a key element of what our care guides do. On their single panel as they support our users, they actually have your whole health profile, but also the key recommendations and the gaps that you need to be closing.” Healthcare can feel like the ocean. It's huge, important, overwhelming at times, and its waves can crash down on a person if they're not careful. There's a sea of healthcare information out there. Without some assistance, no one person can gather it all, make sense of it, figure out a plan, and then act accordingly. Fortunately, we do have help. There is technology that can guide us through the data and help us figure out what to do. Well-intentioned people can be a great support too. The key is getting technology and humanity working together toward the common goal of individual and community health. On this episode of IT Visionaries, Vijay explains the steps we can take to create a system that aggregates health data, personalizes it, and then helps engage people in making healthy decisions. He also shares how future innovation can help those who need services the most by identifying need and targeting care. Enjoy the episode!Takeaways:Three Tech Steps Toward a Healthy System: The first step is aggregating data from a variety of sources concerning health providers and procedures. Secondly, users need the ability to have personalized health information that is driven by the data. The last step involves engaging users so that they can adjust their behaviors to act on information that supports their health. Commonality Between Taxes and Healthcare: Making technological advances for people is not only about taking something that is incredibly complex and making it more simple. People need confidence that they can actually do something in order to even give it a try. The need for confidence to complete one's taxes is similar to the confidence required to care for one's health, as it is in many other important endeavors. The human touch can help support people's confidence and encourage their perseverance.Tech/Health Innovations: Targeting services to people who really need it is something to look forward to and be motivated to do. Information will hopefully become less siloed and more holistic. A.I. advances will target/personalize health even more and then drive healthy behavior changes.IT Visionaries is brought to you by the Salesforce Platform - the #1 cloud platform for digital transformation of every experience. Build connected experiences, empower every employee, and deliver continuous innovation - with the customer at the center of everything you do. Learn more at salesforce.com/platform

TECH C ON TECHNOINVASION
stay connect tech c live 14

TECH C ON TECHNOINVASION

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 22, 2020 44:43


STAY CONNECT LIVE TECH C 14 TECH C DJ / PRODUCER is a techno dj & producer based in Naples, Italy, extremely fascinated by black music, genesis of techno, interfacing with house music naturally ... Mainly influenced by the vein of Detroit / Chicago / New York, skipping from Italy to Switzerland and again to Berlin and the rest of Europe, Tech C has been able to expand its capabilities by spreading its sound by participating in festivals such as Love Parade In Germany, and in places such as Metropolis, Cyclope and Twister in Italy, Eiffel in Shenzhen (China), Oxa in Zurich and more. He has played with several djs and producers including Mark Broom, DJ Lukas, dj Du'art, dj Sasha Carassi, dj Felix Kröcher, Mark Broom, dj Horacio Cruz, dj Danilo Vigorito, dj Murphy, dj Fernanda Martins, dj Paula Cazenave, dj Professor Fatima Hajji, DJ Karm Rise, Dario Sorano. live streaming on: https://djtechc.webnode.com/ https://zeno.fm/imliveonsettechcdj FREE APP FOR ANDROID https://t.co/QHy2W5ejJS?amp=1 If you liketo support us you can donate here https://paypal.com/pools/c/8nXaq5MvXc LISTEN MY MUSIC ON: on Soundcloud https://soundcloud.com/tech_c on Beatport https://www.beatport.com/artist/tech-c/516621 on Itunes https://t.co/wFsPkfTxe6 on Deezer https://t.co/sgcGR4fOuI on Spotify https://t.co/R5BnsUflq6 on bandcamp https://techc.bandcamp.com/ Podcast on: listen to spotify podcast https://t.co/hf3GIaVL27?amp=1 listen to apple podcast https://t.co/1SOuzC8jUC?amp=1 listen to deezer podcast https://deezer.com/show/344702 listen to heartthis poscast https://hearthis.at/djtechc/ Booking Tech C booking worldwide: bookingtechcdj@outlook.com Italy & Artist management djtechc@outlook.com Twitter https://twitter.com/techcdj

Beneath the Dirt
#61 - Did The Rydas Slugs Connect?, Tech N9ne to EnterFear & More!

Beneath the Dirt

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 23, 2019 21:54


Support the channel by donating: https://streamlabs.com/beneathdirt Cash App - $beneathdirt In this episode I talk about new music from Cam'ron, $uicideboy$, Sean Price, King ISO, and more. The Rydas released a new song this week called "We Got Mad Slugs". But did the slugs connect? Tech N9ne announced the release date of his new album "EnterFear". Is he releasing music to fast? Thank you for tuning in, and enjoy! Follow Beneath The Dirt: beneathdirt.com instagram.com/beneathdirt twitter.com/beneathdirt facebook.com/beneathdirt1 youtube.com/beneathdirt

Devchat.tv Master Feed
AiA 254: Nx and Angular CLI with Brandon Roberts

Devchat.tv Master Feed

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 27, 2019 43:28


Sponsors Sentry use the code “devchat” for 2 months free on Sentry small plan Angular Bootcamp iPhreaks Podcast CacheFly Panel Aaron Frost Joe Eames Alyssa Nicoll Joined By Special Guest: Brandon Roberts Episode Summary Joining the panel in this episode is Brandon Roberts, a Senior Angular Engineer at Narwhal Technologies. Brandon was previously on the Angular Team at Google. Brandon talks about what he is working on currently at Narwhal. They have recently launched more support for React and Web Components and Brandon talks about his role in that project. The panel then asks when Narwhal will release support for Knockout and jQuery. They talk about cases when to use Nx and when to use Angular CLI. They then talk about the effort required to learn Nx. They then talk about Narwhal's support plans for NgRx 9.   Links MAS 091: Brandon Roberts NgRx: A Reactive State of Mind (Two Day Workshop) https://www.ng-conf.org/2019/speakers/brandon-roberts/ Brandon Roberts – Medium Brandon (@brandontroberts) | Twitter Building Full-Stack Applications Using Angular CLI and Nx - Nrwl nrwl/nx: Extensible Dev Tools for Monorepos - GitHub   Picks Alyssa Nicoll: ngAir 211 - Template Streams in Angular & Change Detection Profiling w/ Dominic Elm & Kwinten Pisman Joe Eames: Roll for Adventure Board Game Stop Thief! Board Game Aaron Frost: Your local swap meet MLS Soccer Utah Jazz Brandon Roberts: Connect Tech NWA Technology Summit 2019

Adventures in Angular
AiA 254: Nx and Angular CLI with Brandon Roberts

Adventures in Angular

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 27, 2019 43:28


Sponsors Sentry use the code “devchat” for 2 months free on Sentry small plan Angular Bootcamp iPhreaks Podcast CacheFly Panel Aaron Frost Joe Eames Alyssa Nicoll Joined By Special Guest: Brandon Roberts Episode Summary Joining the panel in this episode is Brandon Roberts, a Senior Angular Engineer at Narwhal Technologies. Brandon was previously on the Angular Team at Google. Brandon talks about what he is working on currently at Narwhal. They have recently launched more support for React and Web Components and Brandon talks about his role in that project. The panel then asks when Narwhal will release support for Knockout and jQuery. They talk about cases when to use Nx and when to use Angular CLI. They then talk about the effort required to learn Nx. They then talk about Narwhal's support plans for NgRx 9.   Links MAS 091: Brandon Roberts NgRx: A Reactive State of Mind (Two Day Workshop) https://www.ng-conf.org/2019/speakers/brandon-roberts/ Brandon Roberts – Medium Brandon (@brandontroberts) | Twitter Building Full-Stack Applications Using Angular CLI and Nx - Nrwl nrwl/nx: Extensible Dev Tools for Monorepos - GitHub   Picks Alyssa Nicoll: ngAir 211 - Template Streams in Angular & Change Detection Profiling w/ Dominic Elm & Kwinten Pisman Joe Eames: Roll for Adventure Board Game Stop Thief! Board Game Aaron Frost: Your local swap meet MLS Soccer Utah Jazz Brandon Roberts: Connect Tech NWA Technology Summit 2019

All Angular Podcasts by Devchat.tv
AiA 254: Nx and Angular CLI with Brandon Roberts

All Angular Podcasts by Devchat.tv

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 27, 2019 43:28


Sponsors Sentry use the code “devchat” for 2 months free on Sentry small plan Angular Bootcamp iPhreaks Podcast CacheFly Panel Aaron Frost Joe Eames Alyssa Nicoll Joined By Special Guest: Brandon Roberts Episode Summary Joining the panel in this episode is Brandon Roberts, a Senior Angular Engineer at Narwhal Technologies. Brandon was previously on the Angular Team at Google. Brandon talks about what he is working on currently at Narwhal. They have recently launched more support for React and Web Components and Brandon talks about his role in that project. The panel then asks when Narwhal will release support for Knockout and jQuery. They talk about cases when to use Nx and when to use Angular CLI. They then talk about the effort required to learn Nx. They then talk about Narwhal's support plans for NgRx 9.   Links MAS 091: Brandon Roberts NgRx: A Reactive State of Mind (Two Day Workshop) https://www.ng-conf.org/2019/speakers/brandon-roberts/ Brandon Roberts – Medium Brandon (@brandontroberts) | Twitter Building Full-Stack Applications Using Angular CLI and Nx - Nrwl nrwl/nx: Extensible Dev Tools for Monorepos - GitHub   Picks Alyssa Nicoll: ngAir 211 - Template Streams in Angular & Change Detection Profiling w/ Dominic Elm & Kwinten Pisman Joe Eames: Roll for Adventure Board Game Stop Thief! Board Game Aaron Frost: Your local swap meet MLS Soccer Utah Jazz Brandon Roberts: Connect Tech NWA Technology Summit 2019

Devchat.tv Master Feed
RR 391: Frontend Testing Like a Rubyist with Josh Justice

Devchat.tv Master Feed

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 4, 2018 67:04


Panel: Dave Kimura Charles Max Wood Nate Hopkins Special Guest: Josh Justice In this episode of Ruby Rogues, the panelists talk with Josh Justice who is a developer, writer, and speaker. Josh streams JavaScript and web development on Friday’s at 2:00 PM (ET) here! The panelists and the guest talk about Josh’s background and frontend testing in Ruby. Check it out! Show Topics: 0:00 – Advertisement: Sentry.io 1:04 – Chuck: Hi! Dave, Nate, and myself are on the panel and our special guest is Josh Justice! I am developing a show about developer freedom and it’s called The DevRev. It will be streamed through YouTube, and I will record Friday afternoons. Check out Facebook, too! 2:11 – Josh: Thanks! I am happy to be here! 2:18 – Chuck: Introduce yourself, please! 2:24 – Josh: I have been a developer for about 14 years. I have used PHP and then got into Ruby and then frontend development. 2:46 – Chuck: You work for Big Nerd Ranch in Atlanta? 2:56 – Josh: Yep for the last 3-4 years! 3:15 – Chuck: Can you introduce the topic? 3:25 – The guest talks about Big Nerd Ranch and frontend development. Learn TDD is mentioned, too! Check it out here! 5:06 – Panel: How much bouncing do you do between React and Vue? 5:11 – Guest. 5:47 – Chuck: We need to get you on our podcast shows for React and Vue! It’s an approach that I am familiar with in Ruby – and Selenium what a pain! 6:16 – Guest: I’ve had a good experience with Cypress, actually! 7:47 – Guest: Panelist, can you share your experiences? 7:57 – Panel: Not bad experiences with testing, but now I am trying to minimize my use with JavaScript. 8:30 – Guest: I think there is a big push towards considering more server site rendering. 9:35 – Panel: What’s your recommendation to setup Cypress? 9:40 – Guest: Their docs are really great! They had some conference talks on how to set it up! 10:15 – Guest: Check out my talks about this topic. (Connect Tech 2018). 10:29 – Panel: I think Cypress is a pretty cool solution but one thing that left me confused is that you have to have an environment that is already stood-up and running. Is that accurate or has that changed? 11:00 – Guest: Can you clarify what you mean by a “running environment”? 11:04 – Panelist clarifies. 11:44 – Guest: Luckily for me I have something to say b/c I tried a week ago! 12:01 – Guest mentions Vue CLI 3. 14:38 – Panel: How can you test your code coverage? I want to know how much of my code coverage am I hitting? The applications are up and running, it’s not going through the files (per se), and is there anything that would indicate how good your coverage is with the Cypress test? 15:10 – Guest: Let me as a follow-up question: How do you approach it on the frontend? 15:24 – Panelist answers the guest’s question. 16:06 – The guest mentions Vue CLI 2 & 3. 18:31 – Chuck: Are you using the tool Istanbul? 18:36 – Guest: Yep Istanbul is the one! 18:54 – Chuck: I’ve heard some similar rumors, but can’t say. 19:02 – Panelist talks. 20:13 – Chuck: I have been working on a project and what doesn’t get test-coverage gets a candidate to get pulled-out. 20:40 – Guest: Talking about test-driven development... Guest: Have you read the original book? 21:02 – Guest: The book: “Effective Testing with RSpec 3” is updated information – check it out! The guest mentions his live stream on Friday’s. Check out the links found below! 23:57 – Panel: How is the stability with tests like Cypress with end-to-end tests? If you are testing with a login then the user has to be already created. Or what about a Twitter app – the user has to be created and not followed? How do you handle that? 24:22 – Guest: I think we are spoiled in the Rails world b/c of those... 24:53 – The guest answers the panelist’s question! 26:59 – Fresh Books! 28:07 – Guest: Does that help? 28:10 – Panel. 28:21 – Guest: I have been thinking about this, though, recently. Thinking about the contracts through the business. I have dabbled with native development and I see the cost that runs a native app. 30:21 – Panel: It’s refreshing to hear the new market’s demands. I truly haven’t seen an application that requires that. I have built some extensive applications and also very simple ones, too; the need for productivity. 31:17 – Guest mentions a talk at a conference. See here for that information! 31:43 – Guest: I have a friend who was a new developer and he really knows his stuff. He said that he didn’t know if he could be a full stack developer in the next 5-10 years. Wait a minute?! Guest: The freedom to create something that stands alone. Guest: Tom Dale is mentioned by the Guest. 33:35 – Panel: To choose Rails as a new developer (today) it’s not as easy as it was back in the day. Today you have Active Job, Action Cable and so many other components. It’s more complicated today then it was in the past. It could be overwhelming to a new developer. 35:00 – Chuck: I think a lot of that is the community’s fault and not Rails’ fault. 35:57 – Panel. 36:04 – Panel: The counter-argument could say that’s where server-less come in. 36:27 – Chuck: To some degree you can get away with it. You don’t have to worry about the infrastructure or anything else. 36:44 – Panel: Have you tried messing around with server-less functions with AWS? I have and...it’s not easy. There is not a good flow or good work flow in a server-less environment. 38:01 – Chuck: You can go to this website. It makes the setup easier b/c you are adding your Azure or AWS features. 38:30 – Panel: This topic, though, does tie back to the testing topic we were talking about earlier! 39:14 – Panel: Yeah that is why I haven’t gotten into server-less things. The Rails holistic approach is so appealing. 40:14 – Panel continues: I want to take smaller steps when it comes to technology! I want to move into things that we are laying down the tracks to make it easier travelable. That way we can consider the things we’ve learned in the past and help those in the future. 41:07 – Chuck: What are lacking then? What is the friction that is left? Seems like Cypress helped removed that but maybe not? 42:02 – Panelist mentions Cypress, Jest, Mocha, and others! 43:10 – Panel (continues): I am all about experimenting but I want to know all the reasons. What has changed and what hasn’t’ changed? 43:29 – Panel: There is an article written that talks about this topic. 43:59 – Guest mentions the video “Is TDD Dead?” (See links below.) 44:29 – Guest: I like brining thoughts together and taking his or her input and come up with my own thoughts.  46:32 – Guest (continues): The testing trophy is heavier on the top (picture of a trophy). Guest: I think the thing that draws me to unit testing is that... 47:37 – Guest: I am obsessed with testing. The guest gives a summary here! 48:15 – Chuck: We talked with Quincy Larson last week and it’s a really good take on what we are doing and what we are trying to accomplish with our tests. Check it out – it’s coming out soon! 49:05 – Panel: When you are younger into your career – the way you think about structuring your code – when you are comfortable you really don’t need that guidance. 50:00 – Guest: I would encourage folks who were new to coding to do the following... 51:36 – Guest: Think about WHY you are doing (what you are doing) and being able to articulate well what you are doing and why. 52:03 – Panel: There is no question – every time I test I am surprised how much it shapes my thinking about the code and how many bugs that I catch even in code that I thought was operating well. When you go too far though there is a fallacy there. 52:54 – Panel: Yes, testing is very important. I am a test-after-the-fact programmer. That is my self-key term. Don’t write 500-line methods b/c you won’t be able to test that. Don’t make it too abstract so have a common pattern that you will use. Have a lot of private methods that aren’t exposed to the API. 54:03 – Guest: Yes thinking about how to structure your code can be challenging at first but it gets easier. 55:58 – Chuck: I have had talks with Corey Haines about topics like this! 56:47 – Guest: Yes it can be helpful in consultancy now. 59:23 – Guest: Think about this: choosing what level to test at. 1:00:14 – Panel: It’s hard b/c it changes all the time per function or something else. There are tradeoffs with everything we do. 1:00:41 – Chuck: You are the consultant it depends doesn’t it? 1:00:51 – Picks! 1:00:55 – Advertisement: Get A Coder Job! End – Cache Fly! Links: Get a Coder Job Course Ruby Ruby on Rails Angular Cypress Vue React VUE CLI 3 Jest.io Mocha.js GitHub: Istanbul The RSpec Book RR 068 Episode Ember CLI GitHub: Factory_Bot GitHub: VCR Big Nerd Ranch Big Nerd Ranch: Josh Justice / Team Manager The Bike Shed Keynote: Tom Dale @ EmberFest 2018 JSJ 291 Episode Serverless Article: Test-Induced Design Damage Video: Is TDD Dead? Music: Sub Conscious – Electronic / 2004 Music: Interloper / 2015 Disney Heroes: Battle Mode Google Play: Disney Heroes / Battle Mode Book Authoring Playlist Tom Dale’s Twitter Corey Haines’ Twitter Coding It Wrong Josh’s Twitter Josh’s GitHub Josh’s LinkedIn Josh’s Vimeo Video Sponsors: Sentry CacheFly Fresh Books Picks: Nate Phutureprimitive - Sub Conscious Carbon Based Lifeforms - Interloper Dave Dust collections system in Wood Shop Doctor Who  - Theme Music Charles Authoring music Disney Hero Battles Josh Effecting Testing with RSpec 3 Growing Object-Oriented Software, Guided by Test XUnit Test Patterns Spectacle App Alfred App

All Ruby Podcasts by Devchat.tv
RR 391: Frontend Testing Like a Rubyist with Josh Justice

All Ruby Podcasts by Devchat.tv

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 4, 2018 67:04


Panel: Dave Kimura Charles Max Wood Nate Hopkins Special Guest: Josh Justice In this episode of Ruby Rogues, the panelists talk with Josh Justice who is a developer, writer, and speaker. Josh streams JavaScript and web development on Friday’s at 2:00 PM (ET) here! The panelists and the guest talk about Josh’s background and frontend testing in Ruby. Check it out! Show Topics: 0:00 – Advertisement: Sentry.io 1:04 – Chuck: Hi! Dave, Nate, and myself are on the panel and our special guest is Josh Justice! I am developing a show about developer freedom and it’s called The DevRev. It will be streamed through YouTube, and I will record Friday afternoons. Check out Facebook, too! 2:11 – Josh: Thanks! I am happy to be here! 2:18 – Chuck: Introduce yourself, please! 2:24 – Josh: I have been a developer for about 14 years. I have used PHP and then got into Ruby and then frontend development. 2:46 – Chuck: You work for Big Nerd Ranch in Atlanta? 2:56 – Josh: Yep for the last 3-4 years! 3:15 – Chuck: Can you introduce the topic? 3:25 – The guest talks about Big Nerd Ranch and frontend development. Learn TDD is mentioned, too! Check it out here! 5:06 – Panel: How much bouncing do you do between React and Vue? 5:11 – Guest. 5:47 – Chuck: We need to get you on our podcast shows for React and Vue! It’s an approach that I am familiar with in Ruby – and Selenium what a pain! 6:16 – Guest: I’ve had a good experience with Cypress, actually! 7:47 – Guest: Panelist, can you share your experiences? 7:57 – Panel: Not bad experiences with testing, but now I am trying to minimize my use with JavaScript. 8:30 – Guest: I think there is a big push towards considering more server site rendering. 9:35 – Panel: What’s your recommendation to setup Cypress? 9:40 – Guest: Their docs are really great! They had some conference talks on how to set it up! 10:15 – Guest: Check out my talks about this topic. (Connect Tech 2018). 10:29 – Panel: I think Cypress is a pretty cool solution but one thing that left me confused is that you have to have an environment that is already stood-up and running. Is that accurate or has that changed? 11:00 – Guest: Can you clarify what you mean by a “running environment”? 11:04 – Panelist clarifies. 11:44 – Guest: Luckily for me I have something to say b/c I tried a week ago! 12:01 – Guest mentions Vue CLI 3. 14:38 – Panel: How can you test your code coverage? I want to know how much of my code coverage am I hitting? The applications are up and running, it’s not going through the files (per se), and is there anything that would indicate how good your coverage is with the Cypress test? 15:10 – Guest: Let me as a follow-up question: How do you approach it on the frontend? 15:24 – Panelist answers the guest’s question. 16:06 – The guest mentions Vue CLI 2 & 3. 18:31 – Chuck: Are you using the tool Istanbul? 18:36 – Guest: Yep Istanbul is the one! 18:54 – Chuck: I’ve heard some similar rumors, but can’t say. 19:02 – Panelist talks. 20:13 – Chuck: I have been working on a project and what doesn’t get test-coverage gets a candidate to get pulled-out. 20:40 – Guest: Talking about test-driven development... Guest: Have you read the original book? 21:02 – Guest: The book: “Effective Testing with RSpec 3” is updated information – check it out! The guest mentions his live stream on Friday’s. Check out the links found below! 23:57 – Panel: How is the stability with tests like Cypress with end-to-end tests? If you are testing with a login then the user has to be already created. Or what about a Twitter app – the user has to be created and not followed? How do you handle that? 24:22 – Guest: I think we are spoiled in the Rails world b/c of those... 24:53 – The guest answers the panelist’s question! 26:59 – Fresh Books! 28:07 – Guest: Does that help? 28:10 – Panel. 28:21 – Guest: I have been thinking about this, though, recently. Thinking about the contracts through the business. I have dabbled with native development and I see the cost that runs a native app. 30:21 – Panel: It’s refreshing to hear the new market’s demands. I truly haven’t seen an application that requires that. I have built some extensive applications and also very simple ones, too; the need for productivity. 31:17 – Guest mentions a talk at a conference. See here for that information! 31:43 – Guest: I have a friend who was a new developer and he really knows his stuff. He said that he didn’t know if he could be a full stack developer in the next 5-10 years. Wait a minute?! Guest: The freedom to create something that stands alone. Guest: Tom Dale is mentioned by the Guest. 33:35 – Panel: To choose Rails as a new developer (today) it’s not as easy as it was back in the day. Today you have Active Job, Action Cable and so many other components. It’s more complicated today then it was in the past. It could be overwhelming to a new developer. 35:00 – Chuck: I think a lot of that is the community’s fault and not Rails’ fault. 35:57 – Panel. 36:04 – Panel: The counter-argument could say that’s where server-less come in. 36:27 – Chuck: To some degree you can get away with it. You don’t have to worry about the infrastructure or anything else. 36:44 – Panel: Have you tried messing around with server-less functions with AWS? I have and...it’s not easy. There is not a good flow or good work flow in a server-less environment. 38:01 – Chuck: You can go to this website. It makes the setup easier b/c you are adding your Azure or AWS features. 38:30 – Panel: This topic, though, does tie back to the testing topic we were talking about earlier! 39:14 – Panel: Yeah that is why I haven’t gotten into server-less things. The Rails holistic approach is so appealing. 40:14 – Panel continues: I want to take smaller steps when it comes to technology! I want to move into things that we are laying down the tracks to make it easier travelable. That way we can consider the things we’ve learned in the past and help those in the future. 41:07 – Chuck: What are lacking then? What is the friction that is left? Seems like Cypress helped removed that but maybe not? 42:02 – Panelist mentions Cypress, Jest, Mocha, and others! 43:10 – Panel (continues): I am all about experimenting but I want to know all the reasons. What has changed and what hasn’t’ changed? 43:29 – Panel: There is an article written that talks about this topic. 43:59 – Guest mentions the video “Is TDD Dead?” (See links below.) 44:29 – Guest: I like brining thoughts together and taking his or her input and come up with my own thoughts.  46:32 – Guest (continues): The testing trophy is heavier on the top (picture of a trophy). Guest: I think the thing that draws me to unit testing is that... 47:37 – Guest: I am obsessed with testing. The guest gives a summary here! 48:15 – Chuck: We talked with Quincy Larson last week and it’s a really good take on what we are doing and what we are trying to accomplish with our tests. Check it out – it’s coming out soon! 49:05 – Panel: When you are younger into your career – the way you think about structuring your code – when you are comfortable you really don’t need that guidance. 50:00 – Guest: I would encourage folks who were new to coding to do the following... 51:36 – Guest: Think about WHY you are doing (what you are doing) and being able to articulate well what you are doing and why. 52:03 – Panel: There is no question – every time I test I am surprised how much it shapes my thinking about the code and how many bugs that I catch even in code that I thought was operating well. When you go too far though there is a fallacy there. 52:54 – Panel: Yes, testing is very important. I am a test-after-the-fact programmer. That is my self-key term. Don’t write 500-line methods b/c you won’t be able to test that. Don’t make it too abstract so have a common pattern that you will use. Have a lot of private methods that aren’t exposed to the API. 54:03 – Guest: Yes thinking about how to structure your code can be challenging at first but it gets easier. 55:58 – Chuck: I have had talks with Corey Haines about topics like this! 56:47 – Guest: Yes it can be helpful in consultancy now. 59:23 – Guest: Think about this: choosing what level to test at. 1:00:14 – Panel: It’s hard b/c it changes all the time per function or something else. There are tradeoffs with everything we do. 1:00:41 – Chuck: You are the consultant it depends doesn’t it? 1:00:51 – Picks! 1:00:55 – Advertisement: Get A Coder Job! End – Cache Fly! Links: Get a Coder Job Course Ruby Ruby on Rails Angular Cypress Vue React VUE CLI 3 Jest.io Mocha.js GitHub: Istanbul The RSpec Book RR 068 Episode Ember CLI GitHub: Factory_Bot GitHub: VCR Big Nerd Ranch Big Nerd Ranch: Josh Justice / Team Manager The Bike Shed Keynote: Tom Dale @ EmberFest 2018 JSJ 291 Episode Serverless Article: Test-Induced Design Damage Video: Is TDD Dead? Music: Sub Conscious – Electronic / 2004 Music: Interloper / 2015 Disney Heroes: Battle Mode Google Play: Disney Heroes / Battle Mode Book Authoring Playlist Tom Dale’s Twitter Corey Haines’ Twitter Coding It Wrong Josh’s Twitter Josh’s GitHub Josh’s LinkedIn Josh’s Vimeo Video Sponsors: Sentry CacheFly Fresh Books Picks: Nate Phutureprimitive - Sub Conscious Carbon Based Lifeforms - Interloper Dave Dust collections system in Wood Shop Doctor Who  - Theme Music Charles Authoring music Disney Hero Battles Josh Effecting Testing with RSpec 3 Growing Object-Oriented Software, Guided by Test XUnit Test Patterns Spectacle App Alfred App

Ruby Rogues
RR 391: Frontend Testing Like a Rubyist with Josh Justice

Ruby Rogues

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 4, 2018 67:04


Panel: Dave Kimura Charles Max Wood Nate Hopkins Special Guest: Josh Justice In this episode of Ruby Rogues, the panelists talk with Josh Justice who is a developer, writer, and speaker. Josh streams JavaScript and web development on Friday’s at 2:00 PM (ET) here! The panelists and the guest talk about Josh’s background and frontend testing in Ruby. Check it out! Show Topics: 0:00 – Advertisement: Sentry.io 1:04 – Chuck: Hi! Dave, Nate, and myself are on the panel and our special guest is Josh Justice! I am developing a show about developer freedom and it’s called The DevRev. It will be streamed through YouTube, and I will record Friday afternoons. Check out Facebook, too! 2:11 – Josh: Thanks! I am happy to be here! 2:18 – Chuck: Introduce yourself, please! 2:24 – Josh: I have been a developer for about 14 years. I have used PHP and then got into Ruby and then frontend development. 2:46 – Chuck: You work for Big Nerd Ranch in Atlanta? 2:56 – Josh: Yep for the last 3-4 years! 3:15 – Chuck: Can you introduce the topic? 3:25 – The guest talks about Big Nerd Ranch and frontend development. Learn TDD is mentioned, too! Check it out here! 5:06 – Panel: How much bouncing do you do between React and Vue? 5:11 – Guest. 5:47 – Chuck: We need to get you on our podcast shows for React and Vue! It’s an approach that I am familiar with in Ruby – and Selenium what a pain! 6:16 – Guest: I’ve had a good experience with Cypress, actually! 7:47 – Guest: Panelist, can you share your experiences? 7:57 – Panel: Not bad experiences with testing, but now I am trying to minimize my use with JavaScript. 8:30 – Guest: I think there is a big push towards considering more server site rendering. 9:35 – Panel: What’s your recommendation to setup Cypress? 9:40 – Guest: Their docs are really great! They had some conference talks on how to set it up! 10:15 – Guest: Check out my talks about this topic. (Connect Tech 2018). 10:29 – Panel: I think Cypress is a pretty cool solution but one thing that left me confused is that you have to have an environment that is already stood-up and running. Is that accurate or has that changed? 11:00 – Guest: Can you clarify what you mean by a “running environment”? 11:04 – Panelist clarifies. 11:44 – Guest: Luckily for me I have something to say b/c I tried a week ago! 12:01 – Guest mentions Vue CLI 3. 14:38 – Panel: How can you test your code coverage? I want to know how much of my code coverage am I hitting? The applications are up and running, it’s not going through the files (per se), and is there anything that would indicate how good your coverage is with the Cypress test? 15:10 – Guest: Let me as a follow-up question: How do you approach it on the frontend? 15:24 – Panelist answers the guest’s question. 16:06 – The guest mentions Vue CLI 2 & 3. 18:31 – Chuck: Are you using the tool Istanbul? 18:36 – Guest: Yep Istanbul is the one! 18:54 – Chuck: I’ve heard some similar rumors, but can’t say. 19:02 – Panelist talks. 20:13 – Chuck: I have been working on a project and what doesn’t get test-coverage gets a candidate to get pulled-out. 20:40 – Guest: Talking about test-driven development... Guest: Have you read the original book? 21:02 – Guest: The book: “Effective Testing with RSpec 3” is updated information – check it out! The guest mentions his live stream on Friday’s. Check out the links found below! 23:57 – Panel: How is the stability with tests like Cypress with end-to-end tests? If you are testing with a login then the user has to be already created. Or what about a Twitter app – the user has to be created and not followed? How do you handle that? 24:22 – Guest: I think we are spoiled in the Rails world b/c of those... 24:53 – The guest answers the panelist’s question! 26:59 – Fresh Books! 28:07 – Guest: Does that help? 28:10 – Panel. 28:21 – Guest: I have been thinking about this, though, recently. Thinking about the contracts through the business. I have dabbled with native development and I see the cost that runs a native app. 30:21 – Panel: It’s refreshing to hear the new market’s demands. I truly haven’t seen an application that requires that. I have built some extensive applications and also very simple ones, too; the need for productivity. 31:17 – Guest mentions a talk at a conference. See here for that information! 31:43 – Guest: I have a friend who was a new developer and he really knows his stuff. He said that he didn’t know if he could be a full stack developer in the next 5-10 years. Wait a minute?! Guest: The freedom to create something that stands alone. Guest: Tom Dale is mentioned by the Guest. 33:35 – Panel: To choose Rails as a new developer (today) it’s not as easy as it was back in the day. Today you have Active Job, Action Cable and so many other components. It’s more complicated today then it was in the past. It could be overwhelming to a new developer. 35:00 – Chuck: I think a lot of that is the community’s fault and not Rails’ fault. 35:57 – Panel. 36:04 – Panel: The counter-argument could say that’s where server-less come in. 36:27 – Chuck: To some degree you can get away with it. You don’t have to worry about the infrastructure or anything else. 36:44 – Panel: Have you tried messing around with server-less functions with AWS? I have and...it’s not easy. There is not a good flow or good work flow in a server-less environment. 38:01 – Chuck: You can go to this website. It makes the setup easier b/c you are adding your Azure or AWS features. 38:30 – Panel: This topic, though, does tie back to the testing topic we were talking about earlier! 39:14 – Panel: Yeah that is why I haven’t gotten into server-less things. The Rails holistic approach is so appealing. 40:14 – Panel continues: I want to take smaller steps when it comes to technology! I want to move into things that we are laying down the tracks to make it easier travelable. That way we can consider the things we’ve learned in the past and help those in the future. 41:07 – Chuck: What are lacking then? What is the friction that is left? Seems like Cypress helped removed that but maybe not? 42:02 – Panelist mentions Cypress, Jest, Mocha, and others! 43:10 – Panel (continues): I am all about experimenting but I want to know all the reasons. What has changed and what hasn’t’ changed? 43:29 – Panel: There is an article written that talks about this topic. 43:59 – Guest mentions the video “Is TDD Dead?” (See links below.) 44:29 – Guest: I like brining thoughts together and taking his or her input and come up with my own thoughts.  46:32 – Guest (continues): The testing trophy is heavier on the top (picture of a trophy). Guest: I think the thing that draws me to unit testing is that... 47:37 – Guest: I am obsessed with testing. The guest gives a summary here! 48:15 – Chuck: We talked with Quincy Larson last week and it’s a really good take on what we are doing and what we are trying to accomplish with our tests. Check it out – it’s coming out soon! 49:05 – Panel: When you are younger into your career – the way you think about structuring your code – when you are comfortable you really don’t need that guidance. 50:00 – Guest: I would encourage folks who were new to coding to do the following... 51:36 – Guest: Think about WHY you are doing (what you are doing) and being able to articulate well what you are doing and why. 52:03 – Panel: There is no question – every time I test I am surprised how much it shapes my thinking about the code and how many bugs that I catch even in code that I thought was operating well. When you go too far though there is a fallacy there. 52:54 – Panel: Yes, testing is very important. I am a test-after-the-fact programmer. That is my self-key term. Don’t write 500-line methods b/c you won’t be able to test that. Don’t make it too abstract so have a common pattern that you will use. Have a lot of private methods that aren’t exposed to the API. 54:03 – Guest: Yes thinking about how to structure your code can be challenging at first but it gets easier. 55:58 – Chuck: I have had talks with Corey Haines about topics like this! 56:47 – Guest: Yes it can be helpful in consultancy now. 59:23 – Guest: Think about this: choosing what level to test at. 1:00:14 – Panel: It’s hard b/c it changes all the time per function or something else. There are tradeoffs with everything we do. 1:00:41 – Chuck: You are the consultant it depends doesn’t it? 1:00:51 – Picks! 1:00:55 – Advertisement: Get A Coder Job! End – Cache Fly! Links: Get a Coder Job Course Ruby Ruby on Rails Angular Cypress Vue React VUE CLI 3 Jest.io Mocha.js GitHub: Istanbul The RSpec Book RR 068 Episode Ember CLI GitHub: Factory_Bot GitHub: VCR Big Nerd Ranch Big Nerd Ranch: Josh Justice / Team Manager The Bike Shed Keynote: Tom Dale @ EmberFest 2018 JSJ 291 Episode Serverless Article: Test-Induced Design Damage Video: Is TDD Dead? Music: Sub Conscious – Electronic / 2004 Music: Interloper / 2015 Disney Heroes: Battle Mode Google Play: Disney Heroes / Battle Mode Book Authoring Playlist Tom Dale’s Twitter Corey Haines’ Twitter Coding It Wrong Josh’s Twitter Josh’s GitHub Josh’s LinkedIn Josh’s Vimeo Video Sponsors: Sentry CacheFly Fresh Books Picks: Nate Phutureprimitive - Sub Conscious Carbon Based Lifeforms - Interloper Dave Dust collections system in Wood Shop Doctor Who  - Theme Music Charles Authoring music Disney Hero Battles Josh Effecting Testing with RSpec 3 Growing Object-Oriented Software, Guided by Test XUnit Test Patterns Spectacle App Alfred App

Women Tech Talk
Jeremy Likness at Connect Tech Conference 2017

Women Tech Talk

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 10, 2017 1813:00


Jeremy Likness is an experienced entrepreneur and technology executive who has successfully helped ship commercial enterprise software for 20 years. He specializes in catalyzing growth, developing ideas and creating value through delivering software in technical enterprises. His roles as business owner, technology executive and hands-on developer provided unique opportunities to directly impact the bottom line of multiple businesses by helping them grow and increase their organizational capacity while improving operational efficiency.

tech conferences jeremy likness connect tech
Money for Nothing
Global and investment outlook / China Food Safety / Hong Kong-Shanghai Connect / Tech Roundup / Emp

Money for Nothing

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 28, 2014 56:58