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Kennen Sie den Film Focus mit Will Smith? Wenn Sie ihn nicht kennen, dringend gucken. In Teilen geht es hier um genau das Thema meines heutigen Gastes, Mentalismus. Ich darf euch heute Danny Blue vorstellen. Ein weltweit renommierter Mentalist und Performer, der die Grenzen des menschlichen Geistes überwindet, um Menschen aller Generationen mit seinem Gedankenlesen... ----------------------------------------------------------- Lesen Sie den kompletten Beitrag: 491 Danny Blue ----------------------------------------------------------- Hinweise zum Anmeldeverfahren, Versanddienstleister, statistischer Auswertung und Widerruf finden Sie in der Datenschutzerklärung.
Hi film friends, today we gots seven new reviews for you starting off with (Emperor of the north 1973) where 2 train hoppers are brutally hunted by the cab driver from escape from New York. Next up is (A warm December 1973) Here we have Sidney Portier once again showing racist asshats that people of color are capable of anything they are. (Your three minutes are up 1973) is up, and this hard to find film has the supercops guy Ron Lieberman and Beau Bridges goin on a road trip to doucheness. Next we have (Danny 1977) Where Roger from Dawn of the dead appears for like a second and the rest is an uplifting kids film about horses, though actually it's darker and more about classism. Onward to the classic (Blue collar 1978) where god damn Yaphet Kotto gets the rawest deal. (The Odd Job 1978) has Brain from Life of Brian hiring a handy man to kill him. Enter Zaniness! Finally today your Decade under the influence crew review (Hardcore 1979) where George C. Scot is a Calvinist gone rogue. He puts on an amazingly ridiculous mustache and tries to find his missing Calvinist. Thanks for listening folks, annnnnnnd it's time for lunch.
Special thank you to our sponsors: SCARLET OAK CANDLE CO. The Self-Care Experts www.scarletoakcandleco.com Instagram.com/scarletoakcandleco GENERATION ONE LOGISTICS Taking pride in putting our Carriers first, and helping Owner-Operators get premium loads, stay organized, and increase profit. www.GenOneLLC.info Instagram.com/genonellc BULLSEYE LLC Ready! Aim! Bullseye! Where safety is our ammo. www.bullseye-LLC.com Instagram.com/bullseye_llc On this episode, Frii and Danny Blue from BUST THAT FAT NEWS, chop it up about the milliseconds of support from fans, leaping for greatness when it seems crazy, and daring to do what it takes even when it's uncomfortable. FOLLOW OUR GUEST HERE: instagram.com/bustthatfatnews FOLLOW YOUR HOST HERE: https://linktr.ee/therealfrii --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
“I'm learning to love the pursuit of discipline” Danny Blue is a man on a mission to save 1 MILLION ACRES of Amazonian rainforest! The path to finding this valiant purpose has been long and winding, with nature appreciation playing a major role in Danny's awakening. We share how to find connection to the Earth's abundance and peace in this materialistic era. Other topics explored include how to find meaning in small acts of love, why indigenous wisdom enhances stewardship endeavors, and how integrity intersects with service. Highlights: [08:55] How Danny entered into deeper inquiry with spirit. [14:18] Why is connecting with our ancestors and lineage important? [22:11] How to view the physical world as an expression of the divine. [30:50] How plant medicine awakened a deeper awareness of nature's beautiful power for Danny. [38:31] Why leaving the corporate world and living your purpose is not a linear journey. [47:15] How stewardship and justice intersected to clarify Danny's life purpose. [55:42] What led to Danny's creation of the Uma and how it's serving Mother Earth. [1:05:06] How to persevere when your loving pursuits have real-world, logistical challenges. [1:11:01] Why the most impactful projects hit beyond the material realm. [1:18:38] Why connecting to a sense of meaning and purpose even in the small acts of kindness keeps the mission alive. [1:25:49] How a deeper inner knowledge that you are doing your part in healing the planet supersedes any external narrative. [1:28:43] How did Danny's Compass experience (Rising Man's rites of passage program) impact his dedication to humanity and himself? Connect with Danny Blue and Oma Earth: Website || omaearth.com - Buy a bracelet and DIRECTLY SAVE 1 ACRE of Rainforest! Instagram || @omaearth Rising Man Links: NEW OFFERING - The Brotherhood || The most inclusive, actionable, and helpful container for men on this planet! Instagram | @risingmanmovement DOJO | The DOJO is a 4 day, carefully crafted sequence of rigorous exercises that will challenge the limits of your mental, physical, and emotional fortitude. Men's Circle | Are you ready to join other men JUST LIKE YOU who have found a way to RISE ABOVE life's challenges and create a life of purpose and fulfillment? Join our online FIRE CIRCLE! Online Course | IGNITE is a 12 week online program designed to ignite your purpose and propel you into freedom. Features weekly calls, online modules, growth assignments, and community support! Initiation | Compass is a 4 day 4 night Vision Fast in the wilderness, with preparation and incorporation calls in the months before and after. YouTube | The Rising Man Movement Website | RisingMan.org
What would you do if you were in a lawsuit that was draining you personally and financially and had the potential to destroy your business? Imagine that stress, but add to it the compounding effect of the pandemic lockdown. In the episode we have the honor and privilege of welcoming back one of our former podcast guests and closest friends, Danny Blue. We discuss the lessons earned and learned of a lawsuit with a former business partner while trying to combat with the lockdown and how fitness, friends and family helped Danny bounce back even stronger. Video of this podcast is available at YouTube.com/RealBusinessOwners. Connect with us on Instagram and Facebook @RealBusinessOwners. Need bookkeeping or accounting services for your business? Reach out to Easier Accounting at 888-620-0770 or by visiting EasierAccounting.com. Interested in fixing your credit? Visit SixtyDayCreditRepair.com.
Edición Limitada - 4 de Julio del 2022. Producción, realización y conducción: Gustavo Verduzco. Presentando música de Causeway, She Hates Emotions, Sexy Suicide, Minuit Machine, Emmon featuring Emanuel Åström, blackcarburning, Teleskop, Costume, Kapitalet, Electric City Cowboys, Christopher Anton, Supercraft, Xenturion Prime, Danny Blue, Aesthetic Perfection & Moris Blak, Kanka + Bodewell, Sturm Café, The KVB, Front 242, La Mécanique, Incirrina, ES23 featuring Dino Serci, Gencab, Stars Crusaders, Reichsfeind, Panic Lift, Matt Hart, System Noire, Encephalon y Combichrist.
My guest today is David Gnozzi a platinum mixing/mastering engineer and producer, as well as the creator and host of the popular YouTube channel MixbusTV and a Pro Mix Academy Tutor. David is a former professional musician with 2 albums published (Universal Records and Danse Macabre Records), and he has been recording and mixing for almost 20 years, he fully dedicated himself to recording, mix and mastering after ending his career as musician in 2010. David initially started to gain recognition as a mixing engineer after successful remixes for Ladytron and Felix Da Housecat. His credits include: Raygun Romance, MC Solaar, Ryan Shuck (Orgy, Adema, Julien-K), Daniel Graves (Aesthetic Perfection), Mad Gallica, Danny Blue, Stonebreed, The Nest, and Italian pop superstar, Valeria Rossi to name a few. He mixed various projects for Universal Records, Nettwerk Records and Virgin Radio and video games such as Fallout 4 and Rock Band 3. In 2017, David worked with one of France's most famous and influential hip hop artists of all times, MC Solaar, mixing the multiplatinum album Geopoetique. The release also went on to win “album of the year” at the French Music Awards. In 2014 he started the now popular Youtube channel MixbusTv, which became one of the most trusted and respected online resources for audio mix and mastering. David does “how to” video tutorials for the studio. And with an ever expanding list of partners like AMS Neve, SSL, Empirical Labs, and many more, he's known for his detailed and very technical reviews of pro audio hardware and software. Now located in Los Angeles, California, David has his own private mix and mastering suite, equipped with some of the best gear available on the market he is available as a producer, mix & mastering engineer. David also discovered and developed the upcoming alternative popstar Bella Kelly, and the new singles “Throat” and “Heartbreak Motel” are both in the Youtube playlist. Get access to FREE mixing mini-course: http://MixMasterBundle.com THANKS TO OUR SPONSORS! https://RecordingStudioRockstars.com/Academy Use code ROCKSTAR to get 10% https://samplyaudio.com Use code RSR20 to get 20% off for the first 3 months https://www.Spectra1964.com http://MacSales.com/Rockstars http://iZotope.com/Rockstars use code ROCK10 for 10% off http://www.thetoyboxstudio.com https://www.sonarworks.com https://apiaudio.com http://UltimateMixingMasterclass.com Hear guests discography on Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/playlist/3iZOusnhlqnWY9nck9SqZb?si=ca14b05377d24c78 If you love the podcast, then please leave a review: https://RSRockstars.com/Review CLICK HERE FOR COMPLETE SHOW NOTES AT: http://RSRockstars.com/346
#dannyblue #mentalista #gondolatolvasásSok szeretettel mutatom be Nektek Danny Bluet aki Magyarország legismertebb mentalistája. A 2008-ban indult Kiválasztott című tehetségkutató nyertese. Danny a világ minden táján rendezvények ezrein ejtette ámulatba a közönséget. Televíziós műsorának több hazai TV csatorna is otthont adott már. A videóban érintett témák:- Miért fontosak a célkitűzések?- Vállald a felelősséget!- Hogyan győzzük le az elénk kerülő kihívásokat?- Miért fontos az önismeret?A műsor támogatója az Alrite - mesterséges intelligencia alapú beszédfelismerés. Készítsétek ti is velük a felirataitokat!https://alrite.io/public/registration?leadyourselfA műsor támogatója a Mini CRM - rendszer sikeres mikro-, kis- és középvállalkozásoknakVegyétek fel velünk a kapcsolatot, és kedvezménnyel juthattok hozzá a rendszerükhöz!Ha tetszett, akkor nyomj egy
#mentalista #dannyblue #vállalkozóSok szeretettel mutatom be Nektek Danny Bluet aki Magyarország legismertebb mentalistája. A 2008-ban indult Kiválasztott című tehetségkutató nyertese. Danny mesterien használja az emberi elme képességeit. Hihetetlen produkcióval mindig sikerül elkápráztatnia a közönséget. A videóban érintett témák:- Miért fontosak a célkitűzések?- Vállald a felelősséget!- Hogyan győzzük le az elénk kerülő kihívásokat?- Miért fontos az önismeret?A műsor támogatója az Alrite - mesterséges intelligencia alapú beszédfelismerés. Készítsétek ti is velük a felirataitokat!https://alrite.io/public/registration?leadyourselfA műsor támogatója a Mini CRM - rendszer sikeres mikro-, kis- és középvállalkozásoknakVegyétek fel velünk a kapcsolatot, és kedvezménnyel juthattok hozzá a rendszerükhöz!Ha tetszett, akkor nyomj egy
Edicion Limitada - 15 de Noviembre del 2021. Producción, realización y conducción: Gustavo Verduzco. Presentando música de Dave Gahan & Soulsavers, More, Nation of Language, Analogue Electronic Whatever, 1984, Daniel Hall, Etage Neun, Ayria, Fragrance., Fraula, Kim Lunner, Color Theory, VH x RR, BlakLight, Francesca e Luigi, Social Ambitions, Montage Collective, Platronic, N-Frequency, Munatix, Tycho Brahe, Projekt Ich featuring Madil Hardis, Telekon, Nature of Wires featuring Lady bNow, Outsized featuring Helga Dyrfinna, Uncreated featuring Louise Marchoine, Aesthetic Perfection featuring Isaac Howlett, Danny Blue, The Joke Jay, J:Dead, Orange Sector y Ginger Snap5.
A mai részben Danny Blueval a legismertebb magyar mentalistával, annak jártunk utána, hogy mit lehet átemelni a mentalizmusból az értékesítésbe. A podcastben megemlített tanfolyamok: https://webuni.hu/kepzesek?search=danny+blue A mikrofonnál: Görzsöny Péter, Szűcs Attila és Csorba Dániel https://www.kalmarok.hu Mél: haliho@kalmarok.hu Apple podcast: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/kalm%C3%A1rok/id1523544066?uo=4 Google podcast: https://www.google.com/podcasts?feed=aHR0cHM6Ly9hbmNob3IuZm0vcy8yYmNiODUzOC9wb2RjYXN0L3Jzcw== Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/5ryq5VWYMqvswNO8nHFSdS Főcímet írta: Csorba Dániel, ének: Halász Péter https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCrTTT4gBfqNhynlKTBCPuKA Görzsöny Péter www.gorzsonypeter.hu Szűcs Attila www.ingatlanpaholy.hu Csorba Dániel www.csorbadaniel.com
In this episode I speak with a truly awesome man, Danny Blue, who several years ago left his comfortable career in telecommunications to make a real difference in the world. While he bounced around a bit on the journey for purpose, he eventually started One Million Acres a company selling completely carbon negative bracelets made from materials native to the area by local craftspeople in the Amazon rainforest. The sale of these not only helps buy back acres of the rainforest for preservation, but also employees the locals to kick start their local economy. What an amazing story, what an amazing guy! You will not want to miss this one. One Million Acres (OMA) website to check them out and get your bracelet: https://omaearth.com/
Sziasztok, Ez itt a Vágatlan Verzió, három hetente jelentkező filmes podcast 41. epizódja. Ezúttal egy teljes generáció gyermekkorának tüzetes megvizsgálása és helyes átértékelése a célunk. A Disney-csatorna „örökérvényű” sztár-fantasy filmjein keresztül reflektálunk a Disney popkulturális szerepére, a producerek felelősségére gyermekéletek tönkretételében, valamint a sztárok tragikus sorsára. Ha bármit kihagytunk volna elemzésünkből, nyugodtan írjatok kommentet, hogy miért nem volt olyan rossz, vagy miért volt még ennél is rosszabb a Disney-éra. Jó szórakozást! A filmekről való beszélgetések kezdőidőpontjai: 0:00 - Bevezetés 29:08 – Randiztam egy Sztárral 1:12:33 – Rocktábor 2:07:34 – Varázslók a Waverly helyből 2:42:19 - Utódok Alternatív linkek: iTunes - https://itunes.apple.com/hu/podcast/v%C3%A1gatlan-verzi%C3%B3/id1382751778?l=hu&mt=2 Spotify – https://open.spotify.com/show/3OVfiTmsGL8iYljlRWZ8g3 Youtube - https://www.youtube.com/c/VágatlanVerzió Letöltés – https://hearthis.at/vgatlan-verzi/vv41/download/?secret=xhJjG Social media: Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/vagatlanverziopodcast/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/vagatlanverzio/ E-mail: vagatlanverzio.podcast@gmail.com Az adásban elhangozott adatok és információk mellé minden részben linkelni fogunk további olvasnivalókat. A mostani adag: Karen tier list MoistCritikal-tól (ebben van a hajós Karen is): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pQYd5T3hRK0 CsaniCsenöl videók: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCRfpGRQRj6G6qifuzb3vuSQ Tévedtem, nem Soma, hanem Danny Blue volt! https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iXJbcJogpUc Puzsér Hírklikk cikke a Disney kapcsán: https://hirklikk.hu/kozelet/a-disney-neve-senkit-nem-sert/377066 Partizán – groupie videó: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qe4Evr_F2_U Két cikk a "tisztasággyűrű" kapcsán: https://starity.hu/magazin/17738-tisztasaggyuru-mi-lett-a-fogadalmakkal/ https://nlc.hu/sztarok/20130730/tiszasaggyuru-szuzesseg/ Demi Lovato a Rocktáborra reagál: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7lP4VyGVnKo Eriksoni pszichoszociális fejlődéselmélet: https://hu.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eriksoni_pszichoszoci%C3%A1lis_fejl%C5%91d%C3%A9selm%C3%A9let Maugli: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dWsYKgF4fCg Kulturális forrásaink (minden áthallás jogos, de nem szándékos) : Önkényes Mérvadó, A hét mesterlövésze, Retroschock, Pál Feri, Jordan Peterson Külön köszönet: Tamásnak, az intróban nyújtott hangjáért! https://bogyopeter.tumblr.com/ - Péternek, a csodálatos artworkért! http://eper.elte.hu/ - Az EPER Rádió stúdiójának a felvétel lehetőségéért! Köszi, hogy meghallgattatok! Ádám, Ákos, Alex _________________________________________________________________ podcast, film, kritika, elemzés, kibeszélő, bemutató, disney csatorna, disney channel, high school musical, rocktábor, jonas brothers, demi lovato, sztárok, celebek, pszichológia, fanfiction, rajongás
Waddup world! We got another episode zoomin through your speakers and it's #fresh - like the smell of a lush rainforest stroll! Which is relevant as we hear from Danny Blue, founder of Oma Earth, a social enterprise with a mission of protecting one million acres of endangered rainforest while empowering indigenous artisans to rise out of poverty. Aside form managing Oma Earth, Danny is an entrepreneur, conservationist, spiritual seeker, animal lover, and twin dad. Wowza! Link for the week: https://omaearth.com/ : Get your bracelet today and take part in this holistic approach to rainforest restoration! Mastery of Transformational Training (not a sponsor but I wish they were!) These dynamic workshops are a caring, inspirational, and educational environment for generating breakthroughs in the most crucial aspects of your life. You will realize new ways to be more effective, giving and fulfilled in both your personal relationships and your career while experiencing new levels of self-confidence, vitality, joy, and satisfaction. You will see the degree to which your current thinking and behavior is or is not consistent with your highest aspirations and your vision for life. You will discover new possibilities for yourself that are not determined by your past, but generated by your commitment to the future. You will leave this life-altering experience with the tools for immediately creating more of what truly matters to you. Don't forget to rate, review and subscribe! Instagram: @dogoodfeelgoodshow twitter: @dogoodshow gmail: dogoodfeelgoodshow@gmail.com Website: www.dogoodfeelgoodshow.com --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/do-good-feel-good/support
I spoke with Danny Blue for the first season of DGP and since then a lot of changes have happened in his life. From quarantine life in Vegas to moving to Iowa, Danny spills the details on a less than stellar recent track record of sex as well as possible new relationship!
Show notes in order of appearance: Danny talks about being in flow during coronavirus How do we destroy 80,000 acres of rainforest daily? Why should we care about destroying rainforest land The rainforest and medications Danny talks about corporate life and being comfortable How the sale of 1 bracelet can save an acre of land Fairtrade jobs in the Amazon Danny talks about companies that practice “greenwashing” Understanding a social enterprise and how its profits can scale the help of an environmental cause The importance of quantification in a social enterprise How consumerism can actually help Danny talks about his bankruptcy and divorce and how labels can affect us Danny shares the 2 traits of a conscious leader Visit OMA Earth and on IG @omaearth Connect with Sebastian on Instagram SebastianNaum.com
{Warrior of The Week} Danny Blue, https://www.facebook.com/omaearth/?eid=ARDoXUwLwF_S9p07ZCywEUt4UHK6JAbwMbOFgxM9F8ga-cGaQL1SP4CRGUjxwycsRkVAdsGHCcjUbrqA&timeline_context_item_type=intro_card_work&timeline_context_item_source=100022282025194&fref=tag Born and raised in Atlanta, GA, currently living out in Los Angeles and Father of three-year-old twins. Danny is a lover of all things outdoors and dedicated to spiritual growth and development. The idea for Soulstice began about three years ago when Danny recognized how low of a cost it is to support projects that he was already donating to on a personal level to help preserve the Rainforest. In his opinion, saving the rainforest is one of the most vital environmental issues that not enough people are talking about. Seeing the massive amount of impact that brands like Tom's Shoes have generated through the one-for-one model, he realized that launching Soulstice would be the most direct way to bring the necessary level of impact to saving the rainforests. Through Soultice's buy one save an acre program, they are able to fund the protection of an entire acre of endangered rainforest for every item sold. With a goal of protecting 1 million acres within the next five years, they're literally on a mission to save the world. Sun Sign: Sagittarius What we chat about: How to save the rainforest What impact is deforestation having on the human race Tips on reducing our human consumption Industries that are supporting deforestation Where is all of our water going? How to reverse Global Warming How to support Soultice's mission to save an acre of the rainforest Resources mentioned: https://www.pachamama.org/ https://www.rainforesttrust.org/ https://www.drawdown.org/ For more Goddess conversations join our women's facebook group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/1078258585615424/?ref=bookmarks)
In today's episode, Danny Blue, the founder of an NGO “One Million Acres”, joins us for a thoughtful discussion about the rainforest's central role in maintaining the health of our planet, as well as key actions that are taken to protect this ecosystem and its indigenous communities. Whether we realize it or not right away, we are all connected to the rainforest due to its nurturing role in the environment and, therefore, our lives on this planet. It serves us more than we think of protecting it. Danny sheds light on the work of grassroots and global organizations in the Amazon Rainforest to empower indigenous communities with economic autonomy in order to limit deforestation activities. Making a sustainable impact is not easy and many challenges, such as financial interests, complicate the matter. But building local economic systems sets things in motion for an upcoming positive change. Explore more insights about the rainforest & enjoy the episode! *** OMA/One Million Acres is a conscious lifestyle brand that's committed to the conservation of critically endangered rainforests, some of Earth's most valuable resources. Every item sold funds the protection of an entire acre of endangered rainforest through our Buy One, Save an Acre™ program ***
Going Green host Dylan Welch sits down with One Million Acres, Danny Blue. In this awesome episode, Dylan and Danny talk about Danny's story and how he decided to leave his corporate lifestyle to become an entrepreneur that gives back. We learn about One Million Acres, and about how they created the company that helps buy acres of rainforest in South America.www.GoingGreenShow.comwww.DylanWelch.comSupport the show (http://www.GoingGreenShow.com)
Porn star Danny Blue is visiting NYC and stops by to sit down with me and talk about his entrance into porn, his xtube infamy and growing up a shy kid in Iowa. Don't forget to click "subscribe" to get more interviews like this weekly. Also head over to Spotify and click subscribe to listen to the podcast anywhere. If you want to watch the podcast, check us out on Youtube!Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCpdv_hiBFpM7JvzgREfeAgA?view_as=subscriberSpotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/2PIvocrNq0lM8SL9CC6IY3
We all got here somehow. This week Danny Blue and Leon Revill share how they got into web development. The web is a big place so how did those who do this as a career end up here? Visit the website for This Week in Web, resources & more: https://thewebplatformpodcast.com/186-how-did-you-get-into-web-development? Follow The Web Platform podcast on Twitter for regular updates @TheWebPlatform.
This episode we have on the homie Danny Blue half of the Living Single Podcast. We discuss the progress of his podcast, Futures new album, Big Soulja, Relationships and more. TUNE IN!!! SUBSCRIBE!!!
{Warrior of The Week} Danny Blue www.soulticewear.com @soultice Kickstarter: http://nme.fnd.to/soulsticebracelet Born and raised in Atlanta, GA, currently living out in Los Angeles and Father of three-year-old twins. Danny is a lover of all things outdoors and dedicated to spiritual growth and development. The idea for Soulstice began about three years ago when Danny recognized how low of a cost it is to support projects that he was already donating to on a personal level to help preserve the Rainforest. In his opinion, saving the rainforest is one of the most vital environmental issues that not enough people are talking about. Seeing the massive amount of impact that brands like Tom's Shoes have generated through the one-for-one model, he realized that launching Soulstice would be the most direct way to bring the necessary level of impact to saving the rainforests. Through Soultice's buy one save an acre program, they are able to fund the protection of an entire acre of endangered rainforest for every item sold. With a goal of protecting 1 million acres within the next five years, they're literally on a mission to save the world. Sun Sign: Sagittarius What we chat about: How to save the rainforest What impact is deforestation having on the human race Tips on reducing our human consumption Industries that are supporting deforestation Where is all of our water going? How to reverse Global Warming How to support Soultice's mission to save an acre of the rainforest Resources mentioned: https://www.pachamama.org/ https://www.rainforesttrust.org/ https://www.drawdown.org/ For more Goddess conversations join our women's facebook group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/1078258585615424/?ref=bookmarks) See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
--- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/angularair/support
This week Michael Prentice and Stephen Fluin join Danny Blue and Amal Hussein to chat about the current state of Angular. They go over the path to get to the Angular as it is now as well as the new features available in the latest version (5.1.1 as of this recording). Compilers, template, and Observables are discussed as well as build tools & schematics. Come listen about the Angular Platform on the Web Platform! Visit the website for This Week in Web, resources & more: https://thewebplatformpodcast.com/149-angular-a-platform-for-the-modern-web Follow The Web Platform podcast on Twitter for regular updates @TheWebPlatform.
Summary Hosts Amal, Danny, Leon, and Justin kick of the start of the holiday season by taking a moment to reflect on what they're thankful for when it comes to the web. From platform APIs like Service Worker, to the latest ECMAScript features like arrow functions, to a healthy warning of the impending FCC vote on net neutrality, this episode touches on a wide set of varied topics that every developer just might enjoy. Resources Fight for Net Neutrality Electronic Frontier Foundation Babel RxJs TC39 Proposal - Observable TC39 - Proposal Stages Arrow functions Function.prototype.bind() Workbox Polyfills and the Evolution of the Web Babel Preset Env Test/262 - Official ECMAScript Conformance Test Suite Hour of Code Panel Justin Ribeiro (@justinribeiro) Danny Blue (@dee_bloo) Leon Revill (@revillweb) Amal Hussein (@nomadtechie) Follow The Web Platform podcast on Twitter for regular updates @TheWebPlatform.
Te jössz! Társasjáték és talk show, Gibbon Games-módra. Minden héten hétfőn, este 8-tól, a Gibbon Games Facebook oldalán követhetitek játékos beszélgetős műsorunkat. Izgalmas témákat boncolgatunk, egy témába vágó vendég társaságában, miközben közkedvelt társasjátékokkal dobjuk fel a hangulatot. Podcastjaink a Te jössz! műsorok hanganyagai. E heti vendégünk és egyben témánk: Danny Blue, az ország mentalistája, a Mentalista című műsor győztese. A Gibbonok képviseletében Rikét, Tarnóczi Balázst és Valtner Miklóst hallhatjátok! www.facebook.com/gibbongames/
Summary This week Nic Raboy and Matt Groves talk to us about the history and future of the popular Open Source Couchbase project. Learn about some of the great features the noSQL database has to offer and how you can get started with Couchbase today. Resources Developer Portal Couchbase Dev Twitter Couchbase Blog The NoSQL Database Podcast Couchbase Server Editions Guests Nic Raboy (@nraboy) Matt Groves (@mgroves) Panel Justin Ribeiro (@justinribeiro) Danny Blue (@dee_bloo) Amal Hussein (@nomadtechie) Follow The Web Platform podcast on Twitter for regular updates @TheWebPlatform.
Summary This week Erik Meyer joins us to talk about the past, present and future of CSS. Delving into some web history, discussing why CSS can be overlooked in regards to app development and the reasons people can be off-put by CSS this episode is a delightful insight into the mind of a web legend. Resources Angular 4.4.X released. Be sure to update to the latest patch in 4.4 as there was an issue with the initial release Quick shoutout to the npm package ng-packagr for making it simple to package angular modules for npm As of Firefox 57.0a1, U2F is sitting behind a flag, which hopefully land soon the ability to use YubiKeys and the related security keys Polymer 2.1.0 landed, which now allows the setting of Polymer.passiveTouchGeastures to enable better scroll performance iOS 11 begins rolling out today, which means that Safari 11 has a new set of fixes and features, including more standards compliant flexbox, flags to enable experimental features, WebRTC and Media Capture for real-time video/audio, and much more The upcoming iPhone X “notch” does seem to have workarounds for the web which is good news Guests Eric Meyer (@meyerweb) Panel Justin Ribeiro (@justinribeiro) Danny Blue (@dee_bloo) Amal Hussein (@nomadtechie) Follow The Web Platform podcast on Twitter for regular updates @TheWebPlatform.
Justin Willis from Ionic joins us this week to talk about hybrid app development with Ionic and some amazing work they have been doing with Web Components. Justin gives us an overview of the Ionic project, its background and how it makes building hybrid apps super easy. We then move on to talk about why Ionic have chosen to rebuild their components as Web Components and the benefits they are seeing from making this move. Mozilla moves the Shadow DOM feature backward from ASSIGNED to NEW signalling that we might have to wait even longer to get full Web Components support in FireFox: https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1205323 The ability to import JavaScript modules via a script tag is available behind a flag in Chrome 60 and will be enabled by default in Chrome 61 due for release at the beginning of september https://www.chromestatus.com/feature/5365692190687232 React 16 beta is now available which contains significant updates including a rewrite of React core https://github.com/facebook/react/issues/10294 Safari Technology Preview is now available which implements the JavaScript Object Spread feature, WebRTC fixes and much more - check it out https://webkit.org/blog/7833/release-notes-for-safari-technology-preview-36/ Most of you out there have probably aware of the popular message app Slack, recently it was announced Slack is now valued at $5 billion dollars https://www.inc.com/business-insider/slack-new-funding-round-250-million-5-billion-valuation-2017.html Summits abound for web devs everywhere. Upcoming summits include, Polymer Summit (Aug 22/23, Copenhagen), Microsoft Edge Web Summit (Sept 13, Seattle), Chrome Dev Summit (Oct 23/24, San Francisco) CSS Working Group is meeting at Mozilla Paris, where discusses of Houdini, frame animations, additive animations and Fonts Level 4 working draft have been topics of discussion. Guests Justin Willis (@justinwillis96) Panel Leon Revill (@revillweb) Justin Ribeiro (@justinribeiro) Danny Blue (@dee_bloo)
This week we talk about the exciting JavaScript framework Vue.js! Chad Campbell the author of the training course "Vue.js: Getting Started" educates us on the benefits of Vue.js which includes simplicity and performance. We talk about the tooling story for Vue, comparing it to other frameworks such as Angular and learn about Vue's powerful plugin system which allows developers to add core functionality as it's needed. Resources https://github.com/vuejs/vue-rx https://vuejs.org/v2/guide/typescript.html Integration with Web Components example: https://vaadin.com/vaadin-fw8-documentation-portlet/elements/integrations/integrations-vuejs.html https://vuejs.org/v2/guide/ssr.html Chad's Blog: https://www.ecofic.com/ Chad's training course's: Vue.js: Getting Started & Vue.js: Going Deeper (Coming Soon) Guests Chad Campbell (@chadcampbell) Panel Leon Revill (@revillweb) Justin Ribeiro (@justinribeiro) Danny Blue (@dee_bloo)
Danny, Justin & Amal get together with Kenneth Christiansen to talk about this year's Google I/O. With everyone having attended I/O the show is packed full of great content with discussions on AI, Shape detection, PWAs, Polymer, Kotlin and so much more! Resources New site comparing frameworks: hnpwa.com bit.ly/mustaches-io really shows how nice Shape Detection API and Media Capture has become! Web AR: https://uploadvr.com/google-chrome-getting-ar-api-daydream-support/ https://github.com/googlevr/chromium-webar https://t.co/PyhQiChW2i?amp=1 V8 JavaScript Language Survey: https://docs.google.com/a/revillweb.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSegrt21-vrtT10OsZgSF5THwz8s30JNi6lrm_WoNigUjmZvzA/viewform Guests Kenneth Christiansen Panel Amal Hussein (@nomadtechie) Justin Ribeiro (@justinribeiro) Danny Blue (@dee_bloo)
This week on The Web Platform Podcast your hosts ask the question “Why aren't Web Workers more widely adopted”? Your hosts talk about what problems can be solved by Web Workers providing some interesting use cases and talk about their own experiences in past projects. Resources https://nolanlawson.com/2015/09/29/indexeddb-websql-localstorage-what-blocks-the-dom/ Around the Web in Two Minutes Chrome Canary gets JavaScript Modules https://jakearchibald.com/2017/es-modules-in-browsers/ TypeScript 2.3 Released https://blogs.msdn.microsoft.com/typescript/2017/04/27/announcing-typescript-2-3/ Firefox 53 arrives with new themes, separate graphics process https://venturebeat.com/2017/04/19/firefox-53-arrives-with-new-themes-separate-graphics-process-on-windows-and-compact-tabs-on-android/ Node.js 8.0.0 has been delayed until the end of May https://medium.com/the-node-js-collection/node-js-8-0-0-has-been-delayed-and-will-ship-on-or-around-may-30th-cd38ba96980d Published “A Practical Guide to Vanilla Web Components” my first Pluralsight course all about my favourite topic; Web Components. https://www.pluralsight.com/courses/vanilla-web-components-practical-guide Guests None Panel Leon Revill (@RevillWeb) Justin Ribeiro (@justinribeiro) Danny Blue (@dee_bloo)
My Angular Story 015 Danny Blue On today’s episode we have a My Angular Story with Danny Blue. Danny is a Google Developer Expert for web technologies. In this episode we hear the story about how Danny first started coding, a method suggestion for picking a frameworks, and how vocabulary is vital for a new programmer to learn. It’s a good one, stay tuned. How did you get into programming? Didn’t get started until college. In school he was under the impression that you had to be a math genius to be a programmer. Didn’t even try until college. He wish he would have taken more in College. His first dive into code was ActionScript 2. He was offered a class that taught how to make Flash games and he took the class and made a few games, which he mentions were most likely awful. His game was an infinite runner with a robot. It taught him the basics like loops and storing variables.In his class he realized that as long as he understood some of the key concepts, he would be able to handle it.Soon he went out and just bought a book and after experiencing the code in action he got hooked. Managing memory in C Danny’s friend tried to teach him how to build a checkers game in C. He remembers the pains of manually managing memory. His feedback on malloc is that it’s one of his favorite words because it rolls off the tongue. Charles talks about how in college he had to design systems in VSDL with transistors and silicon. How do you get from that to JavaScript Development First job was at a swimming pool manufacturing company’s marketing department in West Virginia. He worked a lot in Dreamweaver until a man that started after him decided they were going to write all the markup and CSS by hand. From that Danny learned how websites were put together. He talks about a contact form that they wanted to animate. He knew that he could figure it out. He would use code snippets to figure out and build the animation. He started to do more and more JavaScript and teaching himself as much as he could. He did the CodeSchool JavaScript Road Trip. The first few episodes ease you into JavaScript and helps you learn where things lives. From that point he became obsessed with building things with JavaScript. Charles talks about how CodeSchool wasn’t around when he started. Modern code seem to be more complicated but it can be learned best by breaking it down into smaller bites. CodeSchool is good for that. Getting your start or foothold is the hardest part. It’s easy to skip over fundamentals. Charles talks about how that things like CLI came second nature for him and sometimes instructors dismiss that new students may get hung up on those sort of fundamental concepts and tools. Danny adds that there had been times where he would read articles on sites like StackOverflow that would be explaining something but even the baseline instructions has information in it that can something someone has skipped. Little pieces of information can really help pull things together. He talks about the dissociation that can happen for someone who only learned JavaScript and doesn’t know what CLI is and how hard it would be to explain the difference between JavaScript running in the browser and Node, or explaining what a package manager is, then a package , etc. Many people come into it not understanding any of it. He can remember copying commands into a terminal but not understanding what was going on. For learning JavaScript from a basic level, what do you suggest? Finding the beginner tutorials for stuff. CodeSchool is good, Code Academy as well. Do those first. Don’t skip it assuming you know too much to do them. After that just make something. From there you will figure out stuff that works and stuff that doesn’t. Twitter is a great resource for finding helpful people. Being in the environment helps to get exposed to the information. Mainly just write code. Charles mentions that people have grown to understand the concepts and lingo of web development by just listening. Danny also advises that if you learn the vocabulary before learning the concepts, you’ll be able to do things like Google your issues affectively as well as reading articles or talking with others. Complicated concepts end up be boiled down to single words. Ultimately you will need to be able to communicate with everyone on projects anyway. How did you get into Angular? While working at DualLink Digital, they started looking at a few different things, he started looking at Ember and found that he really enjoyed the concepts. One of his friends started messing around with angular and they started workshopping with it to make it work. Afterwards he started to like it, really the plain JavaScript objects. The more he worked with he, the more he started enjoying it compared to Ember. It’s interesting to see how people have moved from Backbone or React or Ember to things like Angular. One of Embers pluses is how large their community is. Charles talks about how the history of Ember is great and the people behind Ember are great. Also, the JavaScript community used to seem to have animosity against the different communities but now it’s more collaborative. Picking the right framework. Danny suggests that when trying to figure out what framework to go with, be able to describe in your own words why the framework you’ve picked is better. Making sure that you do understand the decisions that you are making is important. He uses the example of within the React community and the use of virtual DOM. There was a common misconception that the virtual DOM was faster than the regular DOM, which is just not true. Later the details had to be expressed to clear the misunderstanding. If you don’t talk about the specifics, you may believe something without knowing the facts behind it. Charles adds that its sort of like politics in that way. Tell us the work you’ve done with Web Standards. Danny talks about getting interested in web components through his friend Eric and actually interviewed at the company Eric worked at. He didn’t get the job but they stayed in touch and Eric introduced him into Polymer. He started to learn about Polymer, specifically custom elements. He remembers very early on wanting to make a custom HTML tag. He suggests that being able to do things without the framework has been a piece that has been missing. Having lower level building blocks to build off of is really exciting to Danny. He talks about using custom elements to build a familiar API surface to interact with. He talks about an example where he wrapped a bunch of HTML APIs, like the notification API and the fullscreen API, wrapping another element within it. He was trying to build things that the younger version of himself could use. He things that could be something we are heading towards more often. Danny adds that Web Components come with 4 major parts: Custom elements, HTML Imports (kind of), ShadowDOM, and templates. Custom elements allow you to create a unique piece of HTML and is the most widely accepted and supported. What are you working on now? Danny talks about how the Angular’s component model is very similar to Custom Element component model. Where you pass information in through properties and you listen for changes through events. You can use Custom Elements with very little setup. There is a specific Custom Elements Scheme that will let you use custom elements without any properties being thrown. You use the custom event in the exact same way and syntax as for any other component. The one issue with the source code where it parses the metadata, losing the friendly compiler messages out of the box. He is playing around with trying to find a way to whitelist different element names and properties. He wants to learn how the Framework is parsing potential data and make it easy to whitelist a set of custom elements. Picks Dannys Daemon by Daniel Suarez Bob’s Burgers CodeSchool Charles VR & Augmented Reality IoT Artificial Intelligence Veritone.com Coursera on Artificial Intelligence Artificial Intelligence with Python Machine Learning for Absolute Beginners Links Twitter Blog on Medium
My Angular Story 015 Danny Blue On today’s episode we have a My Angular Story with Danny Blue. Danny is a Google Developer Expert for web technologies. In this episode we hear the story about how Danny first started coding, a method suggestion for picking a frameworks, and how vocabulary is vital for a new programmer to learn. It’s a good one, stay tuned. How did you get into programming? Didn’t get started until college. In school he was under the impression that you had to be a math genius to be a programmer. Didn’t even try until college. He wish he would have taken more in College. His first dive into code was ActionScript 2. He was offered a class that taught how to make Flash games and he took the class and made a few games, which he mentions were most likely awful. His game was an infinite runner with a robot. It taught him the basics like loops and storing variables.In his class he realized that as long as he understood some of the key concepts, he would be able to handle it.Soon he went out and just bought a book and after experiencing the code in action he got hooked. Managing memory in C Danny’s friend tried to teach him how to build a checkers game in C. He remembers the pains of manually managing memory. His feedback on malloc is that it’s one of his favorite words because it rolls off the tongue. Charles talks about how in college he had to design systems in VSDL with transistors and silicon. How do you get from that to JavaScript Development First job was at a swimming pool manufacturing company’s marketing department in West Virginia. He worked a lot in Dreamweaver until a man that started after him decided they were going to write all the markup and CSS by hand. From that Danny learned how websites were put together. He talks about a contact form that they wanted to animate. He knew that he could figure it out. He would use code snippets to figure out and build the animation. He started to do more and more JavaScript and teaching himself as much as he could. He did the CodeSchool JavaScript Road Trip. The first few episodes ease you into JavaScript and helps you learn where things lives. From that point he became obsessed with building things with JavaScript. Charles talks about how CodeSchool wasn’t around when he started. Modern code seem to be more complicated but it can be learned best by breaking it down into smaller bites. CodeSchool is good for that. Getting your start or foothold is the hardest part. It’s easy to skip over fundamentals. Charles talks about how that things like CLI came second nature for him and sometimes instructors dismiss that new students may get hung up on those sort of fundamental concepts and tools. Danny adds that there had been times where he would read articles on sites like StackOverflow that would be explaining something but even the baseline instructions has information in it that can something someone has skipped. Little pieces of information can really help pull things together. He talks about the dissociation that can happen for someone who only learned JavaScript and doesn’t know what CLI is and how hard it would be to explain the difference between JavaScript running in the browser and Node, or explaining what a package manager is, then a package , etc. Many people come into it not understanding any of it. He can remember copying commands into a terminal but not understanding what was going on. For learning JavaScript from a basic level, what do you suggest? Finding the beginner tutorials for stuff. CodeSchool is good, Code Academy as well. Do those first. Don’t skip it assuming you know too much to do them. After that just make something. From there you will figure out stuff that works and stuff that doesn’t. Twitter is a great resource for finding helpful people. Being in the environment helps to get exposed to the information. Mainly just write code. Charles mentions that people have grown to understand the concepts and lingo of web development by just listening. Danny also advises that if you learn the vocabulary before learning the concepts, you’ll be able to do things like Google your issues affectively as well as reading articles or talking with others. Complicated concepts end up be boiled down to single words. Ultimately you will need to be able to communicate with everyone on projects anyway. How did you get into Angular? While working at DualLink Digital, they started looking at a few different things, he started looking at Ember and found that he really enjoyed the concepts. One of his friends started messing around with angular and they started workshopping with it to make it work. Afterwards he started to like it, really the plain JavaScript objects. The more he worked with he, the more he started enjoying it compared to Ember. It’s interesting to see how people have moved from Backbone or React or Ember to things like Angular. One of Embers pluses is how large their community is. Charles talks about how the history of Ember is great and the people behind Ember are great. Also, the JavaScript community used to seem to have animosity against the different communities but now it’s more collaborative. Picking the right framework. Danny suggests that when trying to figure out what framework to go with, be able to describe in your own words why the framework you’ve picked is better. Making sure that you do understand the decisions that you are making is important. He uses the example of within the React community and the use of virtual DOM. There was a common misconception that the virtual DOM was faster than the regular DOM, which is just not true. Later the details had to be expressed to clear the misunderstanding. If you don’t talk about the specifics, you may believe something without knowing the facts behind it. Charles adds that its sort of like politics in that way. Tell us the work you’ve done with Web Standards. Danny talks about getting interested in web components through his friend Eric and actually interviewed at the company Eric worked at. He didn’t get the job but they stayed in touch and Eric introduced him into Polymer. He started to learn about Polymer, specifically custom elements. He remembers very early on wanting to make a custom HTML tag. He suggests that being able to do things without the framework has been a piece that has been missing. Having lower level building blocks to build off of is really exciting to Danny. He talks about using custom elements to build a familiar API surface to interact with. He talks about an example where he wrapped a bunch of HTML APIs, like the notification API and the fullscreen API, wrapping another element within it. He was trying to build things that the younger version of himself could use. He things that could be something we are heading towards more often. Danny adds that Web Components come with 4 major parts: Custom elements, HTML Imports (kind of), ShadowDOM, and templates. Custom elements allow you to create a unique piece of HTML and is the most widely accepted and supported. What are you working on now? Danny talks about how the Angular’s component model is very similar to Custom Element component model. Where you pass information in through properties and you listen for changes through events. You can use Custom Elements with very little setup. There is a specific Custom Elements Scheme that will let you use custom elements without any properties being thrown. You use the custom event in the exact same way and syntax as for any other component. The one issue with the source code where it parses the metadata, losing the friendly compiler messages out of the box. He is playing around with trying to find a way to whitelist different element names and properties. He wants to learn how the Framework is parsing potential data and make it easy to whitelist a set of custom elements. Picks Dannys Daemon by Daniel Suarez Bob’s Burgers CodeSchool Charles VR & Augmented Reality IoT Artificial Intelligence Veritone.com Coursera on Artificial Intelligence Artificial Intelligence with Python Machine Learning for Absolute Beginners Links Twitter Blog on Medium
My Angular Story 015 Danny Blue On today’s episode we have a My Angular Story with Danny Blue. Danny is a Google Developer Expert for web technologies. In this episode we hear the story about how Danny first started coding, a method suggestion for picking a frameworks, and how vocabulary is vital for a new programmer to learn. It’s a good one, stay tuned. How did you get into programming? Didn’t get started until college. In school he was under the impression that you had to be a math genius to be a programmer. Didn’t even try until college. He wish he would have taken more in College. His first dive into code was ActionScript 2. He was offered a class that taught how to make Flash games and he took the class and made a few games, which he mentions were most likely awful. His game was an infinite runner with a robot. It taught him the basics like loops and storing variables.In his class he realized that as long as he understood some of the key concepts, he would be able to handle it.Soon he went out and just bought a book and after experiencing the code in action he got hooked. Managing memory in C Danny’s friend tried to teach him how to build a checkers game in C. He remembers the pains of manually managing memory. His feedback on malloc is that it’s one of his favorite words because it rolls off the tongue. Charles talks about how in college he had to design systems in VSDL with transistors and silicon. How do you get from that to JavaScript Development First job was at a swimming pool manufacturing company’s marketing department in West Virginia. He worked a lot in Dreamweaver until a man that started after him decided they were going to write all the markup and CSS by hand. From that Danny learned how websites were put together. He talks about a contact form that they wanted to animate. He knew that he could figure it out. He would use code snippets to figure out and build the animation. He started to do more and more JavaScript and teaching himself as much as he could. He did the CodeSchool JavaScript Road Trip. The first few episodes ease you into JavaScript and helps you learn where things lives. From that point he became obsessed with building things with JavaScript. Charles talks about how CodeSchool wasn’t around when he started. Modern code seem to be more complicated but it can be learned best by breaking it down into smaller bites. CodeSchool is good for that. Getting your start or foothold is the hardest part. It’s easy to skip over fundamentals. Charles talks about how that things like CLI came second nature for him and sometimes instructors dismiss that new students may get hung up on those sort of fundamental concepts and tools. Danny adds that there had been times where he would read articles on sites like StackOverflow that would be explaining something but even the baseline instructions has information in it that can something someone has skipped. Little pieces of information can really help pull things together. He talks about the dissociation that can happen for someone who only learned JavaScript and doesn’t know what CLI is and how hard it would be to explain the difference between JavaScript running in the browser and Node, or explaining what a package manager is, then a package , etc. Many people come into it not understanding any of it. He can remember copying commands into a terminal but not understanding what was going on. For learning JavaScript from a basic level, what do you suggest? Finding the beginner tutorials for stuff. CodeSchool is good, Code Academy as well. Do those first. Don’t skip it assuming you know too much to do them. After that just make something. From there you will figure out stuff that works and stuff that doesn’t. Twitter is a great resource for finding helpful people. Being in the environment helps to get exposed to the information. Mainly just write code. Charles mentions that people have grown to understand the concepts and lingo of web development by just listening. Danny also advises that if you learn the vocabulary before learning the concepts, you’ll be able to do things like Google your issues affectively as well as reading articles or talking with others. Complicated concepts end up be boiled down to single words. Ultimately you will need to be able to communicate with everyone on projects anyway. How did you get into Angular? While working at DualLink Digital, they started looking at a few different things, he started looking at Ember and found that he really enjoyed the concepts. One of his friends started messing around with angular and they started workshopping with it to make it work. Afterwards he started to like it, really the plain JavaScript objects. The more he worked with he, the more he started enjoying it compared to Ember. It’s interesting to see how people have moved from Backbone or React or Ember to things like Angular. One of Embers pluses is how large their community is. Charles talks about how the history of Ember is great and the people behind Ember are great. Also, the JavaScript community used to seem to have animosity against the different communities but now it’s more collaborative. Picking the right framework. Danny suggests that when trying to figure out what framework to go with, be able to describe in your own words why the framework you’ve picked is better. Making sure that you do understand the decisions that you are making is important. He uses the example of within the React community and the use of virtual DOM. There was a common misconception that the virtual DOM was faster than the regular DOM, which is just not true. Later the details had to be expressed to clear the misunderstanding. If you don’t talk about the specifics, you may believe something without knowing the facts behind it. Charles adds that its sort of like politics in that way. Tell us the work you’ve done with Web Standards. Danny talks about getting interested in web components through his friend Eric and actually interviewed at the company Eric worked at. He didn’t get the job but they stayed in touch and Eric introduced him into Polymer. He started to learn about Polymer, specifically custom elements. He remembers very early on wanting to make a custom HTML tag. He suggests that being able to do things without the framework has been a piece that has been missing. Having lower level building blocks to build off of is really exciting to Danny. He talks about using custom elements to build a familiar API surface to interact with. He talks about an example where he wrapped a bunch of HTML APIs, like the notification API and the fullscreen API, wrapping another element within it. He was trying to build things that the younger version of himself could use. He things that could be something we are heading towards more often. Danny adds that Web Components come with 4 major parts: Custom elements, HTML Imports (kind of), ShadowDOM, and templates. Custom elements allow you to create a unique piece of HTML and is the most widely accepted and supported. What are you working on now? Danny talks about how the Angular’s component model is very similar to Custom Element component model. Where you pass information in through properties and you listen for changes through events. You can use Custom Elements with very little setup. There is a specific Custom Elements Scheme that will let you use custom elements without any properties being thrown. You use the custom event in the exact same way and syntax as for any other component. The one issue with the source code where it parses the metadata, losing the friendly compiler messages out of the box. He is playing around with trying to find a way to whitelist different element names and properties. He wants to learn how the Framework is parsing potential data and make it easy to whitelist a set of custom elements. Picks Dannys Daemon by Daniel Suarez Bob’s Burgers CodeSchool Charles VR & Augmented Reality IoT Artificial Intelligence Veritone.com Coursera on Artificial Intelligence Artificial Intelligence with Python Machine Learning for Absolute Beginners Links Twitter Blog on Medium
Imagine you have been working all your life and finally realized that you have the means and the ideas to be a great entrepreneur. Now that your business is thriving, what's next for you? Great entrepreneurs don't just look at the present; they look forward, think ahead, and anticipate the inevitable – retirement. While planning for your business is great, have you ever thought of what's in store for you after all the work is done? In today's episode, Danny Blue of iSelf Direct expresses the number one problem of America - the lack of awareness of the perks and advantages of having retirement plans and being a business owner. Danny talks about what a Solo 401K is, points out the awesome advantages of having one, including the outstanding amount that you can take home every year, tax-free. A solo 401K is bulletproof in creditors, lawsuits, and bankruptcy. In This Episode of Real Money Talks: Defining Solo 401K Reasons why entrepreneurs need a Solo 401K Benefits of Solo 401K Amount that entrepreneurs expect to get from a Solo 401K Protections for Solo 401K offer The "Why Test" and what it does Check Out Danny Blue Across the Net: http://www.iselfdirect.com/ (iSelf Direct Website) Subscribe, Rate & Share Real Money Talks! Loral Langemeier is on a mission – to educate and empower the http://www.realmoneytalks.com/ (Real Money Talks) community on how to have those important money talks that are straight, to the point, and can be applied to every aspect of your life. So, tune in every Monday, Wednesday, and Friday on iTunes to learn, ask Loral a question, and create your path to financial freedom! Don't forget to leave a review and grab your free gifts on AskLoral.com!
On today’s episode, Charles Max Wood, Alyssa Nickel, Ward Bell, and Joe Eames discuss Incrementally Upgrading an Application to Angular 2 with Danny Blue. Danny is a brand manager at LiveSafe, and is an expert when it comes to web technology. Danny talks about upgrading jQuery spa.
On today’s episode, Charles Max Wood, Alyssa Nickel, Ward Bell, and Joe Eames discuss Incrementally Upgrading an Application to Angular 2 with Danny Blue. Danny is a brand manager at LiveSafe, and is an expert when it comes to web technology. Danny talks about upgrading jQuery spa.
On today’s episode, Charles Max Wood, Alyssa Nickel, Ward Bell, and Joe Eames discuss Incrementally Upgrading an Application to Angular 2 with Danny Blue. Danny is a brand manager at LiveSafe, and is an expert when it comes to web technology. Danny talks about upgrading jQuery spa.
2:15 - Introducing Rob Dodson Polycasts with Rob Dodson A11ycasts with Rob Dodson Twitter 2:35 - What are Web Components? 5:00 - Using Web Components 10:05 - Why material design hasn’t focused on Web Components 11:55 - Making Web Components smaller 14:45 - Standards of work 18:10 - What is “Shadydom”? 21:05 - Benefits of using Web Components and custom elements 26:05 - Web Components and Angular 2.0 31:05 - Eventing and lifecycle models for Web Components 33:55 - Testing Web Components 35:30 - Benefits of using Polymer 38:50 - Clearing up confusion between Polymer, polyfills, and Web Components http://webcomponents.org/ SkateJS Polymer Project 41:20 - What does Rob Dodson do? Polymer Summit London 2016 42:40 - Seeing how Angular 2 and Web Components connect https://github.com/webcomponents/angular-interop https://github.com/robdodson/angular-custom-elements Custom Element Inter-op with Angular 2 by Danny Blue Picks: Men Explain Things to Me by Rebecca Solnit (Ward) Angular Remote Conf videos (Charles) Web Components Remote Conf (Charles) Elon Musk: Tesla, SpaceX, and the Quest for a Fantastic Future by Ashlee Vance (Rob) Stranger Things (Rob)
2:15 - Introducing Rob Dodson Polycasts with Rob Dodson A11ycasts with Rob Dodson Twitter 2:35 - What are Web Components? 5:00 - Using Web Components 10:05 - Why material design hasn’t focused on Web Components 11:55 - Making Web Components smaller 14:45 - Standards of work 18:10 - What is “Shadydom”? 21:05 - Benefits of using Web Components and custom elements 26:05 - Web Components and Angular 2.0 31:05 - Eventing and lifecycle models for Web Components 33:55 - Testing Web Components 35:30 - Benefits of using Polymer 38:50 - Clearing up confusion between Polymer, polyfills, and Web Components http://webcomponents.org/ SkateJS Polymer Project 41:20 - What does Rob Dodson do? Polymer Summit London 2016 42:40 - Seeing how Angular 2 and Web Components connect https://github.com/webcomponents/angular-interop https://github.com/robdodson/angular-custom-elements Custom Element Inter-op with Angular 2 by Danny Blue Picks: Men Explain Things to Me by Rebecca Solnit (Ward) Angular Remote Conf videos (Charles) Web Components Remote Conf (Charles) Elon Musk: Tesla, SpaceX, and the Quest for a Fantastic Future by Ashlee Vance (Rob) Stranger Things (Rob)
2:15 - Introducing Rob Dodson Polycasts with Rob Dodson A11ycasts with Rob Dodson Twitter 2:35 - What are Web Components? 5:00 - Using Web Components 10:05 - Why material design hasn’t focused on Web Components 11:55 - Making Web Components smaller 14:45 - Standards of work 18:10 - What is “Shadydom”? 21:05 - Benefits of using Web Components and custom elements 26:05 - Web Components and Angular 2.0 31:05 - Eventing and lifecycle models for Web Components 33:55 - Testing Web Components 35:30 - Benefits of using Polymer 38:50 - Clearing up confusion between Polymer, polyfills, and Web Components http://webcomponents.org/ SkateJS Polymer Project 41:20 - What does Rob Dodson do? Polymer Summit London 2016 42:40 - Seeing how Angular 2 and Web Components connect https://github.com/webcomponents/angular-interop https://github.com/robdodson/angular-custom-elements Custom Element Inter-op with Angular 2 by Danny Blue Picks: Men Explain Things to Me by Rebecca Solnit (Ward) Angular Remote Conf videos (Charles) Web Components Remote Conf (Charles) Elon Musk: Tesla, SpaceX, and the Quest for a Fantastic Future by Ashlee Vance (Rob) Stranger Things (Rob)
Mark Nadal (@marknadal) joins Danny Blue, Justin RIbeiro and Leon Revil to chat about GunDB and all the challenges of developing a database, concurrency, and distributed systems. Our hosts and guest dive into these topics and even journey to space in the newest episode of the Web Platform Podcast. Resources GunDB - http://gun.js.org/ Readthesource.io episode on GunDB - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=70dn1oZQFCk 15 minute ToDo list tutorial - http://gun.js.org/think.html Enterprise - http://gunDB.io/ Repo - https://github.com/amark/gun NodeJS `npm install gun && cd node_modules/gun && npm start`
This week on the Web Platform Podcast Sam Quayle (@samquayle), Senior UX designer and front-end consultant at Valtech, joined us to discuss Lean UX with hosts Danny Blue, Justin Ribeiro, and Amal Hussein. Lean UX is a design approach which is fits the highly evolving needs of development teams creating products for the modern web. It allows for rapid iteration and user driven design. Sam shares best practices tips and his positive experiences with clients. A very interesting case study is the UK Government Digital Service adoption process, and the benefits they have seen from embracing Lean UX. Show links: Slides from Sam's talk on Lean UX , the Lean UX book that started it all, and this awesome article Resources Lean creative presentation - http://www.slideshare.net/SamQuayle/lean-creative-beyond-user-needs http://shop.oreilly.com/product/0636920021827.do https://www.smashingmagazine.com/2011/03/lean-ux-getting-out-of-the-deliverables-business/
This week on The Web Platform Podcast, Erik Isaksen, Danny Blue, and Leon Revill talk with Mano Marks (@ManoMarks) all about Docker and how containerized deployments can help you from the time you start your web project all the way to the time you need it to scale up. Is Docker good for small applications, large applications, or both? Is it all just and adorable excuse to put a whale mascot on merchandise? Likely not. Mano Marks informs three primarily front end developers on the exciting ways your can use Docker, from simple push button server solutions to creating Quake...yes, Quake. Resources Docker on Github - https://github.com/docker/docker Docker main site - http://www.docker.com/ Docker Hub - https://hub.docker.com/ CodeShip Docs - http://pages.codeship.com/docker Digital Ocean docs - https://www.digitalocean.com/community/tutorials/how-to-use-the-digitalocean-docker-application
The Google DeveloperExperts(GDE) program is a community of developers outside of Googlethatknow one or several Google developer products well.AdditionallyGDE's are leaders in the community that typically blog,speak atevents, or work on open source projects. MartinOmander(@martinomander) & LizPadilla(@justepadilla)fromGoogle's Developer Expert program share talk with us abouttheprogram and how one becomes a GDE. GloriaBueno(@globitss)&Danny Blue (@dee_bloo), new Web TechnologiesGDE'stalk about their recent experiences as well.Show LinksTheGoogle Developer Experts -https://developers.google.com/experts/WomenTech Maker Program - https://www.womentechmakers.com/
Workflows for source control and project management can seem daunting. In this episode, Danny Blue and Justin Ribeiro sit down with Tim Pettersen, Senior Developer & Git Evangelist at Atlassian and Ralph Whitbeck, developer evangelist for Atlassian ecosystem to discuss just how to handle git and workflows. Resources and Links Getting Git Right guide - https://www.atlassian.com/git/ Pro-Git book - https://progit.org/ Tim's Git workflows webinar - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O4SoB3TFkjA Bitbucket & JIRA integration - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M-u8-Ga6if0 Atlassian - https://www.atlassian.com Bitbucket - https://bitbucket.org Jira - https://www.atlassian.com/software/jira Run, Bucket, Run (Tim's Git platform game) - https://run-bucket-run.aerobatic.io/ On This Episode Tim Pettersen - Senior Developer & Git Evangelist at Atlassian Ralph Whitbeck - Developer Evangelist for the Atlassian Ecosystem Danny Blue (@dee_bloo) Justin Ribeiro (@justinribeiro)
There are many paradigms and approaches when it comes to writing JavaScript but how to choose?. In this episode, Danny Blue talks with JavaScript Jedi Masters Dr. Axel Rauschmayer (@rauschma) & Nicolas Bevacqua (@nzgb) about best practices and JavaScript Resources and Links Suggestions (Axel):Tree-shaking and small moduleshttps://github.com/rollup/rolluphttp://www.2ality.com/2015/12/webpack-tree-shaking.htmlMixins via ES6 classes:https://github.com/angus-c/es6-react-mixinshttps://github.com/justinfagnani/mixwith.js Suggestions (Nico):State of front-end tooling/libraries / where it might be goinghttps://medium.com/@ericclemmons/javascript-fatigue-48d4011b6fc4 On This Episode Dr. Axel Rauschmayer (@rauschma) Nicolas Bevacqua (@nzgb) Danny Blue (@dee_bloo)
Summary In episode 49 Danny Blue (@dee_bloo) has a one-on-one talk with Web Application Master & JavaScript Guru Eric Elliott (@_ericelliott). Danny & Eric cover several exciting development topics including event based development, functional programming, Web Assembly, teaching JavaScript, helping to stop homelessness with code, & more. Resources Learn JavaScript with Eric Elliott - https://ericelliottjs.com/ Eric on Web Assembly - https://medium.com/javascript-scene/what-is-webassembly-the-dawn-of-a-new-era-61256ec5a8f6 StampIt 2.0 - https://github.com/stampit-org/stampit/releases/tag/v2.0.3 Campaign to fight Homelessness - Kickstarter - https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/ericelliott/learn-javascript Blog - https://medium.com/the-backer-army/fighting-poverty-with-code-d1ed3ebd982d react-stampit - https://github.com/stampit-org/react-stampit nodeschool.io functional programming (on runnable) - http://code.runnable.com/VQuZjvia8Gxcqkpy/nodeschool-io-s-functional-programming-in-javascript-course-available-in-your-browser-for-node-js-and-freecodecamp jsx - https://facebook.github.io/react/docs/jsx-in-depth.html Tim Oxley's Functional Programming workshop - https://github.com/timoxley/functional-javascript-workshop TC-39 - http://ecma-international.org/memento/TC39.htm Jafar Husain - https://twitter.com/jhusain Event Machine - https://github.com/eventmachine/eventmachine Twisted - https://github.com/twisted/twisted Host Danny Blue (@dee_bloo) - Sr. Front End Engineer at Deloitte Digital