Podcasts about developer advocates

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Best podcasts about developer advocates

Latest podcast episodes about developer advocates

SAP Developers
SAP Developer News January 2nd, 2025

SAP Developers

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 2, 2025 13:13 Transcription Available


A look back at the year 2024 in the SAP Developer Ecosystem with insights from each of the Developer Advocates.

developers developer advocates
SAP Developers
SAP Developer News December 26th, 2024

SAP Developers

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 26, 2024 17:10 Transcription Available


A look back at the year 2024 in the SAP Developer Ecosystem with insights from each of the Developer Advocates.

developers developer advocates
Break Point
The 2024 Dev Advocate Holiday Special

Break Point

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 25, 2024 42:05


In today's episode, I've gathered (nearly) all of the Developer Advocates to discuss our fondest memories from 2024, as well as our plans for making 2025 the Community's best year yet! Topics 00:00 Welcome & Introductions 03:15 Our Top 3 Moments from 2024 21:31 What We Are Reading to Prep for 2025 33:29 Our Developer Advocate New Year's Resolutions 39:51 Conclusion & Outro Check out the other ServiceNow podcastsSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

ServiceNow Podcasts
The 2024 Dev Advocate Holiday Special

ServiceNow Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 25, 2024 42:05


In today's episode, I've gathered (nearly) all of the Developer Advocates to discuss our fondest memories from 2024, as well as our plans for making 2025 the Community's best year yet! Topics 00:00 Welcome & Introductions 03:15 Our Top 3 Moments from 2024 21:31 What We Are Reading to Prep for 2025 33:29 Our Developer Advocate New Year's Resolutions 39:51 Conclusion & Outro Check out the other ServiceNow podcastsSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Break Point
AI with the Dev Advocates

Break Point

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 7, 2024 46:16


We've added a lot of AI features in the platform over the past few years, and in this episode we've got all the Developer Advocates to share their thoughts on Generative AI. Topics 00:00 Welcome/Introductions 02:07 Current uses for AI 17:07 ServiceNow shift in positioning 25:22 Barriers to using AI 35:08 Favorite Xanadu AI features 42:37 Recap 44:07 Outro Links Prompt Library Check out the other ServiceNow podcasts. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

ServiceNow Podcasts
AI with the Dev Advocates

ServiceNow Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 7, 2024 46:16


We've added a lot of AI features in the platform over the past few years, and in this episode we've got all the Developer Advocates to share their thoughts on Generative AI. Topics 00:00 Welcome/Introductions 02:07 Current uses for AI 17:07 ServiceNow shift in positioning 25:22 Barriers to using AI 35:08 Favorite Xanadu AI features 42:37 Recap 44:07 Outro Links Prompt Library Check out the other ServiceNow podcasts. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Thoughtstuff - Tom Morgan on Microsoft Teams, Skype for Business and Office 365 Development

Here's the audio of the video interview I conducted with two of Microsoft's best Developer Advocates, Garry Trinder and Waldeck Mastykarz, where we dive deep into the powerful world of Dev Proxy. You can watch the full video here: https://youtu.be/BgsdGSinWYM More information about what we cover is found in the blog post: Unlocking Dev Proxy: An Interview with Microsoft Experts Garry Trinder and Waldeck Mastykarz | The thoughtstuff Blog   Subscribe to all my videos at: https://thoughtstuff.co.uk/video Podcast: https://thoughtstuff.co.uk/itunes, https://thoughtstuff.co.uk/spotify or https://thoughtstuff.co.uk/podcast Blog: https://blog.thoughtstuff.co.uk

microsoft blog garry proxy waldeck developer advocates blog subscribe
Hablamos de SAP
064 - SAP Developer Advocates

Hablamos de SAP

Play Episode Listen Later May 13, 2024 95:25


Hablamos de SAP con Antonio Maradiaga, miembro del equipo de SAP Developer Advocates, especialista en integración, aunque toca muchos palos. Tratamos de cómo ha ido avanzando la tecnología y cómo SAP se ha ido adaptando… ¿y los demás? ¿Nos hemos ido adaptando igual? Hablamos de la importancia de actualizarse, seguir formándose y en esa labor, si eres desarrollador, te interesa conocer todo lo que hacen desde SAP Developer Advocates. Como siempre, lo mejor es escucharlo...

Fireside with Voxgig
Episode 157, Liz Acosta, Developer Content Marketing Manager for Streamlit

Fireside with Voxgig

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 7, 2024 34:15


The wonderful Liz Acosta joins us on this episode of the podcast for a slightly philosophical chat on community, the different iterations of DevRel, and why we as humans will always gravitate to the things we perceive as “real”. Liz is the new Developer Content Marketing Manager for Streamlit at Snowflake, and this provides us with a wonderful opportunity to learn from someone right in the process of determining their role in an organisation! Liz talks to us about her plans for Streamlit, all of which centre connection and community heavily. As someone who has worked heavily in DevRel, Liz has no intentions of abandoning the Developer Advocates at Streamlit to fend for themselves, and her passion for connecting with people is more than clear. Liz tells us all about the evolution of DevRel, and why she believes increased regulation and codifying of previously informal guidelines is a good thing. Not only that, but for those of you who enjoy a good philosophical discussion, she explains that while we all appreciate things that are “real”, the not-so-real can be just as valuable. Whether that be AI generated copy, or an artist who lip-syncs their way through a concert! Reach out to Liz here: https://www.linkedin.com/in/lizacostalinkedin/ Find out more and listen to previous podcasts here: https://www.voxgig.com/podcast Subscribe to our newsletter for weekly updates and information about upcoming meetups: https://voxgig.substack.com/ Join the Dublin DevRel Meetup group here: www.devrelmeetup.com

Break Point
Washington D.C. with the Developer Advocates

Break Point

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 7, 2024 34:23


Washington D.C. is available in Early Access so get your personal developer instance upgraded and start exploring because in this episode, we're going to share our top 5 favorites from our latest release. Topics 00:00 Intro/Welcome 01:39 #5 07:26 #4 14:21 #3 20:34 #2 25:19 #1 32:12 Outro Links Content calendar Washington D.C. Release Notes Check out the other ServiceNow podcasts.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

ServiceNow Podcasts
Washington D.C. with the Developer Advocates

ServiceNow Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 7, 2024 34:23


Washington D.C. is available in Early Access so get your personal developer instance upgraded and start exploring because in this episode, we're going to share our top 5 favorites from our latest release. Topics 00:00 Intro/Welcome 01:39 #5 07:26 #4 14:21 #3 20:34 #2 25:19 #1 32:12 Outro Links Content calendar Washington D.C. Release Notes Check out the other ServiceNow podcasts.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Spring Office Hours
Spring Office Hours: S3E2 - Developer Advocates

Spring Office Hours

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 9, 2024 74:36


Join Dan Vega and DaShaun Carter as they bring you the latest updates from the Spring Ecosystem. Are you passionate about technology and love engaging with communities or peers? Ever wondered how you could turn these interests into a fulfilling career or utilize them within your current organization? Look no further! In this episode, we'll demystify Developer Advocacy, a role that sits at the intersection of technology, community engagement, and education.

AWS Developers Podcast
Episode 087 - Architecting the Big Dev Theory Show with Du'An Lightfoot and Stuart Clark

AWS Developers Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 16, 2023 38:28


Join your dynamic duo, Brooke and Dave, as they sit down with Stuart Clark, Sr. Developer Advocate, AWS Community Engagement Team, and Du'An Lightfoot, Sr. Cloud Networking Developer Advocate AWS Infrastructure specialist team. Developer Advocates and hosts of the popular Twitch show, Big Dev Theory, Du'an and Stuart have set the virtual stage ablaze with their infectious passion for building solutions for developers, by developers. Demos over PowerPoints, and coding over theory. The two walk us through their exciting journey and share invaluable insights. For those keen on unlocking the mysteries of the networking underlying AWS services, Du'an's got a pocket full of tips and his inspiring transition from military life to the tech world. And just when you think it's all techie, we delve into the enigma that is...baby carrots

Engenharia de Dados [Cast]
Simplify Data Engineering Projects in Your Lakehouse with Delta Lake Framework with Matthew Powers & Denny Lee, Developer Advocates at Databricks

Engenharia de Dados [Cast]

Play Episode Listen Later May 23, 2023 72:32


No episódio de hoje, Luan Moreno e Mateus Oliveira entrevistaram Denny Lee & Mathew Powers, atualmente Developer Advocates na Databricks.Delta Lake é um produto open-source, que nos permite aplicar o famoso Data Lakehouse {Data Lake + Data Warehouse}, desenvolvido pela empresa dos criadores do Apache Spark. Delta Lake resolve o problema do Apache Spark, armazenamento, processamento de dados no Data Lake de forma otimizada.Com Delta Lake, você tem os seguintes benefícios:Formato de arquivo como se fosse uma tabela;Time Travel;ACID;Batch e Streaming Unificados.Falamos também nesse bate-papo sobre os seguintes temas:Estado da arte dos dados;Delta Lake.Aprenda mais sobre Delta Lake, como utilizar uma tecnologia para Data LakeHouse, junto com o time da databricks que mais impulsiona a comunidade com conteúdos, releases e eventos para ajudar este produto open-source.Denny Lee - Linkedin Mathew Powers - Linkedinhttps://delta.io/ Luan Moreno = https://www.linkedin.com/in/luanmoreno/

The Hacking Open Source Business Podcast
Developer Relations in Open Source - Strategies, Challenges, and Growth w/ Joe Karlsson - EP. 27

The Hacking Open Source Business Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 4, 2023 51:33 Transcription Available


Explore the world of Developer Relations (DevRel) with Tinybird's Developer Advocate, Joe Karlsson, in this podcast hosted by Matt Yonkovit. Discover key insights into DevRel, the role of Developer Advocates in open-source communities, strategies for content creation, and the importance of a strong online presence. Learn how to navigate challenges, align business goals with community needs, and understand the nuances between users and customers in open-source businesses. From dealing with layoffs to understanding vanity metrics, this podcast series provides a comprehensive understanding of the ever-evolving tech landscape.✦ Joe Karlsson LinkedIn Profile: https://www.linkedin.com/in/joekarlsson/ Chapters:00:58 -  Navigating lay-offs in tech and advice for those going through it03:24 - The challenges of measuring ROI in DevRel07:10 - The difference between users and customers in Open Source Businesses09:22 - The divide between community and business in open source and what to prioritize15:21 - The open source flywheel and DevRel content strategy21:09 - Small communities in open source and growing your audience24:28 - How to Balance High-Pop and Solution-Focused Content31:20 - Vanity metrics vs. The metrics that matter32:39 - Balancing between different types of target audiences35:31 - Joe Karlsson's first steps in DevRel37:04 - What it takes to get a job in DevRel39:58 - Interview tips for Dev Rel job positions43:25 - Analyzing TinyBird's open source contributions44:52 - Rapid fire questions Checkout our other interviews, clips, and videos: https://l.hosbp.com/YoutubeDon't forget to visit the open-source business community at: https://opensourcebusiness.community/Visit our primary sponsor, Scarf, for tools to help analyze your #opensource growth and adoption: https://about.scarf.sh/Subscribe to the podcast on your favorite app:Spotify: https://l.hosbp.com/SpotifyApple: https://l.hosbp.com/AppleGoogle: https://l.hosbp.com/GoogleBuzzsprout: https://l.hosbp.com/Buzzsprout

Break Point
Our Favorite Utah Features

Break Point

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 8, 2023 36:05


Join the four Developer Advocates as we go around the table and share what we're most excited about in Utah. Topics 00:00 Welcome/introductions 02:16 Workspace Builder 03:41 RPA on PDIs 05:48 Dark theme 08:06 Script editor enhancements 09:32 ERP customization mining 13:18 Automation Center 15:20 Flow updates 18:28 Next Experience updates 21:29 Table builder 23:17 REST step updates 25:33 ECMAScript default for new apps 28:40 Mobile multi-instance switching 30:44 Lightning round 33:30 Outro Links Release notes Check out the other ServiceNow podcasts.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

ServiceNow Podcasts
Our Favorite Utah Features

ServiceNow Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 8, 2023 36:05


Join the four Developer Advocates as we go around the table and share what we're most excited about in Utah. Topics 00:00 Welcome/introductions 02:16 Workspace Builder 03:41 RPA on PDIs 05:48 Dark theme 08:06 Script editor enhancements 09:32 ERP customization mining 13:18 Automation Center 15:20 Flow updates 18:28 Next Experience updates 21:29 Table builder 23:17 REST step updates 25:33 ECMAScript default for new apps 28:40 Mobile multi-instance switching 30:44 Lightning round 33:30 Outro Links Release notes Check out the other ServiceNow podcasts.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

SAP Developers
SAP Developer News November 10th, 2022

SAP Developers

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 11, 2022 6:03


This episode covers SAP TechEd Applications and Business Processes Track, SAP Cloud Application Programming Model October 2022 Release, UI5 Journey Recorder and Developer Advocates at TechEd.

developers teched developer advocates
The NavBar
#10 - What is Developer Advocacy?

The NavBar

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 21, 2022 68:03


Are you curious what this Developer Advocate thing is all about? Want to know the difference between Developer Advocates and Developer Relations? This is the episode for you! Simon and Jon break down the pros and cons of working as a developer advocate, tips for getting a job in Dev Rel and the most important things they have learnt about doing it well! Pro Tailwind: https://www.protailwind.com/ Caching Supabase data at the Edge with Cloudflare Workers and KV Storage (free egghead course): https://egghead.io/courses/cache-supabase-data-at-the-edge-with-cloudflare-workers-and-kv-storage-883c7959 Building the NavBar website with Remix, Notion and Cloudflare: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLFGFKs8nQ3EZI1l9hVri-c4RnX-ZqwWXN Smartless podcast: https://www.smartless.com/ Bandrew Says podcast: https://bandrewsays.com/ Want more NavBar?

No me da la vida
1.6 - Para hablar de Developer Advocates con Alex Martínez

No me da la vida

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 31, 2022 83:25


En el episodio 1.6 hablamos de qué es ser Developer Advocate, de las nuevas versiones de Vite, Astro, Nuxt RCs y Storyblok, del rediseño de Gmail, del nuevo estándar de mensajería de Google y sus peticiones a Apple, de la sintaxis del Nesting CSS, de las novedades de Notion, de la OctoGatosConf, de Arc el browser antiestrés y de Timelular, el time tracker físico, entre otras muchas cosas

API Intersection
DevRel Deep Dive: Measuring impact & where your devs should be feat. Rizel Scarlett, Developer Advocate at GitHub

API Intersection

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 4, 2022 22:35


Developer relations (DevRel) is an increasingly rising industry, growing as a reflection of software's ubiquity in the business world — and the growing power of the developer to influence what products and platforms their employers use.But, what makes a good Developer Advocate and strong DevRel program? This week on the API Intersection podcast, we chatted with Rizel Scarlett, Developer Relations Engineer at Github, to get her opinion on how to measure a DevRel program's success and different platforms Developer Advocates can utilize to reach the developer community.Do you have a question you'd like answered, or a topic you want to see in a future episode? Let us know here: stoplight.io/question/

Tech Lead Journal
#74 - Rapid Web Apps Development With Anvil & Importance of Product Documentation - Meredydd Luff

Tech Lead Journal

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 31, 2022 45:42


“Documentation is content marketing. If your docs don't summarize what your product is actually about, you're going to have a rough time getting anybody interested." Meredydd Luff is the founder of Anvil, the platform for building web apps with nothing but Python. In this episode, Meredydd shared his story starting Anvil and his point of view on the latest Low-Code & No-Code movement and whether it would affect the demand for developers. He touched on the importance of domain experts having the ability to develop software and how tools like Anvil could play a part in supporting them to translate their ideas better. In the second half of the episode, we discussed the importance of product documentation and how it also plays a major part in content marketing. Meredydd shared his tips and best practices for documentation, including how to create thriving online Q&A product forums. Listen out for: Career Journey - [00:05:17] Anvil Story - [00:09:16] Low Code / No Code - [00:12:26] Domain Knowledge Coder - [00:18:08] Demand for Developers - [00:22:37] Importance of Product Documentation - [00:25:42] Documentation is Content Marketing - [00:29:16] Online Q&A Forums - [00:33:18] Developer Advocates - [00:36:55] 3 Tech Lead Wisdom - [00:39:43] _____ Meredydd Luff's Bio Meredydd Luff is the founder of Anvil (https://anvil.works), the platform for building and deploying apps on the web with nothing but Python. He's particularly interested in expanding access to code, and has a PhD in building usable programming systems. Follow Meredydd: Anvil – https://anvil.works/ Twitter – @meredydd LinkedIn – https://www.linkedin.com/in/meredydd Our Sponsor Today's episode is proudly sponsored by Skills Matter, the global community and events platform for software professionals. Skills Matter is an easier way for technologists to grow their careers by connecting you and your peers with the best-in-class tech industry experts and communities. You get on-demand access to their latest content, thought leadership insights as well as the exciting schedule of tech events running across all time zones. Head on over to skillsmatter.com to become part of the tech community that matters most to you - it's free to join and easy to keep up with the latest tech trends. Like this episode? Subscribe on your favorite podcast app and submit your feedback. Follow @techleadjournal on LinkedIn, Twitter, and Instagram. Pledge your support by becoming a patron. For more info about the episode (including quotes and transcript), visit techleadjournal.dev/episodes/74.

DevOps Paradox
DOP 119: Developer Advocacy or Engineering?

DevOps Paradox

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 11, 2021 42:07


#119: Many companies are hiring for Developer Advocates. Have you considered making the move from engineering to developer advocacy? Today we talk with Anaïs Urlichs, a SRE that is doing both developer advocacy and engineering at Civo.   Anais' information: Twitter: https://twitter.com/urlichsanais YouTube: https://youtube.com/AnaisUrlichs Website: https://anaisurl.com/   YouTube channel: https://youtube.com/devopsparadox/   Books and Courses: Catalog, Patterns, And Blueprints https://www.devopstoolkitseries.com/posts/catalog/   Kubernetes Chaos Engineering With Chaos Toolkit And Istio https://www.devopstoolkitseries.com/posts/chaos/   Canary Deployments To Kubernetes Using Istio and Friends https://www.devopstoolkitseries.com/posts/canary/   Review the podcast on Apple Podcasts: https://www.devopsparadox.com/review-podcast/   Slack: https://www.devopsparadox.com/slack/   Connect with us at: https://www.devopsparadox.com/contact/

Under the Hood of Developer Marketing
Developer Advocates with Anna Tsolakou

Under the Hood of Developer Marketing

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 29, 2021 44:49


Theme of the week: Which characteristics or traits developer advocates need to have? What do developer advocates do? They connect and engage with developers and are the bridge between the company and its developer audience. Anna Tsolakou, Developer Advocate at Amadeus for Developers joins our podcast to discuss: What developer advocacy is What she loves most about being a developer advocate What has been her biggest challenge in developer advocacy What is the most important trait/characteristic someone in developer advocacy should have What advice she would give to someone who is new to their developer advocate role In which department developer advocates fit within the company How can we connect and then engage with developers Why an advocacy team is needed when a business has an API How can we improve developers’ experience with our API/product/service How a smooth feedback process can improve that experience And more! Listen to this episode to better understand developer advocates. Let’s talk Data! This is the graph we discuss with Anna: https://www.devrelx.com/trends (Documentation, tutorials, tools and community engagement are the core of developer programs). You can find the https://www.slashdata.co/free-resources/ (State of the Developer Nation 20th edition free report here). Anna Tsolakou is a software engineer working as a Developer Advocate at Amadeus. She loves to wear different hats and DevRel is the ideal world for her to fulfil her expectations; software development and connecting with people at the same time. Passionate about open-source and AI.

Community Pulse
DevRel at the Foundation (Ep 51)

Community Pulse

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 17, 2020 48:01


As companies are starting to realize that Developer Relations can be a competitive advantage, we’ve been noticing more and more job descriptions for Developer Advocates or DevRel Professionals who are the first non-engineering hire at early-stage startups. But when you’re an early hire working alongside the founder and a few engineers, what does your role look like? How is it different from joining a company as employee #30, 120, or even 1432?   Mary, SJ, and Wesley chat with David G Simmons, Taylor Barnett, and Aydrian Howard to talk about being DevRel number one.

Community Pulse
DevRel at the Foundation (Ep 51)

Community Pulse

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 17, 2020 48:01


As companies are starting to realize that Developer Relations can be a competitive advantage, we’ve been noticing more and more job descriptions for Developer Advocates or DevRel Professionals who are the first non-engineering hire at early-stage startups. But when you’re an early hire working alongside the founder and a few engineers, what does your role look like? How is it different from joining a company as employee #30, 120, or even 1432?   Mary, SJ, and Wesley chat with David G Simmons, Taylor Barnett, and Aydrian Howard to talk about being DevRel number one.

Last Week in .NET
July 11, 2020 - Microsoft's Marketing Team Strikes Again!

Last Week in .NET

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 13, 2020 9:52


Show notes:Transcript:Last Week In .NET (for the week ending July 11th, 2020)Microsoft released details about Maui -- their codename for .NET 6.- .NET 6 is when Mono and .NET 5 aka .NET "Core" come together into a unified toolchain and platform, and they're calling it Maui. That's a bit on the nose, don't you think? Maui is the character from Moana that started, failed, stopped, started, failed, stopped, and started again and finally succeeded.Something that I'll end up writing a thousand times because naming is hard: .NET Core is now .NET 5; and .NET Framework and .NET 5 are different incompatible things. Somebody took the Java/JavaScript comparison a bit too far. In case you haven't heard that one, Java is to JavaScript like car is to carpet..NET finally succeeding in bringing together Mono and .NET will be a win for everyone. If you want cross-platform Mobile Applications using .NET, you're currently stuck with Xamarin Forms and Mono. And since .NET game developers rely on Unity, and unity relies on Mono, I'll be happy to see them finally be able to move to .NET 5; since .NET Core (now .NET 5) is a lot faster than the old Framework and Mono.The big news here is Xamarin Forms will now be a first class citizen in .NET; and cross platform Forms will now be possible. This is huge, if I'm reading it right. XAML is back too. Shout out to everyone who learned XAML only to be crushed by the demise of Silverlight. Let's all pour one out for Silverlight.Bill Wagner, a senior content developer for .NET at Microsoft -- wait, did they get rid of Developer Advocates? Isn't a Senior Content Developer just a Developer advocate? Is nothing safe from Microsoft's Marketing team? Anyway, Bill sat down and spoke on the podcast about... .NET 6 - Codename "Maui".Speaking of .NET 5, .NET Core 5 Preview 6 has been released. I'm also incrementing the "please move to calendar versioning" counter. This release fixes a number of issues, especially in EFCore and the .NET 5 SDK.F# updatesFor the five people that use F#, Apparently F# 5 Preview 6 is out. I'd like to thank the marketing team at Microsoft for having at least one language on the same version number as the platform now. The two holdouts are, C# which is at Version 9, and VB.NET, which is sitting at Version 16 . (which also apparently supports .NET Core? I'll have to dive in and see what this is like).This makes me happy because F# has always felt... well.. ignored by Microsoft. Seeing them get updates for NET 5 is great. Thank you Microsoft!EFCore UpdatesEntity Framework Core version 5.0 Preview 6 is out; and once again it feels like a few microsoft teams are all "Let's pin to the platform version", and others are like "screw that". #teamplatformversion .Anyway, from the blog post: This release includes split queries for related collections, a new “index” attribute, improved exceptions related to query translations, IP address mapping, exposing transaction id for correlation, and more.the interesting part to me is the 'index' attribute. This support has been in Entity Framework 6.2, and is now also in EFCore as of version 5.0. In Typical MSDN fashion the API's usage is an exercise for the reader.In the "This is scary but could be useful" department, EF Core 5 Preview 6 also released "Split Queries" support which previously existed in Entity Framework 6. Split Queries will emit separate DataReaders to retrieve data using the .Include method. On the one hand it makes query optimization easier; on the other hand it introduces a lot of magic: When you see "SplitQueryable", you now need to understand that you're hitting the database with separate queries. If you use Split Queries, let me know how you feel about them, but the DBA in me is nervous about consistency..NET Foundation Board Member ElectionsThe .NET Foundation nominations have concluded; and elections for Board Members are going to be held on July 21st. There are 6 board seats open.AND THE NOMINEES ARE (I've always wanted to say that): Ben Adams Bill Wagner Dennie Declercq Dhananjay Kumar Huei Feng Jamie Howarth Javier Lozano Jay Harris Jeff Strauss Jeffrey Chilberto Jerome Hardaway Joseph Guadagno Layla Porter Mitchel Sellers Rainer Stropek Rodney Littles, II Rodrigo Diaz Concha Shawn Wildermuth You can read about the nominees here: https://dotnetfoundation.org/about/election/candidates and best of luck to everyone who doesn't know what they're getting into.Stack Overflow Moderator ElectionsSpeaking of elections, Stack Overflow is holding elections for the first time after 37 moderators left the Stack Exchange Network with 4 Moderators leaving Stack Overflow during the great Moderator exodus of 2019. That is a sordid story best told on its own. Over wine. Lots of wine. If you want me to go deeper into that story in a future podcast, post a five star review on apple podcasts, or if you're reading this newsletter in its email form, reply with the question "how many times can a company shoot itself in the foot"?Anyway,Nominations close on 00:00 UTC on Monday, July 13th which translates to 8pm Eastern Daylight Time on July 12th. (I think. Date math is hard. Also I apologize to my past projects and teams for advocating for the display of UTC time to every user in the application. Save your user's sanity by storing dates in UTC, and displaying them in local time).WinGet / AppGet Debacle continuesDo you remember the time when Microsoft loved Keivan's work on AppGet, invited him out to Microsoft for an interview, ghosted him, copied several architectural features of his project and then the night before Build called him to tell him that they were releasing a competitor to his .NET open source project they were calling "WinGet"?No? Oh.Anyway, Keivan sat down to talk on FossBytes about AppGet and more. That's spelled bytes, not bites. Again, naming is hard. https://fossbytes.com/appget-developer-keivan-beigi-interview/I can appreciate the financial savvy exhibited here. Companies pay tens of thousands of dollars to someone who helped shave off months of development time. Microsoft got all that work for a steal. Typically this work pays well and is called consulting. But if you run an Open Source project, it's called "Thanks for the free work and $*#@ you".Hang on, my fact checker is telling me Microsoft, apparently in exchange for the months of design direction Keivan helped them knock off and the hundreds of developer hours saved through his work, was credited in a Readme file on the WinGet project on June 3rd, 2020.Way to go Microsoft.Keivan, Show that readme file to your landlord for 0% off of next month's rent!Pretty Fricking Cool Library Of the Week (PFCLotW)Have you heard of Polly? No, not Jennifer Aniston's character in that early 2000s hit romantic comedy. I'm talking about the open source library. Polly is meant to be used whenever you would make a network call to another service (internal or external). If you cross a network boundary, you want to wrap that call in something like Polly. You could, of course, re-invent the Circuit breaker pattern, but then you'd have to maintain it. Save electricity. Save the Earth. Use Polly instead. (This is not a sponsored ad. I just really like Polly).And that's what happened Last Week in .NET (technically the last 2 weeks, but July 4th was a holiday and nobody kept up with what happened the week before July 4th either). I'm George Stocker, and I help .NET Teams double their productivity. I won't tell you how though because you'll think I'm a member of the TDD Cult. I am not. But TDD can help your team save time, money, and result in a workday where you actually get to leave at 5pm. Visit www.doubleyourproductivity.io to learn more.If you liked this Newsletter, please forward it to your friends and ask them to subscribe at www.lastweekin.net. If you hated it, please forward it to your enemies.

Django Chat
Advanced Deployment - Katie McLaughlin

Django Chat

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 22, 2020 49:05


Weekly Django Chat NewsletterTwitter @glasntKatie's talksPyCon 2020 - What is deployment, anyway? (video)PyCon 2020 - Tutorial: Deploying Django on Serverless Infrastructureih-aas repo Google Cloud SQLGoogle Cloud RunCloud Run buttondjango-demo-app-unicodexAja Hammerly thread on Developer Advocates being busy without conferencesDjangoCon Europe 2016 - Building a Non-Relational Backend for the ORM - Adam Alton  (video) (djangae)"Every production setup will be a little bit different" - djangoproject.com

Google Cloud Platform Podcast
SAP with Thomas Jung and Lucia Subatin

Google Cloud Platform Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 7, 2020 42:00


Brian Dorsey and Mark Mirchandani team up this week to speak with Thomas Jung and Lucia Subatin about SAP. SAP, the company that builds software and other technology components, is probably best known for their Enterprise Resource Planning software that helps businesses with everything from accounting to order management. Their Customer Relationship Management software helps companies with things like marketing campaign management and sales, while SAP’s Supplier Relationship Management software helps clients manage large supply chains. Thomas explains how companies can get started with SAP products and integrate them into their current systems. Once SAP products are employed, clients benefit from a better understanding of their complete business and a more efficient company. SAP developers must have great communication skills, as they take SAP products and tailor them to each individual company, whether on-prem or in the cloud. Later, Lucia and Thomas describe instances when clients may want to take their core businesses and enhance them with technologies like AI and how this is possible. To wrap up the episode, Thomas and Lucia introduce us to SAP products like HANA, their Cloud Application Programming Model, and security measures. Thomas Jung Thomas Jung is Head of Developer Advocacy - a team within the SAP Developer & Community Relations organization. The Developer Advocates inform and educate about SAP and related development technologies and also act as the voice of external developers within the SAP organization. Lucia Subatin Chocolate, cats, computers. Lucia spends a lot of time with the computer, either solving problems or starting trouble. She likes to architect technology solutions to help enterprises run more efficiently. Her cats and chocolate help her bring innovations. Cool things of the week Google Cloud learning resources at no cost for 30 days blog Powering up caching with Memorystore for Memcached blog Interview SAP site OData site Pub/Sub site Cloud Knative site SAP TechEd site Cloud Run site Google Cloud Platform Podcast Episode 166: SAP HANA with Lucia Subatin and Kevin Nelson podcast Qwiklabs site Question of the week How do I get started with caching? Why should I cache? Brian tells us more about caching, Memcached, and Redis. Where can you find us next? Brian is taking it day by day right now. Mark will be making more videos!

Z DevOps Talks
Matt Cousens talks Developer Advocacy on IBM Z and LinuxONE

Z DevOps Talks

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 31, 2020 47:48


Welcome back for another episode of Z DevOps Talks. We know things are a bit hectic now and most people are probably stuck indoors. So maybe take a listen to our latest episode to help break up the monotony! In our latest episode, we talk with Matt Cousens, a Developer Advocate for IBM Z and LinuxONE. Matt flew into the RTP campus for a (post-quarantine) Developer Advocate event. And while he was here, he carved some time out of his schedule to discuss the work he and other Developer Advocates are doing in IBM Z and LinuxONE. You're probably wondering what a Developer Advocate does. Well we certainly discuss this during the episode, but to give you a bit of background on Developer Advocates; they are our globally federated IBM developers, the ones actively working with and alongside our clients. Our Developer Advocates are responsible for developing our Code Patterns, actively working on more than 100 open source projects, and a curating our library of knowledge resources. The Code Patterns deserve some special attention though. As a library of complete solutions to problems that developers face every day, these patterns leverage multiple technologies, products, or services to solve issues that our developer advocates have recognized as common use cases across multiple industries. You can check out our library here. Our Developer Advocates are collaborators too! Maybe you need to better understand where blockchain technology fits in your company's transactions. Maybe you are moving towards an Omnichannel customer support structure and you want to build a chat bot to interact with your customers. Whatever it is, Developer Advocates exist to help clients understand and take advantage of cutting edge, open technologies and to accelerate that next great project. Transcript of this episode available here.

Brakeing Down Security Podcast
2020-003- Liz Fong Jones, tracking Pentesters, setting up MFA for SSH, and Developer Advocates

Brakeing Down Security Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 30, 2020 34:53


What is Honeycomb.io? From the site:  “Honeycomb is a tool for introspecting and interrogating your production systems. We can gather data from any source—from your clients (mobile, IoT, browsers), vendored software, or your own code. Single-node debugging tools miss crucial details in a world where infrastructure is dynamic and ephemeral. Honeycomb is a new type of tool, designed and evolved to meet the real needs of platforms, microservices, serverless apps, and complex systems.”   SSH 2FA gist https://gist.github.com/lizthegrey/9c21673f33186a9cc775464afbdce820   Honeycomb.io for digging into access logs & retracing what pentesters do.   Check out our Store on Teepub! https://brakesec.com/store Join us on our #Slack Channel! Send a request to @brakesec on Twitter or email bds.podcast@gmail.com #Brakesec Store!:https://www.teepublic.com/user/bdspodcast #Spotify: https://brakesec.com/spotifyBDS #RSS: https://brakesec.com/BrakesecRSS #Youtube Channel:  http://www.youtube.com/c/BDSPodcast #iTunes Store Link: https://brakesec.com/BDSiTunes #Google Play Store: https://brakesec.com/BDS-GooglePlay Our main site:  https://brakesec.com/bdswebsite #iHeartRadio App:  https://brakesec.com/iHeartBrakesec #SoundCloud: https://brakesec.com/SoundcloudBrakesec Comments, Questions, Feedback: bds.podcast@gmail.com Support Brakeing Down Security Podcast by using our #Paypal: https://brakesec.com/PaypalBDS OR our #Patreon https://brakesec.com/BDSPatreon #Twitter: @brakesec @boettcherpwned @bryanbrake @infosystir #Player.FM : https://brakesec.com/BDS-PlayerFM #Stitcher Network: https://brakesec.com/BrakeSecStitcher #TuneIn Radio App: https://brakesec.com/TuneInBrakesec

Under the Hood of Developer Marketing
Moving from startups to global companies with Max Katz

Under the Hood of Developer Marketing

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 9, 2020 34:11


Happy New Year! Trick question of the week: How different is practising developer marketing at a startup vs at one of the world’s largest companies? For our guest in this episode, it’s like moving to another country. Under the Hood of Developer Marketing is back in 2020 with a new episode that touches several subjects from a heavyweight in the field: Max Katz. Max walks us through the lessons learned, the KPIs, the priorities that changed along the way as he moved from a startup to leading the developer advocacy program and a big team at IBM. A great, all-inclusive episode you'll love, to kick-off the new year!  Max Katz is the Program Director for Developer Advocacy at IBM. He leads a team of Developer Advocates, together they provide developer education in NA West region.

More Than Just Code podcast - iOS and Swift development, news and advice

This week we chat about views that seem to be broken in iOS 13. We fact check on Digital Darkroom. WeWork hits a snag and we add some of our favorite Black Friday/Cyber Monday deals. Dad Jokes and other trending memes populate the show. iOS 14 may be rebased with incremental updates with feature flags. X-rays reveal a shutter button on the iPhone Smart Battery Case. We discuss Andy Ibanez' post on new search APIs in iOS 13. Rumor has it that Toronto's Eaton Centre will get a larger Apple Store. Picks: Useful obscure Foundation types in Swift, SwiftUI Views book, The Book of Why. Special Guest: Mike Vinakmens.

Drill to Detail
Drill to Detail Ep.68 ‘Confluent, Event-First Thinking and Streaming Real-Time Analytics' With Special Guests Robin Moffatt and Ricardo Ferreira and Special Host Stewart Bryson

Drill to Detail

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 17, 2019 40:46


In this special edition of the Drill to Detail Podcast hosted by Stewart Bryson, CEO and Co-Founder of Red Pill Analytics, he is joined by Robin Moffatt and Ricardo Ferreira, Developer Advocates at Confluent, to talk about Apache Kafka and Confluent, event-first thinking and streaming real-time analytics.Confluent Download: https://www.confluent.io/download/Demo: https://github.com/confluentinc/cp-demo/Slack group: http://cnfl.io/slackMailing list: https://groups.google.com/forum/#!forum/confluent-platformFrom Zero to Hero with Kafka Connect: http://rmoff.dev/ksldn19l-kafka-connect-slidesNo More Silos: Integrating Databases and Apache Kafka: http://rmoff.dev/ksny19-no-more-silosThe Changing Face of ETL: Event-Driven Architectures for Data Engineers: http://rmoff.dev/changing-face-of-etl

Drill to Detail
Drill to Detail Ep.68 ‘Confluent, Event-First Thinking and Streaming Real-Time Analytics' With Special Guests Robin Moffatt and Ricardo Ferreira and Special Host Stewart Bryson

Drill to Detail

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 17, 2019 40:46


In this special edition of the Drill to Detail Podcast hosted by Stewart Bryson, CEO and Co-Founder of Red Pill Analytics, he is joined by Robin Moffatt and Ricardo Ferreira, Developer Advocates at Confluent, to talk about Apache Kafka and Confluent, event-first thinking and streaming real-time analytics.Confluent Download: https://www.confluent.io/download/Demo: https://github.com/confluentinc/cp-demo/Slack group: http://cnfl.io/slackMailing list: https://groups.google.com/forum/#!forum/confluent-platformFrom Zero to Hero with Kafka Connect: http://rmoff.dev/ksldn19l-kafka-connect-slidesNo More Silos: Integrating Databases and Apache Kafka: http://rmoff.dev/ksny19-no-more-silosThe Changing Face of ETL: Event-Driven Architectures for Data Engineers: http://rmoff.dev/changing-face-of-etl

IT Career Energizer
Learn to Explore and Not be Afraid to Ask the Dumb Questions with Ryan Levick

IT Career Energizer

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 21, 2019 20:46


GUEST BIO: Ryan Levick is a developer advocate working in Berlin.  Ryan joined Microsoft as a result of its acquisition of Wunderlist in 2015.  Ryan has spent his career building apps on both the server and client side and exploring a wide range of open source technologies with a particular focus on functional programming.   Ryan has a passion for the Rust programming language, which he often writes about on Twitter and on his blog, and speaks about at conferences. EPISODE DESCRIPTION: Phil’s guest on today’s show is Ryan Levick. He came late to programming, having worked in marketing, communications, and business. Despite this, after just a few years of programming, Microsoft asked them to join them as a senior engineer. They did so when they acquired 6Wunderkinder, which included Wunderlist, which Ryan was working as a backend engineer. Today, he is a Principal Cloud Developer Advocate. Over the years, he has used numerous languages, including, Ruby, Rails, Scala, Elixir, JavaScript and many others. He is currently learning and working with Rust. As well as working in the Cloud. Primarily, using Azure but he is also learning other competing cloud platforms. Ryan is also a conference speaker. KEY TAKEAWAYS: (1.11) – So Ryan, can I ask you to expand on that brief intro and tell us a little bit more about yourself? Ryan explains that he studied marketing, so that is the sector he began working in, when he left university. Around that time, he moved to Berlin and joined a start-up called 6Wunderkinder. That was when he first started to learn to programme. In time, he became a full-time programmer for them working on their Wunderlist project. (1.41) - I don't know anything about 6Wunderkinder or Wunderlist, can you give us an overview of what they're about? It is a small company that focuses on building productivity software. In 2015, it was acquired by Microsoft, which is when Ryan secured the first of the 3 jobs he has had with Microsoft. (2.02) – Can you please share a unique career tip with the I.T. career audience? Learn as much as you can and spread out in weird and strange directions. Even if what you are learning is not immediately useful, it may be one day. This will push you to explore areas of computer science and programming you would not have otherwise looked at. (2.45) – Is this something you do yourself? Yes, all the time. (3.04) – Do you focus on the strange and unusual? If yes, how do you do that? Ryan explains that he picks up on new trends all sorts of people are talking about, then explores as many of them as possible. Usually, even if something is not ready for real-time use there are still lessons to be learned from that technology. The trick is to learn about something, then generalize that knowledge. Doing this enables you to apply it elsewhere. He always stops and asks himself how he can apply what he has learned to real-time applications and his job. (4.31) – Can you tell us about your worst career moment? And what you learned from that experience. Ryan says he hesitates to say worst because his worst career moment actually turned out to be an amazing experience. Recently, he became the manager of a small team. A role he really enjoyed, but the problem was that running his team did not leave him enough time to be hands-on and continue to learn. As a result, he feels he can categorize this experience as his worst career moment. (5.29) – So, stepping away and being more managerial is not necessarily something you want in the future? Ryan explains that he was continuing to learn new skills. About people management, career growth and things like that. But, he found that he was not waking up in the morning wanting to rush to the office like he used to. Ryan thinks it is important to find things that make you feel enthusiastic and stick to doing them. (6.08) – What was your best career moment? Ryan says he has been lucky enough to have had quite a few career highlights. For example, it felt great when Microsoft took over 6Wunderkinder and offered him a job straight away. He had only been programming for a few years, yet was still asked to become a senior engineer for Microsoft. It proves that, in this industry, if you work hard you do not necessarily need a computer science degree to be able to succeed. (7.04) - So presumably, you were able to demonstrate your value to Microsoft? Ryan explains that he was able to do exactly that primarily by showing them that he looked for and recognized new angles. He did this primarily by not being afraid to ask the so-called dumb questions, the ones nobody else wanted to ask. It turns out that, most of the time, dumb questions are the right questions, (7.51) – Can you tell us what excites you about the future of the IT industry and careers? The fact that things can change almost literally overnight is something that Ryan finds exciting about working in the IT industry. A few months ago he started a new job as a Developer Advocate. Even in that short period of time, the role has already evolved and changed significantly. The pace of change is amazingly fast. So, you never stop learning, which is exciting. (8.40) – Is there any technology or direction that particularly interests you? At the moment, Ryan is fascinated by a technology called web assembly. It enables you to run programs in a very controlled way. Web Assembly has the potential to drastically change the world of IT. Including how things are done on servers, in web browsers, and on people’s computers. It is such a young technology that it is hard to tell what direction it will go in. (9.36) – A lot of companies now have Developer Advocates. How do you see that influencing the way in which people develop their careers? It is very important for companies that offer products and services to developers to build a strong and close relationship with them. One of Microsoft’s aims is to provide value to developers and other IT professionals. To give them the tools they need to succeed and change things for the better. In order to do that, Microsoft has developed the Azure platform, Visual Studio and Visual Studio Code. But, it is not enough to simply deliver these tools. You need to be sure that they are what IT professionals actually need. If you do not have a constant dialogue with these people, there is no way that you can serve them well. So, Ryan feels that one of his key roles is to have an honest dialogue with them. To figure out what is working for them and what is not and take that feedback back to Microsoft. Phil finds that interesting because, to date, developer advocacy has not been explained to him in that way. Others who fulfill this role have described it more as an evangelical role. To Phil it sounded like it was all about sharing a company’s latest products and ideas with IT professionals, rather than acting as a two-way feedback channel. Ryan explains that he does both. He showcases their products and helps IT professionals to recognize and unlock their true potential. But, if something is not up to standard, he  also wants to hear about it. So, that he can make sure that the product is updated and improved. (12.05) – What drew you to a career in IT? Ryan says it was curiosity that led him into the IT sector. He remembers looking over his colleague's shoulder at Wunderlist, realizing he did not understand what they were typing on the screen and started wondering how everything works. So, decided to find out. When he peeled the first layer back he just ended up with even more questions. His curiosity drew him in deeper and deeper. Now he realizes you can never know everything about computers and technology. It is impossible to hold it all in your head. Something that excites and drives him on. (12.53) – What is the best career advice you have ever received? Constantly put yourself in a position to learn the right skills. The skills that you think will be applicable to your future career. Don’t get into the position where you spend all of your time maintaining a legacy system or working on something that will only ever be used inside the company you work for. If you do that, finding and moving on to a new role will become very difficult. Make sure that you are always learning new transferable skills. (14.06) – If you were to begin your IT career again, right now, what would you do? Ryan says he would definitely get involved in what he is doing now – developer relations. He really enjoys working in this field. In particular, having a legitimate excuse to spend all day speaking to people about things he feels passionate about. Things they are passionate about too. It is the perfect opportunity to be continually learning. Ryan prefers being out talking to people to just sitting in front of a screen in a dark room. That kind of IT career is not the one he wants. (15.18) – What are you currently focusing on in your career? Right now, Ryan is focusing on growing his presence in the communities he cares most about. He is trying to become more t-shaped. That means continuing to maintain a wide breadth of knowledge while diving deep on one, maybe two, particular subjects. Right now, for Ryan, that means learning everything he can about cloud technology. That includes Azure of course. But, also his competitor’s technologies like AWS and Google’s cloud platform. He wants to make sure that when he needs to do so, he will have the right type of knowledge to easily switch to another job. Ryan is also working to grow his presence in the IT communities he is most interested in. That includes the Rust programming language community. He has been using this new language since late last year. (16.24) – What is the number one non-technical skill that has helped you the most in your IT career? For Ryan, the ability to listen has been critical to his success. He has noticed that a lot of developers talk too much. They forget to take a step back and just listen. Even if you are an expert in your choosen field that does not mean that you cannot learn from other people. The technology sector is so big and varied that you will rarely be the smartest person in the room. There are always subjects about which others are more knowledgeable than you. It pays to take a step back and just listen and ask questions and grow your understanding. (17.48) – Phil asks Ryan to share a final piece of career advice with the audience. Without wishing to sound like a broken record – don’t be afraid to explore. Find something you feel passionate about and dive deep into it. But, be sure to learn other things too. There is no harm in being a scatterbrain. If you believe you have covered a subject enough, don’t feel you have to stick with it forever. Instead, move on and learn something else. You will find that one set of knowledge feeds into your new subject. Ryan’s advice is to do as much as you can. Don’t worry about catching it all the first time around. Just explore, have fun and revisit it at a later date. BEST MOMENTS: (2.15) RYAN – "Try to learn as much as you possibly can and expand out into weird and strange directions." (5.23) RYAN – "If I'm not having fun at work, then I'm just not going to do as good of a job as I possibly can." (7.39) RYAN – "It turns out that most of the time the dumb questions are the right ones." (13.06) RYAN – "Constantly put yourself in the position to learn the right skills." (17.22) RYAN – "When you do talk, instead of talking at people, try to ask questions." CONTACT RYAN: Twitter: https://twitter.com/ryan_levick LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/ryanlevick/ Website: https://blog.ryanlevick.com/

Community Pulse
Lessons Learned while Organizing Tech Events (Ep 33)

Community Pulse

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 12, 2019 47:03


In this episode, our hosts are joined by Aaron Aldrich and Quintessence Anx, both of whom are Developer Advocates who also have experience organizing community events. Together, they discuss the challenges, lessons learned, and tips for organizing events for a technical audience.

Community Pulse
Lessons Learned while Organizing Tech Events (Ep 33)

Community Pulse

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 12, 2019 47:03


In this episode, our hosts are joined by Aaron Aldrich and Quintessence Anx, both of whom are Developer Advocates who also have experience organizing community events. Together, they discuss the challenges, lessons learned, and tips for organizing events for a technical audience.

Command Line Heroes
Bonus: Developer Advocacy Roundtable

Command Line Heroes

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 17, 2018 29:17


Developer advocates play important roles in open source communities. We brought a few of them together to explain how and why they do what they do. Sandra Persing (Mozilla), Ricky Robinett (Twilio), and Robyn Bergeron (Red Hat) sit down with Saron to share what they’re working on, how they support their communities, and what they’re looking forward to in 2019. Meanwhile, Season 3 of Command Line Heroes is already in the works. You can be one of the first to learn about new episodes when they drop this spring. If you haven't already, subscribe wherever you get your podcasts. It's one click, and it's 100% free. Season 1 and 2 are also available for your listening pleasure while you wait! Listen at redhat.com/en/command-line-heroes.

.NET.CZ
.NET.CZ(Episode.28) - mDevCamp, Developer Advocates, repo týdne

.NET.CZ

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 25, 2018 30:03


Opět jsme nahrávali v terénu, tentokrát na konferenci mDevCamp, kde měl Microsoft kromě stánku také dva zahraniční řečníky. Do Prahy dorazili James Montemagno a Brandon Minnick. Nejprve se s vámi o své dojmy podělí Vojta, poté Brandon, který také trochu přiblíží, co obnáší nově vzniklá role Developer Advocate. A na závěr nový segment: Repo týdne! Odkazy: - James na mDevCampu: https://slideslive.com/38908264/net-everywhere-and-for-everyone - Brandon na mDevCampu: https://slideslive.com/38908247/upgrade-your-apps-with-ai-using-cognitive-services - Xamarin Forms 3.1: https://developer.xamarin.com/releases/xamarin-forms/xamarin-forms-3.1/ - Prague Azure User Group: https://www.meetup.com/Azure-User-Group/ - rozhovor s Markem Šafářem: https://soundcloud.com/msimecek/dotnet-cz-episode-04 Repo týdne: - Train faces: https://github.com/howlowck/train-faces - Refit: https://github.com/reactiveui/refit Twittery atd.: - https://twitter.com/TheCodeTraveler (Brandon) - https://twitter.com/JamesMontemagno (James) - https://twitter.com/deeedx (Martin) - https://twitter.com/madrvojt (Vojta) Děkujeme Worklio a Radkovi za nové logo! Pokud nechcete, aby vám unikla nová epizoda, odebírejte RSS: https://bit.ly/netcz-podcast-rss, sledujte nás na Twitteru: https://twitter.com/dotnetcezet nebo na Apple Podcasts. Hudba pochází od Little Glass Men: https://freemusicarchive.org/music/Little_Glass_Men/

GameDev Breakdown
Microsoft Cloud Developer Advocates Jessica Deen and Abel Wang

GameDev Breakdown

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 26, 2018 28:02


Jessica Deen and Abel Wang stop by at #GDC18 on their quest to bring DevOps goodness to the game dev community. We talk about the importance of consistency and reaching the next level of intuitive, repeatable processes in your software development. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/gamedevbreakdown/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/gamedevbreakdown/support

developers devops microsoft cloud developer advocates abel wang jessica deen gdc18
GameDev Breakdown
Microsoft Cloud Developer Advocates Jessica Deen and Abel Wang

GameDev Breakdown

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 26, 2018 27:26


Jessica Deen and Abel Wang stop by at #GDC18 on their quest to bring DevOps goodness to the game dev community. We talk about the importance of consistency and reaching the next level of intuitive, repeatable processes in your software development.

devops microsoft cloud developer advocates abel wang jessica deen gdc18
Google Cloud Platform Podcast
Cloud Machine Learning Engine with Yufeng Guo

Google Cloud Platform Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 5, 2017 40:20


One of our dear Developer Advocates, Yufeng Guo, joins your co-hosts, Mark and Francesc, to talk about the Cloud Machine Learning Engine. Cloud Machine Learning Engine offers a managed platform for training and serving Tensorflow models. About Yufeng Guo Yufeng is a Developer Advocate for the Google Cloud Platform, where he is trying to make machine learning more understandable and usable for all. He enjoys hearing about new and interesting applications of machine learning, share your use case with him on Twitter @YufengG. Cool things of the week Kubernetes 1.6: Kubernetes 1.6: Multi-user, Multi-workloads at Scale blog post Five Days of Kubernetes 1.6 blog post Recapping Google Next ‘17 by Kalev Leetaru: Deep Learning As A Service Forbes Making Security Forbes The Great Cloud Shift From Renting Hardware To Services And Experts Forbes Interview Tensorflow homepage On-device machine learning: TensorFlow on Android (Google Cloud Next ‘17) YouTube TensorFlow and Deep Learning without a PhD part 1 and part 2 Cloud Machine Learning Engine docs Huggable or not? Build smart applications with your new superpower: cloud machine learning YouTube Kaggle homepage Cloud Machine Learning Engine has a cool logo Question of the week What are API keys and when should I use them? Why and When to use API Keys docs Where can you find us next? Mark is at Vancouver Unity Games Meetup and on Thursday he'll be at Polyglot Vancouver Meetup, then on to East Coast Games Conference and Vector in April. Francesc will be presenting at Gophercon China in April, and will then head off to New York! Then he'll be back to San Francisco for GopherFest.

Google Cloud Platform Podcast
Python with Jon Wayne Parrott

Google Cloud Platform Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 1, 2017 32:13


Following the saga of episodes on programming languages today your co-hosts, Francesc and Mark, have the honor to talk to Jon Wayne Parrott, a Developer Programs Engineer at Google Cloud Platform, about Python on the cloud. About Jon Wayne Jon Wayne focuses on the Python developer experience for Google Cloud Platform. He's an active contributor to multiple open-source Python projects. Cool things of the week Google Cloud Platform is the first cloud provider to offer Intel Skylake blog GPUs are now available for Google Compute Engine and Cloud Machine Learning blog Developer Advocates offer up their favorite Google Cloud NEXT 17 sessions blog Interviews Python on Google Cloud Platform cloud.google.com/python Python on App Engine Standard Environment docs Python on App Engine Flexible Environment docs A skeleton for creating Python applications using the Flask framework on App Engine GitHub Question of the week Can I send emails as part of a Cloud Datastore transaction? No, but you can use Task Queues docs Where can you find us next? Mark is today at GDC and afterwards he'll be speaking at Cloud NEXT, both in San Francisco. Francesc is coming back from Gophercon India and on his way to Cloud NEXT.