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Eighteen TV platforms, one codebase—what could possibly go wrong? Tune in to find out how to tackle the technical and UX challenges of building for Android TV, Apple TV, Fire TV, Tizen, and more—all with React Native! In the 49th episode of React Universe On Air, Łukasz Chludziński (https://x.com/lukasz_app) teams up with Michael Khirallah (https://x.com/mkralla11), Senior Director of Engineering at DIRECTV, and Chris Trag (https://x.com/chris_trag), Developer Evangelist at Amazon, to discuss why cross-platform development is not just a time-saver but also a way to deliver a consistent user experience. You know that at Callstack, we're all about performance—and with devices like Samsung's Tizen TVs released in 2017 (running Chromium 47!), performance is a serious concern. That's why we asked our guests to share real-world techniques for optimizing TV apps, from architectural choices to strategies that avoid unnecessary performance hits on newer devices. The complexity of TV app development doesn't stop at coding, though. Our host and guests know it all to well, so they couldn't help but discuss how they balance unit, integration, automation, and manual testing, leveraging tools like AWS Device Farm and custom-built frameworks to ensure stability across all supported platforms. What's in it for you? Tips on automating QA without compromising thoroughness and why manual testing remains crucial for end-user experience. Want to get started with React Native TV app development? Download our guide
Senior Developer Evangelist, Roger Kibbe joins us on GenAI in the Enterprise. Roger is passionate about Generative AI and has spent a good portion of his career focused on the technology, from the retail space to a startup using Voice AI to now at Samsung. Currently, he's utilizing Conversational AI to enhance user experience with Samsung products from phones to washers and dryers. Zach and Roger dive further into the nuances of integrating GenAI for over 6 million different users. Like, Subscribe, and Follow: YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCAIUNkXmnAPgLWnqUDpUGAQ LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/keyhole-software Twitter: @KeyholeSoftware Find even more Keyhole content on our website (https://keyholesoftware.com/). About Roger: Utilizing his strategic and technological expertise, he focuses on harnessing the transformative power of AI to streamline and enhance our everyday experiences. He is an expert in conversational and generative AI, including extensive experience with voice assistants and voice technology. His professional acumen encompasses a comprehensive array of skills such as technology strategy, communication, developer advocacy, and deep familiarity with web and mobile technology ecosystems. Beyond his responsibilities as a Startup Founder and Advisor, he serves as an Ambassador for the Open Voice Network, championing the progression of conversational AI technology. As a respected thought leader in the tech industry, he has had the privilege to share my insights at distinguished conferences such as the Voice Summit, Project Voice, Samsung SDC, NRF, Dreamforce, and VMWorld. Roger on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/rkibbe/
In this episode, Jon talks to Jacob Marks, Machine Learning Engineer and Developer Evangelist at Voxel51, whose background is rooted in scientific research having formally been a Ph.D. resident at X the moonshot factory. In this episode, Jacob and Jon unpack the current hype surrounding the implementation of AI in computer vision and software development, assessing its current impact on the industry. Join them as discuss the importance of practical and interactive learning resources and the benefits of contributing to open-source projects.
On ne présente plus la fameuse stack «ELK» (Elasticsearch, Logstash, Kibana). Né au début des années 2010, Elasticsearch a connu un rapide essor, qui s'est accéléré avec la création de la société Elastic NV qui en finance le développement à l'aide d'un ensemble de services payants. Après avoir traversé quelques transformations du monde de la Tech (le passage au Cloud, la création des «as a Service», et l'émergence des I.A.), où en est Elastic ? Vers où se dirige Elasticsearch ? Avec David Pilato, Developer Evangelist chez Elastic, prenons le temps de faire le point sur cette solution qui a su se réinventer régulièrement tout en gardant son esprit originel. Tu likes/aimes/partage: Le podcast de musique de David: https://podcasts.apple.com/fr/podcast/dj-dadoo-net-mixes/id505824965 Et son site (qui diffuse le podcast directement): https://djdadoo.pilato.fr/
In today's episode, Jon sits down with Brandon Kessler, CEO and Founder of Devpost, to unpack what it takes to create a successful hackathon that has longevity. Brandon is a record label founder turned tech entrepreneur, who is passionate about creating spaces that facilitate a community. Join him and Jon as they discuss the importance of fostering competition, collaboration, and community to create a space where learning through building can thrive.
This week on The State of Developer Education, Jon is joined by Mike Zamansky, an influential voice in computer science education in New York City. Recently retired, Mike has held a range of roles in the education sector, previously having been the Coordinator of Computer Science Education and Director of Undergraduate Honors at Hunters College. This episode is about unpacking the state of computer science education in the United States. Mike and Jon discuss the disconnect between classroom teaching and industry requirements and explore how educators can better collaborate with industry professionals to close the skills gap in developer education.
Zero to Start VR Podcast: Unity development from concept to Oculus test channel
Discover how Cognitive3D's SDK for Unreal and Unity empowers immersive creators to unlock player behavior and build better 3D experiences with Calder Archinuk, Developer Evangelist at Cognitive3D. Designing for Player agency in virtual environments is one of many challenges in VR development, yet player agency is also what makes VR an essential medium for capturing and studying player behavior.How can developers quickly and easily leverage spatial analytics to build better immersive experiences? What should every immersive developer know about leveraging spatial analytics in their projects? How can developers safely collect spatial data and protect privacy? Dive into these questions and more on our latest episode. Happy installing!CONNECT WITH COGNITIVE3D:Create a free account on Cognitive3D.comDownload the SDKFollow on GithubJoin the Cognitive3D community on DiscordFollow on XCalder Archinuk on LinkedInRESOURCES:Cognitve3D Glossary of Metrics - Cognitive3DVirtual Reality in Behavioral Neuroscience: New Insights and Methods - edited by Christopher Maymon, Gina Grimshaw, Ying Choo Wu Eye-Tracking Methodology and Applications in Consumer Research - Hayk Khachatryan and Alicia L. Rihn, University of Florida X Reality Safety Intelligence (XRSI) CONNECT WITH SICILIANAsicilianatrevino.comon LinkedIn Subscribe to Zero to Start on your favorite podcast platform, and share this episode with the immersive creators in your life. Thanks for listening and for your support!
Corey Weathers is a software developer who loves using technology to make the impossible possible! In his current role as a Developer Evangelist, Corey serves the interests and needs of the Microsoft developer community as well as underrepresented groups in technology. His passion lies in solving human problems through technology.Prior to Auth0, Corey has worked in a variety of software development and program management roles at Howard University, the Internal Revenue Service, and Microsoft before transitioning to application development consulting. His focus on building the customer focused solutions led him to lead performance engineering for Intapp, a Silicon Valley based software firm building software -based application for the legal and financial service industries. After spending time supporting customers, Corey pivoted his focus to empowering developers to build software applications, supporting them in buildingCorey holds a Bachelor of Science degree in Systems & Computer Science from Howard University, and a Master of Business Administration degree from the Haas School of Business at the University of California, Berkeley. He currently lives with his wife and two children in State College, Pennsylvania You can find Corey Weathers on the following sites: Twitter LinkedIn Here are some links provided by Corey Weathers: Okta Online Oktane Conference PLEASE SUBSCRIBE TO THE PODCAST Spotify: http://isaacl.dev/podcast-spotify Apple Podcasts: http://isaacl.dev/podcast-apple Google Podcasts: http://isaacl.dev/podcast-google RSS: http://isaacl.dev/podcast-rss You can check out more episodes of Coffee and Open Source on https://www.coffeeandopensource.com Coffee and Open Source is hosted by Isaac Levin (https://twitter.com/isaacrlevin) --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/coffeandopensource/support
There's a large population of technical writers in devrel. And a big number of these technical writers don't necessarily come from technical backgrounds. So how do they do it? In this episode, Richard has a fascinating discussion on this topic and more with developer evangelist, Pavan Belegatti. Pavan transitioned from a marketer to a highly skilled technical writer. He's a self-taught developer and he gives us an insight into the marriage between writing and coding. In developing, there's often either a developing to writing pipeline (Richard's path) or a writing to developing pipeline (Pavan's), and as someone who came to writing later in his career, Richard picks Pavan's brain on the discipline of writing. How do you move from being a ten pages on Monday, one page on Tuesday kind of writer, to someone with a more consistent output? Pavan explains that a common oversight in technical writing is not knowing the product well enough. As the saying goes - in order to sell something, you have to buy it yourself first. And how can you do great technical writing without great knowledge of the subject matter? Pavan is also a content creator and a conference speaker and organiser. All of this as he explains, is a key aspect of a career in devrel. It's all about building trust with potential colleagues, and having a reputation you can refer back to. When it comes to all of this, consistency is key. It's easy to feel down about low view counts, but what Pavan explains is that a small number of followers who love engaging with your content is so much more valuable than a thousand eyeballs who don't. With the devrel community in India growing rapidly, Richard asks about the recent advent of people leaving devrel to go back to developing. Is this just a micro-trend, or an indication of a bigger shift? According to Pavan, it comes down to knowing what industry you're going into. He's found what he loves to do, and he's happy here. We couldn't agree more! 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
The NoDegree Podcast – No Degree Success Stories for Job Searching, Careers, and Entrepreneurship
In high school he wanted to be a pilot and had a love for all things Math and Physics. When Rishab Kumar immigrated to Canada, he made $10/hr as a gas station cashier. He wanted a career in tech but the cost of going to college prevented him from going.Get insight into the opportunities that come with transitioning into tech, the challenges that come with transitioning between different tech roles, and learn about the resources available to help you hone your skills in the tech field.In high school he wanted to be a pilot and had a love for all things Math and Physics. When Rishab Kumar immigrated to Canada, he made $10/hr as a gas station cashier. He wanted a career in tech but the cost of going to college prevented him from going.Get insight into the opportunities that come with transitioning into tech, the challenges that come with transitioning between different tech roles, and learn about the resources available to help you hone your skills in the tech field. Timestamps:(0:45) What does a Developer Evangelist do? And the salary(1:37) You need these skills to succeed as a Developer Evangelist(1:21) He wanted to be a pilot(4:16) How he got into tech from working as a gas station cashier(7:12) Working as tech support and then getting into AWS cloud(9:58) Get certifications but don't be a junkie(11:00) Students: Here's a more cost-effective way to get certifications(13:26) Here's why he couldn't go to college(15:17) Job titles don't matter, here's why(17:28) What is DevOps(19:18) How his previous experience helped him on the DevOps team(21:41) Working at Google and why he quit(27:33) The problem with romanticizing Big Tech(30:15) What helped him to become a developer evangelist(34:17) Hardest time of his life(36:17) How not having a degree held him backSupport/Contact Rishab:Twitter: https://twitter.com/rishabk7?t=YI8LOLYTH8CGbl4RLdSROw&s=09LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/rishabkumar7/Books and resources mentioned in this podcast:Resume course: https://bit.ly/podcastpcaNeed career or resume advice? Follow and/or connect with Jonaed Iqbal on LinkedIn.LinkedIn: https://bit.ly/JonaedIqbalNDConnect with us on social media!LinkedIn: https://bit.ly/NoDegreeLinkedInFacebook: https://bit.ly/NoDegreeFBInstagram: https://bit.ly/NoDegreeIGTwitter: https://bit.ly/NoDegreeTWTikTok: https://bit.ly/3qfUD2VJoin our discord server: https://bit.ly/NoDegreeDiscordThank you for sponsoring our show. If you'd like to support our mission to end the stigma and economic disparity that comes along with not having a college degree, please share with a friend, drop us a review on Apple Podcast and/or subscribe to our Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/nodegree.Remember, no degree? No problem! Whether you're contemplating college or you're a college dropout, get started with your no-degree job search at nodegree.com.
Wir begrüßen Michael Friedrich, Developer Evangelist bei GitLab, der uns tiefe Einblicke in die Welt der Observability und modernen Monitoring-Methoden gewährt. Wir entmystifizieren das Buzzword "Observability" und zeigen, wie es sich von traditionellen Monitoring-Ansätzen unterscheidet. Michael erläutert, wie Observability einen besseren Einblick in die Abläufe komplexer IT-Systeme ermöglicht und wie verschiedene Daten korreliert werden, um die Ursachen von Problemen schneller identifizieren zu können.In unserem Gespräch gehen wir auf das "Warum" hinter einem Fehler ein und diskutieren, wie Observability dazu beiträgt, die Ursachen von Problemen besser zu verstehen. Michael gibt uns auch eine Einführung in verschiedene Tools, die in diesem Bereich eingesetzt werden, wie Prometheus, Grafana und eBPF, und zeigt, wie diese Technologien dazu beitragen, Observability in der Praxis umzusetzen.Picks of the Day: Michael: Liz Rice: Learning eBPF – Dieses Buch von Liz Rice bietet einen Leitfaden für eBPF, Extended Berkeley Packet Filter. Dabei handelt es sich um ein leistungsfähiges und flexibles Framework zur Überwachung und Modifikation von Linux-Systemen auf Kernel-Ebene. Schreibt uns! Schickt uns eure Themenwünsche und euer Feedback: podcast@programmier.barFolgt uns! Bleibt auf dem Laufenden über zukünftige Folgen und virtuelle Meetups und beteiligt euch an Community-Diskussionen. TwitterInstagramFacebookMeetupYouTubeMusik: Hanimo
Michael Heap, Director of Developer Experience at Kong Inc., joins us to explain what he learned from his failures and discuss his thoughts on strategic management.
Lorna Mitchell, VP of Developer Experience at Redocly, joins us to discuss why writing your own tutorials is such a powerful tool for learning and how he deals with a complex workload.
Marcos Placona, Director of Developer Relations, at Circle, joins us to share his thoughts on how developer evangelism has changed over the years, as well as his opinions on Web3.
Nadeem is from Bahrain country, he said about his work and experiences and answered some of my questions. more info- https://www.SmartCherrysThoughts.com
In this episode, Jennifer Petoff, Director of Program Management of Google Cloud Platform and Technical Infrastructure Education, joins us to discuss her pivot from chemistry to tech, the culture shock that came with it, as well as what it's like working for a place like Google.
Hiro Systems is a developer tooling company building software that makes Bitcoin developers lives easier. Max Efremov is developer evangelist at Hiro. Follow Max on Twitter: @maxefremov Follow Hiro Systems on Twitter: @hirosystems Learn more about Hiro developer tools: https://www.hiro.so/ ---------------------------------------------------------- Get the TL:DR on Bitcoin innovation via the Built on Bitcoin newsletter. https://builtonbitcoin.beehiiv.com/subscribe Big thank you to our sponsor, The Stacks Foundation. If you want to get started building on Stacks and push the mission forward of a user-owned internet with Bitcoin as the base layer. Check the links below. Learn Clarity: https://start.stacks.org/ Learn more about Stacks: https://stacks.co/ Apply for a grant: https://stacks.org/grants —--------------------------------------------------------
Emily Lin, Developer Evangelist at ConsenSys, joins us to discuss the learning curves that come with working in Web3.
Nikita Koselev, the Lead Software Development Engineer at Mastercard, joins us to share how he got his start in software engineering and highlight the peaks and troughs of the industry. He goes on to speak about how he has been helping people learn open source coding and other technical skills that are highly required in the industry.
Viktor Gamov, Principal Developer Advocate at Kong, joins us to share his thoughts on what's changed within the industry and how to adapt to it.
Olivier Poupeney visits to discuss the exciting professional opportunities that Symphony's collaboration platform provides for the financial services industry. Topics covered include a retrospective look at the past thirty years of innovation, design principles and practices, skill building, and the future of open source education.
There are huge opportunities for companies that adopt an open-source mindset. Joshua Poddoku joins the show to discuss how to incorporate open-source educational programs within an organization.
Vyshakh Babji, Global Lead of DevRel at Shippo, joins us to share his insights on the role of developer relations in mentoring and educating developers.
In this episode, Tech Evangelist at Autodesk Aliza Carpio discusses her incredible journey. She also shares priceless advice, career hacks, and actionable tips.
Senior Software Engineer at Google Sandile Keswa discusses the role of open source development in his career. He shares his story and offers advice on how to get involved in the community.
Thao Bach, a Senior Software Engineer at LinkedIn, joins host Jon Gottfried to discuss the peculiarities of international software development, diversity, and educational opportunities for new developers.
Konaverse hits the road, as Akshay Sura and Matthew McQueeny were on hand at the Kontent.ai Horizons event at Glasshouse Chelsea in New York on November 17th, 2022. Guests include Ondrej Polesny, Developer Evangelist at Kontent.ai; Ondřej Chrastina, Developer Relations Leader at Kontent.ai; Thomas Murphy, Senior Customer Success Manager at Kontent.ai; Michael Andrews, Content Strategy Evangelist at Kontent.ai; Robert Yelle, Kontent.ai Sales Director USA East; Lauren Orlando, Kontent.ai Sales Director USA West; Ilya Kucherenko, Vice President of North American Sales at Kontent.ai; Brian McKeiver, Co-Owner at BizStream; and Vojtech Boril, VP of Growth & Marketing at Kontent.ai.
In this episode of Breaking Changes, Postman Chief Evangelist Kin Lane is joined by Valériane Venance, Developer Evangelist at Twilio for a conversation about being a developer evangelist. She emphasized the global reach of APIs in our programs and increasing regulation that is shaping the API landscape.
In this Breaking Changes episode, Postman Chief Evangelist Kin Lane welcomes Raymond Camden, Senior Developer Evangelist at Adobe. Raymond shared his belief in the power of storytelling when it comes to APIs and how important it is to help our API consumers find solutions to the everyday challenges that they face.
Full Description / Show Notes Guillermo talks about how he came to work at OCI and what it was like helping to pioneer Oracle's cloud product (1:40) Corey and Guillermo discuss the challenges and realities of multi-cloud (6:00) Corey asks about OCI's dedicated region approach (8:27) Guillermo discusses the problem of awareness (12:40) Corey and Guillermo talk cloud providers and cloud migration (14:40) Guillermo shares about how OCI's cost and customer service is unique among cloud providers (16:56) Corey and Guillermo talk about IoT services and 5G (23:58) About Guillermo RuizGuillermo Ruiz gets into trouble more often than he would like. During his career Guillermo has seen many horror stories while building data centers worldwide. In 2007 he dreamed with space-based internet and direct routing between satellites, but he could only reach “the Cloud”. And there he is, helping customer build their business in someone else servers since 2011.Beware of his sense of humor...If you ever see him in a tech event, run, he will get you in problems.Links: Twitter: https://twitter.com/IaaSgeek, https://twitter.com/OracleStartup LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/gruizesteban/ TranscriptAnnouncer: Hello, and welcome to Screaming in the Cloud with your host, Chief Cloud Economist at The Duckbill Group, Corey Quinn. This weekly show features conversations with people doing interesting work in the world of cloud, thoughtful commentary on the state of the technical world, and ridiculous titles for which Corey refuses to apologize. This is Screaming in the Cloud.Corey: Welcome to Screaming in the Cloud. I'm Corey Quinn. I've been meaning to get a number of folks on this show for a while and today is absolutely one of those episodes. I'm joined by Guillermo Ruiz who is the Director of OCI Developer Evangelism, slash the Director of Oracle for Startups. Guillermo, thank you for joining me, and is Oracle for Startups an oxymoron because it kind of feels like it in some weird way, in the fullness of time.Guillermo: [laugh]. Thanks, Corey. It's a pleasure being in your show.Corey: Well, thank you. I enjoy having you here. I've been trying to get you on for a while. I'm glad I finally wore you down.Guillermo: [laugh]. Thanks. As I said, well, startup, I think, is the future of the industry, so it's a fundamental piece of our building blocks for the next generation of services.Corey: I have to say that I know that you folks at Oracle Cloud have been a recurring sponsor of the show. Thank you for that, incidentally. This is not a promoted guest episode. I invited you on because I wanted to talk to you about these things, which means that I can say more or less whatever I damn well want. And my experience with Oracle Cloud has been one of constantly being surprised since I started using it a few years ago, long before I was even taking sponsorships for this show. It was, “Oh, Oracle has a cloud. This ought to be rich.”And I started kicking the tires on it and I came away consistently and repeatedly impressed by the technical qualities the platform has. The always-free tier has a model of cloud economics that great. I have a sizable VM running there and have for years and it's never charged me a dime. Your data egress fees aren't, you know, a 10th of what a lot of the other cloud providers are charging, also known as, you know, you're charging in the bounds of reality; good for that. And the platform continues to—although it is different from other cloud providers, in some respects, it continues to impress.Honestly, I keep saying one of the worst problems that has is the word Oracle at the front of it because Oracle has a 40-some-odd-year history of big enterprise systems, being stodgy, being difficult to work with, all the things you don't generally tend to think of in terms of cloud. It really is a head turn. How did that happen? And how did you get dragged into the mess?Guillermo: Well, this came, like, back in five, six years ago, when they started building this whole thing, they picked people that were used to build cloud services from different hyperscalers. They dropped them into a single box in Seattle. And it's like, “Guys, knowing what you know, how you would build the next generation cloud platform?” And the guys came up with OCI, which was a second generation. And when I got hired by Oracle, they showed me the first one, that classic.It was totally bullshit. It was like, “Guys, there's no key differentiator with what's there in the market.” I didn't even know Oracle had a cloud, and I've been in this space since late-2010. And I had to sign, like, a bunch of NDAs a lot of papers, and they show me what they were cooking in the oven, and oh my gosh, when I saw that SDN out of the box directly in the physical network, CPUs assign, it was [BLEEP] [unintelligible 00:03:45]. It was, like, bare metal. I saw that the future was there. And I think that they built the right solution, so I joined the company to help them leverage the cloud platform.Corey: The thing that continually surprises me is that, “Oh, we have a cloud.” It has a real, “Hello fellow kids,” energy. Yes, yeah, so does IBM; we've seen how that played out. But the more I use it, the more impressed I am. Early on in the serverless function days, you folks more or less acquired Iron.io, and you were streets ahead as far as a lot of the event-driven serverless function style of thing tended to go.And one of the challenges that I see in the story that's being told about Oracle Cloud is, the big enterprise customer wins. These are the typical global Fortune 2000s, who have been around for, you know—which is weird for those of us in San Francisco, but apparently, these companies have been around longer than 18 months and they've built for platforms that are not the latest model MacBook Pro running the current version of Chrome. What is that? What is that legacy piece of garbage? What does it do? It's like, “Oh, it does about $4 billion a quarter so maybe show some respect.”It's the idea of companies that are doing real-world things, and they absolutely have cloud power. Problems and needs that are being met by a variety of different companies. It's easy to look at that narrative and overlook the fact that you could come up with some ridiculous Twitter for Pets-style business idea and build it on top of Oracle Cloud and I would not, at this point, call that a poor decision. I'm not even sure how it got there, and I wish that story was being told a little bit better. Given that you are a developer evangelist focusing specifically on startups and run that org, how do you see it?Guillermo: Well, the thing here is, you mentioned, you know, about Oracle, many startup doesn't even know we have a cloud provider. So, many of the question comes is like, how we can help on your business. It's more on the experience, you know, what are the challenges, the gaps, and we go in and identify and try to use our cloud. And even though if I'm not able to fill that gap, that's why we have this partnership with Microsoft. It's the first time to cloud providers connect both clouds directly without no third party in between, router to router.It's like, let's leverage the best of these clouds together. I'm a truly believer of multi-cloud. Non-single cloud is perfect. We are evolving, we're getting better, we are adding services. I don't want to get to 500 services like other guys do. It's like, just have a set of things that really works and works really, really well.Corey: Until you have 40 distinct managed database services and 80 ways to run containers, are you're really a full cloud provider? I mean, there's always that question that, at some point, the database Java, the future is going to have to be disambiguating between all the different managed database services on a per workload basis, and that job sounds terrible. I can't let the multi-cloud advocacy pass unchallenged here because I'm often misunderstood on this, and if I don't say something, I will get emails, and nobody wants that. I think that the idea of building a workload with the idea that it can flow seamlessly between cloud providers is a ridiculous fantasy that basically no one achieves. The number of workloads that can do that are very small.That said, the idea of independent workloads living on different cloud providers as is the best fit for placement for those is not just a good idea, it is the—whether it's a good idea or not as irrelevant because that's the reality in which we all live now. That is the world we have to deal with.Guillermo: If you want distributed system, obviously you need to have multiple cloud providers in your strategy. How you federate things—if you go down to the Kubernetes side, how you federate multi-clusters and stuff, that's a challenge out there where people have. But you mentioned that having multiple apps and things, we have customers that they've been running Google Cloud, for example, and we build [unintelligible 00:07:40] that cloud service out there. And the thing is that when they run the network throughput and the performance test, they were like, “Damn, this is even better than what I have in my data center.” It's like, “Guys, because we are room by room.” It's here is Google, here it's Oracle; we land in the same data center, we can provide better connectivity that what you even have.So, that kind of perception is not well seen in some customers because they realize that they're two separate clouds, but the reality is that most of us have our infrastructure in the same providers.Corey: It's kind of interesting, just to look at the way that the industry is misunderstanding a lot of these things. When you folks came out with your cloud at customer initiatives—the one that jumps out to my mind is the dedicated region approach—a lot of people started making fun of that because, “What is this nonsense? You're saying that you can deploy a region of your cloud on site at the customer with all of the cloud services? That's ridiculous. You folks don't understand cloud.”My rejoinder to that is people saying that don't understand customers. You take a look at for example… AWS has their Outpost which is a rack or racks with a subset of services in them. And that, from their perspective, as best I can tell, solves the real problem that customers have, which is running virtual machines on-premises that do not somehow charge an hourly cost back to AWS—I digress—but it does bring a lot of those services closer to customers. You bring all of your services closer to customers and the fact that is a feasible thing is intensely appealing to a wide variety of customer types. Rather than waiting for you to build a region in a certain geographic area that conforms with some regulatory data requirement, “Well, cool, we can ship some racks. Does that work for you?” It really is a game-changer in a whole bunch of respects and I don't think that the industry is paying close enough attention to just how valuable that is.Guillermo: Indeed. I've been at least hearing since 2010 that next year is the boom; now everybody will move into the cloud. It has been 12 years and still 75% of customers doesn't have their critical workloads in the cloud. They have developer environments, some little production stuff, but the core business is still relying in the data center. If I come and say, “Hey, what if I build this behind your firewall?”And it's not just that you have the whole thing. I'm removing all your operational expenses. Now, you don't need to think about hardware refresh, upgrade staff, just focus on your business. I think when we came up with a dedicated region, it was awesome. It was one of the best thing I've seen their Outpost is a great solution, to be honest, but if you lose the one connectivity, the control plane is still in the cloud.In our site, you have the control plane inside your data center so you can still operate and manage your services, even if there is an outage on your one site. One of the common questions we find on that area is, like, “Damn, this is great, but we would like to have a smaller size of this dedicated region.” Well, stay tuned because maybe we come with smaller versions of our dedicated regions so you guys can go and deploy whatever you need there.Corey: It turns out that, in the fullness of time, I like this computer but I want it to be smaller is generally a need that gets met super well. One thing that I've looked into recently has been the evolution of companies, in the fullness of time—which this is what completely renders me a terrible analyst in any traditional sense; I think more than one or two quarters ahead, and I look at these things—the average tenure of a company in the S&P 500 index is 21 years or so. Which means that if we take a look at what's going on 20 years or so from now in the 2040s, roughly half—give or take—of the constituency of the S&P 500 may very well not have been founded yet. So, when someone goes out and founds a company tomorrow as an idea that they're kicking around, let's be clear, with a couple of very distinct exceptions, they're going to build it on Cloud. There's a lot of reasons to do that until you hit certain inflection points.So, this idea that, oh, we're going to rent a rack, and we're going to go build some nonsense, and yadda, yadda, yadda. It's just, it's a fantasy. So, the question that I see for a lot of companies is the longtail legacy where if I take that startup and found it tomorrow and drive it all the way toward being a multinational, at what point did they become a customer for whatever these companies are selling? A lot of the big E enterprise vendors don't have a story for that, which tells me long-term, they have problems. Looking increasingly at what Oracle Cloud is doing, I have to level with you, I viewed Oracle as being very much in that slow-eroding dinosaur perspective until I started using the platform in some depth. I am increasingly of the mind that there's a bright future. I'm just not sure that has sunk into the industry's level of awareness these days.Guillermo: Yeah, I can agree with you in that sense. Mainly, I think we need to work on that awareness side. Because for example, if I go back to the other products we have in the company, you know, like the database, what the database team has done—and I'm not a database guy—and it's like, “Guys, even being an infrastructure guy, customers doesn't care about infrastructure. They just want to run their service, that it doesn't fail, you don't have a disruption; let me evolve my business.” But even though they came with this converged database, I was really impressed that you can do everything in a single-engine rather than having multiple database implemented. Now, you can use the MongoDB APIs.It's like, this is the key of success. When you remove the learning curve and the frictions for people to use your services. I'm a [unintelligible 00:13:23] guy and I always say, “Guys, click, click, click. In three clicks, I should have my service up and running.” I think that the world is moving so fast and we have so much information today, that's just 24 hours a day that I have to grab the right information. I don't have time to go and start learning something from scratch and taking a course of six months because results needs to be done in the next few weeks.Corey: One thing that I think that really reinforces this is—so as I mentioned before, I have a free tier account with you folks, have for years, whenever I log into the thing, I'm presented with the default dashboard view, which recommends a bunch of quickstarts. And none of the quickstarts that you folks are recommending to me involve step one, migrate your legacy data center or mainframe into the cloud. It's all stuff like using analytics to predict things with AI services, it's about observability, it's about governance of deploy a landing zone as you build these things out. Here's how to do a low-code app using Apex—which is awesome, let's be clear here—and even then launching resources is all about things that you would tend to expect of launch database, create a stack, spin up some VMs, et cetera. And that's about as far as it goes toward a legacy way of thinking.It is very clear that there is a story here, but it seems that all the cloud providers these days are chasing the migration story. But I have to say that with a few notable exceptions, the way that those companies move to cloud, it always starts off by looking like an extension of their data center. Which is fine. In that phase, they are improving their data center environment at the expense of being particularly cloudy, but I don't think that is necessarily an adoption model that puts any of these platforms—Oracle Cloud included—in their best light.Guillermo: Yeah, well, people was laughing to us, when we released Layer 2 in the network in the cloud. They were like, “Guys, you're taking the legacy to the cloud. It's like, you're lifting the shit and putting the shit up there.” Is like, “Guys, there are customers that cannot refactor and do anything there. They need to still run Layer 2 there. Why not giving people options?”That's my question is, like, there's no right answers to the cloud. You just need to ensure that you have the right options for people that they can choose and build their strategy around that.Corey: This has been a global problem where so many of these services get built and launched from all of the vendors that it becomes very unclear as a customer, is this thing for me or not? And honestly, sometimes one of the best ways to figure that out is to all right, what does it cost because that, it turns out, is going to tell me an awful lot. When it comes to the price tag of millions of dollars a year, this is probably not for my tiny startup. Whereas when it comes to a, oh, it's in the always free tier or it winds up costing pennies per hour, okay, this is absolutely something I want to wind up exploring and seeing what happens. And it becomes a really polished experience across the board.I also will say this is your generation two cloud—Gen 2, not to be confused with Gentoo, the Linux distribution for people with way more time on their hands than they have sense—and what I find interesting about it is, unlike a lot of the—please don't take this the wrong way—late-comers to cloud compared to the last 15 years of experience of Amazon being out in front of everyone, you didn't just look at what other providers have done and implement the exact same models, the exact same approaches to things. You've clearly gone in your own direction and that's leading to some really interesting places.Guillermo: Yeah, I think that doing what others are doing, you just follow the chain, no? That will never position you as a top number one out there. Being number one so many years in the cloud space as other cloud providers, sometimes you lose the perception of how to treat and speak to customers you know? It's like, “I'm the number one. Who cares if this guy is coming with me or not?” I think that there's more on the empathy side on how we treat customers and how we try to work and solve.For example, in the startup team, we find a lot of people that hasn't have infrastructure teams. We put for free our architects that will give you your GitHub or your GitLab account and we'll build the Terraform modules and give that for you. It's like now you can reuse it, spin up, modify whatever you want. Trying to make life easier for people so they can adopt and leverage their business in the cloud side, you know?[midroll 00:14:45]Corey: There's so much that we folks get right. Honestly, one of the best things that recommends this is the always free tier does exactly what it says on the tin. Yeah, sure. I don't get to use every edge case service that you've built across the board, but I've also had this thing since 2019, and never had to pay a penny for any of it, whereas recently—as we're recording this, it was a week or two ago—that I saw someone wondering what happened to their AWS account because over the past week, suddenly they went from not using SageMaker to being charged $270,000 on SageMaker. And it's… yeah, that's not the kind of thing that is going to endear the platform to frickin' anyone.And I can't believe I'm saying this, but the thing says Oracle on the front of it and I'm recommending it because it doesn't wind up surprising you with a bill later. It feels like I've woken up in bizarro world. But it's great.Guillermo: Yep. I think that's one of the clever things we've done on that side. We've built a very robust platform, really cool services. But it's key on how people can start learning and testing the flavors of your cloud. But not only what you have in the fleet here, you have also the Ampere instances.We're moving into a more sustainable world, and I think that having, like, the ARM architectures in the cloud and providing that on the free space of people can just go and develop on top, I think that was one of the great things we've done in the last year-and-a-half, something like that. Definitely a full fan of a free tier.Corey: You also, working over in the Developer Evangelist slash advocacy side of the world—devrelopers, as I tend to call it much to the irritation of basically everyone who works in developer relations—one of the things that I think is a challenge for you is that when I wind up trying to do something ridiculous—I don't know maybe it's a URL shortener; maybe it is build a small app that does something that's fairly generic—with a lot of the other platforms. There's a universe of blog posts out there, “Here's how I did it on this platform,” and then it's more or less you go to GitHub—or gif-UB, and I have mispronounced that too—and click the button and I wind up getting a deploy, whereas in things that are rapidly emerging with the Oracle Cloud space, it feels like, on some level, I wind up getting to be a bit of a trailblazer and figure some of these things out myself. That is diminishing. I'm starting to see more and more content around this stuff. I have to assume that is at least partially due to your organization's work.Guillermo: Oh, yeah, but things have changed. For example, we used to have our GitHub repository just as a software release, and we push to have that as a content management, you know, it's like, I always say that give—let people steal the code. You just put the example that will come with other ideas, other extensions, plug-in connectors, but you need to have something where you can start. So, we created this DevRel Quickstart that now is managed by the new DevRel organization where we try to put those examples. So, you just can go and put it.I've been working with the community on building, like, a content aggregator of how people is using our technology. We used to have ocigeek.com, that was a website with more than 1000 blog and, like, 500 visits a day looking after what other people were doing, but unfortunately, we had to, because of… the amount of X reasons we have to pull it off.But we want to come with something like that. I think that information should be available. I don't want people to think when it comes to my cloud is like, “Oh, how you use this product?” It's like no, guys how I can build with Angular, React the content management system? You will do it in my cloud because that example I'm doing, but I want you to learn the basics and the context of running Python and doing other things there rather than go into oh, no, this is something specific to me. No, no, that will never work.Corey: That was the big problem I found with doing a lot of the serverless stuff in years past where my first Lambda application took me two weeks to build because I'm terrible at programming. And now it takes me ten minutes to build because I'm terrible at programming and don't know what tests are. But the problem I ran into for that first one was, what is the integration format? What is the event structure? How do I wind up accessing that?What is the thing that I'm integrating with expecting because, “Mmm, that's not it; try again,” is a terrible error message. And so, much of it felt like it was the undifferentiated gluing things together. The only way to make that stuff work is good documentation and numerous examples that come at the problem from a bunch of different ways. And increasingly, Oracle's documentation is great.Guillermo: Yeah, well, in my view, for example, you have the Three-Tier Oracle. We should have a catalog of 100 things that you can do in the free tier, even though when I propose some of the articles, I was even talking about VMware, and people was like, “[unintelligible 00:22:34], you cannot deploy VMware.” It's like, “Yeah, but I can connect my [crosstalk 00:22:39]—”Corey: Well, not with that attitude.Guillermo: Yeah. And I was like, “Yeah, but I can connect to the cloud and just use it as a backup place where I can put my image and my stuff. Now, you're connecting to things: VMware with free tier.” Stuff like that. There are multiple things that you can do.And just having three blocks is things that you can do in the free tier, then having developer architectures. Show me how you can deploy an architecture directly from the command line, how I can run my DevOps service without going to the console, just purely using SDKs and stuff like that. And give me the option of how people is working and expanding that content and things there. If you put those three blocks together, I think you're done on how people can adopt and leverage your cloud. It's like, I want to learn; I don't want to know the basics of I don't know, it's—I'm not a database guy, so I don't understand those things and I don't want to go into details.I just they just need a database to store my profiles and my stuff so I can pick that and do computer vision. How I can pick and say, “Hey, I'm speaking with Corey Quinn and I have a drone flying here, he recommends your face and give me your background from all the different profiles.” That's the kind of solutions I want to build. But I don't want to be an expert on those areas.Corey: Because with all the pictures of me with my mouth open, you wouldn't be able to under—it would make no sense of me until I make that pose. There's method to—Guillermo: [laugh].Corey: —my insane madness over here.Guillermo: [laugh] [unintelligible 00:23:58].Corey: Yeah. But yeah, there's a lot of value as you move up the stack on these things. There's also something to be said, as well, for a direction that you folks have been moving in recently, that I—let me be fair here—I think it's clown shoes because I tend to think in terms of software because I have more or less the hardware destruction bunny level of aura when it comes to being near expensive things. And I look around the world and I don't have a whole lot of problems that I can legally solve with an army of robots.But there are customers who very much do. And that's why we see sort of the twin linking of things like IoT services and 5G, which when I first started seeing cloud providers talking about this, I thought was Looney Tunes. And you folks are getting into it too, so, “Oh, great. The hype wound up affecting you too.” And the thing that changed my mind was not anything cloud providers have to say—because let's be clear, everyone has an agenda they're trying to push for—but who doesn't have an agenda is the customers talking about these things and the neat things that they're able to achieve with it, at which point I stopped making fun, I shut up and listen in the hopes that I might learn something. How have you seen that whole 5G slash IoT slash internet of Nonsense space evolving?Guillermo: That's the future. That's what we're going to see in the next five years. I run some innovation sessions with a lot of customers and one of the main components I speak about is this area. With 5G, the number of IoT devices will exponentially grow. That means that you're going to have more data points, more data volume out there.How can you provide the real value, how you can classify, index, and provide the right information in just 24 hours, that's what people is looking. Things needs to be instant. If you say to the kids today, they cannot watch a football match, 90 minutes. If you don't get the answer in ten, they move to the next thing. That's how this society is moving [unintelligible 00:25:50].Having all these solutions from a data perspective, and I think that Oracle has a great advantage in that space because we've been doing that for 43 years, right? It's like, how we do the abstraction? How I can pick all that information and provide added value? We build the robot as a service. I can configure it from my browser, any robot anywhere in the world.And I can do it in Python, Java. I can [unintelligible 00:26:14] applications. Two weeks ago, we were testing on connecting IoT devices and flashing the firmware. And it was working. And this is something that we didn't do it alone. We did it with a startup.The guys came and had a sandbox already there, is like, “let's enable this on [unintelligible 00:26:28]. Let's start working together.” Now, I can go to my customers and provide them a solution that is like, hey, let's connect Boston Dynamics, or [unintelligible 00:26:37] Robotics. Let's start doing those things and take the benefits of using Oracle's AI and ML services. Pick that, let's do computer vision, natural language processing.Now, you're connecting what I say, an end-to-end solution that provides real value for customers. Connected cars, we turn our car into a wallet. I can go and pay on the petrol station without leaving my car. If I'm taking the kids to takeaway, I can just pay these kind of things is like, “Whoa, this is really cool.” But what if I [laugh] get that information for your insurance company.Next year, Corey, you will pay double because you're a crazy driver. And we know how you drive in the car because we have all that information in place. That's how the things will roll out in the next five to ten years. And [unintelligible 00:27:24] healthcare. We build something for emergencies that if you have a car crash, they have the guys that go and attend can have your blood type and some information about your car, where to cut the chassis and stuff when you get prisoner inside.And I got people saying, “Oh gee, GDPR because we are in Europe.” It's like, “Guys, if I'm going to die, I don't care if they have my information.” That's the point where people really need to balance the whole thing, right? Obviously, we protect the information and the whole thing, but in those situations is like hey, there's so many things we can do. There are countless opportunities out there.Corey: The way that I square that circle personally has always been it's about informed consent, when if people are given a choice, then an awful lot of those objections that people have seemed to melt away. Provided, of course, that is an actual choice and it's not one of those, “Well, you can either choose to”—quote-unquote—“Choose to do this, or you can pay $9,000 a month extra.” Which is, that's not really a choice. But as long as there's a reasonable way to get informed consent, I think that people don't particularly mind, I think it's when they wind up feeling that they have been spied upon without their knowledge, that's when everything tends to blow up. It turns out, if you tell people in advance what you're going to do with their information, they're a lot less upset. And I don't mean burying it deep and the terms and conditions.Guillermo: And that's a good example. We run a demo with one of our customers showing them how dangerous the public information you have out there. You usually sign and click and give rights to everybody. We found in Stack Overflow, there was a user that you just have the username there, nothing else. And we build a platform with six terabytes of information grabbing from Stack Overflow, LinkedIn, Twitter, and many other social media channels, and we show how we identify that this guy was living in Bangalore in India and was working for a specific company out there.So, people was like, “Damn, just having that name, you end up knowing that?” It's like there's so much information out there of value. And we've seen other companies doing that illegally in other places, you know, Cambridge Analytics and things like that. But that's the risk of giving your information for free out there.Corey: It's always a matter of trade-offs. There is no one-size-fits-all solution and honestly, if there were it feels like we wouldn't have cloud providers; we would just have the turnkey solution that gives the same thing that everyone needs and calls it good. I dream of such a day, but it turns out that customers are different, people are different, and there's no escaping that.Guillermo: [laugh]. Well, you mentioned dreamer; I dream direct routing between satellites, and look where I am; I'm just in the cloud, one step lower. [laugh].Corey: You know, bit by bit, we're going to get there one way or another, for an altitude perspective. I really want to thank you for taking so much time to speak with me today. If people want to learn more, where's the right place to find you?Guillermo: Well, I have the @IaaSgeek Twitter account, and you can find me on LinkedIn gruizesteban there. Just people wants to talk about anything there, I'm open to any kind of conversation. Just feel free to reach out. And it was a pleasure finally meeting you, in person. Not—well in person; through a camera, at least being in the show with you.Corey: Other than on the other side of a Twitter feed. No, I hear you.Guillermo: [laugh].Corey: We will, of course, put links to all of that in the [show notes 00:30:43]. Thank you so much for your time. I really do appreciate it.Guillermo: Thanks very much. So, you soon.Corey: Guillermo Ruiz, Director of OCI Developer Evangelism. I'm Cloud Economist Corey Quinn, and this is Screaming in the Cloud. If you've enjoyed this podcast, please leave a five-star review on your podcast platform of choice, whereas if you've hated this podcast, please leave a five-star review on your podcast platform of choice along with an insulting comment, to which I will respond with a surprise $270,000 bill.Corey: If your AWS bill keeps rising and your blood pressure is doing the same, then you need The Duckbill Group. We help companies fix their AWS bill by making it smaller and less horrifying. The Duckbill Group works for you, not AWS. We tailor recommendations to your business and we get to the point. Visit duckbillgroup.com to get started.Announcer: This has been a HumblePod production. Stay humble.
*Andrea habla personalmente y no representando a ninguna empresa o institución de ninguna manera. Toda la información aquí descrita es nuestra interpretación y no necesariamente lo que Andrea quiso decir. Andrea (@Andyvargtz en Twitter) es Developer Evangelist y Community Manager de Avalanche (@avalabsofficial), una plataforma de desarrollo de smart contracts. Posee una Licenciatura Actuarial Science y una Maestría en Ciencias de la Computación del Instituto Tecnológico Autónomo de México. Habilidades que la han llevado al éxito profesional: -Definir el camino hacia dónde ir. -Enfocar todos los esfuerzos a cumplirlo. -Hacer cursos e investigar más sobre lo que quieres aprender. -Integrarse a una comunidad. Involucrarse. ¿Qué evalúa una empresa de cripto como Avalanche antes de contratar? -Interés y participación en las comunidades. Interactuar y darse a conocer. -Evalúan tu capacidad y proactividad antes de contratarte formalmente. -No es necesario tener un perfil técnico. Avalanche considera diversos aspectos. -Tener una cartera cripto es un plus. ¿Es difícil usar y programar en cripto? -Usar cripto puede ser intimidante más no difícil. Tiene una curva de aprendizaje. -Para entrar en este mundo, primero aprende Solidity y luego conoce cómo funciona una blockchain y sus generalidades. -La máquina virtual de Ethereum se programa con Solidity. Si eres desarrollador con conocimientos en Javascript es muy sencillo pasarte a Solidity. Funcionamiento de Avalanche: -Ethereum sirve para crear una computadora ya descentralizada totalmente programable. Permite desarrollar contratos inteligentes. -Hay 3 cadenas principales en Avalanche: 1) la cadena C es una máquina virtual de Ethereum compatible con Solidity. Si eres desarrollador, te pasas a la cadena C y puedes utilizar Avalanche y tener costos bajos y mayor velocidad de transacciones. -Avalanche no distingue qué transacción es más importante que otra, pero cuando hay saturación, sus costos suben. -Puedes tener aplicaciones de uso específico como gaming montadas en tu propia blockchain sobre Avalanche teniendo características como definir el costo de tu red, emplear tu token como gas, rapidez y ecología. ¿Por qué programar un videojuego en Avalanche y no en una L2 de Ethereum? -Hay muchos juegos que se montan sobre una blockchain y sus tokens se quedan a nivel de aplicación. Avalanche permite darle una utilidad extra al token para pagar las transacciones. -Avalanche permite que todos los validadores de una cadena, sean validadores de la red primaria. -A nivel regulación Avalanche se adecua sus soluciones de acuerdo a las legislación que necesitan los validadores. -En la documentación de Avalanche, en la sección de tutoriales, pueden encontrar desde cómo desarrollar una Subnet hasta cómo crear una DAO con contratos inteligentes. ¿Cómo iniciar en el mundo blockchain? -Comprar cripto para interactuar. -Investigar qué tecnología vas a utilizar y por qué. Con Avalanche tienes bajos costos de transacciones y mayor velocidad. -Abrir una Wallet no custodiada como Meta+. Agrega la red de Avalanche y comienza a operar.
Brandon West joined SendGrid, a customer communication platform for transactional and marketing email in 2011 as their first Developer Evangelist. Since then he's had a brilliant career, working at AWS and CoScreen, which has just been acquired by Datadog. Scaling DevTools is the podcast that investigates how dev tools go from zero to one. Created by Jack Bridger, founder of BitReach. BitReach helps DevTool companies reach more developers. In this series Jack will explore how startups sell to developers, build tools and become successful.Brandon WestBrandon West is among the most qualified people on the planet to tell you how to become more popular with developers. In this episode of Scaling DevTools we discuss what DevRel looks like in the early stages, how to build credibility and learnings from passed roles.What we cover(00:57): What does DevRel look like at startups at the earliest stage? (05:13): How do you balance doing the right things and building credibility with the fact that you're also willing to push and demo things, which aren't perfect yet. (07:13): What was it like when you were at SendGrid? (11:46): What did the relationship look like with the product team?(17:04): Where can people learn more?Guest linksTwitter: @bwest Site link: http://bwe.stDataDog: https://www.datadoghq.com/ CoScreen: https://www.coscreen.co/Thank you so much for listening to this episode of Scaling DevTools. To keep up to date with the podcast, check out the below links. Twitter: @JackSBridger Site link: https://blog.bitreach.io Newsletter: https://www.bitreach.io/
Para criar relacionamentos, engajar desenvolvedores e gerar valor para uma comunidade de tecnologia, surgiu a área de Developer Relations (ou DevRel). É uma tendência e uma boa prática ainda incipiente no Brasil, por isso, ainda existem muitas dúvidas sobre como funciona na prática. Uma das frases mais usadas para falar sobre DevRel é: “Nas comunidades, eu sou os ouvidos da empresa. Dentro da empresa, eu sou a voz da comunidade”. Para ajudar a explicar, convidamos quem vive isso no dia a dia e quem estuda isso nas Universidades. Convidados: Gabs Ferreira, Developer Evangelist na Alura Danielhe4rt, Líder da He4rt Developers Awdren Fontão, Professor PhD e Pesquisador na UFMS Anfitriões: Roberson Miguel, Desenvolvedor de Software na Vindi Maria Silvia Vieira, Estrategista de Conteúdo na Vindi Saiba mais sobre DevRel:
Some IT roles are straightforward, some are harder to digest. Listen to this episode to learn how to find a Developer Evangelist.Join our Tech Recruitment Academy if you'd like to get better at IT recruitment:https://TechRecruitmentAcademy.comThe next Live group program with 20 recruiters starts in January but all tickets are already sold out.https://TechRecruitmentProgram.comIf you are looking for a freelance job or would like to become our recruitment associate, visit:https://RecruitInstantly.comGet my best-selling, proven Mind Maps in a nice booklet:https://ITRecruiterMindMaps.comWatch my additional free videos on my YouTube channel:https://TechRecruitmentChannel.comRead my free blog posts here:https://TechRecruitment.blogFOR STAFFING AGENCIES: Hire me to upskill & train your team of IT recruiters:https://TechRecruitmentAcademy.com/for-teamsMore about me:https://MichalJuhas.comTech Recruitment Academy Become a premium member of the Tech Recruitment Academy to start recruiting IT candidates like a Pro
In this episode of the Kontent Rocks podcast, Brian McKeiver is once again joined by Ondrej Polesny, Developer Evangelist at Kontent. Brian and Ondrej walk through what workflows are in Kontent, why you would want to use them, and demo a real world example of an advanced workflow that integrates with Netlify functions to perform some automation that saves time for all of Kontent MVPs and Ondrej.
In this episode of the Kontent Rocks podcast, Brian McKeiver is once again joined by Ondrej Polesny, Developer Evangelist at Kontent. Brian and Ondrej walk through what workflows are in Kontent, why you would want to use them, and demo a real world example of an advanced workflow that integrates with Netlify functions to perform some automation that saves time for all of Kontent MVPs and Ondrej.
Twilio was founded in 2008 by Jeff Lawson, Evan Cooke, and John Wolthuis. Millions of developers around the world have used Twilio to unlock the magic of communications to improve any human experience. Twilio has democratized communications channels like voice, text, chat, video, and email by virtualizing the world's communications infrastructure through APIs that are simple enough for any developer to use, yet robust enough to power the world's most demanding applications. By making communications a part of every software developer's toolkit, Twilio is enabling innovators across every industry — from emerging leaders to the world's largest organizations — to reinvent how companies engage with their customers. On this episode, we chat with Liz Moy, Developer Evangelist at Twilio to learn more about how Twilio simplifies adding communication to your applications and works well with MongoDB. Twilio and MongoDB Tutorials + Blog Posts https://www.twilio.com/blog/automatically-trigger-twilio-sms-mongodb-mongodb-functions https://dev.to/twilio/save-user-input-via-slackbot-with-twilio-autopilot-functions-and-mongodb-3i13 https://www.twilio.com/docs/voice/tutorials/automated-survey-node-express Contact Liz: https://www.linkedin.com/in/lizmoy/ https://twitter.com/Ecmoy
Miko Matsumura is a General Partner with gCC Gumi Cryptos Capital, a Silcon Valley investment fund with over $400M in assets including early-stage investments in unicorns like OpenSea, Yield Guild Games, Celsius Network, VEGA Protocol, Qredo and 1Inch Network. Miko fell in love with open source software 25 years ago as chief Developer Evangelist for the Java Programming Language and Platform at Sun Microsystems. Since then he has been building open source software startups in Silicon Valley including raising over $50 million in venture capital for developer platform companies such as Gradle and financial infrastructure companies like Hazelcast and has participated in multiple exits including INFRAVIO, webMethods, and Db4O. He is an advisor in successful startups like Celsius (CeFi Lending), Idle Finance (DeFi Yield Aggregator), Pundi X (Payments), and KEYLESS (ID infrastructure). He holds a Master's degree in Neuroscience from Yale University where he worked on abstract computational neural networks. In this episode, we discuss the state of the union speech and a conversation about where we are in the blockchain journey and why this matters. Where are we in crypto? What have we achieved? What worked? What hasn't worked? Where do we go next?
TestTalks | Automation Awesomeness | Helping YOU Succeed with Test Automation
AI and machine learning have been hot topics in the automation testing space for a few years now. But how, specifically, can AI help with Mobile Automation Testing? In this episode, Shannon Lee, a Developer Evangelist for Kobiton, will share her vision of how innovative technology applies to mobile test automation. Discover common issues encountered with crafting automation for mobile devices and ways to work around them using artificial intelligence. Listen up!
https://go.dok.community/slack https://dok.community/ ABSTRACT OF THE TALK An introduction to OraOperator, the open source project that makes Oracle Database Kubernetes-Native. BIO Paulo works as the Developer Evangelist at Oracle focuses on Microservices, Application Development with Converged Oracle Database, and Event Mesh. His current technical expertise focuses on Cloud Native architecture and best practices, including containerization and microservices development. KEY TAKE-AWAYS FROM THE TALK Oracle Database as a Kubernetes-native platform. Simplified way to operator Oracle Database.
Relicans host, Ben Greenberg, talks to Developer Evangelist, Lorna Mitchell, about developer burnout, writing technical documentation, and open-source culture and what it can bring into our working cultures and docs portals.Should you find a burning need to share your thoughts or rants about the show, please spray them at devrel@newrelic.com. While you're going to all the trouble of shipping us some bytes, please consider taking a moment to let us know what you'd like to hear on the show in the future. Despite the all-caps flaming you will receive in response, please know that we are sincerely interested in your feedback; we aim to appease. Follow us on the Twitters: @PolyglotShow.Do you have ideas about how we can make our show better? Or would you like to be a guest on an upcoming episode? Reach out to our #devrel team at devrel@newrelic.com. We would LOVE to hear from you with any questions, curiosities, and/or feedback you have in hopes of making this the best show possible!
These book recommendations were put together from GOTO Book Club authors and interviewers.http://gotopia.tech/bookclubDESCRIPTIONThe holiday season is the perfect time to take a step back, relax and read a book, so we asked past authors and interviewers from GOTO Book Club to share the books that they would either give or want to receive as a gift. Watch this episode for a wide selection of more than 30 recommended titles covering software development and more.Eoin Woods - Co-Author of "Continuous Architecture in Practice"Fabio Pereira - Author of "Digital Nudge" & Head of Open Innovation Labs in Latin America at Red HatDave Farley - Continuous Delivery & DevOps Pioneer, Award-winning Author, Founder & Director of Continuous Delivery Ltd.Kevlin Henney - Co-Author of "97 Things Every Java Programmer Should Know"Phil Winder - Author of "Reinforcement Learning" & CEO of Winder.AIPreben Thorø - CTO at Trifork SwitzerlandSven Johann - Senior Consultant at INNOQ and Podcast Host at CaSEMike Amundsen - Author of "Design and Build Great Web APIs"Saša Jurić - Author of "Elixir in Action"Jim Webber - Co-Author of "Graph Databases"Trisha Gee - Co-Author of "97 Things Every Java Programmer Should Know"Raymond Camden - Co-Author of "The Jamstack Book" & Developer Evangelist for AdobeAdam Tornhill - Author of "Software Design X-Rays" and Founder & CTO at CodeSceneLinda Rising - Author of various books & Computer Software Consultant and ProfessionalMatt Turner - SRE at Marshall WaceRichard Feldman - Author of "Elm in Action"Erik Schön - Author of "The Art of Strategy"Casey Rosenthal - Co-Author of "Chaos Engineering"James Wickett - Founder of Open Source Project GauntltDownload slides and read the full abstract here:https://gotopia.tech/bookclub/episodes/2021-best-books-recommended-by-the-goto-book-clubRECOMMENDED BOOKSRolf Dobelli • The Art of Thinking Clearly • https://amzn.to/3qavZzIAdam Grant • Think Again • https://amzn.to/3H82WnbTed Nelson • Computer Lib/Dream Machines • https://amzn.to/3mmLDXsAileen Nielsen • Practical Fairness • https://amzn.to/3mmblLLMatthew Skelton & Manuel Pais • Team Topologies • https://amzn.to/3JcfhIQYuval Harari • Sapiens • https://amzn.to/3J8CNqmGojko Adzic & David Evans • 50 Quick Ideas to Improve Your User Stories • https://amzn.to/32hb6e2Eric Evans • Domain-Driven Design • https://amzn.to/3qb7HWnNir Eyal • Indistractable • https://amzn.to/3J485OOJake Knapp & John Zeratsky • Make Time • https://amzn.to/3mjdsjsLiz Rice • Container Security • https://amzn.to/3e7HkuyDuncan McGregor & Nat Pryce • Java to Kotlin • https://amzn.to/32ajzQcLaurentiu Spilca • Spring Start Here • https://amzn.to/3pbOBQwAdam Tornhill • Your Code as a Crime Scene • https://amzn.to/3J8GNXUDavid Thomas & Andrew Hunt • The Pragmatic Programmer • https://amzn.to/3sm8eHGAdam Rutherford & Hannah Fry • The Complete Guide to Absolutely Everything (Abridged) • https://amzn.to/3yIM6brRutger Bergman • Humankind • https://amzn.to/3EoD4BREmily St. John Mandel • Station Eleven • https://amzn.to/3suVz5ohttps://twitter.com/GOTOconhttps://www.linkedin.com/company/goto-https://www.facebook.com/GOTOConferencesLooking for a unique learning experience?Attend the next GOTO conference near you! Get your ticket at https://gotopia.techSUBSCRIBE TO OUR YOUTUBE CHANNEL - new videos posted almost daily.https://www.youtube.com/user/GotoConferences/?sub_confirmation=1
Contact Us:nocodenoproblem@gmail.comnocodenoproblem.comSponsor: Yourvone.comBildr.comAs mentioned:https://twitter.com/clssmittyhttp://www.christopherlsmith.com/Retool.com
¡Bienvenidos a Crypto Birds! Entrevista a Andrea Vargas, Developer Evangelist en Avalache. Toda la información sobre el podcast y nuestro plataforma en www.cryptobirds.com , y sobre nuestra novela gráfica en www.mistermeta.com Puedes visitarnos en nuestros grupos y canales de Telegram: Grupo Telegram Crypto Birds ESP: https://t.me/ICOSpanish Canal Telegram Crypto Birds Información: https://t.me/CryptoBirds También puedes seguirnos por twitter @CryptoBirds
This is the 2nd episode focused on Blockchain for Enterprises, and after Hyperledger, we dive into the other market leader Corda, designed by R3. From the get go, the team behind Corda wanted to solve the pain points of the financial services industry, tainted by duplicated and inconsistent data. And of course the team resorted to using a distributed ledger and blockchain technology. Even if Corda first started with banks, it's a myth that Corda is just for finance. Corda is for all industries, and has been adopted in healthcare, insurance, energy, trade and more. To help us learn more about how Corda can transform business, I have the pleasure to have Anthony Nixon, a Software Engineer at R3, who specializes in Digital Asset solutions and Payment integrations. As a former Developer Evangelist, Anthony enjoys articulating and sharing the world of DLT/Blockchain through simple, real-world discussions accessible to a broad range of audiences. Anthony is the proof that accountants can evolve - As a Chartered Accountant, he taught himself to code and became instrumental to Corda's current success. In this episode, you will learn; What Corda is and the business problem it aims to solve; How will banks evolve in the future; The best use cases of Corda; Whether it's possible to use Corda to build the same financial mechanisms of the Defi space; How tokenization works with Corda; And much more; This episode is brought to you by AuditChain - the world's first decentralized continuous audit and real time reporting protocol. Traditional audit methodology focuses on “materiality”, not accuracy. We are constrained by time and cannot audit 100% of the transactions, and therefore we perform sampling. AuditChain decentralizes audit and uses an independent assurance methodology that automates auditing tasks, and continuously audits 100% of the transactions. With AuditChain, Chartered Accountants and professionals will write and own Process Control NFTs that automate internal and disclosure controls, where these NFTs pay royalties in return. With more and more automation, accountants will increasingly find themselves becoming redundant. If you are a forward thinking CPA or Chartered Accountant, and want to participate and be in touch with the latest developments from AuditChain in decentralizing the audit profession using blockchain, you should apply for membership by visiting DCARPE Alliance. If you enjoy the podcast, would you please consider leaving a short review on Apple Podcasts/iTunes. It takes less than 60 seconds, and it really makes a difference in helping to convince hard-to-get guests. Together we can help accountants prepare themselves for a blockchain future. For show notes and past guests, please visit theaccountantquits.com/podcasts/ Follow The Accountant Quits: Instagram: instagram.com/theaccountantquits/ LinkedIN: linkedin.com/company/the-accountant-quits
This interview was recorded for the GOTO Book Club.http://gotopia.tech/bookclubBrian Rinaldi - Co-Author of "The Jamstack Book" & Developer Advocate at StepZenRaymond Camden - Co-Author of "The Jamstack Book" & Developer Evangelist for AdobeDESCRIPTIONReady to go beyond static sites and leverage Javascript, APIs and markup? In this episode, Brian Rinaldi and Raymond Camden, authors of "The Jamstack Book," explore the past and future of this new standard architecture for the web. They provide you with a list of their favorite tools and cover how their book can help you build your first Jamstack website, including advice on the correct framework from deployment to production.The interview is based on Brian's and Ray's book "The Jamstack Book": https://bit.ly/3gtSYCgRead the full transcription of the interview here:https://gotopia.tech/bookclub/episodes/guide-for-building-a-jamstack-websiteRECOMMENDED BOOKSRinaldi & Camden • The Jamstack Book • https://bit.ly/3gtSYCgKirill Konshin • Next.js Quick Start Guide • https://amzn.to/3gPkU3khttps://twitter.com/GOTOconhttps://www.linkedin.com/company/goto-https://www.facebook.com/GOTOConferencesLooking for a unique learning experience?Attend the next GOTO conference near you! Get your ticket at https://gotopia.techSUBSCRIBE TO OUR YOUTUBE CHANNEL - new videos posted almost daily.https://www.youtube.com/user/GotoConferences/?sub_confirmation=1
I spoke with Christos Matskas. Christos is a Developer Evangelist at Microsoft working with the Identity Platform. After 2015, Christos started to do a lot of community speaking, conferences, user groups, blogging, open source contributions which all lead him to become a Microsoft MVP (most valuable professional). In turn, all of that activity culminated on him being invited to work at Microsoft in the UK. During our conversation we spoke about community building and how challenging it is to do it right. We discussed the importance of being willing to speak as a developer and what that can do for ones career. We also talked about his recent experimenting with TikTok, teaching people how to use Git via quick videos. I had a look and he is good! You can get the link in the show notes to check it out. You will learn quite a few things about Git from Christos videos. Oh, did I mention that he wants to be Microsoft's CEO? Watch out Satya! Enjoy the chat! Full show notes and links: https://SoloCoder.com/100
The Two Gay Geeks have a chat with our good friend Chuck Tomasi from Technorama Podcast. Chuck fills us in on what has been going on with Technorama Podcast as well as a new release of Podcasting for Dummies he co-authors with Tee Morris. Have a listen and we hope you enjoy this as much as we did. About Chuck Tomasi Chuck Tomasi has nearly 40 years of professional experience in IT, software development, and service management. He started podcasting in late 2004 and incorporated his passion into his day job. He currently a Sr. Developer Evangelist for ServiceNow where he is the top contributor on their online community. He has authored several retail and custom books in the technical space, produced hundreds of videos, and thousands of podcasts. He currently co-hosts the Parsec award winning podcast Technorama and The Topic is Trek. You can find him at http://www.chucktomasi.com. About Podcasting For Dummies ☀☀☀ From the Inside Flap Understand the do's and don'ts of podcasting Produce unique content that attracts listeners Build a studio that rivals pro podcasters How to talk your way to the top As more and more people turn to podcasts for entertainment, information, and education, the market for new players has never been bigger—or more competitive. And with corporations and A-list celebs moving in on the action, it's more important than ever to know how to stand out from the crowd. Written by two podcasting veterans, this book gives you everything you need to launch a podcast. Get the insider info on how to produce quality audio (and even video), keep your content fresh, find your voice, and build an audience. Inside... Building your podcasting studio Developing your podcast theme Conducting great interviews Recording and editing episodes Distributing your podcast Adding sponsorships Expanding your podcast consumption From the Back Cover Understand the do's and don'ts of podcasting Produce unique content that attracts listeners Build a studio that rivals pro podcasters How to talk your way to the top As more and more people turn to podcasts for entertainment, information, and education, the market for new players has never been bigger―or more competitive. And with corporations and A-list celebs moving in on the action, it's more important than ever to know how to stand out from the crowd. Written by two podcasting veterans, this book gives you everything you need to launch a podcast. Get the insider info on how to produce quality audio (and even video), keep your content fresh, find your voice, and build an audience. Inside... Building your podcasting studio Developing your podcast theme Conducting great interviews Recording and editing episodes Distributing your podcast Adding sponsorships Expanding your podcast consumption #AD ❀❀❀❀ In our second segment, we chat rather non-spoilery about Star Trek: Discovery and The Mandalorian. We also highlight recent articles posted to the tggeeks.com in the past week. As always we have our birthdays and we have the ever-popular feedback segment. We welcome your feedback. Please, let us know what you think. Good or bad, we want to know and you could receive a shoutout in the feedback segment. Thank you for listening, we really do appreciate you taking time out of your day to spend with us. Our YouTube channel is audio only: Show Notes / Links: TG Geeks Episode 304 Matcha & Vanilla drops original Christmas Carol Happy Thanksgiving During “The Great Pause,” Please Remember to Take Care of Yourself Nerdy Chupacabras #026 Gini's Christmas Classics | The Man Who Invented Christmas Andrea's Angle | Don't Be Scrooged This Year! Keith's Holiday Korner | Pee-Wee's Playhouse Christmas Special is an Experience Not to be Believed... Tokyo Godfathers - A Different Look at Christmas This Got Made hosted by Carlton Tetley - Season 2 Episode C - Tiger Girl
Jennifer Marsman is a Principal Developer Evangelist in Microsoft's Developer and Platform Evangelism group, where she educates developers on Microsoft's new technologies. In this role, Jennifer is a frequent speaker at software development conferences around the world. In 2016, Jennifer was recognized as one of the “top 100 most influential individuals in artificial intelligence and machine learning” by Onalytica. She has been featured in Bloomberg for her work using EEG and machine learning to perform lie detection. In 2009, Jennifer was chosen as "Techie whose innovation will have the biggest impact" by X-OLOGY for her work with GiveCamps, a weekend-long event where developers code for charity. She has also received many honors from Microsoft, including the Central Region Top Contributor Award, Heartland District Top Contributor Award, DPE Community Evangelist Award, CPE Champion Award, MSUS Diversity & Inclusion Award, Gold Club, and Platinum Club. Prior to becoming a Developer Evangelist, Jennifer was a software developer in Microsoft's Natural Interactive Services division. In this role, she earned two patents for her work in search and data mining algorithms. Jennifer has also held positions with Ford Motor Company, National Instruments, and Soar Technology. Jennifer holds a Bachelor's Degree in Computer Engineering and Master's Degree in Computer Science and Engineering from the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor. Her graduate work specialized in artificial intelligence and computational theory. Jennifer blogs at http://blogs.msdn.com/jennifer and tweets at http://twitter.com/jennifermarsman.
In this episode I have a fireside chat about what it's like to live the life of a developer evangelist with Jack Skinner, otherwise known as @developerjack, whilst he was at the first BuzzConf.