Podcasts about eleven tips

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Best podcasts about eleven tips

Latest podcast episodes about eleven tips

Silver Lining Safety - West Bend Cares
28. Eleven tips to protect your campsite this summer

Silver Lining Safety - West Bend Cares

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 9, 2021 2:55


Camping is a favorite pastime enjoyed by many. Taking early morning walks, fishing, and making s'mores over the campfire can create many fond memories for your family. However, have you ever returned to your campsite to find thieves have turned it upside down? Here are some tips to keep your family and campsite safe and secure while camping this summer.

Lace Out AFL Podcast
Tipped Out's AFL Round Eleven Tips

Lace Out AFL Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 27, 2021 27:04


Peps and Jamie give their tips for a massive covid affected round eleven of AFL footy. https://woorise.com/laceoutpodcast/win-a-box-of-afl-team-coach-footy-cards-36-packs (Enter here) to win a box of 2021 AFL Team Coach footy cards (36 packs). Hosted By Christopher Pepper and Jamie Wallis. Check out Lace Out's https://www.facebook.com/laceoutpodcast/ (Facebook page) and https://www.redbubble.com/shop/ap/63366641 (Merchandise)! Broadcasting LIVE every Tuesday night @ 8pm (AEST) #itshowiwantmyfooty #laceout #afl

DIY Marketing School with Melanie Dyann Howe
Seven Tips For Showing Up in 2021 to Grow Your Audience

DIY Marketing School with Melanie Dyann Howe

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 14, 2021 33:47


Welcome to 2021! Another opportunity to look ahead and think, "what am I going to do differently to finally make the strides I want to make?" Well, sister, you're going to show UP! Don't sit around waiting for things to happen. No more waiting for the courage to arrive magically so you can finally take action. Your actions will create more courage. In this episode, I'm going to share 7 ways I want you to show up this year. I'm passionate about every single one of them and they are very much things you can start doing TODAY. So, do it. Pick one, or all seven, take action, and let me know about it on Instagram @melaniedyann Lets GO!Links Mentioned in this Episode:My Instagram ProfileEpisode 16: Eleven Tips for a Better Profile PictureFifty Ideas for Live VideosDIY Marketing With Melanie Facebook Group

Silver Lining Safety - West Bend Cares
7. Eleven tips to avoid or handle hydroplaning

Silver Lining Safety - West Bend Cares

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 20, 2020 3:10


Why is hydroplaning so dangerous? When people realize they're hydroplaning, they panic. In this podcast, I'll go over some tips to avoid or better handle hydroplaning.

hydroplaning eleven tips
Silver Lining Safety - West Bend Cares
6. Eleven tips to save on your utility bills this summer

Silver Lining Safety - West Bend Cares

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 6, 2020 3:32


While summer is a great time to enjoy many outdoor activities, it can take a toll on our pocket books because of increased utility costs. In this podcast, I'll go over eleven tips to save on your utility bills this summer.

bills utility eleven tips
DIY Marketing School with Melanie Dyann Howe
Eleven Tips For a Better Profile Picture

DIY Marketing School with Melanie Dyann Howe

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 5, 2019 29:07


Your profile picture is a first impression, but it's also a way to maintain a lasting impression. When you're showing up online, it's important that you not only are authentic in how you post and comment but also how you look. This episode is not how to look pretty online, it's how to have an authentic profile picture that will actually help you connect with your audience. I've got eleven tips that will help you have a better profile picture.

Travel, Music, Business and more....
#2 Eleven Tips to save money on travel

Travel, Music, Business and more....

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 25, 2018 10:50


Brought to you by 2 Week Holidays --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/freshlysqueezedmedia/message

travel save money eleven tips
The Well-Storied Podcast
Eleven Tips For Building A Feel-Free Writing Routine

The Well-Storied Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 31, 2018 12:48


Building a consistent creative practice is key to achieving our writing goals, but with all the chaos of life, establishing a writing routine is often far from easy. How can we conquer creative blues and find a routine that leaves us feeling free? Let's discuss, writers! Article + Transcript: www.well-storied.com/routine Support the Podcast: www.patreon.com/wellstoriedWell-Storied Communities: www.well-storied.com/community All Episodes: www.well-storied.com/podcastYou can find the show on: iTunes, Soundcloud, Stitcher, Spotify, Google Play, Youtube, RSS, and other popular podcatchers!Support the show (http://www.kofi.com/kristen)

Adventures in Angular
AiA 208: From Custom Webpack Build to Angular CLI with Martin Jakubik

Adventures in Angular

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 25, 2018 54:57


Panel: Alyssa Nicholl Joe Eames John Papa Ward Bell Special Guests: Martin Jakubik In this episode, the Adventures in Angular panel talk with Martin Jakubik and he has been working with Angular for the last three years. He has one large and one small Angular application, which the panel talks about. Show Topics: 2:31 – Alyssa likes to be called... 2:40 – Alyssa: You have a large and small application – what makes it small? Is it the user-base? 2:56 – Martin: It is one module out of ten or twenty components. 2: 59 – Panelist: Only 1 Angular module? 3:47 – Panelist: Joe went off on how much he hates modules. I am sorry JP we had to throw that in that? 4:04 – Joe: I am an anti-modulist. 4:11 – Martin: Just one module. 4:21 – Panelist: When you are building an application with one module – start us from the beginning, what does it look like? 4:38 – Martin: It is actually quite special. It has to run in an iFrame, and all it does it allows the user to add into the experiment. 5:05 – Alyssa: Is it like a CMS? 5:10 – Martin: It is like Google Optimize. The application is quite simple and every component is in that one module. 5:36 – Panelist: How many do you have? 5:44 – Martin: There are less than 10 services and 20 components at most. 5:57 – Panelist: I feel personally, I feel like that I a decent size? 6:11 – Panelist: That makes perfect sense. If there is no routing or nothing... 6:40 – Panelist: Asks a question, and clarifies the question to Martin. 7:48 – Panelist: It is nice and clean. 7:55 – Panelist: I do, too. 8:08 – Alyssa: How new is it? 8:15 – Panelist: June/July? 8:32 – Martin: I am using the new style. 9:01 – Panelist: I am leery of using it. 9:13 - Panelist: I would like to clarify. When you mention you have 20 components... 9:40 - Panelist: Do it. 10:34 – Panelist: Webpack. Can you explain what that is and how you solved it? 10:57 – Martin: I don’t think I did anything special. I wanted to know how it works. I used webpack and used their configurations. Several months into the project then I... 11:40 – Panelist: Why did you decide not to use the CLI? This is like an Iron Man thing. 11:55 – Panelist: I think it’s a pain thing. 12:05 – Martin: I wanted to know how it works. 12:32 – Martin: I started from scratch, I can’t remember. 12:44 – Panelist: Whenever I use webpack it makes my head spin. 12:56 – Martin: The application was very simple. I was doing more blogging. 13:45 – Panelist: It is doing more configurations on the fly for you. It’s wonderful if it works and if it doesn’t work then I don’t know what you’d do. 14:17 – Martin: That’s why I did it, so I can appreciate all the magic. 14:30 – Panelist: How big is big? 14:36 – Martin: Enterprise level. 100 different components. 15:06 – Panelist chimes in. 15:13 – Panelist: That is complex. 15:28 – Panelist: let’s add more modules to add to the complexity... 15:55 – Alyssa: When you took your app to the CLI was that hard? 16:06 – Martin: That took me one whole day. The module is so simple that’s why. 16:32 – Panelist talks about this topic. 17:39 – Panelist asks a question. 17:53 – Panelist: Fixing any problem ... ever work on tooling help people if they have their stuff in the right file name? 18:18 – Martin: I used Cypress. 18:58 – Panelist: Under what situation would you recommend it to anyone? Do it your own webpack configuration? 19:23 – Martin: Only if... 19:51 – Alyssa: What if you wanted to add a watermark to each file, do you have to stop adding the CLI? 20:13 – Panelist: So am I...what are the boundaries, I don’t know what they are? I’m curious. 20:41 – Panelist: Are you asking, Alyssa, how you would customize it? 21:09 – Panelist: You won’t loose all the features that you get. You now elected out of that place where they had it; webpack configurations. 22:12 – Panelist: What happened to it ejecting? How do you get it out of there? 22:26 – Good question! I have – I like to play with scissors. 22:43 – Advertisement 23:32 – Panelist reads a message from the company. How do you get that voice? 24:10 – First you have to have a really deep sinus cold. 25:00 – Panelist: Do you live without eject? I really don’t care. What I care about...Scratch that! I want to know what kinds of things you can’t do with a CLI that would drive you to do your own application? What other things could you not do in webpack. 25:50 – Martin: I wanted to see how it works. 25:56 – Panelist: Now I use CLI and all it’s features except testing. I use Cypress completely separate than CLI. 26:46 – Panelist: I feel like it’s talking to the one person without a cellphone. 27:01 – Panelist: Wow! I had no concept that life could be like that! I thought you had to have a cellphone. 27:29  – Martin: What does anyone use the CLI for anyways? 27:44 – Martin: I use it for unit tests. 27:52 – Panelist: Another question. 28:30 – Alyssa: You write things out by hand because it’s easier?! 28:44 – Panelist: You copy, and paste and it’s less work. 29:06 – Panelist: It feels easier. 29:22 – Joe: No, I am serious. 29:48 – Joe: Yes, I am amazing. 30:30 – Martin talks about another topic. 30:48 – Alyssa: When you generate a component do you put it into a different file? 31:29 – Panel: We are all friends here and we aren’t shaming anyone here. We are joking here. 32:00 – Alyssa: It’s that he can write it from memory. 33:08 – Panelist: I have been using Vue lately. He also talks about Angular and mentions Sarah Drasner, too. 34:26 – Panelist: Not everyone has a memory like him, though. 35:32 – Panelist: The fourth version of Renderer. 36:28 – Panelist: We are not talking about Nirvana the band, here. 36:46 – Alyssa: It will be the new Renderer. It’s out for you to try. Check out Angular Air. He was trying out IB yourself right now. People are flipping out about it. I am excited to see how my Angular app runs differently now. Here is the code that was generated, here is the code that... I am not sure that there is a promise date. Any secrets heads-up on when it will come out? 38:22 – Panelist: The big question what does this mean for my existing code? Do I have to change my existing code? 38:48 – Alyssa: The Angular team is working so that there are minimal changes. I don’t have a good answer. NGGC. For third-party libraries you run it through and it... I don’t know what that means for the community. 39:49 – Panelist: My hope is that they... 40:03 – Alyssa: For your third-party... 40:18 – Panelist: Question: between your small and large pack? What architectural differences are there? 40:44 – Martin: I have a template edit. 41:03 – Panelist: Come to my... 41:32 – Panel talks about talks that Jon can do. 42:13 – Panelist: True story... The panel is having fun going back and forth with jokes. 43:03 – Panelist: This kind of stuff creeps into production code. That’s the great thing about copy and paste. 43:21 – Panelist: We had a rule, though, if it happens more than once let’s put into our build. 44:20 – It’s 3 hours if you have a CI process, if you don’t... 44:33 – Console.log 44:49 – Martin chimes in. 45:14 – Panelist: Let’s talk about an iFrame in your app? 45:27 – Martin: The point is to be able to do it with any... Make sure that it doesn’t collide. The CSS wasn’t separated. I had to put my application inside an iFrame. 46:27 – Panelist: Thanks for coming on for us, Martin. 46:37 – Picks! 46:44 - Advertisement Links: Martin Jakubik’s Medium How to Copy, Cut, Paste for Beginners by Melanie Pinola Art Joker Blog @AngularMine Cypress Vue Renderer Sponsors: Angular Boot Camp Digital Ocean Get a Coder Job course Picks: Alyssa Question as my pick – About Angular 7...(47:52) True or False? Martin Thank you for having me today. Present your work more. I challenge you all to cook. Blog: Bratislava Angular Ward How to Copy, Cut, and Paste Joe Brian Holt – Eleven Tips to Scale Node.js NPM scripts – I relearned something “new” lately.

adventures medium iron man panel beginners false ward scratch nirvana copy special guests jp console cms panelists ib css paste advertisement cypress vue angular cli digital ocean npm webpack google optimize iframe john papa sarah drasner angular cli brian holt renderer joe eames ward bell coder job angular air martin it panelist you eleven tips angular boot camp melanie pinola panelist let alyssa it panelist it martin there alyssa nicholl alyssa what alyssa how panelist question alyssa you panelist so panelist why martin only panelist not alyssa is
All Angular Podcasts by Devchat.tv
AiA 208: From Custom Webpack Build to Angular CLI with Martin Jakubik

All Angular Podcasts by Devchat.tv

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 25, 2018 54:57


Panel: Alyssa Nicholl Joe Eames John Papa Ward Bell Special Guests: Martin Jakubik In this episode, the Adventures in Angular panel talk with Martin Jakubik and he has been working with Angular for the last three years. He has one large and one small Angular application, which the panel talks about. Show Topics: 2:31 – Alyssa likes to be called... 2:40 – Alyssa: You have a large and small application – what makes it small? Is it the user-base? 2:56 – Martin: It is one module out of ten or twenty components. 2: 59 – Panelist: Only 1 Angular module? 3:47 – Panelist: Joe went off on how much he hates modules. I am sorry JP we had to throw that in that? 4:04 – Joe: I am an anti-modulist. 4:11 – Martin: Just one module. 4:21 – Panelist: When you are building an application with one module – start us from the beginning, what does it look like? 4:38 – Martin: It is actually quite special. It has to run in an iFrame, and all it does it allows the user to add into the experiment. 5:05 – Alyssa: Is it like a CMS? 5:10 – Martin: It is like Google Optimize. The application is quite simple and every component is in that one module. 5:36 – Panelist: How many do you have? 5:44 – Martin: There are less than 10 services and 20 components at most. 5:57 – Panelist: I feel personally, I feel like that I a decent size? 6:11 – Panelist: That makes perfect sense. If there is no routing or nothing... 6:40 – Panelist: Asks a question, and clarifies the question to Martin. 7:48 – Panelist: It is nice and clean. 7:55 – Panelist: I do, too. 8:08 – Alyssa: How new is it? 8:15 – Panelist: June/July? 8:32 – Martin: I am using the new style. 9:01 – Panelist: I am leery of using it. 9:13 - Panelist: I would like to clarify. When you mention you have 20 components... 9:40 - Panelist: Do it. 10:34 – Panelist: Webpack. Can you explain what that is and how you solved it? 10:57 – Martin: I don’t think I did anything special. I wanted to know how it works. I used webpack and used their configurations. Several months into the project then I... 11:40 – Panelist: Why did you decide not to use the CLI? This is like an Iron Man thing. 11:55 – Panelist: I think it’s a pain thing. 12:05 – Martin: I wanted to know how it works. 12:32 – Martin: I started from scratch, I can’t remember. 12:44 – Panelist: Whenever I use webpack it makes my head spin. 12:56 – Martin: The application was very simple. I was doing more blogging. 13:45 – Panelist: It is doing more configurations on the fly for you. It’s wonderful if it works and if it doesn’t work then I don’t know what you’d do. 14:17 – Martin: That’s why I did it, so I can appreciate all the magic. 14:30 – Panelist: How big is big? 14:36 – Martin: Enterprise level. 100 different components. 15:06 – Panelist chimes in. 15:13 – Panelist: That is complex. 15:28 – Panelist: let’s add more modules to add to the complexity... 15:55 – Alyssa: When you took your app to the CLI was that hard? 16:06 – Martin: That took me one whole day. The module is so simple that’s why. 16:32 – Panelist talks about this topic. 17:39 – Panelist asks a question. 17:53 – Panelist: Fixing any problem ... ever work on tooling help people if they have their stuff in the right file name? 18:18 – Martin: I used Cypress. 18:58 – Panelist: Under what situation would you recommend it to anyone? Do it your own webpack configuration? 19:23 – Martin: Only if... 19:51 – Alyssa: What if you wanted to add a watermark to each file, do you have to stop adding the CLI? 20:13 – Panelist: So am I...what are the boundaries, I don’t know what they are? I’m curious. 20:41 – Panelist: Are you asking, Alyssa, how you would customize it? 21:09 – Panelist: You won’t loose all the features that you get. You now elected out of that place where they had it; webpack configurations. 22:12 – Panelist: What happened to it ejecting? How do you get it out of there? 22:26 – Good question! I have – I like to play with scissors. 22:43 – Advertisement 23:32 – Panelist reads a message from the company. How do you get that voice? 24:10 – First you have to have a really deep sinus cold. 25:00 – Panelist: Do you live without eject? I really don’t care. What I care about...Scratch that! I want to know what kinds of things you can’t do with a CLI that would drive you to do your own application? What other things could you not do in webpack. 25:50 – Martin: I wanted to see how it works. 25:56 – Panelist: Now I use CLI and all it’s features except testing. I use Cypress completely separate than CLI. 26:46 – Panelist: I feel like it’s talking to the one person without a cellphone. 27:01 – Panelist: Wow! I had no concept that life could be like that! I thought you had to have a cellphone. 27:29  – Martin: What does anyone use the CLI for anyways? 27:44 – Martin: I use it for unit tests. 27:52 – Panelist: Another question. 28:30 – Alyssa: You write things out by hand because it’s easier?! 28:44 – Panelist: You copy, and paste and it’s less work. 29:06 – Panelist: It feels easier. 29:22 – Joe: No, I am serious. 29:48 – Joe: Yes, I am amazing. 30:30 – Martin talks about another topic. 30:48 – Alyssa: When you generate a component do you put it into a different file? 31:29 – Panel: We are all friends here and we aren’t shaming anyone here. We are joking here. 32:00 – Alyssa: It’s that he can write it from memory. 33:08 – Panelist: I have been using Vue lately. He also talks about Angular and mentions Sarah Drasner, too. 34:26 – Panelist: Not everyone has a memory like him, though. 35:32 – Panelist: The fourth version of Renderer. 36:28 – Panelist: We are not talking about Nirvana the band, here. 36:46 – Alyssa: It will be the new Renderer. It’s out for you to try. Check out Angular Air. He was trying out IB yourself right now. People are flipping out about it. I am excited to see how my Angular app runs differently now. Here is the code that was generated, here is the code that... I am not sure that there is a promise date. Any secrets heads-up on when it will come out? 38:22 – Panelist: The big question what does this mean for my existing code? Do I have to change my existing code? 38:48 – Alyssa: The Angular team is working so that there are minimal changes. I don’t have a good answer. NGGC. For third-party libraries you run it through and it... I don’t know what that means for the community. 39:49 – Panelist: My hope is that they... 40:03 – Alyssa: For your third-party... 40:18 – Panelist: Question: between your small and large pack? What architectural differences are there? 40:44 – Martin: I have a template edit. 41:03 – Panelist: Come to my... 41:32 – Panel talks about talks that Jon can do. 42:13 – Panelist: True story... The panel is having fun going back and forth with jokes. 43:03 – Panelist: This kind of stuff creeps into production code. That’s the great thing about copy and paste. 43:21 – Panelist: We had a rule, though, if it happens more than once let’s put into our build. 44:20 – It’s 3 hours if you have a CI process, if you don’t... 44:33 – Console.log 44:49 – Martin chimes in. 45:14 – Panelist: Let’s talk about an iFrame in your app? 45:27 – Martin: The point is to be able to do it with any... Make sure that it doesn’t collide. The CSS wasn’t separated. I had to put my application inside an iFrame. 46:27 – Panelist: Thanks for coming on for us, Martin. 46:37 – Picks! 46:44 - Advertisement Links: Martin Jakubik’s Medium How to Copy, Cut, Paste for Beginners by Melanie Pinola Art Joker Blog @AngularMine Cypress Vue Renderer Sponsors: Angular Boot Camp Digital Ocean Get a Coder Job course Picks: Alyssa Question as my pick – About Angular 7...(47:52) True or False? Martin Thank you for having me today. Present your work more. I challenge you all to cook. Blog: Bratislava Angular Ward How to Copy, Cut, and Paste Joe Brian Holt – Eleven Tips to Scale Node.js NPM scripts – I relearned something “new” lately.

adventures medium iron man panel beginners false ward scratch nirvana copy special guests jp console cms panelists ib css paste advertisement cypress vue angular cli digital ocean npm webpack google optimize iframe john papa sarah drasner angular cli brian holt renderer joe eames ward bell coder job angular air martin it panelist you eleven tips angular boot camp melanie pinola panelist let alyssa it panelist it martin there alyssa nicholl alyssa what alyssa how panelist question alyssa you panelist so panelist why martin only panelist not alyssa is
Devchat.tv Master Feed
AiA 208: From Custom Webpack Build to Angular CLI with Martin Jakubik

Devchat.tv Master Feed

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 25, 2018 54:57


Panel: Alyssa Nicholl Joe Eames John Papa Ward Bell Special Guests: Martin Jakubik In this episode, the Adventures in Angular panel talk with Martin Jakubik and he has been working with Angular for the last three years. He has one large and one small Angular application, which the panel talks about. Show Topics: 2:31 – Alyssa likes to be called... 2:40 – Alyssa: You have a large and small application – what makes it small? Is it the user-base? 2:56 – Martin: It is one module out of ten or twenty components. 2: 59 – Panelist: Only 1 Angular module? 3:47 – Panelist: Joe went off on how much he hates modules. I am sorry JP we had to throw that in that? 4:04 – Joe: I am an anti-modulist. 4:11 – Martin: Just one module. 4:21 – Panelist: When you are building an application with one module – start us from the beginning, what does it look like? 4:38 – Martin: It is actually quite special. It has to run in an iFrame, and all it does it allows the user to add into the experiment. 5:05 – Alyssa: Is it like a CMS? 5:10 – Martin: It is like Google Optimize. The application is quite simple and every component is in that one module. 5:36 – Panelist: How many do you have? 5:44 – Martin: There are less than 10 services and 20 components at most. 5:57 – Panelist: I feel personally, I feel like that I a decent size? 6:11 – Panelist: That makes perfect sense. If there is no routing or nothing... 6:40 – Panelist: Asks a question, and clarifies the question to Martin. 7:48 – Panelist: It is nice and clean. 7:55 – Panelist: I do, too. 8:08 – Alyssa: How new is it? 8:15 – Panelist: June/July? 8:32 – Martin: I am using the new style. 9:01 – Panelist: I am leery of using it. 9:13 - Panelist: I would like to clarify. When you mention you have 20 components... 9:40 - Panelist: Do it. 10:34 – Panelist: Webpack. Can you explain what that is and how you solved it? 10:57 – Martin: I don’t think I did anything special. I wanted to know how it works. I used webpack and used their configurations. Several months into the project then I... 11:40 – Panelist: Why did you decide not to use the CLI? This is like an Iron Man thing. 11:55 – Panelist: I think it’s a pain thing. 12:05 – Martin: I wanted to know how it works. 12:32 – Martin: I started from scratch, I can’t remember. 12:44 – Panelist: Whenever I use webpack it makes my head spin. 12:56 – Martin: The application was very simple. I was doing more blogging. 13:45 – Panelist: It is doing more configurations on the fly for you. It’s wonderful if it works and if it doesn’t work then I don’t know what you’d do. 14:17 – Martin: That’s why I did it, so I can appreciate all the magic. 14:30 – Panelist: How big is big? 14:36 – Martin: Enterprise level. 100 different components. 15:06 – Panelist chimes in. 15:13 – Panelist: That is complex. 15:28 – Panelist: let’s add more modules to add to the complexity... 15:55 – Alyssa: When you took your app to the CLI was that hard? 16:06 – Martin: That took me one whole day. The module is so simple that’s why. 16:32 – Panelist talks about this topic. 17:39 – Panelist asks a question. 17:53 – Panelist: Fixing any problem ... ever work on tooling help people if they have their stuff in the right file name? 18:18 – Martin: I used Cypress. 18:58 – Panelist: Under what situation would you recommend it to anyone? Do it your own webpack configuration? 19:23 – Martin: Only if... 19:51 – Alyssa: What if you wanted to add a watermark to each file, do you have to stop adding the CLI? 20:13 – Panelist: So am I...what are the boundaries, I don’t know what they are? I’m curious. 20:41 – Panelist: Are you asking, Alyssa, how you would customize it? 21:09 – Panelist: You won’t loose all the features that you get. You now elected out of that place where they had it; webpack configurations. 22:12 – Panelist: What happened to it ejecting? How do you get it out of there? 22:26 – Good question! I have – I like to play with scissors. 22:43 – Advertisement 23:32 – Panelist reads a message from the company. How do you get that voice? 24:10 – First you have to have a really deep sinus cold. 25:00 – Panelist: Do you live without eject? I really don’t care. What I care about...Scratch that! I want to know what kinds of things you can’t do with a CLI that would drive you to do your own application? What other things could you not do in webpack. 25:50 – Martin: I wanted to see how it works. 25:56 – Panelist: Now I use CLI and all it’s features except testing. I use Cypress completely separate than CLI. 26:46 – Panelist: I feel like it’s talking to the one person without a cellphone. 27:01 – Panelist: Wow! I had no concept that life could be like that! I thought you had to have a cellphone. 27:29  – Martin: What does anyone use the CLI for anyways? 27:44 – Martin: I use it for unit tests. 27:52 – Panelist: Another question. 28:30 – Alyssa: You write things out by hand because it’s easier?! 28:44 – Panelist: You copy, and paste and it’s less work. 29:06 – Panelist: It feels easier. 29:22 – Joe: No, I am serious. 29:48 – Joe: Yes, I am amazing. 30:30 – Martin talks about another topic. 30:48 – Alyssa: When you generate a component do you put it into a different file? 31:29 – Panel: We are all friends here and we aren’t shaming anyone here. We are joking here. 32:00 – Alyssa: It’s that he can write it from memory. 33:08 – Panelist: I have been using Vue lately. He also talks about Angular and mentions Sarah Drasner, too. 34:26 – Panelist: Not everyone has a memory like him, though. 35:32 – Panelist: The fourth version of Renderer. 36:28 – Panelist: We are not talking about Nirvana the band, here. 36:46 – Alyssa: It will be the new Renderer. It’s out for you to try. Check out Angular Air. He was trying out IB yourself right now. People are flipping out about it. I am excited to see how my Angular app runs differently now. Here is the code that was generated, here is the code that... I am not sure that there is a promise date. Any secrets heads-up on when it will come out? 38:22 – Panelist: The big question what does this mean for my existing code? Do I have to change my existing code? 38:48 – Alyssa: The Angular team is working so that there are minimal changes. I don’t have a good answer. NGGC. For third-party libraries you run it through and it... I don’t know what that means for the community. 39:49 – Panelist: My hope is that they... 40:03 – Alyssa: For your third-party... 40:18 – Panelist: Question: between your small and large pack? What architectural differences are there? 40:44 – Martin: I have a template edit. 41:03 – Panelist: Come to my... 41:32 – Panel talks about talks that Jon can do. 42:13 – Panelist: True story... The panel is having fun going back and forth with jokes. 43:03 – Panelist: This kind of stuff creeps into production code. That’s the great thing about copy and paste. 43:21 – Panelist: We had a rule, though, if it happens more than once let’s put into our build. 44:20 – It’s 3 hours if you have a CI process, if you don’t... 44:33 – Console.log 44:49 – Martin chimes in. 45:14 – Panelist: Let’s talk about an iFrame in your app? 45:27 – Martin: The point is to be able to do it with any... Make sure that it doesn’t collide. The CSS wasn’t separated. I had to put my application inside an iFrame. 46:27 – Panelist: Thanks for coming on for us, Martin. 46:37 – Picks! 46:44 - Advertisement Links: Martin Jakubik’s Medium How to Copy, Cut, Paste for Beginners by Melanie Pinola Art Joker Blog @AngularMine Cypress Vue Renderer Sponsors: Angular Boot Camp Digital Ocean Get a Coder Job course Picks: Alyssa Question as my pick – About Angular 7...(47:52) True or False? Martin Thank you for having me today. Present your work more. I challenge you all to cook. Blog: Bratislava Angular Ward How to Copy, Cut, and Paste Joe Brian Holt – Eleven Tips to Scale Node.js NPM scripts – I relearned something “new” lately.

adventures medium iron man panel beginners false ward scratch nirvana copy special guests jp console cms panelists ib css paste advertisement cypress vue angular cli digital ocean npm webpack google optimize iframe john papa sarah drasner angular cli brian holt renderer joe eames ward bell coder job angular air martin it panelist you eleven tips angular boot camp melanie pinola panelist let alyssa it panelist it martin there alyssa nicholl alyssa what alyssa how panelist question alyssa you panelist so panelist why martin only panelist not alyssa is
The Well-Storied Podcast
Eleven Tips For Creating a Feel-Free Writing Routine

The Well-Storied Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 18, 2017 14:57


In today's episode, Kristen talks about how to build a consistent writing routine that doesn't drag you down, but rather allows you to make the absolute most of your limited writing time! Article + Transcript: www.well-storied.com/routine Support the Podcast: www.patreon.com/wellstoriedWell-Storied Communities: www.well-storied.com/community All Episodes: www.well-storied.com/podcastYou can find the show on: iTunes, Soundcloud, Stitcher, Spotify, Google Play, Youtube, RSS, and other popular podcatchers!Support the show (http://www.kofi.com/kristen)

Mammoth Mountain Emergency Medicine Conference
Eleven Tips on Admitting to Medicine

Mammoth Mountain Emergency Medicine Conference

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 11, 2016 59:42


Its good to know what our colleagues in internal medicine's perspective is when we admit to them

Annette Coleman The Artist's Voice
27- REBROADCAST OF POPULAR SHOW Myths about artists

Annette Coleman The Artist's Voice

Play Episode Listen Later May 24, 2012 79:00


Myths about artists with guest host: Aletta de Wal, Director, Artist Career Training • A True Artist Lives Life Free and Without Structure • If It Didn’t Work Out Once, It Will Never Work Out • All Good Artists Are Poor Artist Advisor Aletta de Wal, artistcareertraining.com Subscribe today and receive a free art marketing guide: "Eleven Tips for Success for Fine Artists" Digital Recording and 15-page PDF Presentation by Artist Advisor Aletta de Wal Download here: www.artistcareertraining.com/blogtalk-radio Artists pre-interviewed Tom Cannon, tomcannonart.com Tatjana Krizmanic, tatjanastudio.com Karen Mandery, KarenMandery Daniel Gonzalas, syncgallery.org/gonzalez.html Jonna Johnson, joannajohnson.name TiffanyMiller, deadraccoon.com Brad Riley, iempathize.org Anne Shutan, ashutan.com

Annette Coleman The Artist's Voice
59-Mixed Artists Myths & Creative Realities

Annette Coleman The Artist's Voice

Play Episode Listen Later May 12, 2011 35:00


Myths and Realities of artists. What does society think and say about artists? You won’t be famous until you….Poor starving……flaky, dreamer, angst ridden ……What myths do you have to dispel in order to embrace a healthy reality as a successful artist? Myths about artists and how they live and work abound. These myths create misunderstanding in the minds of collectors and become obstacles for artists who have absorbed them. When artists shed these misconceptions and plant themselves squarely inside the realities, more energy is available for a creative lifestyle and sustainable art business. Aletta de Wall tackles these Myths: Subscribe today and receive a free art marketing guide: "Eleven Tips for Success for Fine Artists" Digital Recording and 15-page PDF Presentation by Artist Advisor Aletta de Wal Download here: www.artistcareertraining.com/blogtalkArtists pre-interviewed: Jim Caldwell, ArtworkNetwork.com, Annette Coleman, annettecolemanartist.com, 88 88 ArtLook, 8888ArtLook.com, Tracy Weil, tracyWeil.com, Dismis Rotta, dismasrotta.com, Karen Mandery, karenmandery.com

Annette Coleman The Artist's Voice
27-Myths about artists with guest host: Aletta de Wal, Director, Artist Career Training

Annette Coleman The Artist's Voice

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 23, 2010 61:00


Myths about artists with guest host: Aletta de Wal, Director, Artist Career Training • A True Artist Lives Life Free and Without Structure • If It Didn’t Work Out Once, It Will Never Work Out • All Good Artists Are Poor Artist Advisor Aletta de Wal, artistcareertraining.com Subscribe today and receive a free art marketing guide: "Eleven Tips for Success for Fine Artists" Digital Recording and 15-page PDF Presentation by Artist Advisor Aletta de Wal Download here: www.artistcareertraining.com/blogtalk-radio Artists pre-interviewed Tom Cannon, tomcannonart.com Tatjana Krizmanic, tatjanastudio.com Karen Mandery, KarenMandery Daniel Gonzalas, syncgallery.org/gonzalez.html Jonna Johnson, joannajohnson.name TiffanyMiller, deadraccoon.com Brad Riley, iempathize.org Anne Shutan, ashutan.com

Annette Coleman The Artist's Voice
14-Visual artist myths debunked for true career success

Annette Coleman The Artist's Voice

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 24, 2010 61:00


Along with our guest host: Aletta de Wall we will dispel some of the artist myths that block artists from their unique successes. Artist Myth: If I Just Do My Art, Everything Else Will Work Out. Artist Myth: My Artwork Is So Good, It Will Appeal to Everyone Artist Myth: I Can Succeed Only in New York (Or any Other Art Mecca) Subscribe today and receive a free art marketing guide: "Eleven Tips for Success for Fine Artists" Digital Recording and 15-page PDF Presentation by Artist Advisor Aletta de Wal Download here: www.artistcareertraining.com/blogtalk-radio Artists interviewed: Any Odorizzi, Metro State BFA Tracy Weil, TracyWeil.com Lola Montejo, LolaMontejo.com Dismis Rotta, dismasrotta.com JacobLeauwenburgh, millenniumhart.nl ,JenniferHeath, theveilbook.com Katie Hoffman, KatieHoffman.com, CoreNewArtSpace.com Myth1AlettaIfIJustDoMyArt.mp3 Myth2AlettaMyArtWorkIsSoGood.mp3 Myth3AlettaSuccessInNY.mp3 MythIntroductionAletta.mp3 Phyllis Rider, phillisriderart.com, Tim Downing, Sculptor Tracy Weil, tracyWeil.com Annette Coleman, AnnetteColemanArtist.com, Jim Caldwell, ArtWorkNetwork.com 8888ArtLook.com

Annette Coleman The Artist's Voice
8-Myths and Realities of artists with guest host Aletta de Wal

Annette Coleman The Artist's Voice

Play Episode Listen Later May 13, 2010 60:00


Myths and Realities of artists. What does society think and say about artists? You won’t be famous until you….Poor starving……flaky, dreamer, angst ridden ……What myths do you have to dispel in order to embrace a healthy reality as a successful artist? Myths about artists and how they live and work abound. These myths create misunderstanding in the minds of collectors and become obstacles for artists who have absorbed them. When artists shed these misconceptions and plant themselves squarely inside the realities, more energy is available for a creative lifestyle and sustainable art business. Aletta de Wall tackles these Myths: 'My art speakes for it's self', 'Artists are not business people', and 'One big break will make my career'. Subscribe today and receive a free art marketing guide: "Eleven Tips for Success for Fine Artists" Digital Recording and 15-page PDF Presentation by Artist Advisor Aletta de Wal Download here: www.artistcareertraining.com/blogtalk-radio Tonight’s sponsors: Up Start Crow Theatre,8888ArtLook.com Artists interviewed: Claudia Roulier, claudiaroulier.com Ryan Rice, RyanRiceFineArt.com Mary Barron, adagioartglass.com, Jim Caldwell, artworknetwork.com, Annette Coleman, annettecolemanartist.com, Leah Bradley, leahbradley.com, Daniel Gonzalas, Todd Redman, earth-marks.com