Podcasts about FileZilla

Free software, cross-platform file transfer protocol application

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Best podcasts about FileZilla

Latest podcast episodes about FileZilla

52 Weeks of Cloud
TCP vs UDP

52 Weeks of Cloud

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 26, 2025 5:46


TCP vs UDP: Foundational Network ProtocolsProtocol FundamentalsTCP (Transmission Control Protocol)Connection-oriented: Requires handshake establishmentReliable delivery: Uses acknowledgments and packet retransmissionOrdered packets: Maintains exact sequence orderHeader overhead: 20-60 bytes (≈20% additional overhead)Technical implementation:Three-way handshake (SYN → SYN-ACK → ACK)Flow control via sliding window mechanismCongestion control algorithmsSegment sequencing with reordering capabilityFull-duplex operationUDP (User Datagram Protocol)Connectionless: "Fire-and-forget" transmission modelBest-effort delivery: No delivery guaranteesNo packet ordering: Packets arrive independentlyMinimal overhead: 8-byte header (≈4% overhead)Technical implementation:Stateless packet deliveryNo connection establishment or termination phasesNo congestion or flow control mechanismsBasic integrity verification via checksumFixed header structureReal-World ApplicationsTCP-Optimized Use CasesWeb browsers (Chrome, Firefox, Safari) - HTTP/HTTPS trafficEmail clients (Outlook, Gmail)File transfer tools (Filezilla, WinSCP)Database clients (MySQL Workbench)Remote desktop applications (RDP)Messaging platforms (Slack, Discord text)Common requirement: Complete, ordered data deliveryUDP-Optimized Use CasesOnline games (Fortnite, Call of Duty) - real-time movement dataVideo conferencing (Zoom, Google Meet) - audio/video streamsStreaming services (Netflix, YouTube)VoIP applicationsDNS resolversIoT devices and telemetryCommon requirement: Time-sensitive data where partial loss is acceptablePerformance CharacteristicsTCP Performance ProfileHigher latency: Due to handshakes and acknowledgmentsReliable throughput: Stable performance on reliable connectionsConnection state limits: Impacts concurrent connection scalingBest for: Applications where complete data integrity outweighs latency concernsUDP Performance ProfileLower latency: Minimal protocol overheadHigh throughput potential: But vulnerable to network congestionExcellent scalability: Particularly for broadcast/multicast scenariosBest for: Real-time applications where occasional data loss is preferable to waitingImplementation ConsiderationsWhen to Choose TCPData integrity is mission-criticalComplete file transfer verification requiredOperating in unpredictable or high-loss networksApplication can tolerate some latency overheadWhen to Choose UDPReal-time performance requirementsPartial data loss is acceptableLow latency is critical to application functionalityApplication implements its own reliability layer if neededMulticast/broadcast functionality requiredProtocol EvolutionTCP variants: TCP Fast Open, Multipath TCP, QUIC (Google's HTTP/3)UDP enhancements: DTLS (TLS-like security), UDP-Lite (partial checksums)Hybrid approaches emerging in modern protocol designPractical ImplicationsProtocol selection fundamentally impacts application behaviorUnderstanding the differences critical for debugging network issuesLow-level implementation possible in systems languages like RustServices may utilize both protocols for different components

The Daily Decrypt - Cyber News and Discussions
Change Healthcare Extorted Again, Malvertising Targets IT, GitHub Scams on Developers: Navigating Cybersecurity Minefields

The Daily Decrypt - Cyber News and Discussions

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 11, 2024


Today we unravel the second ransomware extortion of Change Healthcare by RansomHub, the cunning malvertising campaign targeting IT pros with malware-laden ads for PuTTY and FileZilla, and the deceptive tactics on GitHub fooling developers into downloading malware. Discover protective strategies and engage with expert insights on bolstering defenses against these evolving cyber threats. Original URLs: https://www.securityweek.com/second-ransomware-group-extorting-change-healthcare/ https://www.helpnetsecurity.com/2024/04/10/malvertising-putty-filezilla/ https://thehackernews.com/2024/04/beware-githubs-fake-popularity-scam.html https://www.bleepingcomputer.com/news/security/malicious-visual-studio-projects-on-github-push-keyzetsu-malware/ Follow us on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/the_daily_decrypt/ Thanks to Jered Jones for providing the music for this episode. https://www.jeredjones.com/ Logo Design by https://www.zackgraber.com/ Tags: cybersecurity, ransomware, malvertising, GitHub scams, Change Healthcare, IT professionals, data protection, cybercrime, malware, software development Search Phrases: How to protect against ransomware attacks Strategies to combat malvertising campaigns Tips for IT professionals on avoiding malicious ads Safeguarding software development from GitHub scams Change Healthcare ransomware extortion case study Cybersecurity advice for IT administrators Dealing with malware in system utilities ads Best practices for data protection in healthcare Understanding cybercrime tactics on GitHub Preventing repeated ransomware extortions Transcript: Transition (Long) 2 Welcome back to the Daily Decrypt. Change Healthcare falls victim to a second ransomware extortion in just a month, now at the hands of the Emergent Ransom Hub Group, wielding over 4 terabytes of sensitive data stolen in the February 2024 cyberattack. Which comes as a result from the Black Cat Exit Scam. Next, we're turning over to a new malvertising campaign where searching for essential utilities for IT professionals like Putty and Filezilla leads to malware laden ads, and you all know what I'm going to say about this. Don't click Google Ads. And finally, GitHub becomes a battlefield as cybercriminals exploit its search functionality to trick developers into downloading repositories full of malware. How can developers ensure the repositories they download from GitHub are safe and not just traps set by cybercriminals? All right, so at the end of February of this year, you may remember that Change Healthcare, which is a subsidiary of UnitedHealthcare, was the victim of a ransomware attack by the notorious and since disbanded ransomware group named Black Cat. Well, Change Healthcare finds itself in the crosshairs of a ransomware extortion scheme for the second time in just over a month, coming from a new ransomware group called Ransom Hub. There hasn't been a second attack. But this is believed to be a result of the exit scam that Black Cat pulled, where they kept all of the ransom payment that Change Healthcare had made. Allegedly, Optum, which is a subsidiary of Change Healthcare, paid Black Cat 22 million in ransom after the attack. Black Cat then pulled an apparent exit scam and disappeared without paying the affiliate who carried out the attack. And according to Qualys Cyber Threat Director Ken Dunham, it's not uncommon for companies that give in and pay these ransoms to quickly become additional targets or soft targets where their information is extorted again and again and again. Paying and giving into these ransomware artists might seem like a quick fix to your problems, but once you've proven that you will and can pay, they're gonna come after you again. The data doesn't just disappear or get deleted. It's very valuable, and in this case it's worth 22 million dollars, so even if the attackers say they're gonna delete it, maybe they won't and maybe they'll come hit you again. So even though Black Cat has disbanded, whether or not they were taken down by the FBI or performed an exit scam, The data that they pillaged from Change Healthcare is now in the hands, or supposedly in the hands, of a group called Ransomhub, which is extorting Change Healthcare all over again. IT professionals have found themselves at the crosshairs of an ongoing malvertising campaign. These attackers are using malicious Google Ads to disguise malware as popular system utilities, like Putty, which is a free SSH IntelNet client. And FileZilla, which is a FTP application. This research comes from Malwarebytes researcher Jerome Segura, and he points out that even after alerting Google about these malicious ads, the campaign continues unabated. This sophisticated scheme begins when IT administrators search for these utilities on Google. The top search results, or sponsored ads, lead them through a series of cloaking pages. These pages are designed to filter out non target traffic such as bots or security researchers, directing only potential victims to imitation sites. Unwittingly, when these IT administrators download what they believe to be legitimate software, they instead receive nitrogen malware, which is a dangerous software for cybercriminals, enabling them to infiltrate private networks or steal data, deploy ransomware attacks, and was used by the notorious Black Cat from the previous story. The method of infiltration is known as DLL sideloading, which involves the malware masquerading as a legitimate and signed executable to launch a DLL, thereby avoiding detection. So what this essentially means is these IT professionals are probably getting the tool, FileZilla, Putty, that they're looking for, The functionality might remain exactly the same, which only serves to benefit the attackers because once the IT professionals download the software, there's no indicators that it's incorrect or fake, but this software such as Putty or FileZilla will then launch a separate DLL, which is just an executable that contains the malware. So one way you can prevent this as someone downloading software from the web, is to find what's called an MD5 hash, which is essentially a signature of sorts that verifies the integrity of the file you've downloaded. Now, hashing isn't necessarily something we need to get into, Right now on this podcast, but all you need to know is it's sort of like math where you multiply the data from within this piece of software or do algebra or something to create this long string of characters. that can't be replicated if the files have been altered. So as soon as the files are altered, the mathematical equation puts out a different set of characters, right? So the creators of the software release this hash, they display it on their website, and then when you download the software, you run the same algorithm against that software to see if those two hashes match. Now I personally am guilty of Not always checking the hash for softwares. And I know a lot of other IT professionals are guilty of that as well, but it's time to set up a new good habit and consistently check these hashes, maybe even develop a web scraper that will go grab the hash and also run the software through it, comparing it, reducing the amount of work you have to do on the other end, but in summary, as I always say, do not click Google ads unless you absolutely have to, unless the thing you're searching for down below. Unless the thing you're specifically searching for is not in the search results below, and is only present in the advertisement, which will probably only be for things like thedailydecrypt. com, where I haven't been around long enough to boost my search result ranking naturally, so eventually maybe I'll start buying ad space, trying to get to people who are looking for the content that we're providing. But if you're going to download some software, there's no need to click the ads, especially something as popular as FileZilla or PuTTY, VS Code, whatever you're trying to download, go find it in the search results. Do not click the ad. And in a similar vein, let's talk about a scam on GitHub that's fooling developers into downloading dangerous malware. Cybercriminals are exploiting GitHub's search features, luring users into downloading fake yet seemingly popular repositories. This scheme has been identified to distribute malware hidden within Microsoft Visual Studio Code project files, which are cunningly designed to fetch further malicious payloads from remote URLs, as reported by checkmarks. So the attackers are mimicking popular repositories and employing automated updates and fake stars to climb GitHub's search rankings. So unlike Google, I don't believe there are ads you can buy in GitHub search to boost your search rankings. So attackers are becoming a little more creative. Making the repository look like it's consistently updated, helps boost the search rankings, and then naming the repositories, things that developers are constantly searching for will also help boost its rankings in its SEO. So since many of these repositories are disguised legitimate projects, it can be pretty tricky to identify them, but among the discoveries, some repositories were found downloading an encrypted file named feedbackapi. exe. which is an executable and is notably large at 750 megabytes. This executable is designed to bypass antivirus detection and deploy malware, similar to the Kizetsu Clipper, a notorious tool known for hijacking cryptocurrency transactions. And unlike softwares downloaded from the internet by clicking on Google ads in the previous story, there may or may not be hashes for these repositories. Most likely not. Sometimes if they're an executable or a package, they'll provide a hash. But if you're on the GitHub repository, you think it's legit, they might list the hash, but that's just the hash to their malware, giving you a false sense of security, just be extra vigilant when you're downloading anything to your computer, especially open source things that are generally found on GitHub, it can't be that hard to create. A thousand GitHub accounts, or maybe even you can buy them online. And that immediately gives your repo a thousand stars, making it look legitimate. So if you're looking for a tool, it's best to find it on the web within, from within a reputable website. GitHub search feature is not the most reliable. And that's all I've got for you today. Thanks so much for tuning in. Today I'll be traveling to Florida to Participate in the Hackspace conference where I'm really excited to learn a little bit more about how cybersecurity and satellites and other spacecraft intertwine. I'll also be meeting up with dogespan where we'll hopefully do a joint episode, our first ever one in person. So be sure to tune in tomorrow for that episode.

Captain Roy's Rocket Radio Show: The UK Podcast for the Culture Geek, Technology Nerd, and Creative Wizard

Geek Life, Ordered Sci-Fi Book Never Arrived, Kermit the Frog Rainbow Connection Minifigure, Doctor Who Scarf, The Adventures of Tintin: The Secret of the Unicorn, The Adventures of Tintin: Red Rackham's Treasure, Starblazer, The Observer, Daily Mirror, i, Metro, The Good Liar, Invincible, For All Mankind, Artemis Moon Missions Delayed, Mr. Robot, Red Team Field Manual, UNIX Training Guide, The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power, True Love, Game, Motorhead, Hawkwind, Jeff Wayne's Musical Version of The War of the Worlds, Buy Physical Media, Don't Rely On Streaming, Video Recording on YouTube Versus Skype Versus Your Phone, TikTok, Bluesky, Vivaldi, FileZilla, Microphone Errors and Omissions, KOSS KSC75, Blood Pressure Monitor, Plumbing, A Storm Killed Our Fence, Was It Alright?, Start Podcasting

Linux User Space
Episode 3:19: You Got Moxie, Kid

Linux User Space

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 17, 2023 100:19


Coming up in this episode 1. Leo shows his moxy 2. Ubuntu falls flat 3. Watch the browsers 4. A Look back on our season 5. and Leo moves his files See this episode on Youtube (https://youtu.be/Vbofi3pndm4) https://youtu.be/Vbofi3pndm4 319 Audio Timestamps 0:00 Cold Open 2:03 Proxy Moxie 16:42 Ansible In Your Pantsible 22:56 Ubuntu Falls Flat 41:57 Browser Watch! 1:03:55 Feedback 1:13:49 Season 3 Recap 1:26:17 Community Focus: Geerling Guy 1:28:13 App Focus: TermSCP & Filezilla 1:37:25 Next Time: Raspberry Pi OS 1:39:25 Stinger Banter Proxmox (https://www.proxmox.com/en/proxmox-ve) Ansible (https://www.ansible.com) Announcements Give us a sub on YouTube (https://linuxuserspace.show/youtube) and TILvids (https://tilvids.com/a/linuxuserspace). You can watch us live on Twitch (https://linuxuserspace.show/twitch) the day after an episode drops. If you like what we're doing here, make sure to send us a buck over at https://patreon.com/linuxuserspace Flattening out Ubuntu Ubuntu and the official flavors decide not to include Flatpak by default (https://discourse.ubuntu.com/t/ubuntu-flavor-packaging-defaults/34061?u=d0od) More Announcements Want to have a topic covered or have some feedback? - send us an email, contact@linuxuserspace.show Browser Watch Total Cookie Protection (https://blog.mozilla.org/en/mozilla/firefox-androids-new-privacy-feature-total-cookie-protection-stops-companies-from-keeping-tabs-on-your-moves/) Firefox Extension (https://blog.mozilla.org/en/mozilla/email-protection-just-got-easier-in-firefox/) Firefox will get support for animated AV1 images and in a surprise move (https://9to5linux.com/firefox-113-promises-support-for-animated-av1-images-official-debian-package-and-more) an official debian/ubuntu package in .deb format. Edge is testing (https://www.bleepingcomputer.com/news/microsoft/microsoft-is-testing-a-built-in-crypto-wallet-in-microsoft-edge/) a Crypto Wallet. Edge added DALL-E right into the browser (https://www.bleepingcomputer.com/news/microsoft/microsoft-edge-can-now-generate-images-with-ai/)! Brave adds a VPN option (https://brave.com/desktop-vpn/). Brave removes (https://brave.com/privacy-updates/24-google-sign-in-permission/) legacy Google sign-in Cookies. Chrome/Chromium will unload background tabs (https://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2023/02/chrome-110-will-automatically-discard-background-tabs-heres-how-to-stop-it/) to save memory. Falkon is finally getting hardware acceleration (https://www.omglinux.com/falkon-browser-hardware-acceleration/)! Gnome Web has a few tricks coming (https://www.reddit.com/r/gnome/comments/11pav5t/comment/jbww3sb/) in version 44, as well. Feedback Senor Araton On compiling the Gentoo Kernel Installed a distribution-binary-kernel to get a running system. Leo wants to compile all the things. John A. On Linux Books ownCloud (https://www.oreilly.com/library/view/running-linux-5th/0596007604/) Bradly on the Ubuntu ShipIt Program Tried to convert as many as possible. Bonus Bradly Also - Leo, make the switch to Proxmox. Dan is right. R.L. on -O3 Just FYI, the compiler option is -O3 (dash oh three), not -03 (dash zero 3) The O obviously stands for Optimize

Engelsiz Android
Android telefonunuzun içeriğini kablosuz ağdan yöneten program Wi-Fi FTP Transfer Pro

Engelsiz Android

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 26, 2022 5:25


Android telefonunuzu / tabletinizi bir FTP Sunucusuna dönüştürün! Telefonunuzda / tabletinizde kendi FTP Sunucunuzu barındırmak için bu harika uygulamayı kullanın. Dosyaları, fotoğrafları, filmleri, şarkıları aktarmak için FTP Sunucusunu kullanın etc...to/from android cihazınız FileZilla gibi bir FTP istemcisi kullanıyor. Temel özellikler: ★ Yapılandırılabilir port numarası ile komple FTP sunucusu ★ TLS / SSL (FTPS) üzerinden ftp'yi destekler ★ Yapılandırılabilir anonim erişim ★ Yapılandırılabilir ana klasör (bağlama noktası) ★ Yapılandırılabilir kullanıcı adı / şifre ★ Dosya aktarımı ve kopyalama / yedekleme için USB kabloları kullanmaktan kaçının wifi üzerinden dosyalar ★ Wifi ve Wifi bağlama modu üzerinden çalışır (hotspot modu) ★ Satın almadan önce deneyin!!!. Aynı FTP Sunucusunun reklam destekli ücretsiz sürümünü şu adresten deneyin: https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.medhaapps.wififtpserver satın almadan önce Destek e-posta kimliği için e-posta geribildirim/bugs lütfen. FTPS (TLS / SSL üzerinden FTP) kullanmak istiyorsanız, lütfen sunucu URL'sinin ftps:// olacağını ve ftp olmayacağını unutmayın:// FTPS ve sftp'nin aynı olmadığını lütfen unutmayın. SFTP desteği yakında eklenecektir. Port numarası köklü olmayan telefonlarda 21 gibi bağlantı noktalarına bağlanma mümkün olmayacağından 1024'ten büyük olmalıdır. Varsayılan bağlantı noktası numarası 2221 olarak yapılandırılmıştır ve ayarlar ekranından değiştirilebilir. Güvenlik nedeniyle, anonim erişim varsayılan olarak etkin değildir. Ayarlar ekranından etkinleştirilebilir. Bir FTP istemciniz yoksa, Filezilla'yı şu adresten indirebilirsiniz: https://filezilla-project.org/download.php?type=client Ftp sunucusuna windows dosya gezgini'nden de erişebilirsiniz.

Jeanviet - L'informatique pour tous (podcast audio)
Créer un site WordPress chez OVH depuis un Chromebook

Jeanviet - L'informatique pour tous (podcast audio)

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 4, 2021 10:02


Pas besoin d'une machine de guerre et d'un gros budget pour créer un site Internet. Dans ce tuto, je te montre depuis le Chromebook de ma fille comment créer un site WordPress avec ton propre nom de domaine. Abonne-toi à ma chaîne YouTube ici : http://jbv.ovh/jeanviet --------- - Mon Twitter : https://twitter.com/jeanviet - Mon Instagram : https://www.instagram.com/jeanviet/ --------- Au Sommaire : Intro 00:00 Acheter un nom de domaine 00:38 Lier un nom de domaine à un hébergement 02:05 Télécharge le Zip WordPress 03:25 Upload via FTP WP sur ton site 04:23 Installe WP depuis ton site 05:20 On se connecte à l'admin de WP 06:15 Ajoute un thème WP 07:05 Crée ton logo 07:26 Ajoute ton logo sur ton WP 08:11 Publie ton 1er article 08:53 --------- Pour aller plus loin : Le site Web de ma fille créé en 30 minutes hier (3/7/2021): https://cliqueclac.fr Nom de domaine chez OVH à moins de 6€ https://www.ovh.com/fr/domaines/ Pour créer un logo pro gratuitement https://spark.adobe.com/express-apps/logomaker/ Pour télécharger WordPress gratuitement, va sur WordPress.org https://fr.wordpress.org/latest-fr_FR.zip Attention au site WordPress.com (offre payante) et aux offres d'hébergement inutiles qu'essaie de te pousser WordPress.org Le chromebook Asus de ma fille (lien affilié) à moins de 400€ https://amzn.to/3bZYjOP Comment mettre Linux sur ChromeOS ? https://chromeos.dev/en/linux/setup Installe ensuite Gnome depuis le terminal Linux pour télécharger Filezilla (client FTP) et d'autres logiciels sympas https://chromeos.dev/en/linux/setup#installing-linux-apps-and-packages --------- Tu veux devenir un bon blogueur ? lis mon livre Blogbuster ici : https://blogbuster.fr/le-livre/ --------- Abonne-toi à ma chaîne YouTube ici : http://jbv.ovh/jeanviet --------- Musiques : Dj Quads it just makes me happy Deux - Dyalla Bensound Ukulele Carefree

Compilado do Código Fonte TV
VS Code com DevTools integrado | Next.JS ainda mais rápido | Invasão no repositório do PHP | Popularidade do TensorFlow e mais [Compilado #2]

Compilado do Código Fonte TV

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 3, 2021 37:17


Neste episódio tivemos notícias sobre PyThorch, FileZilla com adware, Invasão no repo do PHP, Índices automáticos no GitHub, Novidades no Next.JS, Deno Company, novo DevTools com integração com VS Code e muito mais. Confira o Compilado #002, com as notícias e novidades do mundo da programação que nos chamaram atenção dos dias 27/03 a 02/04! Além de trazer e comentar as notícias, abrimos espaço no Compilado para os comentários dos nossos seguidores, aproveitamos para explicar sobre os vídeos que publicamos na semana no YouTube e também fazemos menções honrosas aos membros do Clube dos CDFs, nosso membros no YouTube. Hosts: Somos Gabriel Fróes e Vanessa Weber, um casal de programadores que dá as caras desde 2016 no canal Código Fonte TV no YouTube. Links:

Compilado do Código Fonte TV
VS Code com DevTools integrado | Next.JS ainda mais rápido | Invasão no repositório do PHP | Popularidade do TensorFlow e mais [Compilado #2]

Compilado do Código Fonte TV

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 3, 2021 37:17


Neste episódio tivemos notícias sobre PyThorch, FileZilla com adware, Invasão no repo do PHP, Índices automáticos no GitHub, Novidades no Next.JS, Deno Company, novo DevTools com integração com VS Code e muito mais. Confira o Compilado #002, com as notícias e novidades do mundo da programação que nos chamaram atenção dos dias 27/03 a 02/04! Além de trazer e comentar as notícias, abrimos espaço no Compilado para os comentários dos nossos seguidores, aproveitamos para explicar sobre os vídeos que publicamos na semana no YouTube e também fazemos menções honrosas aos membros do Clube dos CDFs, nosso membros no YouTube. Hosts: Somos Gabriel Fróes e Vanessa Weber, um casal de programadores que dá as caras desde 2016 no canal Código Fonte TV no YouTube. Links:

All TWiT.tv Shows (Video HI)
The Tech Guy 1772

All TWiT.tv Shows (Video HI)

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 21, 2021 137:13


Facebook takes news out of the News Feed in Australia, backing up hard drives off site, adding hard drive space to an M1 MacMini, have my passwords been compromised? Scott Wilkinson reviews the Grado GW 100v2 Bluetooth headphones, digitizing VHS tapes yourself, connecting an iPhone wirelessly to a stereo, what is the first smartphone I should buy? The new roaring 20s and the return to traveling with Johnny Jet, improving Wi-Fi reception, 15 years of the Giz Wiz and more of your calls! Host: Leo Laporte Guests: Scott Wilkinson, Johnny Jet, and Dick DeBartolo Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/the-tech-guy. For detailed show notes, visit techguylabs.com. Sponsors: mintmobile.com/techguy casper.com/twit1 - promo code: TWIT1

The Tech Guy (Video LO)
Leo Laporte - The Tech Guy: 1772

The Tech Guy (Video LO)

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 21, 2021 137:13


Facebook takes news out of the News Feed in Australia, backing up hard drives off site, adding hard drive space to an M1 MacMini, have my passwords been compromised? Scott Wilkinson reviews the Grado GW 100v2 Bluetooth headphones, digitizing VHS tapes yourself, connecting an iPhone wirelessly to a stereo, what is the first smartphone I should buy? The new roaring 20s and the return to traveling with Johnny Jet, improving Wi-Fi reception, 15 years of the Giz Wiz and more of your calls! Host: Leo Laporte Guests: Scott Wilkinson, Johnny Jet, and Dick DeBartolo Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/the-tech-guy. For detailed show notes, visit techguylabs.com. Sponsors: mintmobile.com/techguy casper.com/twit1 - promo code: TWIT1

All TWiT.tv Shows (MP3)
The Tech Guy 1772

All TWiT.tv Shows (MP3)

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 21, 2021 137:13


Facebook takes news out of the News Feed in Australia, backing up hard drives off site, adding hard drive space to an M1 MacMini, have my passwords been compromised? Scott Wilkinson reviews the Grado GW 100v2 Bluetooth headphones, digitizing VHS tapes yourself, connecting an iPhone wirelessly to a stereo, what is the first smartphone I should buy? The new roaring 20s and the return to traveling with Johnny Jet, improving Wi-Fi reception, 15 years of the Giz Wiz and more of your calls! Host: Leo Laporte Guests: Scott Wilkinson, Johnny Jet, and Dick DeBartolo Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/the-tech-guy. For detailed show notes, visit techguylabs.com. Sponsors: mintmobile.com/techguy casper.com/twit1 - promo code: TWIT1

All TWiT.tv Shows (Video HD)
The Tech Guy 1772

All TWiT.tv Shows (Video HD)

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 21, 2021 137:13


Facebook takes news out of the News Feed in Australia, backing up hard drives off site, adding hard drive space to an M1 MacMini, have my passwords been compromised? Scott Wilkinson reviews the Grado GW 100v2 Bluetooth headphones, digitizing VHS tapes yourself, connecting an iPhone wirelessly to a stereo, what is the first smartphone I should buy? The new roaring 20s and the return to traveling with Johnny Jet, improving Wi-Fi reception, 15 years of the Giz Wiz and more of your calls! Host: Leo Laporte Guests: Scott Wilkinson, Johnny Jet, and Dick DeBartolo Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/the-tech-guy. For detailed show notes, visit techguylabs.com. Sponsors: mintmobile.com/techguy casper.com/twit1 - promo code: TWIT1

Radio Leo (Video LO)
The Tech Guy 1772

Radio Leo (Video LO)

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 21, 2021 137:13


Facebook takes news out of the News Feed in Australia, backing up hard drives off site, adding hard drive space to an M1 MacMini, have my passwords been compromised? Scott Wilkinson reviews the Grado GW 100v2 Bluetooth headphones, digitizing VHS tapes yourself, connecting an iPhone wirelessly to a stereo, what is the first smartphone I should buy? The new roaring 20s and the return to traveling with Johnny Jet, improving Wi-Fi reception, 15 years of the Giz Wiz and more of your calls! Host: Leo Laporte Guests: Scott Wilkinson, Johnny Jet, and Dick DeBartolo Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/the-tech-guy. For detailed show notes, visit techguylabs.com. Sponsors: mintmobile.com/techguy casper.com/twit1 - promo code: TWIT1

All TWiT.tv Shows (Video LO)
The Tech Guy 1772

All TWiT.tv Shows (Video LO)

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 21, 2021 137:13


Facebook takes news out of the News Feed in Australia, backing up hard drives off site, adding hard drive space to an M1 MacMini, have my passwords been compromised? Scott Wilkinson reviews the Grado GW 100v2 Bluetooth headphones, digitizing VHS tapes yourself, connecting an iPhone wirelessly to a stereo, what is the first smartphone I should buy? The new roaring 20s and the return to traveling with Johnny Jet, improving Wi-Fi reception, 15 years of the Giz Wiz and more of your calls! Host: Leo Laporte Guests: Scott Wilkinson, Johnny Jet, and Dick DeBartolo Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/the-tech-guy. For detailed show notes, visit techguylabs.com. Sponsors: mintmobile.com/techguy casper.com/twit1 - promo code: TWIT1

Radio Leo (Audio)
The Tech Guy 1772

Radio Leo (Audio)

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 21, 2021 137:13


Facebook takes news out of the News Feed in Australia, backing up hard drives off site, adding hard drive space to an M1 MacMini, have my passwords been compromised? Scott Wilkinson reviews the Grado GW 100v2 Bluetooth headphones, digitizing VHS tapes yourself, connecting an iPhone wirelessly to a stereo, what is the first smartphone I should buy? The new roaring 20s and the return to traveling with Johnny Jet, improving Wi-Fi reception, 15 years of the Giz Wiz and more of your calls! Host: Leo Laporte Guests: Scott Wilkinson, Johnny Jet, and Dick DeBartolo Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/the-tech-guy. For detailed show notes, visit techguylabs.com. Sponsors: mintmobile.com/techguy casper.com/twit1 - promo code: TWIT1

Radio Leo (Video HD)
The Tech Guy 1772

Radio Leo (Video HD)

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 21, 2021 137:13


Facebook takes news out of the News Feed in Australia, backing up hard drives off site, adding hard drive space to an M1 MacMini, have my passwords been compromised? Scott Wilkinson reviews the Grado GW 100v2 Bluetooth headphones, digitizing VHS tapes yourself, connecting an iPhone wirelessly to a stereo, what is the first smartphone I should buy? The new roaring 20s and the return to traveling with Johnny Jet, improving Wi-Fi reception, 15 years of the Giz Wiz and more of your calls! Host: Leo Laporte Guests: Scott Wilkinson, Johnny Jet, and Dick DeBartolo Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/the-tech-guy. For detailed show notes, visit techguylabs.com. Sponsors: mintmobile.com/techguy casper.com/twit1 - promo code: TWIT1

Radio Leo (Video HI)
The Tech Guy 1772

Radio Leo (Video HI)

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 21, 2021 137:13


Facebook takes news out of the News Feed in Australia, backing up hard drives off site, adding hard drive space to an M1 MacMini, have my passwords been compromised? Scott Wilkinson reviews the Grado GW 100v2 Bluetooth headphones, digitizing VHS tapes yourself, connecting an iPhone wirelessly to a stereo, what is the first smartphone I should buy? The new roaring 20s and the return to traveling with Johnny Jet, improving Wi-Fi reception, 15 years of the Giz Wiz and more of your calls! Host: Leo Laporte Guests: Scott Wilkinson, Johnny Jet, and Dick DeBartolo Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/the-tech-guy. For detailed show notes, visit techguylabs.com. Sponsors: mintmobile.com/techguy casper.com/twit1 - promo code: TWIT1

Ask The Tech Guys (Audio)
Leo Laporte - The Tech Guy: 1772

Ask The Tech Guys (Audio)

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 21, 2021 137:13


Facebook takes news out of the News Feed in Australia, backing up hard drives off site, adding hard drive space to an M1 MacMini, have my passwords been compromised? Scott Wilkinson reviews the Grado GW 100v2 Bluetooth headphones, digitizing VHS tapes yourself, connecting an iPhone wirelessly to a stereo, what is the first smartphone I should buy? The new roaring 20s and the return to traveling with Johnny Jet, improving Wi-Fi reception, 15 years of the Giz Wiz and more of your calls! Host: Leo Laporte Guests: Scott Wilkinson, Johnny Jet, and Dick DeBartolo Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/the-tech-guy. For detailed show notes, visit techguylabs.com. Sponsors: mintmobile.com/techguy casper.com/twit1 - promo code: TWIT1

The Tech Guy (Video HI)
Leo Laporte - The Tech Guy: 1772

The Tech Guy (Video HI)

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 21, 2021 137:13


Facebook takes news out of the News Feed in Australia, backing up hard drives off site, adding hard drive space to an M1 MacMini, have my passwords been compromised? Scott Wilkinson reviews the Grado GW 100v2 Bluetooth headphones, digitizing VHS tapes yourself, connecting an iPhone wirelessly to a stereo, what is the first smartphone I should buy? The new roaring 20s and the return to traveling with Johnny Jet, improving Wi-Fi reception, 15 years of the Giz Wiz and more of your calls! Host: Leo Laporte Guests: Scott Wilkinson, Johnny Jet, and Dick DeBartolo Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/the-tech-guy. For detailed show notes, visit techguylabs.com. Sponsors: mintmobile.com/techguy casper.com/twit1 - promo code: TWIT1

The Tech Guy (Video HD)
Leo Laporte - The Tech Guy: 1772

The Tech Guy (Video HD)

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 21, 2021 137:13


Facebook takes news out of the News Feed in Australia, backing up hard drives off site, adding hard drive space to an M1 MacMini, have my passwords been compromised? Scott Wilkinson reviews the Grado GW 100v2 Bluetooth headphones, digitizing VHS tapes yourself, connecting an iPhone wirelessly to a stereo, what is the first smartphone I should buy? The new roaring 20s and the return to traveling with Johnny Jet, improving Wi-Fi reception, 15 years of the Giz Wiz and more of your calls! Host: Leo Laporte Guests: Scott Wilkinson, Johnny Jet, and Dick DeBartolo Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/the-tech-guy. For detailed show notes, visit techguylabs.com. Sponsors: mintmobile.com/techguy casper.com/twit1 - promo code: TWIT1

PC Networking
What is FTP (File Transfer Protocol)?

PC Networking

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 13, 2021 2:12


What is FTP (File Transfer Protocol)? FTP is a file transfer protocol and is the most commonly used protocol for modifying, updating, and uploading files, folders, images, or text files on your website. FTP is the simplest way to send files and folders online from your computer to the server. For example, if you want to upload WordPress on your website, you can send your files to the server via FTP. With the data transfer between two different computers, it becomes easier to reach the desired content. Moreover, this process, which is provided extremely quickly, creates the opportunity to use the time in the best way. The FPT server, which provides data exchange and connection between computers at the same time, thus obtains a wide range of use. In order to use FTP, you must have the information to connect to your FTP server. This is the name or IP address of the FTP server is your username, password, and the port number of the server to connect to. You also need a program to send your files via FTP to the server. There are certain FTP server programs prepared with care. These programs make it much more practical to access data via FTP server addresses. The desired file can be downloaded or uploaded within seconds. In addition, the target source can be scanned with the file explorer feature. Thus, it becomes easier to see under which file the desired data is located. FileZilla, WinSCP, and CyberDuck are among the most popular FTP server programs. After entering the FTP address, it is necessary to fill in the user name and password information. After the requested information is completed, the main source can be accessed and the desired file can be imported from there. Programs that display the download process offer a user-friendly experience. What is Anonymous FTP? Some FTP services accept connections over the internet with an anonymous user who is active by default. In this way, any user can download the files within his/her authority to his/her computer or send any file on his/her computer to the other computer via FTP service in line with the competence of his/her authority. More Podcasts The OSI Model in Google Podcast The DNS in Google Podcast The IP Address in iHeart Podcast The Windows 10 Operating System in Podchaser The DHCP Protocol in Listennotes

The Amir Rimer Podcast
Free Web Development Course For Flipping HTML Websites - Lesson 12 - How To Upload Files To Your Host By Using The FileZilla Software

The Amir Rimer Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 28, 2020 4:43


This is an audio extract from my larger, full video course which is now complete and can be accessed from here: https://bit.ly/3m6VSNF Join the Ask Instructor Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/askinstructor Follow me on Twitter: https://twitter.com/askinstructor

The Amir Rimer Podcast
Digital Marketing - Essentials Training Course - Lesson 8 - How To Use FileZilla - FTP Tutorial (Connect And Upload Files To A Server)

The Amir Rimer Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 8, 2020 7:30


This is an audio extract from my larger, full video course which is now complete and can be accessed from here: https://bit.ly/3mj0yjH Join the Ask Instructor Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/askinstructor Follow me on Twitter: https://twitter.com/askinstructor

Nevazator.ro
Conectează-te la FTP cu Filezilla

Nevazator.ro

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 6, 2020 14:37


Filezilla este un program cu ajutorul căruia te poţi conecta la un server FTP, deci este un client care ne permite să descărcăm, încărcăm şi Citește mai mult The post Conectează-te la FTP cu Filezilla first appeared on Nevazator.ro.

DEVNAESTRADA
DNE 269 - A Evolução da Infraestrutura

DEVNAESTRADA

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 4, 2020 50:19


Filezilla, FTP, Vagrant, Capistrano, Chef, Ansible, Jenkins, Docker, Terraform, Infra as a Code... É tanto termo! Hoje vamos falar sobre a evolução da infraestrutura, passando um pouco sobre o contexto histórico do crescimento dessa área e, principalmente, do que se fala hoje, em termos de tecnologia pra cloud, com a participação do Hernandes Sousa, e a galera do DNE (Willian e Ramon)!

Björeman // Melin
Avsnitt 210: Naggade på den akademiska kvarten

Björeman // Melin

Play Episode Listen Later May 21, 2020 63:17


Fredrik är sen Jockes tak är på väg ner En shoutout - till Linkedin! Jocke har fler servrar på ingång - och fler kommer därmed att ges bort till intresserade Jocke har blivit CERTIFIERAD i något med så många buzzwords att Fredrik behövde starta om Fredrik börjar verifiera sig på Riot. Lite pyssligt, men ganska trevligt och tydligt designat Jockes kontorsstol är verkligen helt jävla slut. Surfar efter nya, försöker få dem levererade Jockes NTSC-band med Steve Jobs som demonstrerar Nextstep 3.0 har återvänt i digitaliserad form. Finns på ftp.fidonet.io (1,1GB stor) Importera analog video från en videokamera utan Firewire, USB eller annat till en Mac - finns det hårdvara för analog videoimportering till iMovie? Apropå förra veckans diskussion av att vara power user och plattformar det händer spännande saker med - Fredrik insåg att han äger en plattform som just nu utvecklas spännande och snabbt Länkar Stolpes entreprenad Homrighausen Crontab DRAC Folding@home Rosetta@home Google stadia Peertube Flintan Markus Jysks gamingstolar Håg Capisco AJ produkter Secret lab titan Herman Miller Aeron Framtidsfabriken Spray Icon medialab aerons.se Nextstep 3-videon NTSC Oculus quest Chromebook Snow crash Transmit Filezilla Två nördar - en podcast. Fredrik Björeman, Joacim Melin diskuterar allt som gör livet värt att leva. Fullständig avsnittsinformation finns här: https://www.bjoremanmelin.se/podcast/avsnitt-210-naggade-pa-den-akademiska-kvarten.html.

HC Universal Network
HCUTT Ep 1: Making a Wordpress Post for a Podcast, Vlog or Blog

HC Universal Network

Play Episode Listen Later May 17, 2020 28:33


In this edition of the HC University tech training series we delve into the wonderful world of Wordpress posting. As the dominant website building and blogging platform, Wordpress is to websites what Kleenex is to tissue…a trusted household name. But a lot of people, especially podcasters and vloggers are timid and afraid to jump into the muddied waters of uploading a file to an audio file to a remote host server and then writing a Wordpress post for their podcast or vlog episode, or even just writing a simple blog post. Have no fear the HC University is here to help! In this episode we are going to show you everything. From where to download the FTP Client known as Filezilla, to how to upload your files to your host server backend using it. We are even going to show you how to embed audio and video files into your post. How to mark your post for specific categories as well as making it “cornerstone content”, adding a featured image, writing a meta description, making outbound links and more. Yup, pretty much everything you will need to make Google put more eyes on content. All this and more in this mind melting edition of the HC University Tech Training Series. HC University is a proud member of the HC Universal Network in collaboration with HC Productions and PodcastCadet.com Use the code HCUniversal20 to save 20% off your purchase at PodcastCadet.com TODAY!

HC Universal Network
HCUTT Ep 1: Making a Wordpress Post for a Podcast, Vlog or Blog

HC Universal Network

Play Episode Listen Later May 17, 2020 28:33


In this edition of the HC University tech training series we delve into the wonderful world of Wordpress posting. As the dominant website building and blogging platform, Wordpress is to websites what Kleenex is to tissue…a trusted household name. But a lot of people, especially podcasters and vloggers are timid and afraid to jump into the muddied waters of uploading a file to an audio file to a remote host server and then writing a Wordpress post for their podcast or vlog episode, or even just writing a simple blog post. Have no fear the HC University is here to help! In this episode we are going to show you everything. From where to download the FTP Client known as Filezilla, to how to upload your files to your host server backend using it. We are even going to show you how to embed audio and video files into your post. How to mark your post for specific categories as well as making it “cornerstone content”, adding a featured image, writing a meta description, making outbound links and more. Yup, pretty much everything you will need to make Google put more eyes on content. All this and more in this mind melting edition of the HC University Tech Training Series. HC University is a proud member of the HC Universal Network in collaboration with HC Productions and PodcastCadet.com Use the code HCUniversal20 to save 20% off your purchase at PodcastCadet.com TODAY!

Le SanTro Show
FileZilla Pro - E215

Le SanTro Show

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 15, 2020 4:24


Spoiler: Cet épisode traite d'un sujet extrêment Geek et Plate! Pour me joindre Francis Parent-Valiquette -- LinkedIN: https://www.linkedin.com/in/fpv/ InstaGram: https://www.instagram.com/runningfranck/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/francis.parentvaliquette Strava: https://www.strava.com/athletes/runningfranck Varmedia INC -- Web: https://www.varmedia.com/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/varmedia/ InstaGram: https://www.instagram.com/vmpodcast/ Crédit narration en introduction: Xich-Vê Hô https://www.linkedin.com/in/xichveho/

La mia vita spaziale
241 Il tuo hard disk in remoto

La mia vita spaziale

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 14, 2020 6:43


Sicuramente hai bisogno di una spazio FTP... cos'è? Come funziona? Te lo spiego in questo semplice podcast e ti invito ad usare un programma per entrarvi: Filezilla. https://filezilla-project.org

Digitalmente rico
9. Que herramientas utilizo para trabajar y crear sitios web

Digitalmente rico

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 29, 2020 15:24


En este episodio les comento algunas de las aplicaciones que utilizo para mejorar y trabajar más eficientemente, las que menciono son las siguientes: Trello, google drive, FileZilla, Wunderlist, illustrator.

Webosaures
Le transfert de fichier à travers les âges

Webosaures

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 10, 2019 66:11


Hello les amis podcastosaures, comment allez-vous cette semaine ? De notre côté tout roule et nous avons eu envie de faire un petit retour dans le passé afin de vous partager comment nous avons vu évoluer le transfert de fichiers sur l'Internet. L'occasion pour les Webosaures de se souvenir de logiciels comme Unzip, ICQ, AIM, Kazaa, Megaupload ou Filezilla mais aussi de revenir au temps des disquettes, du peer to peer, ... Et vous qu'utilisiez-vous ? Dites-le-nous !

That's my JAMstack
James Quick on ejecting from Wordpress, Gatsby, Netlify and more

That's my JAMstack

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 12, 2019


Quick show notes Our Guest: James Quick What he'd like for you to see: His Learn Build Teach courses | Learn VS Code His JAMstack Jams: Gatsby | Netlify His musical Jam: Jason Aldean Transcript Bryan Robinson 0:03 Hello, everyone, welcome to another episode of That's My JAMstack the podcast where we asked the pressing question, what's your jam in the JAMstack. Today I'm joined by someone I've had the pleasure of knowing for a few years now he's a developer at FedEx, a technology speaker and educator. The one the only James Quick. Hi, James. Thanks for thanks for joining us on the podcast today. James Quick 0:26 Yeah, it's pretty cool to be here. Thanks for inviting me on. Bryan Robinson 0:29 Yeah, no problem. So So you and I have known each other for a little while, but tell it tell our listeners a little bit more about yourself. What do you do for fun? What do you do for work, that sort of thing? James Quick 0:36 Sure. So I think one of the biggest things is we have a lot in common, especially the last maybe year so we've kind of bounced a lot of ideas and stuff off of each other. So I, I work full time at FedEx as a software developer, do full stack, so front end, angular and then back end Java Spring Boot, microservices, pretty fun stuff, actually. But outside of that, I do a lot of stuff kind of going back to my days of evangelism at Microsoft, conference speaking, I've been getting back into been pretty heavy into my YouTube channel, written articles, online courses. Again, kind of the stuff that we have in common, focused on web development, design and developer tools. So I've been doing a lot of that stuff the past couple of years trying to be trying to be more engaged as active as I can. Bryan Robinson 1:23 Nice and what do you do kind of outside of the the technology realm, James Quick 1:28 just on a personal note, so we have three dogs, we spent a lot of time with our dogs play a lot of sports. My wife and I play on two different soccer teams together. Also, I'm playing basketball one night a week. Sometimes during lunch, we play basketball at FedEx, which is pretty cool. One kind of fun fact that I'm working on right now is building an arcade cabinet like an old school arcade cabinet using like a Raspberry Pi to put games on, and then actually doing the woodwork to build a cabinet which I've never done. So we'll see how that goes. Bryan Robinson 1:57 we won't be like an angle when you're done. James Quick 2:00 That might just be part of the challenge. We'll see how it turns out, but it should be fun. Bryan Robinson 2:04 That's awesome. That's that's very cool. Cool. So So obviously, we're talking about the JAMstack here today or static sites or whatever you like to call them. But what was kind of your entry point into this philosophy of development? James Quick 2:16 One I think you were you were probably one of the earliest people to kind of preach or start to tell me about it. I think a big one was also listening to the Syntax podcast. So with Wes Bos and Scott Telinsky, listen to their podcast a lot. And they, they kept talking about static sites and static site generators and JAMstack and Netlify and all these all these words, and I was kind of aware of what it was, but didn't really have the hands on experience that I think we'll get to in a few minutes. So yeah, I was just kind of word of mouth for a long time. And I was like, I don't really I don't really need to, like, get into that at the time and eventually did and I think like I said, we'll talk about that in a few more minutes. Bryan Robinson 2:55 Yeah, so so so it's kind of just in the ether around you. What was the actual tech like? What was your first project that you did on the JAMstack? James Quick 3:04 First project and I've got, I guess I've primarily got two, or at least two real ones. So both of my sites, Jamesqquick.com, and learnbuildteach.com, I'll go ahead and give my promotional stuff. Both of those are static sites using Gatsby. So I had gotten into React maybe a year and a half ago, React was one that I kind of, shied away from for a while as well, had done Angular work was pretty big into JavaScript just hadn't done React, got into it really liked it, started using it. And then when I heard about static site generators, and learning more about them, again, podcasts and articles and stuff, I realized that my two sites, those two sites, I mentioned that were on WordPress, had some really big flaws with just a lot really primarily around like the development process. James Quick 3:52 So I couldn't find a way to like check stuff in a source code and have that have any kind of automated deployments. I couldn't figure out how to like the version, the data that was a big problem. So like if I made if I was trying to do stuff locally, and I made changes based on whatever the database was here, how did that interacts with the database out there, like in the live site, and basically ended up finding, I can't even remember what the plugin was, but it just it doesn't lift and shift. So if I do locally, it'll have it'll wrap up my entire database, all the content, all the WordPress settings, everything and just push those out to production, which is it wasn't like that bad, but it wasn't ideal. Bryan Robinson 4:30 That sounds absolutely terrifying. Like put pushing from your local database to a production database. Just give me some heart palpitations. James Quick 4:38 Yeah, the good thing was it like the tool was really nice. So it was kind of like I could I could go to prod, I could do like an export button, and it would give me whatever, like zip it put everything in. I could load that into my local version. I can make changes, I could send it back. So it like in that sense. It wasn't really that bad just because the plugin was nice, but overall, it was a mess. It wasn't it wasn't ideal at all for the simple site that I was working on. Bryan Robinson 5:04 So So really the JAMstack was kind of your, your ejection point from the WordPress world. James Quick 5:09 It was Yeah. And I think I figured like, as, as a web developer, I could probably do something a little more like developer than WordPress, I was using Divi theme, and it's a visual builder. And you can do all these things. And honestly, as a developer, it was harder to like design stuff in Divi, than it was to just code it. So I figured moving away from that. And then also kind of jumping into this jam sack world where I can incorporate blog, I could have other types of static information and the automatic build process and all that kind of stuff. And really check stuff into source control and have everything in source control, including like data and assets and stuff was really, really cool. So Bryan Robinson 5:48 That was also something that I ran into a decent bit agency world was was a data changes that were important, like, how do you deal with that on a regular basis and how you deal with that without some sort of downtime. Everything's just in source control. You're good to go. James Quick 6:02 Yep. Yep. I don't know. I don't know if we have Should we go get into like some of the some of the workflow for how that is for my sites now? Bryan Robinson 6:11 Sure. Yeah. Be I'd be super excited here that cool. James Quick 6:15 So I've got two sites, like I said, one is learn build, teach sex. That's kind of like, that's kind of my motto for online learning and teaching. So I take time learning stuff, I use what I learned to build stuff. And then I take what I build and learn and teach other people how to do it and the community online and all that kind of stuff. So on on that site, it's pretty, it's pretty, pretty simple. I guess the one thing that kind of fell into the realm of static site generators was just displaying course content information. So I only had like four or five total courses. So if a few free ones on YouTube, and then a free one on you, to me, and a free one or a paid one on you to me, and just want to display the information, but in theory, like I'm going to continue to build courses, and I could go in and I can like Copy and paste the div and I could type in the information to change it and all that kind of stuff. But now I using Gatsby, set it up to just read from markdown files, which is typically I think, what people do. James Quick 7:11 And I just put information directly in a markdown file, it queries that using graphQL. That was actually another technology that I've kind of heard about for a long time. And I was like, I'm not that interested. And then it's tied into Gatsby. So I get to use that there, which is pretty cool. And so anytime I add a course I just add a markdown file, rebuild my site, and then it goes out there and it's live. And the build process is really cool. So I use, Netlify to host. Netlify is so so easy to just connect a website to a GitHub repo, you tell it, you can tell it a command to to run and I think mine I guess it's Gatsby build. And then wherever the output of that build, like a public directory, basically, you tell it this is the public directory that I want you to serve. So it's those two things, and telling it where the repo is and it's out there and it's built. James Quick 7:59 So anything I push the master branch it automatically rebuilds and start restarts my site as well with the new information. So anytime I add a course I add a markdown file, check it in, and I push it to master and it automatically goes out there and it resets or restarts the site after doing a build. So all the content is out there it's good to go. Again, going from being on WordPress and having these databases and differences between local and prod and all that kind of stuff to this where everything is just basically in like one neat little bow and my GitHub repo was super super sweet. Bryan Robinson 8:36 Also have probably having to deal with you're probably doing FTP stuff back in the day with WordPress to not even having that source control with either. James Quick 8:43 Yep, yeah, did some so before that plugin I mentioned I was definitely going in and like drag and drop and using FileZilla directly to the server, which is, I think on the Syntax podcast they talks about, like the horror stories. They did those recently and it was all about like people, like going in and doing stuff directly on prod and How they mess things up. And yeah, whatever. So I think I think with the workflow that I have now that's, that's probably at a at a minimum. James Quick 9:10 And one. So one other thing that I did recently, I was writing articles on a site called scotch.io for a long time, and really good friends with Chris, who runs that he kind of cut back on the amount of articles that they were accepting. And so I started to think about writing articles on my own platform. And then from you actually copying those over to Dev.to and having those you have to tell me that like syndicated Is that the right word. Yeah, sure. Again, like this is this is the knowledge that you dropped on me, but basically, like put them on my site and then have them copied over to dev.to and link back to my site. So I get credit for it. Bryan Robinson 9:47 Yeah, the canonical link the meta tag. Yeah Rel Canonical James Quick 9:54 So with that, I started writing articles on my James q Quick site, putting those on dev.to and then with James q quick ended up going through that same workflow of anytime I have an article, which I have one to put out tonight, is just put a markdown file in there, re rebuild the site. And that does it automatically by pushing the master and the site is up and running. And it's good to go. So, Bryan Robinson 10:16 yeah, JAMstack at its purist right there. And I think at one point, you, you and I have talked about a little bit, I think we're working on a MailChimp server list function of some sort. James Quick 10:27 yeah. So that's actually like a whole whole new dynamic. So with jam stack, one of the potential I'm doing quotes here for people on audio, the potential limitations is that you don't have a back end, necessarily, like you could have a completely separate back end, you could talk the API's. If you don't want to write a completely separate back in and Netlify they've got you covered. So you can write service functions. And service functions are basically just like you write an individual endpoint. James Quick 10:56 So you can receive a request. You can do whatever it is you want with that request. Then send it off. So what I did to add newsletter subscribers to my site, I created a server list function in nullify that when someone fills out their email, it will send their email to the server list function, the server list function has their credentials for my MailChimp. James Quick 11:18 So obviously with secret credentials, secret keys, credentials, you never want those checked into source control, you never want those available for someone else to see. You don't want them in your front end JavaScript. So with the requests coming in to the server list function, the credentials are in nullify so I get access to them and code. I can take the email, I can make the API request on the server to send off and register them as a subscriber to the newsletter and then just respond back to the front end saying Yeah, you're good to go. So any any sort of like extra piece of functionality that I need, I could just create an extra server list function. Have, like however many lines of code 10 2030 not a whole server. Just be good to go from Whatever that functionality is Bryan Robinson 12:01 nice. And so obviously, that's kind of the the personal side, are you able to use any of these methodologies at work? I mean, as as much as you can talk about with with FedEx, but like, Is there anything happening in that world? James Quick 12:11 Sure. Not, there's definitely some. So one of our teams is kind of like a best practices team. And they do pretty good documentation on their like standards and like, the cookbook is what they call it. So it's like recipes that other people can use to do X. And they actually I think they use Hugo as a static site generator. And I I'm gonna blank here on what language and what language it uses behind the scenes. Yeah, that's, that's it. Yeah. So it uses go has like template tags and like short code, abbreviation, whatever those things are called. And yeah, so they use that internally for some of the documentation that we just kind of like share. James Quick 12:56 We also have our own team version, that I just I probably just haven't spent the time to, like, get into Hugo and really understand what I'm doing. I'm sure it's not that complicated. I just like looked at it. And I was like, Yeah, I don't really feel like doing this. So I haven't done as much as that myself. But I think that's for the most part. As far as I know, that's that's kind of the static site JAMstack type stuff that we're doing internally at FedEx, none of none of the applications that I work on directly have any of those implications, I guess, Bryan Robinson 13:25 Hey, but internal documentation is a great use case for JAMstack. So yeah, more power to them on that. Yep, James Quick 13:30 Definitely. And that's what like all of the Netlify, and Gatsby documentation is all static site stuff. I think, obviously Gatsby is using Gatsby, which makes sense, but that like their documentation is great, right? So you can go out there, you can search for plugins, you can do all these things. And you would, I guess some people have this misconception of like the limitations of gems that but you can you can fill those voids in all these different types of ways something like service functions, to where you really like you don't think of it as like, quote unquote, just static site is like you can build powerful applications that happened to be static sites behind the scenes. Bryan Robinson 14:06 Yeah, preach on that. Bryan Robinson 14:09 So so obviously if you're using Gatsby on a couple sites Netlify is your host, but what kind of what what part of the JAMstack is really your jam like, Is it is it Gatsby? Is it Netlify? Is it the methodology, the philosophy? Where's your love for for the jam stack coming from? James Quick 14:26 Sure. So definitely, definitely the two tools that you mentioned, Gatsby and nullify. Again, Gatsby like static site generator using react, which is what I like to use using graphQL, which like, has some pretty cool stuff behind the scenes. For me, just like learning what graphQL is and how to work with it. They also have some like image optimization stuff built in, so into Gatsby, so you can like it'll do like image optimization in terms of like sizing and you give it an image and it'll do the random sizing and it'll choose the appropriate one. James Quick 15:00 Kinda like what Cloudinary does as a service or like you can use Cloudinary to do that. So that's a really cool feature. Anyway, so definitely, like I said, Netlify/Gatsby probably the the mentality of the development workflow, especially coming from like the WordPress workflow that I had before. Everything is in this GitHub repo. I know where all my data is. I don't have to have a database. I don't have to have almost anything installed on my local machine other than node and whatever. Like Gatsby, for example, like I don't need anything else. I can do it anywhere. I can check stuff in from anywhere I push and it gets built, and it's out there and it's ready to go. And if you've already got note on your laptop, you've got a way of getting Gatsby no matter where you are. Anyway. Bryan Robinson 15:38 It's all NPM based. It all just kind of works. James Quick 15:41 Exactly. Yeah. It's, it's, I mean, like the best development workflow that I could have dreamed of when I was struggling to figure out how people did WordPress successfully. Bryan Robinson 15:52 Yeah, struggling do WordPress successfully is the story of the first half of my development career. So I feel you on that, what's gonna what's going to keep You in the JAMstack? Like, obviously, you're enjoying this right now. But like, if you look a few few years down the road, where are you seeing how that develops for you personally, James Quick 16:09 I think one to continue on the same same idea of ease of use, right? I mean, that's a huge thing. I think the whole ecosystem is continuing to grow. Gatsby just got however, millions of dollars of funding, they have Netlify, just got however many millions of dollars they got. They're continuing to kind of add, again, like those quote unquote, potential limitations, people are continuing to add solutions to those. So you can build like all these really powerful applications, but still have that really cool like minimal streamlined development workflow. James Quick 16:41 A lot of a lot of that like comes into play with these headless CMS that are out there. So to kind of replace the backend of WordPress and you can actually use WordPress as a headless CMS. And just kind of forget the front end of that and just pull data into their API, but things like content full and cosmic is one I've worked on recently. And there's so many other ones. I don't know, there's just so many tools. People are loving it. Like, obviously, you're doing this podcast because you love it. You've got people that are listening and coming on because they feel the same way. And as a community as an ecosystem being online, the more you hear about something, after ignoring it for a certain amount of time you like you kind of have to say, well, there's there must be something to this, because of how many people are talking about it. And I think that's the stage that we've been in for a while. James Quick 17:28 And it just seems like it's going to continue to grow. And I think the tooling will continue to get better and better and potential limitations will be addressed. And I don't know, I think you'll find less and less reasons to not go this route. Bryan Robinson 17:39 Yeah, I completely agree with you on that. So yeah, so I don't want to take up too much more of your time where we're starting to get in that 1520 minute range that I'm trying to keep us in. So what's your what's your actual jam right now? What's your favorite song or your musician? Or what's your coding to on a regular basis? James Quick 17:56 Yeah, so the last I guess it's been like the last Two weeks I've been listened to Jason Aldean new album So Jason Aldean is a country artist. And I wouldn't say I wouldn't say country music like characterizes me as a person. But I certainly like grew up listen to country music went to school in Nashville, so got a lot like got even more in the country music at the time, and have always liked Jason Aldean. It took me a while to kind of just get to this album. And as soon as I did, I was like, Oh, this is this is really good. So I had I had a day when I was cleaning the house, like last weekend, Saturday, and I had like a portable speaker and just had one of the songs on repeat for like an hour and a half. Bryan Robinson 18:34 Really just just one song. James Quick 18:35 Yeah, I got that for my wife. She ends up like taking taking a song and playing it over and over. So I've kind of gotten used to doing that too. But Bryan Robinson 18:44 I suppose whatever works for you, right? James Quick 18:47 Yeah, whatever helps you kind of zone out and just kind of, I don't know, kind of forget about what you're doing in terms of being able to relax, I guess. Bryan Robinson 18:53 Yeah, gotcha. And and we've mentioned a couple things before but but is there anything that you want to go ahead and promote that you're doing Right now any any any big things on the horizon for you? James Quick 19:03 Sure. So I have my one paid course on Udemy is called learn Visual Studio Code teaches you in my mind, like everything you need to know about VScode as an editor, how to debug how to set up, prettier, and ES lint configurations, Git integration, all the shortcuts that you could ever want to learn are in there. So that's a big one for me. James Quick 19:24 I also have a free one on Udemy that is build a quiz app with JavaScript, HTML or HTML, CSS and JavaScript. So no frameworks, no libraries, just building a pretty cool application, I think, with just kind of the core HTML, CSS and JavaScript. James Quick 19:39 And then like I said earlier, LearnBuildTeach.com is where I reference all of my content. I'm working on some content right now hopefully have maybe a little bit more to share later on. But one of them is going to be kind of a MERN stack application. It'll be an Amazon price tracker. So if you've ever heard of like CamelCamelCamel, You can give it a URL, tell it a threshold price and have it notify you if the price drops. And so I'm working on building that basically with the MERN stack, so Mongo, express, react, and node, and then tying in Twilio for text message notifications. So that'll be a course that I don't have a link to yet but hopefully will be the next big thing that I advertised. So keep an eye out for that. Bryan Robinson 20:23 Probably on the Learn Build Teach website? James Quick 20:25 Yes, it will be on LearnBuildTeach.com Bryan Robinson 20:27 Beautiful, beautiful. Alright, well, I appreciate you taking the time out of your day to come and chat with us and share your experience. Yeah, James Quick 20:36 cool. Yeah, I enjoyed it. I glad I could help you kind of spread the positive word about JAMstack. And I will continue to roll on and use it on all my my sites. Bryan Robinson 20:45 Cool. Well keep doing amazing things. And we'll see you around the internet. Bryan Robinson 20:50 So now's the time on the episode where I ask all of you amazing podcast listeners in the JAMstack world. Go out to your podcast app of choice and leave a rating and review. So there are Hello JAMstackers out in the world have a way of finding this lovely little podcast. Thanks for listening as always, and we'll see you next time.Transcribed by https://otter.aiIntro/outtro music by bensound.com

La mia vita spaziale
210 A che serve lo spazio FTP?

La mia vita spaziale

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 16, 2019 8:41


Ciascuno di noi dovrebbe avere uno spazio FTP in cui poter caricare contenuti che possano essere accessibili online. Per gestire questo spazio, ti consiglio l'app gratuita Filezilla: https://filezilla-project.orgAscoltami su Spotify, Anchor, TuneIn, YouTube , ALEXA, Google Assistant, Radio RCS.______Recensioni: https://andreabrugnoli.click/stellineCommenti: https://t.me/abcomunica !Recensioni su iTunes: www.andreabrugnoli.click/loveCanale Telegram: https://t.me/lamiavitaspaziale :-)______Diventa produttore: https://tag.satispay.com/Lamiavitaspaziale______Pillole sulla comunicazione: https://twitter.com/abrugnoli______Gadgets: https://teespring.com/stores/la-mia-vita-spaziale-podcast

Zawaj Podcasts
Les logiciels gratuits indispensables que vous devriez vraiment utiliser

Zawaj Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 4, 2018 7:35


Les logiciels gratuits indispensables Nous allons voir ensemble les logiciels gratuits les plus populaires que vous deviez utiliser.  De nos jours, vous pouvez très facilement acheter un ordinateur flambant neuf et installer tous les logiciels dont vous avez besoin gratuitement, à l'aide des applications offertes avec la licence logicielle libre. Un logiciel libre est un logiciel dont l'utilisation, l'étude, la modification et la duplication par autrui en vue de sa diffusion sont permises, techniquement et légalement1, ceci afin de garantir certaines libertés induites, dont le contrôle du programme par l'utilisateur et la possibilité de partage entre individus Définition d'un un logiciel libre Un logiciel est considéré comme libre, au sens de la Free Software Foundation, s'il confère à son utilisateur quatre libertés La liberté d'exécuter le programme, pour tous les usages ; La liberté d'étudier le fonctionnement du programme et de l'adapter à ses besoins ; La liberté de redistribuer des copies du programme (ce qui implique la possibilité aussi bien de donner que de vendre des copies) ; La liberté d'améliorer le programme et de distribuer ces améliorations au public, pour en faire profiter toute la communauté. Vous pouvez obtenir un éditeur d'image gratuit, un éditeur de son gratuit, un traitement de texte gratuit, un lecteur multimédia, un archiveur de fichiers, un créateur de PDF… la liste s'allonge encore et encore. Alors que certaines de ces applications gratuites n'offrent pas le même niveau de fonctionnalités sophistiquées que leurs rivales commerciales, d'autres dépassent de loin les capacités de tout le reste du marché. Nous examinons de près la crème de la crème des applications libres indispensables que vous devriez vraiment utiliser, si vous ne l'êtes pas déjà. La grande majorité d'entre elles sont multi-plateformes et absolument 100% gratuits. Vous en trouverez sûrement plusieurs qui conviennent parfaitement à vos besoins. La crème de la crème des applications libres indispensables 1-Wordpress WordPress est la plate-forme de blogs la plus populaire au monde, utilisée par 126 millions de sites Web. En 2017, 50.000 sites lancés de façon quotidienne. Aussi simple ou aussi complexe que vous le souhaitez, WordPress est supporté par un large éventail de plug-ins qui peuvent être utilisés pour transformer un blog standard en tout ce que vous pouvez désirer. 2- Magento Magento, utilisé par des milliers de marchands, dont  des grands noms comme Samsung, Nespresso et plusieurs autres, est la plate-forme de commerce électronique qui connaît la croissance la plus rapide au monde. Magento Community Edition est offerte gratuitement sous licence de logiciel libre. Il existe une édition entreprise, pour laquelle vous devez payer, offre des fonctionnalités telles les cartes-cadeaux, prêts à l'emploi et d'autres options intéressantes. 3- Mozilla Thunderbird Avec ses recherches rapides, ses flux RSS intégrés, sa sécurité renforcée et ses superbes add-ons, Thunderbird doit être la meilleure application de messagerie gratuite disponible. Si vous êtes prêt à passer du temps à adapter votre environnement de messagerie avec des modules complémentaires, vous allez l'adorer, mais ce n'est probablement pas idéal pour les novices. 4- FileZilla FileZilla est un client FTP multi-plateformes extrêmement réussi. Il est également disponible en tant que serveur, uniquement pour Windows. Il prend en charge non seulement FTP, mais aussi FTP sur TLS (FTPS) et SFTP. Créé en janvier 2001 en tant que projet pédagogique, FileZilla est le 5ème téléchargé sur SourceForge.net de tous les temps. 5- Audacity Les logiciels de musique tels que Cubase et Logic Pro peuvent être extrêmement coûteux, raison pour laquelle de plus en plus de gens se tournent vers Audacity, un éditeur de son gratuit multi-plate-forme. Les utilisateurs peuvent enregistrer et éditer de l'audio en direct; couper, copier,

Thexyz
FileZilla now includes bundled adware

Thexyz

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 25, 2018 2:07


Bleeping Computer article: FileZilla's Use Of Bundled Offers Sparks Outrage From Users http://xyz.am/d0983

The Laravel Podcast
Interview: Taylor Otwell, creator of Laravel

The Laravel Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 12, 2017 47:57


An interview with Taylor Otwell, creator of Laravel, about what he did before Laravel and what got him started. Views by Drake The Life of Pablo by Kanye West Free 6LACK by 6LACK 808s and heartbreak by Kanye West Blue Neighbourhood by Troye Sivan Laravel & Lawns Transcript (sponsored by Laravel News): Matt Stauffer : Welcome to the Laravel Podcast, episode 55, in which I talk to Laravel creator Taylor Otwell. We learn about his back story, where he came from, and what helped him—and made him—start Laravel in the first place. Stay tuned. Taylor, it's great to have you on season three of the Laravel podcast. Obviously you've been around since the very beginning, but we're doing a little switch up here, where I'm going to start doing interviews. So, I'm super excited to have you as the first person whose brain I get to pick here. So, I guess we can start with ... Say hi to the people. Taylor Otwell : Hey people. Hey party people. Matt Stauffer : Ha. Party people. What we're going to do here for today, and I told you this beforehand, but I feel like a lot of people have talked to you about Laravel, about development, about the latest version. Every time a new version comes out, 5.5 just came out, people want to talk about that. And maybe we'll cover that a little bit, but what I feel like we haven't talked about quite as much is, the man behind the scenes, kind of thing. I think there's a lot about you that people don't know, so I first started with the questions ... I've known you for years now. I feel like I know you really well and there's still certain things I don't know about your past, but then I also asked a few folks, "What are some things you really want to know about Taylor and how he works?" So, we're just going to off-the-cuff, just throw some of those questions at you and see where it goes. Sound good? Taylor Otwell : Sounds good. Matt Stauffer : Awesome. So, first of all, back to the early days, when did you first have a computer in your home? Taylor Otwell : I think I was about ten or eleven, I had a computer. 66-megahertz computer that our neighbor actually, I think had, had it built of us, because our neighbor was a computer programmer, across the street. And this was back in the early days of Windows. Matt Stauffer : Mm-hmm (affirmative). Taylor Otwell : I guess it was like Windows 3.1 or something like that. Matt Stauffer : Yeah. Taylor Otwell : He was an early Windows programmer. And my parents had, I think asked him to help them get a computer for us. And it had a little megahertz readout on the front of the screen ... or on the front of the tower I guess. And was like Windows 95. Matt Stauffer : I'm always interested to hear from people what role, kind of early access and interest in computers has for them. So you having that neighbor, was it your neighbor that sparked your interest or was it having that computer? What was it that really sparked your interest in computers when you first got into them? Taylor Otwell : You know, it's hard to say, I don't think it was necessarily the neighbor that sparked the interest. I'm not sure I even realized that my neighbor was a programmer until later. I think I was just always interested in sci-fi type stuff and geeky stuff. Of course, I always liked Star Wars. I liked The Jetsons cartoon when I was a kid and all the cool tech stuff they had, so I guess I was just always drawn to futuristic tech stuff, so it was natural to be into computers. My first dabbling in programming was just playing HTML, where I would make little websites about the games I liked, like Pokemon or whatever other games I was playing at the time. Just little tips and strategy site. I remember one of the first ones I ever made actually, which was on CompuServe. And our neighbor, that same neighbor helped me and his son put it on CompuServe, was a website about Civilization 2, and sort of our strategies for that game. Matt Stauffer : Yes. What's the oldest website that you still have access to? Do you know? Taylor Otwell : I don't have anything from my childhood unfortunately. I wish I did. I wish I had thought to take screenshots of them and stuff. But a lot of them ... Several of them were on GeoCities and other free sites like that. Matt Stauffer : I remember my GeoCities sites. The only thing that I remember is the first one that I ever built, I hosted on GeoCities and it had a single image in it because image tags were pretty new at that point. So it was basically like text about me and a giant picture with a page scroll on the corner of the picture because the page scroll was the hottest Photoshop effect or whatever. Taylor Otwell : Yeah. I always thought the counters were really cool too. That you could put on your stuff. Matt Stauffer : Oh, my God, yeah. I was listening to somebody's podcast recently, I don't know who it was and the guy who had originally created link exchange was on there. Did you ever do those? Taylor Otwell : Yeah. I remember those. Those were big especially in the Pokemon website world. Matt Stauffer : Right? Yeah. We were all just waiting for one of those big sites to get a link over to us because of how the link exchange rule played. So it sounds like HTML is where you go started, do you ever do any, I don't know what the right term is like coding, coding, like a basic or anything like that early on, or was it not till later. Taylor Otwell : Yeah, I wrote few basic things. I also got really into TI-83 calculator programs where I would write little strategy games. Back then, at least in like middle school and high school the popular thing was like that drug wars game. Matt Stauffer : I was just going to say drug wars, that was it. Taylor Otwell : I would write games like that, either with drugs or with other lemonade stand type games. And I learned how to do that basically like sitting in ninth grade English, I just kind of taught myself how to program the calculator. Those were really the first real programs I wrote, I feel like. Matt Stauffer : When was your first exposure to the Internet that you remember? Taylor Otwell : We had internet pretty early after I got my first computer. We had dial up Internet. Just like at 14 4 modem. That was my first exposure to the internet. I don't even remember what sites were really a thing back then. I remember mainly looking at video game sites and just like Yahoo, and stuff like that. Matt Stauffer : When you were thinking, then, about coding ... I think a lot of us we were just kind of figuring it out as we went. Did you think, "Man, this is what I want to do forever," or was it just a fun thing and you were still ... did you have a different plan for your life at that point? Taylor Otwell : I actually did not plan to do coding, even when I entered college, I was doing my degree in computer networking and stuff because I thought programming would be too mathematical and sort of boring. Matt Stauffer : Mm-hmm (affirmative). Taylor Otwell : But I didn't really have a good understanding of what real programming was like, on a professional level. I'm not sure if schools back then, even in college ... I'm not sure I really got a good picture of what actual, on-the-job programming is like. I always imagined it to be so theoretical and really hard, like calculus all the time and stuff like that. But it really, at least for the kind of programming we do on the web, it doesn't tend to be that way. I went through all of college not planning to even be a programmer. Matt Stauffer : Did you do well ... I hope you don't mind me asking ... did you do well in math in high school, did you take calculus and everything? Taylor Otwell : Yeah, I was always like a B student in math. Matt Stauffer : Okay. Taylor Otwell : I was just okay. Matt Stauffer : Right. Taylor Otwell : I wasn't exceptional. Matt Stauffer : Not enough that the idea of programming being very "mathy" made you excited about it. Taylor Otwell : Yeah, exactly. Matt Stauffer : Okay. Did you ... like a different tact ... did you always consider yourself someone who's gonna do entrepreneurial stuff? At what point did you start thinking of yourself as, "I'm someone who's going to start a business"? Taylor Otwell : Only a few years after I'd gotten out of college and had a taste of the fact that anyone could take PHP and build an entire web application, which I didn't really realize, I guess, at the time that that was pretty possible for someone to do. Once I realized that, my brain just started churning with different ideas, and even if it wasn't something I could do full-time, but just something small to supplement my income or whatever. I was probably two or three years out of college before I really started thinking that way, though. Matt Stauffer : What was your first exposure to PHP that led you to having that experience? Taylor Otwell : My very first exposure was in college itself. We had a class project, it was a group project with two other people, and we had to build an inventory tracking system for a local charity. This was our final senior thing. We were all assigned real-world projects in the community, and so we happened to get this inventory tracking thing. One of the guys in the group was familiar with PHP, apparently, and said, "We can use PHP for this, because it's pretty easy," and I didn't really know any better, so I was like, "Sure, sounds good." That's when I really got my first exposure to PHP, even though I, on that project, mainly did talking with the customer, and finding out how they needed it to work, and stuff like that. Later, a couple of years down the road, when I started having ideas for side projects and stuff, I had remembered that he had chosen PHP back a couple of years ago in that class project. It was supposed to be easy or whatever, and I knew that we were able to lush the projects, so it wasn't too hard, apparently. Matt Stauffer : Were you ... Taylor Otwell : Yeah, so that's when I revisited PHP, because I hadn't actually used it very much in college. My partner had chosen it as our programming language for that project. Matt Stauffer : In college, when he chose that, were you doing .NET at that point, or did you get into it out of college? Taylor Otwell : No, I only did .NET once I got hired at my first actual programming job. The only programming courses I took in college were two semesters of C++, and that was it, actually I had those two semesters of programming, again, because I was in a networking degree, so I didn't have a lot of programming classes, like a pure computer science major might have. Matt Stauffer : Right. I think I remember you told me that the .NET thing was an intentional, learning-the-job-type situation? Taylor Otwell : Yeah. Matt Stauffer : What was that experience like? Taylor Otwell : Yeah, so, the place that hired me right out of college, they came to my university, which was Arkansas Tech. They were just interviewing students, and since they were there, I just decided to do an interview, even though I hadn't planned on being a programmer. I did the interview, and got the job, and the immediately put you in this six-month training program, where basically, for the first six months of the job, you spend most of your time in class, especially for the first three months, and then for the remaining three months, it's like 50-50 in class, and doing little projects and stuff. They actually taught me basically all of classic ASP, COBOL, JCL, which are two old things, and some beginnings of .NET, but not a ton of it. I did a lot of COBOL and classic ASP, and then eventually got put on a .NET project at work. I just picked that up from the existing code that was already written on the project, because I wasn't writing it from scratch at first. I just taught myself .NET as I got in there, because I already had been programming for a couple of years, so picking up another language was not too difficult, since they actually wrote in VB.NET, and all of their classic ASP was in VB, so ... Matt Stauffer : Right. The syntax was really similar. Taylor Otwell : Wasn't too bad. Matt Stauffer : That actually ... I wanted to ask about .NET and VC, but stepping back for a second, when you guys were writing PHP in school, was this classic PHP, was this ... I'm assuming it was 5-3, based on what I've talked to you about before, right? Was there any framework or anything? Taylor Otwell : No, there was no framework on that project that I remember. It was just classic ... from what I remember, because I actually had to put it all in a thumb drive and install it at this charity, it was just a bunch of random PHP files. There was no real structure to it. Matt Stauffer : Index.php, about.php ... Taylor Otwell : All the ... I remember looking at the HTML and all the PHP being mixed in. Matt Stauffer : Yeah. You got your SQL queries up top, and then the end bracket, and then, all of a sudden, your HTML. Taylor Otwell : Yeah. But then, when I came back to PHP later, it was on PHP 5.3. But again, I started with plain PHP for a few weeks, and then quickly realized that I needed some structure, and that's when I used CodeIgniter for a little bit. Matt Stauffer : Okay. Now, when you were doing .NET, was it .MVC at that point, or was it some predecessor? Taylor Otwell : I've done both. I've done .NET webforms, which were a predecessor to .MVC, and later, I did .MVC, the early versions. Matt Stauffer : I have experience with webforms, and I've never got my brain around the way it works, because if I remember right, it's basically ... rather than a route or a controller, or anything, it's really basically a form that handles its own validation, that handles its own everything. Everything is centered around this form, and then that form, and then that form. It's just a very different mental model, in my ... I know that's not a great description, but am I right in remembering that that's the difference between that versus .MVC? Taylor Otwell : Yeah. I think what they did, is they took WinForms, which is what we used to write desktop apps. On WinForms, how it works, if you want to do some action on a button-click, when they click on a button on your desktop app, you're literally in, the designer can click the button, and it takes you to the spot in the code that's like a click-event handler, and you write all of your code. I think on webforms, they tried to have ... basically, their thought process was, "Wouldn't it be cool if we could make the same model for the web, so that all these WinForms programmers can write these dynamic web applications, so you have the same thing, where you have button-click handlers in your .NET code that correspond to things on your front end." Somehow, they routed that using ... I don't know if it was query strings, or what they were actually passing in the form, but somehow, they were able to route that to the right piece of code when you clicked a button on your web front end. It felt like building a WinForms app, and was really different than any other web technology I've ever used since. Matt Stauffer : Yeah. The reason I was asking is, my brother has done .MVC for ages, and he helped me understand .MVC when I first got into CodeIgniter, but I remember having written webforms before that, and it's such a complete ... it felt a little bit like writing a classic ASP, especially if you're using VB, but then it felt a little bit like some kind of super-powered jQuery, basically. It's not like a mentality that I'm used to seeing anywhere else. Before you got back into CodeIgniter, you had had some experience with .MVC, then. Taylor Otwell : Yeah. I had .MVC, and that's why I even knew the frameworks as a concept to look for, basically. Matt Stauffer : So, you got a job out of school. It almost seems like it was a sponsored boot camp, basically, for the first six months. Is that a good way to think about it? There are getting used to real-world stuff, but you're actually sitting in classes sponsored by the company? Taylor Otwell : Yeah, a little bit. It was all on site, and all the instructors were full-time employees that actually were in other departments, actually. They would just pull them into these training classes when they needed them. But it was a really unique place. They only hired new graduates, and everyone goes through the same training program. It's like they just want people fresh, and wanted to sort of train them in their way of doing things, rather than bring in existing programmers that are already, I guess, ingrained with other ways. Matt Stauffer : Right. That you have to un-train, basically. Taylor Otwell : Yeah, it was one of the of the ... I guess, the only places I've worked that only hired new graduates. Matt Stauffer : Interesting. So, you're doing that, you're working at .MVC, and you have this idea that you want to do some side projects, and you mention that seeing your partner in that class project using PHP gave you a little of the idea that you could do something on your own. Can you tell me a little bit more about what the mentality was, and what the thought process was, that led for you to have a good, paying job doing .MVC, that you could do that for quite a while, and saying, "You know what? I want to do something on the side." What was the itch there? Taylor Otwell : I think part of it was having freedom to move wherever I wanted to if it did take off. Then, I could work from home, and we could move back closer to family, because at the time, I was living three or four hours away from the main bulk of my family, which lives in one town. It was just gonna be more freedom is what I remember to live wherever we wanted to. Matt Stauffer : Yeah. You wanted that freedom, you wanted to be able to be self-employed. If it's anything like it was for me, and then you can tell me if I'm wrong, that there wasn't quite as significant of a culture around being an entrepreneur. It feels like there is, today ... there wasn't all these conferences about being a sole entrepreneur. I guess hearing Ian and Andre talk about it, they're definitely ... what's that form they're always talking about? Business and Software? Taylor Otwell : Mm-hmm (affirmative). Matt Stauffer : But I don't know about you ... have you ever heard of any of those folks who are really big about doing your little business, or is it just something where you said, "Well, I want to do this, and I'll figure it out as I go." Taylor Otwell : No, I didn't know anyone else doing anything like that. I didn't even go to any websites that talked about that or anything. Matt Stauffer : Yeah, same here. I'm interested ... let's see if anything will come up during this chat ... whether the lack of those resources help to hurt us in various ways. You knew PHP was an option. You knew that you could ship with PHP. You at least had the ability to compare it against some other web-based programming things, and it seemed like PHP was more viable for getting something launched, working solo, and so you dug into PHP, you did a little bit of old-school procedural PHP, quickly realized you wanted to do CodeIgniter. What was the first project, do you remember, that you built with CodeIgniter? Taylor Otwell : One of the first projects I built was this really niche thing. I had known someone that owned a book bindery, they rebind old books, and I was going to build a little system for them to take orders and keep track of orders of books they were rebinding. It was a very specific product for this company. I think they were based in Tulsa or something at the time, pretty close to where I was living, really. Matt Stauffer : You built an app custom for them, you built it in CodeIgniter ... what was hosting like? What was the front end like? Do you remember any of the other technical details of what that was like? Taylor Otwell : I think I used DreamHost at the time, so it was just a shared host, because I didn't really know how to configure my own VPS until years later, basically. Yeah, I know I was on DreamHost, and would FTP the files using FileZilla, because I was on Windows at the time, and actually, I didn't even have a Mac until I started working for UserScape after Laravel had been built. All of Laravel, the first version, was built on a cheap Windows laptop. I would just FTP all the files up. When I first started, I was using Notepad++. Matt Stauffer : Yeah, man, I love Notepad++. A lot of good work done with Notepad++ and FileZilla. You were doing that, and at some point, you felt like ... well, actually, I was gonna say, at some point, you felt like CodeIgniter wasn't giving you what you wanted, but actually, the reason you and I first interacted was because I was a CodeIgniter developer who had started learning about IOC and DI, and stuff like that, and I said, "What I wanted was an IOC container for CodeIgniter," and this guy Taylor, this young guy, had written an IOC container for CodeIgniter, and I couldn't find the code anywhere." I ended up DMing you or something, and you ended up saying, "You know what I just pulled ... I got rid of it, I pulled it in Laravel, you should check out Laravel." That was basically how I first my Laravel. I followed Jeffrey at Nettuts for a while, and he'd been talking about Laravel for a bit, so that was what finally switched me over. It sounds like before you went off on your own to do your own thing, you were trying to work in the CodeIgniter ecosystem to improve it. What was that like? Taylor Otwell : Yeah, so at first, I had no intentions of splitting off and writing a framework. But you're right, one of the first projects I wrote was CI injector, CInject or something like that. I was actually pretty proud of that. It was actually the first reflection-based IOC container in PHP at all that I'm aware of. There was one other IOC container that was also written in 2010, a few months later. That was one of the main pieces of .NET/.MVC that I really like was the auto-resolving container. Laravel's container still works, basically, like that first CodeIgniter container did. The other thing I was really interested in was the better ORM for CodeIgniter, and I wanted to get those two things in ... oh, there was a third thing. I wanted better templating, like Blade, where you have an @extends at the top, and then you define these sections that override the parent template section, stuff like that. Template inheritance. I remember the final straw, that I couldn't really continue with CodeIgniter anymore, is I wanted auto-resolving dependency injection in my CodeIgniter controllers. To make that work, you really had to start editing the core files in a way that was not in a nice, packageable, shippable way, where other people could do it. Then I hit this crossroads, where I considered just forking CodeIgniter, and making this "special edition" of just sort of souped-up CodeIgniter on steroids, and giving it another name. Or just starting fresh. I think I just started fresh to just experiment at first, and then got so far along, I just kept going. I know I rewrote the first version of Laravel, probably a solid five or six times until I was happy with it. Matt Stauffer : What was the first thing you wrote in Laravel? Taylor Otwell : I remember writing the routing engine first. Probably the routing and the views. I think ... I don't remember exactly what I was doing for the database at the time. There was an active record of implementation called PHP ActiveRecord, that even at that time had become abandonware. That was back in 2010. Then, there was another couple of libraries. One was called Idiorm ... it was I-D-I-O-R-M, and then it had a corresponding ORM called "Paris". I think the Idiorm thing was the query builder, Paris was the ORM. Actually, Eloquent was very inspired by Paris, because it had the sort of model where a relationship is just a function of the model that returns a query builder. Eloquent, of course, still works like that to this day, so Paris deserves quite a bit of credit for coming up with that model. I don't think the person who wrote Paris even programs PHP anymore, last time I looked, but I'm not sure they're aware that Eloquent was so inspired by that. Matt Stauffer : That's really cool. I remember the moment where I realized I had to leave CodeIgniter was when I recognized that some of its inherent restrictions were forcing me into writing worse code. For example, some of the ugliest stuff in my old CodeIgniter apps were because I had ... database models, they called it, which was really like it was a model and repository and three other things, but you cram it all into one, and so you have methods that are everything you could just possibly imagine that would touch the database in any way, would all get crammed into a single class. If you're lucky, you've figured out enough to at least differentiate those classes by table. But that wasn't even always the case. Like you said, without view inheritance, you end up loading views and data in every controller and passing them around to each other, and you've got a single variable that you're passing through your controller method that tracks the data that's eventually going to get past the view. There's just a lot of things, because of the constraints of CodeIgniter, you just wrote worse code. When you started doing Laravel, you wanted to be able to do dependency injection and all these things. How much of your mindset was, "I'm gonna write things that are gonna make people write better code," and how much of it was, "I want to do these things, and I can't do these things." Was it a purity concept? Was it an ease-of-use concept, or were those things all tied together? Taylor Otwell : At first, I feel like it was a lot of ease-of-use, but also, there was some purity mixed in as well, because of the whole dependency injection thing, which I considered a more pure approach to doing some things back then, and of course still is a more pure approach a lot of times now. I feel like ... but also, ease of use was huge, too, because I wanted it to be very Apple-esque, where it was just really nice to use out of the box, and you didn't have to do all these hacks and customizations to get it really nice that I had to do with CodeIgniter. I wanted it to be like when you unwrap Laravel, it was this nice package that you could use, it was all cohesive and coherent. Matt Stauffer : Yeah. I want to talk a little bit further on that for a little bit. One of the things that you've talked about since the early days is that you recognize that the documentation in the community just make a really big impact on people's experience, working with the framework of a library. You've reference the fact that CodeIgniter was so successful, in large part because it had great documentation. For starters, what do you think it is that prepared you to be in a place where you could recognize that? Is it because you hadn't trained to be a programmer, or are there other experiences in your life that made you more sensitive to those types of, or do you even have a sense for what that is? Taylor Otwell : I don't know. I feel like it was just a low tolerance for pain in terms of programming, because programming wasn't a hobby for me, even really back then. I didn't come home and program, I did other stuff. To have a painful experience programming wasn't that great for me, because it wasn't something I was particularly obsessed about, and so if I was gonna do it at all, I wanted it to be really enjoyable, and easy to do, and fun. I just had a really low threshold for any pain points in the tools I was using, I think. Matt Stauffer : Yeah. It's like we always joke about the fact that a lazy programmer is a good programmer because they're gonna do the one that doesn't waste time or whatever else it ends up being, so I hear that. Taylor Otwell : Yeah, and even when I was at my .NET job, I had already discovered that I really enjoyed writing tools that helped programmers be more productive, because I remember one of the things I did there in my free time, when I had a few extra minutes, was I wrote this little program called WeDev in .NET that was like ... the closest thing I can think of, it would be a lot worse version of Slack, but it had a file dropbox where we could drop files to each other, and it had a little status indicator of what you were doing then, so it was like our own little instant messenger with a file share thing. But I really loved that project, so that was my first taste of, "Hey, I really enjoyed making developers' lives easier." I think that was part of what drew me into Laravel, was it became this fun project to see how productive I could make a programming environment. Matt Stauffer : Yeah, I like that. One of the things that really struck me when I first started going to Laravel conferences was how many people told stories about the ways that Laravel had changed their lives. That was something I wasn't used to. I think people ... there's some jokes around that the terms of "artisan" and some of the other terms we use in the Laravel world, but it's reflective of a really different approach for what the priorities and values are coming from Laravel. What's the goal? That's the question I was asking about purity versus ease of use, it seems like developer happiness is really a very significant ... like productivity and happiness are really significant goals that you have there. When you were building Laravel, you started out, you wanted to scratch your own itch. You wanted to make something that was good for you and it made you be able to do things a certain way, but you were relatively public about it. You started showing people. At what point did you start to realize this is something people are responding to? This is something that might really be a big player in the post-CodeIgniter framework world. Taylor Otwell : I think when I was pretty far along and had, basically, a finished product, only then did I really decide that I would go all the way and document it. I knew that the documentation would be huge, because I felt like that was why CodeIgniter was even popular to begin with, because there was Kohana, which was another, CodeIgniteresque-type framework that had some advantages, and had some better features, but the documentation was so much worse that it just never really had the same steam that CodeIgniter had. I had picked up on that pretty early that if I wanted Laravel to be popular, I would have to write really good documentation. I tried to write, basically, CodeIgniter-level documentation from the very first 1.0 release, because I've seen a lot of people put stuff out there, and then looks like, "Documentation coming soon," or "Documentation in progress," and it's never gonna get the same reception as if it's a finished product. I thought I had a pretty productive little thing, and decided, "Hey, I'll go ahead and document it and put it out there, and see what the response is." My mentality at the time was, "Even if nobody else ever uses this, then that's fine with me, because I at least have something enjoyable to use when I write PHP." Matt Stauffer : Are there any people or moments or inflection points or whatever where you point to a thing and said, "If that thing hadn't happened, or that moment hadn't happened, it would have been a completely different story"? Taylor Otwell : Yeah, so there's a couple of moments. A big moment was, there was a point where a few PHP programmers were teaming up to make this PHP framework called "Fuel", and it was a few CodeIgniter people like Phil Sturgeon, and Dan Horrigan, and one other guy, I think, one or two other guys. I think they were trying to build the successor to CodeIgniter that was moving faster and had features that people wanted, and stuff like that. They had some pretty decent marketing pages for it, and stuff like that. I remember I had some ideas ... I was actually excited about Fuel, and had some ideas that I wanted to put into Fuel. I can't remember what they exactly were at the time. I think one of them might have been some type of route filter-type thing that ended up being in Laravel, or something like that. I had messaged one of them and said, "Hey, I'd really like to help out on Fuel. This is the feature I want to add, or whatever." They weren't super-interested in the feature, which is fine. It's not a knock on them, they just weren't interested in it. I was like, "Okay, I guess I'll keep working on Laravel," but if they would have bit on that, and been interested in me helping with Fuel a little bit and some of these things, then of course, I think things could have been really different, because I would have jumped into Fuel and started adding stuff there, and probably would have just started using it, and become invested in it. That's one moment. Probably the biggest moment I can think of where things could have taken a really different direction because that feature wasn't really a fit for them, that I just kept working on Laravel. Matt Stauffer : Yeah. Well, I, for one, am grateful to whoever it was that rejected that feature. I think ... it's not to say that something else wouldn't have come along, but I think your life would have looked a little bit different after that point, so I think it's a good time to ask a couple questions about what's your life like today. When you were working full-time ... I assume it's at least a 40-hour work week .NET job, and you were writing Laravel on the side ... do you have a sense for what your hours a week were looking like between day job and Laravel work? Taylor Otwell : Yeah. I seemed to have a lot of energy back then. I worked eight to five, and then I came home. James, our first child, was pretty young at the time, just basically a baby, when I'd first started working on it. I would hang out with the family from five to nine. We were just in a little two-bedroom apartment, it was 900 square feet. We were all in there together, pretty close. Abigail would go to bed around nine or 9:30, and I would actually stay up until one or 1:30, a lot of the time. Going to bed at midnight, for me, was like, "I'm going to feel great tomorrow, I went to bed at midnight." I would stay up until midnight, one, sometimes two, the majority of nights, really, and work on Laravel. I was putting in, let's see, probably three to four hours of Laravel work every night, and somehow felt pretty good, actually. I can't really seem to do that anymore. I don't know what changed, but ... Matt Stauffer : Yeah. When my wife was pregnant, she would go to bed at 9:00 every night. I was not happy with my day job situation, and that's when I wrote my first softwares and service. I was working 90, 100-hour work weeks between my normal job and that. It's the same thing. There's no way I could do that right now. But I'm glad I did it then, back when I had that energy. Taylor Otwell : Even when I wrote Forge, I was still working at UserScape, and would stay up until midnight or one routinely, because that took six months for me to build just in my free time. Matt Stauffer : Yeah. At some point, you had Laravel to a point ... I don't want to go too deep in this story, because it's been told before, so I want to cover things I haven't, but you got to a point where Laravel was good enough that it attracted Ian's attention. He was looking to do a reboot of UserScape, which was handled PHP from scratch, and he pick Laravel, and he hired you, and said, "Hey, you build this thing out, and you can make Laravel better, so it can support our needs." You would add a lot of features that UserScape needed, and that helped Laravel grow up in a lot of ways. You told that story. I think the interesting aspect that hasn't been covered before, is what the shift from being UserScape plus Laravel to solo Laravel look like. What were some of the things that you were thinking about when you were starting to make that decision ... when you were starting to consider going out on your own, what was scary, what was exciting, what considerations did you have before you decided to go solo? Taylor Otwell : Some of the scary parts were just not knowing how much longevity Laravel, as the ecosystem, would have, because ... Forge was out, and was doing well, and I was actually making more on Forge than I was making at UserScape pretty quickly. But Laravel was still relatively new. It was only three years old when Forge came out, so there was questions. What if everyone stops using Laravel? What if a better framework comes out in six months and everyone's like, "Screw Laravel, screw Forge, I'm using whatever." That was one of the main fears. The exciting part was that I would just have so much time to work on Laravel. At the time, it was just unfathomable if you know how much time that would be, because 40 hours a week on Laravel. If I'm working just two or three hours of my free time at night, it's two weeks worth of free time. I could try stuff faster, I could experiment faster. That was the most exciting part for me. Matt Stauffer : Yeah, that's cool. I remember talking to you during that time where, to me, it seemed obvious because I have a similar story where I did DreamHost, but I was running a softwares and service from 2010, 2011. I needed a VPS, and I tried managing my own Linode VPSes, and it was just awful. I wasn't trained in that stuff. I ended up paying for these super-constrained hosts that didn't let you do what CodeIgniter and Laravel needed, because nothing like Forge was out there, and I just couldn't afford from my SaaS to pay a DevOps person to handle it. When Forge came along ... I don't want to be bombastic, but it really revolutionized individual developers' and small teams' ability to run fully-robust VPSes without having full-time DevOps people. For me, as someone from the outside, first of all, I said, "Please let us pay you more money," but second of all, I knew that was really gonna sustain. But I know that there were times where it was a little bit scary. Within your realm of comfort ... I don't want you to have to say your deepest, darkest secrets, but what does make you nervous today? Are you worried about some other framework? Are you worried about PHP no longer being viable? Are you just feeling pretty good? What does ... in the life that you have, where Laravel is very popular, very stable, what's on your horizon? Taylor Otwell : Nothing makes me too nervous anymore, because even if Laravel started dying today, and died a slow death over the next few years, I would have secured my future at this point, in terms of "I'm gonna be able to retire with my family, the kids' college is paid for, and I don't have to worry about those things anymore." I would just be like, "Okay, great, thanks for the memories," and I would apply to work at Tighten, I guess. Matt Stauffer : I know, I love it, yes, I'm sold. Taylor Otwell : I would have to just go back to being a regular guy programmer, working on projects and stuff, but I don't know. It doesn't make me too nervous, because I always try to have this mentality that Laravel, obviously, will not be a thing anymore, that either because PHP's not a thing anymore or there's some other framework that's better or whatever. I don't know how long that will be, but I don't really get too nervous about it, because I feel happy with what I created, the memories I made, what I did for my family for decades to come, basically. If it all ended tomorrow, I would be fine. It would be a fun ride. Matt Stauffer : I love it, and that's really good. I think that makes me so happy I want to touch two other things, and then we might just cut it short. The two other things are in that same direction, about what makes you happy and what gives you peace outside of programming. I think the first question is, do you have any daily practices or any mantras, or any things that you do to center yourself, and just help you handle life when it's stressful or not? Just things to keep you steady, I guess. Taylor Otwell : Yeah, I try to meditate some. I can't say I do it every day, but every other day at least, let's say, I try to meditate. For me, that's a spiritual thing, but for other people, it might not be. It might be more just a "focus your thoughts" kind of thing. Also, just try to keep life and perspective during that meditation, I guess. Try to think some of those things ... same thoughts where I don't want to hold too tightly on the success of Laravel, or being a popular programmer is core to my identity, because I think that's setting yourself up for a lot of pain in the future, because all things pass away eventually. It's just a time to focus my thoughts. Also, I just think about my family, stuff like that. More important stuff than programming. But I find it just de-stresses me a bit, helps me focus on what's important, and it's refreshing. But now I try to make time to do it. I feel like as soon as we get up in the morning, now with two kids, it's sort of rushing around everywhere getting ready for school and stuff like that. But yeah, that's what I do. Matt Stauffer : Yeah. You got to be intentional about those things. You've talked about productivity systems and how much you love Wunderlist and stuff. How structured do you keep your life? Do you have, "This is the hour when I do that"? I remember you've talked about starting with pull requests and issues. Do you still have some of those same structures, or is it different with Mohamed around? Taylor Otwell : Yeah, I still have some structures. It's not structured to the point that every hour of the day is structured. I'm more focused in day increments moreso than hour increments in Todoist, which is what I moved to after Wunderlist, which I'm really enjoying, actually. I have this bullet journal approach, where I only really sit in the "Today" column of Todoist, and I have, usually, five or six things that I want to do that day, and I have them in Todoist, and then I have projects that I treat just as grab-bags, the things I want to do at some point. Some of my projects in Todoist are actual projects that I'm working on, like Laravel Horizon was, where I have all the things I want to do. But some of them are just movies I want to watch, or music I want to listen to, or something like that. I do keep my day fairly structured, where I start my day with port request and emails, but then after that, it's not so structured. I just work through my to-do list for that day as I ... just whatever I feel like doing next. But it's still structured at a daily level. Matt Stauffer : Right. In regards to the music that you're gonna listen to ... I'm not gonna ask you to tell me the best rap album of all time, because we could do a whole podcast on that, but do you have one that, even if it's not your favorite today, has been the longest-running favorite, or the most significant impact, just the one that you played out like no other album or something. Taylor Otwell : I feel like I go in phases, and it's funny because each Laravel release, I feel like, has had an album that I feel like I really played a lot for that release. I know on one of the releases, I played the Views album that Drake put out quite a bit. One of the releases was "The Life of Pablo" from Kanye West. But I think one of the albums recently that I really played a lot was ... I think you pronounce his name "Black" even though it's spelled with a six on the front, so "6lack" is what it looks like. He's a rapper/singer hybrid, I guess you could say, almost more singer than rapper, but I played that album a lot when it first came out, and still play it quite a bit. Matt Stauffer : All right. Did you like 808s and Heartbreak? Taylor Otwell : Yeah, I really like that album. Matt Stauffer : I played that out like no album for quite a while. Taylor Otwell : Yeah, looking through my music ... okay, another album I played a lot was "Blue Neighbourhood", by Troye Sivan, who's not a rapper at all, he's a singer. But that's another album I just really wore out over the past couple of years Matt Stauffer : I've literally never heard of it. Taylor Otwell : Okay, you should check that out. Matt Stauffer : I definitely will. That's awesome. I'll put all of this in the show notes. Okay, let's see, so I'm sure rap is one of these, but what outside program inspires you? Whether it's inspiring you to do good things with programming, because you hear something that gives you a thing, or just inspires you in terms of your life and your family and your entrepreneurial-ness or whatever else. What inspires you? Taylor Otwell : Any time I travel, I feel like I get inspired. Any time I see some cool part of the world, or some really beautiful piece of scenery while I'm traveling or something, somehow that just inspires me to create cool stuff in general. For me, that usually translates into trying to think of cool Laravel ideas, so travel is a big inspiration for me. Let's see, what else ... you know music is a big inspiration. I don't know. Those are the two things that jump out at me. Matt Stauffer : That's good. I didn't prepare you for this one, so sorry, but my friend DeRay and his podcast always asks every guest for one piece of advice that they've received that's really influenced them across their life ... is there any one piece of advice that really stands out, that has big impact on you, that you've gotten from somebody else? Taylor Otwell : One thing that comes to mind that wasn't really a piece of advice, but just more like learning, is probably from my grandfather, who just did jobs really well. Anything he worked on, he just made sure it was done really right, in a way he could be proud of. I don't know, I guess it goes back to an old-fashioned work ethic that he must have been raised with, but I think that was really inspiring, and I actually blogged about this once, but when I worked with him, actually when I was in college, we took care of all the lawns at our local church. It was just a lot, because they had soccer fields, and just big lawns and stuff, and even with that, he put a lot of attention to detail into that. It inspired a lot of my own attention to detail and going forward. It wasn't a spoken piece of advice, it was more of just a thing you had to observe, but was pretty impactful. Matt Stauffer : I remember that post. I'll link it. Well, I could ask you questions for another hour, but I'm gonna try and keep this one to the hour range, so I think that is pretty good for my questions for today. Is there anything else, especially along this line of questions, but just in general, that you feel like you want to talk about today? Taylor Otwell : I can't think of anything. Matt Stauffer : Okay. Taylor, this was ridiculously fun. Part of the reason that I'm having you is that the first episode of the Laravel Podcast, Season Three, is because everybody wants to know about you and you have a lot to say, but also I just want to say, officially, from me, and from Dan, and from the rest of the crew at Tighten, and the rest of the Laravel crew, thank you for what you've done for our community, because when I talk about Tighten, I say, "You know what? We're creating a company that we want to take care of people. We want to create good jobs for people and stuff like that." You're doing the same thing with Laravel. Yeah, you make money off of it, and you have the ability for yourself to create certain kinds of codes and stuff like that. But your attention to providing good things for people is evident throughout this interview, and just throughout everything about what you've done for Laravel. From all of us, thank you very much. Taylor Otwell : All right. You're welcome. Matt Stauffer : Awesome, man. Thank you so much for speaking with me today, and that's it for today. Taylor Otwell : All right, see you. See you.

Talking Practice w Manolo Something / KPISS.FM

Matt Finnegan talks film, bowtie fighters, race, dog balls, the mandela effect, and the old anti-folk rap group we were in.

Talking Practice w Manolo Something / KPISS.FM

Matt Finnegan talks film, bowtie fighters, race, dog balls, the mandela effect, and the old anti-folk rap group we were in.

Björeman // Melin
Avsnitt 67: En golfklapp för Cloudflare

Björeman // Melin

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 5, 2017 73:21


p>Det 67:e dramatiska avsnittet i landets i övrigt kanske inte mest dramatiska podcast: Det kanske blir en fin GÄST i podden framöver! Tävlingsresultatet, såhär långt, avslöjas. Nytt makalöst avsnitt av Den makalösa, ute NYSS Jocke sålde en massa retrodatasaker och överlevde. hela den skakande berättelsen! Cloudflare-buggen. Fredrik förundras över att så få kräver C-språkens avgång. Jocke ser ofullständigt tänk kring säkerhet, Fredrik ser funderingar kring val av programmeringsspråk. Go vs. C! Overcast 3.0! Brusreducerande lurar kan närma sig rent beroende. Vad mycket det bullrar i omvärlden! ftp.retrodatorer.se - Jocke pratar om något som kommer att läcka utanför landets gränser! Transmits minnesläckor! Plötsligt snackar vi Blockstack! Jocke sågade huvudet av ett vildsvin – allt om varför och hur det var! Twitterrific-kickstartern! Och det är inte alla som gillar semlor. Länkar Haproxy ACL – access control list Owncloud Rubber duck debugging Trinidad scorpion Nginx Taylors and Jones Super cars-musiken Excalibur Den makalösa-avsnittet om Arrival Turbo Outrun Kickstart Cloudflares rapport om sitt problem Buffer overrun-problem Rust Go Overcast 3 Fredriks text om brusreducerande lurar ftp.retrodatorer.se Transmit – eminent FTP-klient för Mac, minnesläcka till trots Filezilla Cyberduck Radar – Apples bugghanteringssystem Blockstack Läsvärt paper om Blockstacks erfarenheter och uppkomst Domännamnssystem Blockkedja Bitcoin Fredrik menade Bitcoin när han sa “Bittorrent-noder” App.net Blockstack på Github Haiku Google tech talk om Haiku Let’s encrypt Twitterrific för Mac-kickstartern Craig Hockenberry Mutant: Mechatron– Mutant: Maskinarium på engelska Steinbrenner & Nyberg Jocke blev intervjuad på Nyheter24 Netmail Två nördar - en podcast. Fredrik Björeman och Joacim Melin diskuterar allt som gör livet värt att leva. Fullständig avsnittsinformation finns här: https://www.bjoremanmelin.se/podcast/avsnitt-67-en-golfklapp-for-cloudflare.html.

Going Linux
Going Linux #301 · Open Source for Online Media

Going Linux

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 20, 2016


Going Linux #301 · Open Source for Online Media Today we discuss Open Source software and services to meet your online media needs. It may be totally free software or it might be a application running on some service you paid for. But it all has one thing in common. Everything we discuss is using, in some part, an Open Source application or service. Episode 301 Time Stamps 00:00 Going Linux #301 · Open Source for Online Media 01:33 Alternatives to Facebook 03:06 Wordpress 15:23 The Maker 20:16 Blue Griffon 21:26 TeamSpeak 22:29 Mumble 26:03 Don't overlook your web host 29:08 FileZilla 29:46 Encrypting stored files 30:37 With open source you have choices 32:59 Application pick: Atom 35:35 goinglinux.com, goinglinux@gmail.com, +1-904-468-7889, @goinglinux, feedback, listen, subscribe 36:41 End

Going Linux
Going Linux #301 · Open Source for Online Media

Going Linux

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 20, 2016 36:41


Going Linux #301 · Open Source for Online Media Today we discuss Open Source software and services to meet your online media needs. It may be totally free software or it might be a application running on some service you paid for. But it all has one thing in common. Everything we discuss is using, in some part, an Open Source application or service. Episode 301 Time Stamps 00:00 Going Linux #301 · Open Source for Online Media 01:33 Alternatives to Facebook 03:06 Wordpress 15:23 The Maker 20:16 Blue Griffon 21:26 TeamSpeak 22:29 Mumble 26:03 Don't overlook your web host 29:08 FileZilla 29:46 Encrypting stored files 30:37 With open source you have choices 32:59 Application pick: Atom 35:35 goinglinux.com, goinglinux@gmail.com, +1-904-468-7889, @goinglinux, feedback, listen, subscribe 36:41 End

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

This week we discuss the struggles and lack there of faced by Instagram, Evernote and Patreon. We also touched on the Apple TV Developer Kit round 2. We discuss the new paradigm in interacting with the Apple TV. We discuss Microsofts new Surface Book and Display Dock. Developers made need to pay tax to Japanese govt. Picks: Apple Developer Search, Paintcode 2, Starbucks and iOS 9 By Tutorials Episode 60 Show Notes: The Other App Store Instagram Apple Developer Kit iFixit’s Apple TV Tear Down Screwed Developers Inquisitive #27: Behind the App #1: History - Relay FM (Mike Hurley) Microsoft PixelSense (multi-touch table) Jim Dovey Teleprompt+ 3 Evernote Patreon (MTJC Page) The right way to ship software The iPad Pro is too big to get Office apps for free, says Microsoft Microsoft Outlook for iOS Microsoft’s Surface Book Will Redefine How PCs Are Made Microsoft Display Dock Filezilla Modbook Compaq TC1000 Microsoft HoloLens: release date, rumours, specs & pricing Understanding Japanese App Store Withholding (old post) Tweetbot 4 for Twitter PaintCode Tutorial for Designers: Getting Started asciiwwdc Revision of Consumption Taxation on Cross-Border Supplies of Services Jeff M Vinyl Tap Tour: Every Song Tells a Story Netflix documentary 'Keith Richards: Under The Influence' Episode 60 Picks: developer.apple.com Search Paintcode 2 Starbucks app iOS 9 By Tutorials

Marketer of the Day with Robert Plank: Get Daily Insights from the Top Internet Marketers & Entrepreneurs Around the World
055: Time Management Hacks: Install These Quick Computer Programs Today to Get Yourself Over the Hump, Complete All Your Projects, and Have More Fun

Marketer of the Day with Robert Plank: Get Daily Insights from the Top Internet Marketers & Entrepreneurs Around the World

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 11, 2015 45:30


When we run our own businesses and don't have a "boss" to answer to, it can be easy to fall back into old habits of goofing off. It's easy to fall back into the habit of filling up time because when you worked at your "day job", the objective was to fill up 8 hours a day. Today, we're going to talk about getting all that clutter that we're used to from a day job out of the way. Quick Computer Programs Everyone Can Use to Improve Their Productivity Online Stopwatch: Use this to time yourself doing a task so that you truly commit to getting it done in a certain amount of time, i.e. knock out a blog post in 10 minutes instead of thinking about it for an hour. Camtasia: This software can record everything you're doing online. This is excellent software for recording tutorials, software walk-through demo's, etc. You can simultaneously record your processes as well as your spoken audio. We'll talk more in depth regarding Camtasia a little later in the episode. Google Calendar: This is free and you already have it if you have a Gmail account. If you don't, you can just go to www.google.com/calendar to get it. It's great because you can synchronize it to your iPhone and iPad as well as share it with other users, such as spouses and business partners. It will send you popups/emails for upcoming appointments. Don't schedule EVERYTHING you do on your calendar-you'll just end up creating a glorified to-do list. Use it for essential appointments, such as meetings and webinars, etc. Don't forget to check out Robert's Book, 100 Time Savers for more useful advice. Essential Software/Programs for Internet Marketers Camtasia Studio (again): You can record a full video and save that but also have the option of saving just the audio portion. You could use the audio for doing something like a podcast. You can even record tutorial videos or "helper videos" just for yourself. If Robert has a particular process he has to go through, that he doesn't want to forget, he can record the entire process and then post that video to YouTube. Some examples would be how to convert a .wav audio file to an MP3 file: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o4Z7_47zToA ... Or how to convert any graphics file into a JPEG thumbnail: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hy75zatrDcQ ... Or how to upload a book to CreateSpace: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m_wRgqMasgk Now that you have this process, you don't have to write it down on a piece of paper or make extensive notes. Your entire tutorial is accessible anywhere you can access internet to get to YouTube. Access Robert's video tutorials at his YouTube channel. Be sure to subscribe too. GoToWebinar: Use this software for setting up all of your webinars. WordPress Most all other things that Robert needs to accomplish in his business can be taken care of through WordPress and various WordPress plugins. He uses a plugin called Paper Template to create landing pages, opt-in pages, download pages, thank you pages, etc. He uses a WordPress plugin called Member Genius to take payments in combination with PayPal. Then, he uses a plugin called Backup Creator to back up his WordPress sites and if you back it up to another place (i.e. your hard drive, etc.), you've now cloned that site and you can use it over and over (with editing) to produce multiple sites. These are all plugin's that Robert has created and you can get all of them in one package by joining Income Machine today. Additional Software/Programs You'll Find Useful GoodSync: Developed by the same creators of RoboForm, it allows you to synchronize your folders with FTP websites, Dropbox or Amazon S3 buckets. Let's look at this scenario: When you record a video that you want to put online (like your membership site), first you have to record it, then you have to edit it, then you need to produce it and save it to a folder on your computer, then you would have to open up an FTP program (like FileZilla), then you have to drag the file over and wait for i...

BSD Now
92: BSD After Midnight

BSD Now

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 3, 2015 67:14


Coming up this week, we'll be chatting with Lucas Holt, founder of MidnightBSD. It's a slightly lesser-known fork of FreeBSD, with a focus on easy desktop use. We'll find out what's different about it and why it was created. Answers to your emails and all this week's news, on BSD Now - the place to B.. SD. This episode was brought to you by Headlines Zocker, it's like docker on FreeBSD (http://toni.yweb.fi/2015/05/zocker-diy-docker-on-freebsd.html) Containment is always a hot topic, and docker has gotten a lot of hype in Linux land in the last couple years - they're working on native FreeBSD support at the moment This blog post is about a docker-like script, mainly for ease-of-use, that uses only jails and ZFS in the base system In total, it's 1,500 lines of shell script (https://github.com/toddnni/zocker) The post goes through the process of using the tool, showing off all the subcommands and explaining the configuration In contrast to something like ezjail, Zocker utilizes the jail.conf system in the 10.x branch *** Patrol Read in OpenBSD (https://www.marc.info/?l=openbsd-cvs&m=143285964216970&w=4) OpenBSD has recently imported some new code to support the Patrol Read (http://www.intel.com/support/motherboards/server/sb/CS-028742.htm) function of some RAID controllers In a nutshell, Patrol Read is a function that lets you check the health of your drives in the background, similar to a zpool "scrub" operation The goal is to protect file integrity by detecting drive failures before they can damage your data It detects bad blocks and prevents silent data corruption, while marking any bad sectors it finds *** HAMMER 2 improvements (http://lists.dragonflybsd.org/pipermail/commits/2015-May/418653.html) DragonFly BSD has been working on the second generation HAMMER FS It now uses LZ4 compression by default, which we've been big fans of in ZFS They've also switched to a faster CRC (http://lists.dragonflybsd.org/pipermail/commits/2015-May/418652.html) algorithm, further improving HAMMER's performance, especially (http://lists.dragonflybsd.org/pipermail/commits/2015-May/418651.html) when using iSCSI *** FreeBSD foundation May update (https://www.freebsdfoundation.org/press/2015mayupdate.pdf) The FreeBSD foundation has published another update newsletter, detailing some of the things they've been up to lately In it, you'll find some development status updates: notably more ARM64 work and the addition of 64 bit Linux emulation Some improvements were also made to FreeBSD's release building process for non-X86 architectures There's also an AsiaBSDCon recap that covers some of the presentations and the dev events They also have an accompanying blog post (http://freebsdfoundation.blogspot.com/2015/05/another-data-center-site-visit-nyi.html) where Glen Barber talks about more sysadmin and clusteradm work at NYI *** Interview - Lucas Holt - questions@midnightbsd.org (mailto:questions@midnightbsd.org) / @midnightbsd (https://twitter.com/midnightbsd) MidnightBSD News Roundup The launchd on train is never coming (http://homepage.ntlworld.com/jonathan.deboynepollard/FGA/launchd-on-bsd.html) Replacement of init systems has been quite controversial in the last few years Fortunately, the BSDs have avoided most of that conflict thus far, but there have been a few efforts made to port launchd from OS X (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Launchd) This blog post details the author's opinion on why he thinks we're never going to have launchd in any of the BSDs Email us your thoughts on the matter *** Native SSH comes to… Windows (http://blogs.msdn.com/b/looking_forward_microsoft__support_for_secure_shell_ssh1/archive/2015/06/02/managing-looking-forward-microsoft-support-for-secure-shell-ssh.aspx) In what may be the first (and last) mention of Microsoft on BSD Now... They've just recently announced that PowerShell will get native SSH support in the near future It's not based on the commercial SSH either, it's the same one from OpenBSD that we already use everywhere Up until now, interacting between BSD and Windows has required something like PuTTY, WinSCP, FileZilla or Cygwin - most of which are based on really outdated versions The announcement also promises that they'll be working with the OpenSSH community, so we'll see how many Microsoft-submitted patches make it upstream (or how many donations (http://www.openbsdfoundation.org/index.html) they make) *** Moving to FreeBSD (http://www.textplain.net/blog/2015/moving-to-freebsd/) This blog post describes a long-time Linux user's first BSD switching experience The author first talks about his Linux journey, eventually coming to love the more customization-friendly systems, but the journey ended with systemd After doing a bit of research, he gave FreeBSD a try and ended up liking it - the rest of the post mostly covers why that is He also plans to write about his experience with other BSDs, and is writing some tutorials too - we'll check in with him again later on *** Feedback/Questions Adam writes in (http://slexy.org/view/s29hS2cI05) Dan writes in (http://slexy.org/view/s20VRZYBsw) Ivan writes in (http://slexy.org/view/s20bumJ5u9) Josh writes in (http://slexy.org/view/s21BU6Pnka) ***

La Tecnología para todos
19. Patrón Modelo Vista Controlador

La Tecnología para todos

Play Episode Listen Later May 21, 2015 21:53


Ya vamos por el capítulo 19 y hoy veremos que es el patrón de arquitectura MVC (Modelo Vista Controlador). Se trata de un patrón muy extendido entre programadores en entorno web y en aplicaciones nativas, que nos permite separar las capas de presentación, lógica y acceso a datos. Es fundamental para reutilizar, estructurar y ordenar el código en una aplicación.Pero antes de nada como siempre, el formulario, mandarnos vuestras sugerencias, quejas o peticiones y la lista de distribución para que os suscribáis, así podréis estar al día en todo lo que hablamos en programarfacil.com.Como ya hemos comentado con anterioridad MVC es un patrón muy extendido entre los programadores de diferentes tecnologías. Es fundamental para tener un código legible y estructurado. Cuando comenzamos a desarrollar una aplicación, nunca sabemos hasta donde va a llegar su propósito, es fundamental que desde un principio tengamos claro cómo estructurar nuestro código. Si no lo hacemos será muy complicado aplicar cualquier patrón en mitad del proyecto y, creerme, os será muy útil en muchos proyectos.Si que es cierto que este tipo de patrones pretenden ser una guía y no son estrictos en su uso. Cada programador puede adaptar su manera de programar a cualquier patrón conocido o simplemente crear uno propio. No hay que volverse loco con toda la documentación que hay al respecto, simplemente tenemos que ser muy organizados y lo más importante saber cual el objetivo de nuestro proyecto.La vistaLa vista es el módulo de la aplicación que interactúa con el usuario. Recibe los datos, ejecuta eventos y muestra la información que recibe del controlador. En la programación web forma parte del Front-end y normalmente está programado en HTML, JavaScript y CSS. Aplicando esta arquitectura nos resultará mas o menos sencillo, dependerá de cómo programe el desarrollador, cambiar cualquier elemento de la vista para utilizar otra tecnología, cambiar el diseño, añadir módulos, etc...El controladorEl controlador es el enlace entre la vista y el modelo. Por un lado recibe la información y eventos que envía la vista validando la información. Por otro lado, se pondrá en contacto con el modelo para transmitir la información susceptible de ser almacenada en algún sistema de almacenamiento de datos. Por norma general en esta capa es donde se implementa la lógica de negocio aunque seguramente veréis proyectos donde parte de la lógica está implementada en el modelo e incluso en la vista.El modeloAquí es donde encontramos la estructura de nuestros datos, las clases y entidades, en definitiva, el modelo de datos. Digamos que esta capa es la que nutre a la vista y al controlador de la información tanto a nivel de estructura como a nivel de datos. En esta capa se produce la comunicación con la base de datos. Si lo pensáis bien imaginaros que accedéis a la base de datos desde las tres capas y mañana, por lo que sea, se decide que el motor de base de datos pasa de MySQL a SQL Server, algo nada descabellado. Si vosotros habéis seguido el patrón MVC simplemente tendréis que tocar la capa de acceso a datos, el modelo, mientras que si habéis accedido a esa base de datos desde diferentes capas, tendréis que tocar todas y cada una de ellas. El tema se puede complicar mucho. En esta capa se suelen utilizar los ORM, esto hace que sea más fácil todavía migrar de un motor de base de datos a otro, en algunos casos con solo cambiar una línea de código es suficiente.Por último deciros que este patrón no solo se utiliza en el desarrollo web. Para aplicaciones de escritorio para Windows tenemos un patrón similar que se llama MVVM (Model View View-Model). Es un patrón que se utiliza con las aplicaciones realizadas en WPF. Uno de los frameworks más famosos que se utilizan para aplicar este patrón con Visual Studio es MVVM Light Toolkit.Recurso del díafilezilla-project.orgOs presentamos, si alguno no lo conocéis, el Filezilla. Se trata de un software (cliente FTP) que nos permite subir archivos a nuestro sitio web, ya sea código HTML, CSS, JavaScript, PHP, ASP, etc... o imágenes, audio, vídeo o documentos. Es un software Open Source (código libre), gratuito y muy sencillo de usar. Permite conexiones seguras y guardar las conexiones que más utilizamos. Sin duda alguna es una herramienta indispensable para cualquier desarrollador web.Pues hasta aquí el programa de hoy os agradecemos todas las valoraciones que habéis dejado en iTunes, ivoox y Spreaker nos vemos en el siguiente capítulo.

TyfloPodcast

O możliwościach tego darmowego klienta FTP rozmawiają Robert Łabędzki i Patryk Faliszewski.

TechByter Worldwide (formerly Technology Corner) with Bill Blinn
TechByter Worldwide 2015.02.15: FileZilla Is The Best FTP Client if You Can Get It; Safe Communications with Open Wi-Fi Hotspots; Short Circuits; and Spare Parts.

TechByter Worldwide (formerly Technology Corner) with Bill Blinn

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 14, 2015 19:56


Sometimes downloading open-source software such as FileZilla can be dangerous because the host site adds unwanted applications to the installer; to avoid giving away important information when using a Wi-Fi hotspot, it's a good idea to run a virtual-private network application; in Short Circuits: Microsoft pushes into mobile computing and unreasonable fear that televisions spy on their owners; on the website only Spare Parts takes note of a new NASA photo project, the Drones for Good winners have been announced, and a service you've probably never heard of is about to shut down.

The Genealogy Guys Podcast & Genealogy Connection
The Genealogy Guys Podcast #265 - 2014 April 27

The Genealogy Guys Podcast & Genealogy Connection

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 29, 2014 60:24


The Genealogy Guys would like to welcome its new sponsor, MyHeritage.com! Genealogical Publishing Company has released a new Genealogy at a Glance (GAAG) laminated resource document written by George G. Morgan titled FamilySearch.org Research. This joins George's recent Ancestry.com Research (GAAG) and 23 other titles in the series. They are available from the publisher and at Amazon.com. Drew reports on the status of the Dozier School project which is researching the remains of students who died and were buried at the Arthur G. Dozier School for Boys in Marianna, Florida, during the 20th century. The genealogy news includes: FamilySearch has added more than 1.2 million images of Italian civil registration records. RootsMagic has its own YouTube channel at https://www.youtube.com/user/RootsMagicTV. They have just added a new video called “Using Charting Companion with RootsMagic The Genealogical Research Institute of Pittsburgh (GRIP) has announced 2015 plans for two institute weeks of its popular courses. The Federation of Genealogical Societies (FGS) has announced its calls for Award Nominations, with a nomination deadline of June 15, 2014. Details can be found at http://www.fgs.org/cpage.php?pt=56awards Professional genealogist and house historian Marian Pierre-Louis has developed a new genealogy show in audio (podcast) format called The Genealogy Professional. The show shares the experiences of genealogy professionals in developing and running their businesses. Members of AARP can obtain a 30% discount on an annual subscription to the Ancestry.com World Explorer package. Please see the details and terms of the discount at http://discounts.aarp.org/offer/ancestry-com/deal/707823/uSource/MTFP The National Archives in the UK announced that Operation War Diary, a key project in their First World War 100 program, won a Best of the Web Award at the Museums and the Web Conference in Baltimore, Maryland. The “Family Names of the United Kingdom Project” has completed the first phase of a project to create a database with surnames researched and explained. The project is being conducted by a team from the University of the West of England, Bristol. Details are available at http://www1.uwe.ac.uk/cahe/research/bristolcentreforlinguistics/fanuk.aspx. Drew reviews Families of Southeastern Georgia by Jack N. Averitt. The book is a reprint of a 1964 book and is published by Genealogical Publishing Company using its Clearfield Publishing imprint. The news includes: Doug asks about some available books about land records. The Guys make some suggestions, including one titled Digging for Ancestors: An In-Depth Guide to Land Records by Michelle Goodrum. Richard responded to Beverly's inquiry (in episode #264) with suggestions about software to use to create a genealogy website and free hosting possibilities. Richard uses Serif's WebPlus X7 software and uses Filezilla to upload the data. He suggests several hosting options. He included links to three of his sites: FreePages at RootsWeb at http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~yehle/; Comcast at http://home.comcast.net/~ryehle/; and GoDaddy at http://yehlegenealogy.info/ Debbie responded to our call for suggestions (in episode #264) for the researcher whose 82-year-old mother discovered through DNA testing that her legal father was not her biological father. Debbie also asked about the book reviewed in episode #263, Finding Your Irish Ancestors in New York City by Joseph Buggy, and whether it also included information about immigrants from Northern Ireland. Caroleen expands on The Guys' answer in episode #260 about LDS temple work done for individuals entered into the FamilySearch Family Tree. Chris/Jenny responded to Sue's question (in episode #260) about locating a diary of the ship Shannon sold to a museum in the U.S. Chad asks about the DNA testing he had done with DNA Tribes into his South American Ancestry and the results he received. Barbara suggests checking out the GenealogyInTime Magazine at www.genealogyintime.com Brett asks about becoming a credentialed genealogist and a professional researcher, and The Guys offer some suggestions.

DIY Microsoft Azure Troubleshooting  (MP4) - Channel 9
Troubleshooting Errors in Microsoft Azure Web Sites

DIY Microsoft Azure Troubleshooting (MP4) - Channel 9

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 4, 2014 7:21


This video is part one of a four part video series on diagnostics in Microsoft Azure Web Sites. In this video, you'll learn how to troubleshoot application errors in Microsoft Azure Web Sites.Other Videos:Part 2: Remote DebuggingPart 3: Failed Request TracingPart 4: Application Logging and CrashesAdditional Resources:How to Monitor Web SitesQuick Links for this Video:[00:49] Configuring Detailed Error Messages[02:07] Logging into Your Site with FileZilla[04:37] Downloading the Detailed Error Message[05:15] Using Web Matrix to Edit a File

DIY Microsoft Azure Troubleshooting  (HD) - Channel 9
Troubleshooting Errors in Microsoft Azure Web Sites

DIY Microsoft Azure Troubleshooting (HD) - Channel 9

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 4, 2014 7:21


This video is part one of a four part video series on diagnostics in Microsoft Azure Web Sites. In this video, you'll learn how to troubleshoot application errors in Microsoft Azure Web Sites.Other Videos:Part 2: Remote DebuggingPart 3: Failed Request TracingPart 4: Application Logging and CrashesAdditional Resources:How to Monitor Web SitesQuick Links for this Video:[00:49] Configuring Detailed Error Messages[02:07] Logging into Your Site with FileZilla[04:37] Downloading the Detailed Error Message[05:15] Using Web Matrix to Edit a File

BE 3380 Web Design Tutorials

This tutorial will show you how to move files from your computer to the Appalachian State web server using FTP tools like FileZilla. You will need these skills moving forward through the upcoming tutorials.

Pensadores Criativos
FalaFreela#30 - Legalize Já

Pensadores Criativos

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 6, 2012 42:59


A questão é controversa desde a primeira versão do Windows, mas é também muito presente. Por falta de conhecimento (como no já clássico trote/ligação para o help-desk da Microsoft onde mãe e filha exigem que a estrelinha azul que avisa que a cópia de seu XP é falta seja retirada), costume ou até mesmo má intenção mesmo, pouco ou nada fazemos para regularizar a situação de nossos softwares.Em um bate-papo sem a intenção de julgar ninguém e muito menos c#$%agar regra nenhuma, Mauro Amaral, Humberto Oliveira & Carolina Vigna-Maru buscaram apresentar respostas básicas para três questões fundamentais: O que é um programa pirata? Porque pirateamos? Como trabalhar com o máximo de programas gratuitos legais?Confira essas e outras dicas na meia hora mais valiosa do seu dia. E use o espaço de comentários para nos ajudar a responder essas questões, principalmente a última!E para não dizer que não falamos de referências:Listinha da Carol de Sofwares gratuitos: 7-zip, Artweaver, Audacity, AVG Free, Dicionário Aulete Digital, EasyCleaner, FileZilla, Firefox, Inkscape, Media Burner, Notepad ++, OpenOffice, Opera, PSPad editor, Sib icon editor, Skype, Thunderbird, WinAmp, WinkMinha humilde resenha para o livro "A Cabeça de Steve Jobs", lá no Carreirasolo.orgA Bibilografia "modafoca" que a Carol separou sobre o tema empreendedorismo:BANGS, D.H., Jr. The business planning guide, 8th ed. Upstart, Chicago, 1998.BENNIS, Warren. A invenção de uma vida. Rio de Janeiro: Campus, São Paulo: Publifolha, 1999.BERRY, T.: Hurdle: The book on business planning. Palo Alto Software, Oregon, 1998.BIRLEY, Sue e Muzyka, Daniel F. Dominando os Desafios do Empreendedor - Financial Times. São Paulo: Makron Books, 2001.BLOCK, Z.; MACMILLAN, I.C.: Corporate venturing. Creating new business within the firm. Harvard Business Scholl Press, Boston - MA, 1995.BRITTO, Francisco; WEVER, Luiz. Empreendedores brasileiros: vivendo e aprendendo com grandes nomes. 2. ed. Rio de Janeiro: Campus, 2003.BROADHURST, T.: History of science park development and the existing pattern. In: Worral, B. (editor). Setting up a science park, UKSPA, 1988.BUSINESS INCUBATION WORKS: The results of the impact of incubator investment study. NBIA, National Business Incubation Association, 1997.CHIAVENATO, Idalberto. Empreendedorismo - Dando asas ao espírito empreendedor. Rio de Janeiro: Saraiva, 2004.DEGEN, R. J. O empreendedor, fundamentos da iniciativa empresarial. São Paulo: Mc Graw-Hill, 1989.DERTOUZOS, M.: Four pillars of innovation. MIT's Magazine of Innovation Technology Review. Nov-Dez. 1999.DORNELAS, José Carlos Assis. Empreendedorismo corporativo: como ser empreendedor, inovar e se diferenciar em organizações estabelecidas. Rio de Janeiro: Elsevier, 2003.DRUCKER, Peter F. Administração em tempos de grandes mudanças. São Paulo: Pioneira, 1995.DRUCKER, Peter F. Inovação e Espírito Empreendedor. São Paulo: Pioneira, 1987.HISRICH, Robert D.; PETERS, Michael P. Empreendedorismo. 5. ed., Porto Alegre: Bookman, 2004.KOTTER, John. Liderando Mudança. Rio de Janeiro: Campus, São Paulo: Publifolha, 1999. LALKAKA, R.; BISHOP, J.: Business incubator in economic development. An initial assessment in industrializing countries. United Nations Programme. New York, 1996.LASHER, W.: The perfect business plan made simple.

FalaFreela - Carreirasolo.org
FalaFreela#30 - Legalize Já

FalaFreela - Carreirasolo.org

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 5, 2012 42:59


A questão é controversa desde a primeira versão do Windows, mas é também muito presente. Por falta de conhecimento (como no já clássico trote/ligação para o help-desk da Microsoft onde mãe e filha exigem que a estrelinha azul que avisa que a cópia de seu XP é falta seja retirada), costume ou até mesmo má intenção mesmo, pouco ou nada fazemos para regularizar a situação de nossos softwares. Em um bate-papo sem a intenção de julgar ninguém e muito menos c#$%agar regra nenhuma, Mauro Amaral, Humberto Oliveira & Carolina Vigna-Maru buscaram apresentar respostas básicas para três questões fundamentais: O que é um programa pirata? Porque pirateamos? Como trabalhar com o máximo de programas gratuitos legais? Confira essas e outras dicas na meia hora mais valiosa do seu dia. E use o espaço de comentários para nos ajudar a responder essas questões, principalmente a última! E para não dizer que não falamos de referências: Listinha da Carol de Sofwares gratuitos: 7-zip, Artweaver, Audacity, AVG Free, Dicionário Aulete Digital, EasyCleaner, FileZilla, Firefox, Inkscape, Media Burner, Notepad ++, OpenOffice, Opera, PSPad editor, Sib icon editor, Skype, Thunderbird, WinAmp, Wink Minha humilde resenha para o livro "A Cabeça de Steve Jobs", lá no Carreirasolo.org A Bibilografia "modafoca" que a Carol separou sobre o tema empreendedorismo: BANGS, D.H., Jr. The business planning guide, 8th ed. Upstart, Chicago, 1998. BENNIS, Warren. A invenção de uma vida. Rio de Janeiro: Campus, São Paulo: Publifolha, 1999. BERRY, T.: Hurdle: The book on business planning. Palo Alto Software, Oregon, 1998. BIRLEY, Sue e Muzyka, Daniel F. Dominando os Desafios do Empreendedor - Financial Times. São Paulo: Makron Books, 2001. BLOCK, Z.; MACMILLAN, I.C.: Corporate venturing. Creating new business within the firm. Harvard Business Scholl Press, Boston - MA, 1995. BRITTO, Francisco; WEVER, Luiz. Empreendedores brasileiros: vivendo e aprendendo com grandes nomes. 2. ed. Rio de Janeiro: Campus, 2003. BROADHURST, T.: History of science park development and the existing pattern. In: Worral, B. (editor). Setting up a science park, UKSPA, 1988. BUSINESS INCUBATION WORKS: The results of the impact of incubator investment study. NBIA, National Business Incubation Association, 1997. CHIAVENATO, Idalberto. Empreendedorismo - Dando asas ao espírito empreendedor. Rio de Janeiro: Saraiva, 2004. DEGEN, R. J. O empreendedor, fundamentos da iniciativa empresarial. São Paulo: Mc Graw-Hill, 1989. DERTOUZOS, M.: Four pillars of innovation. MIT's Magazine of Innovation Technology Review. Nov-Dez. 1999. DORNELAS, José Carlos Assis. Empreendedorismo corporativo: como ser empreendedor, inovar e se diferenciar em organizações estabelecidas. Rio de Janeiro: Elsevier, 2003. DRUCKER, Peter F. Administração em tempos de grandes mudanças. São Paulo: Pioneira, 1995. DRUCKER, Peter F. Inovação e Espírito Empreendedor. São Paulo: Pioneira, 1987. HISRICH, Robert D.; PETERS, Michael P. Empreendedorismo. 5. ed., Porto Alegre: Bookman, 2004. KOTTER, John. Liderando Mudança. Rio de Janeiro: Campus, São Paulo: Publifolha, 1999. LALKAKA, R.; BISHOP, J.: Business incubator in economic development. An initial assessment in industrializing countries. United Nations Programme. New York, 1996. LASHER, W.: The perfect business plan made simple. Ed.: Doubleday, New York, 1994. PINCHOT, Gifford; PELLMAN, Ron. Intra-empreendedorismo na prática: um guia de inovação nos negócios. Rio de Janeiro: Elsevier, 2004. RICE, M.P.; MATTHEWS, J.B.: Growing new ventures, creating new jobs, Quorum Books, 1995. ROBBINS, Stephen Paul. Administração – mudanças e perspectives. São Paulo: Saraiva, 2000. SAHLMAN,W.A.; BHIDE,A.; STEVENSON, H.: Business fundamentals as taught at the Harvard Business School. Financial entrepreneurial ventures. Harvard Business Scholl Publishing, Boston - MA, 1998. SMILOR, R.W.; Gill Jr, M.D.: The new business incubator, Lexington Books, 1986. Set-list: ouvimos de forma saudosa nesse episódio faixas de dois álbuns de Michael Jackson, que partiu definitivamente para Never Land no último dia 25/06/2009, aos 50 anos. Abrimos com Thriller, do álbum de mesmo nome. Nos E-mails tivemos Don't Stop 'til You Get Enough (Of The Wall). Bloco 1: Human Nature (a minha favorita do álbum Thrillher). Bloco 2: Billie Jean (Thrillher). Bloco 3: abrindo com I Wanna be Staring Something e seguindo em BG com P.Y.T (Thriller). Para finalizar, uma demo caseira de Billie Jean. O que você pode fazer para participar: Publique seu perfil ou post no Carreirasolo.org: Página de publicação Envie e-mail de voz, sua dúvida ou sugestão para: carreirasolo.org@gmail.com Assine no iTunes: http://feeds.feedburner.com/FalaFreela

OpenCharla
OpenCharla 2x01 - IPv6 Launch, SOPA/PIPA, Plone, WPS, FileZilla, HTTPS

OpenCharla

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 29, 2012 63:59


IPv6 Launch, SOPA/PIPA, Plone, WPS, FileZilla, HTTPS

Filezilla
ftp - filezilla

Filezilla

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 12, 2010 1:37


http://espace.mika.free.fr/PODCAST/ftp/ftp.m4v Tue, 12 Jan 2010 23:30:26 +0100 Podcasting no

Ace-Websites.com
How to Install Filezilla ftp Software

Ace-Websites.com

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 26, 2009 8:49


How to Install Filezilla ftp Software