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Mark Erikson, Redux maintainer and a senior front-end engineer at replay.io discusses why Redux remains a powerful tool for state management in 2024, the evolution of Redux Toolkit, and the common pitfalls developers face. Links https://blog.isquaredsoftware.com https://twitter.com/acemarke https://github.com/markerikson https://stackoverflow.com/users/62937/markerikson https://linkedin.com/in/markerikson We want to hear from you! How did you find us? Did you see us on Twitter? In a newsletter? Or maybe we were recommended by a friend? Let us know by sending an email to our producer, Emily, at emily.kochanekketner@logrocket.com (mailto:emily.kochanekketner@logrocket.com), or tweet at us at PodRocketPod (https://twitter.com/PodRocketpod). Follow us. Get free stickers. Follow us on Apple Podcasts, fill out this form (https://podrocket.logrocket.com/get-podrocket-stickers), and we'll send you free PodRocket stickers! What does LogRocket do? LogRocket provides AI-first session replay and analytics that surfaces the UX and technical issues impacting user experiences. Start understand where your users are struggling by trying it for free at [LogRocket.com]. Try LogRocket for free today.(https://logrocket.com/signup/?pdr) Special Guest: Mark Erikson.
In this episode, I talk to Alvin Bryan from Contentful. Alvin is a Developer Advocate and Front-End Engineer who is into privacy and owning your own data, as well as the television show "Billions". We discuss a number of topics in this episode like Developer relations, privacy and data, and some of the cool web technologies out there like Astro and Svelte, and much more! Transcripts can be found at https://toddl.dev/podcast/transcripts/bryan Show Notes https://alvin.codes/ - Alvin's Personal Site https://www.contentful.com/ - Contentful https://astro.build/ - Astro https://svelte.dev/ - Svelte https://www.signal.org/ - Signal App https://proton.me/ - ProtonMail https://twitter.com/alvinbnet - Alvin on Twitter https://alv.sh/github - Alvin on GitHub https://fosstodon.org/@alvin - Alvin on Mastodon --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/frontendnerdery/support
Vanessa Vun, Front-End Engineer at SciShield, interviews AmyJune Hineline, Drupal Core Mentor, Drupal Project, and a co-lead of Accessibility talks. They discuss how open source can elevate careers for those who have been historically marginalized. They speak about mentoring as well.
Arely joins the show to talk about her origin story, how she grew up in New Mexico and joined her science club to moving to New York City and joining Amazon as a Front-End Engineer. We discuss a Twitch community that her friend started during the pandemic, and the joy she gets watching people come together. We also discuss Techqueria, a community of Latinx in Tech. Discussed Links https://mimosa.gg/ (Mimosa Twitch Streamer's Website) https://techqueria.org/ (Techqueria)
@AlanGDavalos and @cipto.hartanto talk about the difficulties of working in a different language and how to overcome them.
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Episode 2 features Annie Liew, also known as @anniebombanie, a Front-end Engineering Lead at Pastel, for a discussion on life at an early stage startup. In this episode we learn a bit about Annie's journey, as well as the following topics:Tell us about the company you're at and their productWhat's it like working at an early stage startup? Were you scared to take the plunge into the startup world?Pros and cons of being on such a small team? Tips for folks in a similar position?What are you focusing on at the moment, main goals for 2022?What technologies / frameworks / tools are you currently learning or really excited about right now?Annie comes from a multidisciplinary design & teaching background. She's currently the Front-end Engineering Lead at Pastel and is active in both the design and developer community. In her free time, she reads, travels and makes CSS art!Website: https://anniebombanie.comPolywork: https://updates.anniebombanie.comBlog: https://blog.anniebombanie.com
When Erik started his coding career, several companies rejected him. Today, he works as a Front End Engineer at Amazon Web Services! Can you imagine how different things might have been had Erik let rejection block him? In this episode, Erik talks about how to think about rejection so it doesn't bother you, the tactics he would use to get a junior developer job in 2021, and how to glide into a recruiter's inbox. Finally, Erik compares React and Vue, and talks about the job prospects for each.
Chris Ferdinandi helps people learn vanilla JavaScript. He believes there's a simpler, more resilient way to make things for the web. His developer tips newsletter is read by thousands of developers each weekday which you can check out at GoMakeThings.com.In college, Chris had a lot of curiosities and even 4-5 majors before landing in Anthropology. He loved studying the content, but the work wasn't exactly interesting to him. His dad suggested he explore the world of HR (Human Resources) and he did, for quite a while in fact.Interested in helping people solve problems within the world of HR, he started a blog and began teaching himself WordPress, HTML, and CSS. As he was learning but still working at his 9-5 job, he and his HR manager had the idea to create a scavenger hunt app to help new hires learn more about the company. The problem was that it was WAY too expensive to outsource and have someone else build. So Chris was given the opportunity to build it himself! And while creating that app, he discovered the joy of building and creating something with code. He has since gone on to become a Sr. Front-End Engineer! He has also developed deep expertise on Vanilla JS and teaches people how to create powerful and exciting things with it!We discuss how to know when you're ready to apply for your first web development job. Chris's advice is to apply even sooner than when you feel ready! He encourages folks to teach others, help newbies, and blog about your learning to help others on their journey as it can help you find a job too! Resources: GoMakeThings.comFollow Chris on Twitter @chrisferdinandiVanilla JS Podcast Vanilla JS AcademyDeveloper Tips NewsletterWe Belong Here Podcast:Follow Lauren on Twitter @LoLoCoding: https://twitter.com/LoLoCodingWeBelongPodcast.com https://webelongpodcast.com/Subscribe on Apple: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/we-belong-here-lessons-from-unconventional-paths-to-tech/id1455784370#episodeGuid=Buzzsprout-6495208Subscribe on Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/0YilCmVxb3t9dHAYCQoExCWe Belong Here Discord CommunityJoin us on Discord Server today! bit.ly/webelongdiscord
Apa aja sih yang dikerjain sama seorang Frond End Engineer? Lalu bagaimana mereka bisa terus up to date dengan teknologi terkini? Di episode ini, kita ngobrol bareng Farah Oktarina tentang perannya sebagai Front End Engineer dan pengalamannya aktif dalam berbagai kegiatan komunitas perempuan di teknologi, khususnya di Kota Semarang.
Apa aja sih yang dikerjain sama seorang Frond End Engineer? Lalu bagaimana mereka bisa terus up to date dengan teknologi terkini? Di episode ini, kita ngobrol bareng Farah Oktarina tentang perannya sebagai Front End Engineer dan pengalamannya aktif dalam berbagai kegiatan komunitas perempuan di teknologi, khususnya di Kota Semarang.
Evyatar, a Front End Engineer at Facebook and the author of the Vest validations framework joins Ari Koponen on the Frontend Greatness podcast to talk about "DX is UX." In this episode: - Why developer experience and ergonomics matter? - How you build tools and libraries that developers love to use? - How are DX and UX principles similar. --- Episode Notes Social - Evyatar's Twitter: https://twitter.com/AlushEvyatar - Ari's Twitter: https://twitter.com/apkoponen Show Notes - Evyatar's blog post on DX: https://medium.com/fiverr-engineering/creating-apis-for-the-human-developer-c0f51a6d9366 - Vest: https://github.com/ealush/vest - Yup: https://github.com/jquense/yup - Zod: https://github.com/colinhacks/zod - Joi: https://github.com/sideway/joi Evyatar's Recommendations - "The Design of Everyday Things" by Donald A. Norman: https://www.amazon.com/Design-Everyday-Things-Donald-Norman/dp/1452654123 - Christoph Nakazawa's blog: https://cpojer.net/
Jack is a twenty-something Front End Engineer at Google. In this episode, you will learn from his experience as he traveled an ambitious and twisty career path that, ultimately, landed him a high-impact job on the Google Chrome Developers team.Contents 00:00 How did the opportunity at Google come about? 02:39 What it's like working at Google? 04:01 The decision to become a professional developer 05:52 Do you need a computer science degree to work at Google? 9:23 Becoming a speaker 17:31 Publishing a book at 21 21:38 Finding work you love 27:00 Front end engineer vs. developer? 28:57 How Jack got into Google 31:20 Google developer interview process 34:08 How to change jobs when you already have one 37:03 What it's like at Google 38:41 Quick-fire questions
My guest today is Irina Iskrenova. Irina is a former psychologist turned front-end engineer. In this episode, Irina unpacks how she switched careers from psychology to development. The career transition was not a trivial decision for her, Irina didn't want to leave her career in psychology, she loved the field and still does. After taking some time off after her master's degree to give herself some time to think about what she wanted, she decided to give programming a try. For Irina, the process of learning to code was not only about gaining technical skills, but it was also a period of deep introspection and reflection. A period when she had to make peace with the fact that she was going to become a psychologist and reconcile not seeing the career change as a failure but instead as a positive direction that her life had taken. Links mentioned in the episode: https://es.linkedin.com/in/irina-iskrenova-a9b3ab1b3 Twitter: @irin_ska Irina's learning radar: http://bit.ly/3vNcfnS
Today's guest is Fiona Spruill, Chief Product Officer at Overstory.Overstory's mission is to monitor all of Earth's natural resources in real-time to reverse climate change. Its first project helps utilities track forest and vegetation growth to reduce the risk of wildfires and power outages by applying machine learning to satellite imagery. We are proud to be an Overstory investor!Prior to Overstory, Fiona was most recently COO at Meetup, and spent 14 years in journalism, in roles of increasing responsibility at The New York Times. In 2019, Fiona decided to transition into working on climate. Like so many, she found the transition to be a difficult one (because it is!), but she navigated it brilliantly, and landed in a terrific spot.This episode is meant for anyone else who is thinking about doing the same! It covers Fiona’s reasons for wanting to transition into working in climate tech, how she went about the process, lessons learned, and advice for others looking to head down a similar path.Enjoy the show! You can find me on twitter @jjacobs22 or @mcjpod and email at info@myclimatejourney.co, where I encourage you to share your feedback on episodes and suggestions for future topics or guests.Episode recorded February 24th, 2021Advice Fiona has for those looking to make a career transition:Narrow your focus as quickly as you can and being willing to pivotClimate is everything; therefore, no one is unqualified to work in climateTalk to as many people as you canLearning collectively through various projects such as Project Drawdown, On Deck Fellowships, Terra.do courses, and the MCJ podcast and membership If you are interested in connecting with Fiona, reach out to her via Twitter or LinkedIn.Overstory is hiring for a Front-End Engineer, Data Scientist, Data Engineer, and Marketing roles. Please check out their website: https://www.overstory.ai/
In this episode Alex Lee shares his journey in how he became a front-end developer, becoming a senior software engineer, and gives hints to his new job at amazon. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/chrisseantalks/support
How a Former Computer Science Major and Front End Engineer turned Entrepreneur was able to Freestyle His Lifestyle Follow Kevin Uuritia at voymedia.comJoin Destrie's *Daily* Newsletter:https://freestyleyourlifestyle.com/newsletterWhere he shares DAILY tips on creating your Freestyle Lifestyle.
Join my discord :D www.Discord.gg/Nighthawk Today on Dev Dive Jared Sartin joins me to talk about his career as a Front End Engineer for Cryptic studios working on Magic: Legends! We go in-depth on his education history, varied career path, and his creative outlets outside of gaming. Jared is also the Dungeon Master for a DnD show called Here Be Dragons and puts out a few episodes a month live on his Twitch. https://twitter.com/JaredSartin http://jared.sart.in/ https://www.twitch.tv/herebedragonsdnd Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/1pFgNnwI5nLzuL0ddZAbgS Apple Podcasts: https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/dev-dive/id1451324371?mt=2&ign-mpt=uo%3D4 https://www.Youtube.com/Nighthawk20000 https://www.Discord.gg/Nighthawk https://www.twitch.tv/Nighthawk20000 https://www.Twitter.com/BenDiPiero https://www.Twitter.com/DevDivePodcast
https://codingcat.dev/podcasts/1-6-jamstack-handbook-with-colby-fayock/ Colby Fayock Links https://twitter.com/colbyfayock https://www.youtube.com/colbyfayock https://www.twitch.tv/colbyfayock https://github.com/colbyfayock https://dribbble.com/colbyfayock https://www.instagram.com/colbyfayock/ https://www.colbyfayock.com/ Who is Colby Fayock? Colby helps others learn by doing through articles, videos, and courses about Javascript, React, and the static web. He is a Lead UX & Front End Engineer passionate about tackling challenges that can help save people’s lives and make the world a better place. What is Jamstack? Ask Colby some leading questions ;) What is the Jamstack? What makes the Jamstack so great? What are some of the challenges? How can you build a Jamstack site or app? What isn't the Jamstack great at? E-Commerce in the Jamstack Is it WordPress vs the Jamstack? (poke the fire!) Additional Mentioned Links https://auth0.com/ Purrfect Picks Colby Fayock Next.js WordPress Starter - Headless WordPress into a static Next.js app Applitools Eyes GitHub Action - Work in progress, the company I work at Alex Patterson https://www.disneyplus.com/series/wandavision/4SrN28ZjDLwH - WandaVision https://fauna.com/ - Fauna Database Brittney Postma Colbyashi Maru Use Shopping Cart - Nick DeJesus @dayhaysoos --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/purrfect-dev/message
Interested in a Front-End Engineering position at Canva? Vee Ciputra is a Front End Engineer at Canva who is currently in her last year of Software Engineering at the University of Auckland (UoA)! Vee started out as a Front-End intern at Canva, before getting an offer for a graduate role in April this year. Ryan and Arsham discuss the recruitment process, what it was like interning at Canva, and how she found doing an internship away from her home in Auckland! Vee also co-founded the Developers Society at UoA and discusses the process of building a society from the ground up.
Interested in a Front-End Engineering position at Canva? Vee Ciputra is a Front End Engineer at Canva who is currently in her last year of Software Engineering at the University of Auckland (UoA)! Vee started out as a Front-End intern at Canva, before getting an offer for a graduate role in April this year. Ryan and Arsham discuss the recruitment process, what it was like interning at Canva, and how she found doing an internship away from her home in Auckland! Vee also co-founded the Developers Society at UoA and discusses the process of building a society from the ground up.
Ben and I discuss being a creator, communication skills, and the importance of constructive disagreements.
Lenora Porter is a Front-End Engineer at Heroku, and she's joined by Sejal Parikh, who is a Product Manager for developer-focused content at Salesforce. Sejal started her technical career in QA, before transitioning into freelance (then full-time) technical writing. When she started her tech writing career, she really had no idea that the field existed, much less what it entailed. She grew to love the role, and the way it called upon her skills of writing and technical knowledge. Technical writers can be grouped into writing for three categories of users: end users, who need help with user interfaces; administrators, who configure what features are available for an organization's users; and developers, who use APIs to build their own tooling and workflows. In essence, technical writers craft content so that users don't end up stuck whenever they need to solve a problem. These writers often need more sophisticated and complex tooling than word processing software to publish their work. Even for the writers working with APIs, a background in development is not necessary to be a technical writer. Good use of language and an interest in helping others is enough. When Sejal was starting her career transition, she found plenty of videos on YouTube to help break down the tasks a technical writer might face. She also attended several conferences, and spoke to writers around her, to get a better sense of what the work entailed. Links from this episode Sejal volunteered for many years with the Ratan Tata Trust OpenAPI and RAML are just two of the formats used for documenting APIs The Society of Technical Writing and Write The Docs offer resources for aspiring tech writers
Following on from our series on accessibility at Belfast Design Week we thought we should learn more about web accessibility from the perspective of developers. Gareth catches up with Nicholas Murray, Senior User Interface Engineer, and Gareth Frazer a Front End Engineer from Allstate Northern Ireland. Nicholas and Gareth discuss web accessibility concerns drawn from their experience in their work from screen readers trying to translate HTML, The Equality Act 2010 and the best tools to check your website's accessibility.Get new episodes to your inbox every 2 weeks, as well as top jobs and local meetups -> Subscribe to our fortnightly newsletterWebTalksNI is hosted by Gareth Stirling - A recruiter & podcaster Follow WebTalksNI on Twitter / WebTalksNI is brought to you by Corvus Recruitment - www.corvus.jobs
In this episode we get to chat with Maria Lamardo: Speaker, Front End Engineer, Vue Vixens NC chapter leader, Community...
Este es un episodio especial acerca de Code for Venezuela, una organización creada en San Francisco para unir a toda la diáspora venezolana distribuida por el mundo; conectar experiencia técnica de esta red de profesionales venezolanos y así ayudar a su país usando soluciones basadas en tecnología. En este episodio, compilé algunas de las conversaciones que tuve con participantes del Hackathon de Code for Venezuela el 14 de Abril en San Francisco: Fabio Canache, Ingeniero de Software para Slack en el área de monetización, Johanna Figueira, Coordinadora de Marketing para Code for Venezuela, Eduardo Medina, Desarrollador para Democracy Earth, y Diego García, Manager de Ingeniería para Velocity. Hablamos acerca de sus trabajos, sus historias, y cómo Code for Venezuela y la tecnología están ayudando al país a salir adelante. Conéctate con ellos vía linkedin: Fabio CanacheJohanna FigueiraEduardo MedinaDiego Garcia Recursos mencionados: SF Hackathon - Code for VenezuelaAlumnUSB Médicos por Venezuela Human Rights WatchDemocracy Earth FoundationSovereign - herramienta de gobernanza(votación) de Democracy Earth que puede ser utilizada por distintas redesDr. Julio CastroSlackVlocity CourseraUdacity Nos quieres ayudar a crecer?: Déjanos una reseña en ITunesMandanos un mensaje a ConexionesPodcast@gmail.comCompártelo con un amigo Notas de la conversación con Fabio Canache: 04:06 – Dando la bienvenida a Fabio Canache04:38 – Cómo llegó Fabio a San Francisco05:30 – Qué es un Front End Engineer?06:31 – Como es el trabajo de Fabio en el área de Monetización de Slack FABIO EN EL ÁREA DE MONETIZACIÓN DE SLACK Fabio trabaja en el área de Monetización, es decir, área de pagos y todo lo referido a dinero de Slack. Tienen servicios gratis y pagos, y es un producto global. Su trabajo es crear interfaces para que usuarios puedan ver sus invoices y puedan pagar sus servicios, usando un software por escrito y teniendo en cuenta, entre otras cosas, impuestos y leyes de finanzas cuando escribe el código. La otra parte del equipo se encarga de membresía. Los usuarios tienen beneficios al pagar más y su misión es que vean el valor de su producto. “Hay productos que se pagan con gusto porque hacen el día a día mucho más fácil” 09:31 – Acerca de fair membership11:48 – Experiencia de Fabio en SF Hackathon - Code for Venezuela Notas de la conversación con Johanna Figueira: 13:15 – Dando la bienvenida a Johanna Figueira13:28 – Experiencia de haber estado en SF Hackathon - Code for Venezuela14:43 – Acerca de Johanna y cómo llegó a Code for Venezuela16:14 – La Misión de Code for Venezuela MISIÓN DE CODE FOR VENEZUELA La misión de Code for Venezuela fue organizar la diáspora que trabaja en Tech, en Silicon Valley, y hacer una conexión con Venezuela. Se buscó ayudar al país usando soluciones basadas en tecnología porque era el domino de todo el equipo, pero en el futuro quieren expandir sus áreas de solución. La misión del Hackathon fue crear una comunidad de colaboración para dar solución a los retos. 17:56 – Proceso para elegir los retos de cada grupo21:02 – Mayor sorpresa del Hackathon22:13 – Recuerdo que se lleva Johanna del Hackathon23:21 – Últimas palabras para la audiencia Notas de la conversación con Eduardo Medina: 23:57 – Acerca de Democracy Earth29:47 – Gente involucrada en Democracy Earth31:09 – Historia de Democracy Earth33:54 – Rol de eduardo dentro de la fundación ROL DE EDUARDO EN DEMOCRACY EARTH En la fundación hay dos “developers”, y Eduardo es uno de ellos. Desarrolla software de código abierto, y está en un período de mucha programación y trabajo por hacer. Cualquiera con expertise se puede acercar para ayudar. “En Democracy Earth creemos que una persona puede aprender a programar y hacer un cambio grande” 35:14 – Motivo del viaje de Eduardo de New York al Hackathon en San Francisco37:06 – Qué reto les tocó?38:46 – Recuerdo que se lleva Eduardo del Hackathon
Este es un episodio especial acerca de Code for Venezuela, una organización creada en San Francisco para unir a toda la diáspora venezolana distribuida por el mundo; conectar experiencia técnica de esta red de profesionales venezolanos y así ayudar a su país usando soluciones basadas en tecnología. En este episodio, compilé algunas de las conversaciones que tuve con participantes del Hackathon de Code for Venezuela el 14 de Abril en San Francisco: Fabio Canache, Ingeniero de Software para Slack en el área de monetización, Johanna Figueira, Coordinadora de Marketing para Code for Venezuela, Eduardo Medina, Desarrollador para Democracy Earth, y Diego García, Manager de Ingeniería para Velocity. Hablamos acerca de sus trabajos, sus historias, y cómo Code for Venezuela y la tecnología están ayudando al país a salir adelante. Conéctate con ellos vía linkedin: Fabio CanacheJohanna FigueiraEduardo MedinaDiego Garcia Recursos mencionados: SF Hackathon - Code for VenezuelaAlumnUSB Médicos por Venezuela Human Rights WatchDemocracy Earth FoundationSovereign - herramienta de gobernanza(votación) de Democracy Earth que puede ser utilizada por distintas redesDr. Julio CastroSlackVlocity CourseraUdacity Nos quieres ayudar a crecer?: Déjanos una reseña en ITunesMandanos un mensaje a ConexionesPodcast@gmail.comCompártelo con un amigo Notas de la conversación con Fabio Canache: 04:06 – Dando la bienvenida a Fabio Canache04:38 – Cómo llegó Fabio a San Francisco05:30 – Qué es un Front End Engineer?06:31 – Como es el trabajo de Fabio en el área de Monetización de Slack FABIO EN EL ÁREA DE MONETIZACIÓN DE SLACK Fabio trabaja en el área de Monetización, es decir, área de pagos y todo lo referido a dinero de Slack. Tienen servicios gratis y pagos, y es un producto global. Su trabajo es crear interfaces para que usuarios puedan ver sus invoices y puedan pagar sus servicios, usando un software por escrito y teniendo en cuenta, entre otras cosas, impuestos y leyes de finanzas cuando escribe el código. La otra parte del equipo se encarga de membresía. Los usuarios tienen beneficios al pagar más y su misión es que vean el valor de su producto. “Hay productos que se pagan con gusto porque hacen el día a día mucho más fácil” 09:31 – Acerca de fair membership11:48 – Experiencia de Fabio en SF Hackathon - Code for Venezuela Notas de la conversación con Johanna Figueira: 13:15 – Dando la bienvenida a Johanna Figueira13:28 – Experiencia de haber estado en SF Hackathon - Code for Venezuela14:43 – Acerca de Johanna y cómo llegó a Code for Venezuela16:14 – La Misión de Code for Venezuela MISIÓN DE CODE FOR VENEZUELA La misión de Code for Venezuela fue organizar la diáspora que trabaja en Tech, en Silicon Valley, y hacer una conexión con Venezuela. Se buscó ayudar al país usando soluciones basadas en tecnología porque era el domino de todo el equipo, pero en el futuro quieren expandir sus áreas de solución. La misión del Hackathon fue crear una comunidad de colaboración para dar solución a los retos. 17:56 – Proceso para elegir los retos de cada grupo21:02 – Mayor sorpresa del Hackathon22:13 – Recuerdo que se lleva Johanna del Hackathon23:21 – Últimas palabras para la audiencia Notas de la conversación con Eduardo Medina: 23:57 – Acerca de Democracy Earth29:47 – Gente involucrada en Democracy Earth31:09 – Historia de Democracy Earth33:54 – Rol de eduardo dentro de la fundación
Este es un episodio especial acerca de Code for Venezuela, una organización creada en San Francisco para unir a toda la diáspora venezolana distribuida por el mundo; conectar experiencia técnica de esta red de profesionales venezolanos y así ayudar a su país usando soluciones basadas en tecnología. En este episodio, compilé algunas de las conversaciones que tuve con participantes del Hackathon de Code for Venezuela el 14 de Abril en San Francisco: Fabio Canache, Ingeniero de Software para Slack en el área de monetización, Johanna Figueira, Coordinadora de Marketing para Code for Venezuela, Eduardo Medina, Desarrollador para Democracy Earth, y Diego García, Manager de Ingeniería para Velocity. Hablamos acerca de sus trabajos, sus historias, y cómo Code for Venezuela y la tecnología están ayudando al país a salir adelante. Conéctate con ellos vía linkedin: Fabio CanacheJohanna FigueiraEduardo MedinaDiego Garcia Recursos mencionados: SF Hackathon - Code for VenezuelaAlumnUSB Médicos por Venezuela Human Rights WatchDemocracy Earth FoundationSovereign - herramienta de gobernanza(votación) de Democracy Earth que puede ser utilizada por distintas redesDr. Julio CastroSlackVlocity CourseraUdacity Nos quieres ayudar a crecer?: Déjanos una reseña en ITunesMandanos un mensaje a ConexionesPodcast@gmail.comCompártelo con un amigo Notas de la conversación con Fabio Canache: 04:06 – Dando la bienvenida a Fabio Canache04:38 – Cómo llegó Fabio a San Francisco05:30 – Qué es un Front End Engineer?06:31 – Como es el trabajo de Fabio en el área de Monetización de Slack FABIO EN EL ÁREA DE MONETIZACIÓN DE SLACK Fabio trabaja en el área de Monetización, es decir, área de pagos y todo lo referido a dinero de Slack. Tienen servicios gratis y pagos, y es un producto global. Su trabajo es crear interfaces para que usuarios puedan ver sus invoices y puedan pagar sus servicios, usando un software por escrito y teniendo en cuenta, entre otras cosas, impuestos y leyes de finanzas cuando escribe el código. La otra parte del equipo se encarga de membresía. Los usuarios tienen beneficios al pagar más y su misión es que vean el valor de su producto. “Hay productos que se pagan con gusto porque hacen el día a día mucho más fácil” 09:31 – Acerca de fair membership11:48 – Experiencia de Fabio en SF Hackathon - Code for Venezuela Notas de la conversación con Johanna Figueira: 13:15 – Dando la bienvenida a Johanna Figueira13:28 – Experiencia de haber estado en SF Hackathon - Code for Venezuela14:43 – Acerca de Johanna y cómo llegó a Code for Venezuela16:14 – La Misión de Code for Venezuela MISIÓN DE CODE FOR VENEZUELA La misión de Code for Venezuela fue organizar la diáspora que trabaja en Tech, en Silicon Valley, y hacer una conexión con Venezuela. Se buscó ayudar al país usando soluciones basadas en tecnología porque era el domino de todo el equipo, pero en el futuro quieren expandir sus áreas de solución. La misión del Hackathon fue crear una comunidad de colaboración para dar solución a los retos. 17:56 – Proceso para elegir los retos de cada grupo21:02 – Mayor sorpresa del Hackathon22:13 – Recuerdo que se lleva Johanna del Hackathon23:21 – Últimas palabras para la audiencia Notas de la conversación con Eduardo Medina: 23:57 – Acerca de Democracy Earth29:47 – Gente involucrada en Democracy Earth31:09 – Historia de Democracy Earth33:54 – Rol de eduardo dentro de la fundación
Este es un episodio especial acerca de Code for Venezuela, una organización creada en San Francisco para unir a toda la diáspora venezolana distribuida por el mundo; conectar experiencia técnica de esta red de profesionales venezolanos y así ayudar a su país usando soluciones basadas en tecnología. En este episodio, compilé algunas de las conversaciones que tuve con participantes del Hackathon de Code for Venezuela el 14 de Abril en San Francisco: Fabio Canache, Ingeniero de Software para Slack en el área de monetización, Johanna Figueira, Coordinadora de Marketing para Code for Venezuela, Eduardo Medina, Desarrollador para Democracy Earth, y Diego García, Manager de Ingeniería para Velocity. Hablamos acerca de sus trabajos, sus historias, y cómo Code for Venezuela y la tecnología están ayudando al país a salir adelante. Conéctate con ellos vía linkedin: * Fabio Canache* Johanna Figueira* Eduardo Medina* Diego Garcia Recursos mencionados: * SF Hackathon - Code for Venezuela* AlumnUSB * Médicos por Venezuela * Human Rights Watch* Democracy Earth Foundation* Sovereign - herramienta de gobernanza(votación) de Democracy Earth que puede ser utilizada por distintas redes* Dr. Julio Castro* Slack* Vlocity * Coursera* Udacity Nos quieres ayudar a crecer?: * Déjanos una reseña en ITunes* Mandanos un mensaje a ConexionesPodcast@gmail.com* Compártelo con un amigo Notas de la conversación con Fabio Canache: * 04:06 – Dando la bienvenida a Fabio Canache* 04:38 – Cómo llegó Fabio a San Francisco* 05:30 – Qué es un Front End Engineer?* 06:31 – Como es el trabajo de Fabio en el área de Monetización de Slack FABIO EN EL ÁREA DE MONETIZACIÓN DE SLACK Fabio trabaja en el área de Monetización, es decir, área de pagos y todo lo referido a dinero de Slack. Tienen servicios gratis y pagos, y es un producto global. Su trabajo es crear interfaces para que usuarios puedan ver sus invoices y puedan pagar sus servicios, usando un software por escrito y teniendo en cuenta, entre otras cosas, impuestos y leyes de finanzas cuando escribe el código. La otra parte del equipo se encarga de membresía. Los usuarios tienen beneficios al pagar más y su misión es que vean el valor de su producto. “Hay productos que se pagan con gusto porque hacen el día a día mucho más fácil” * 09:31 – Acerca de fair membership* 11:48 – Experiencia de Fabio en SF Hackathon - Code for Venezuela Notas de la conversación con Johanna Figueira: * 13:15 – Dando la bienvenida a Johanna Figueira* 13:28 – Experiencia de haber estado en SF Hackathon - Code for Venezuela* 14:43 – Acerca de Johanna y cómo llegó a Code for Venezuela* 16:14 – La Misión de Code for Venezuela
GUEST BIO: Joe is a Front End Engineer for Digital Air Strike in Scottsdale, Arizona. Before his current role, Joe had worked as a Digital Marketing Manager while he continued to learn how to code in the evenings and at weekends. Joe also creates video tutorials for egghead.io and helps to run a local meetup called Desert GraphQL. EPISODE DESCRIPTION: Phil’s guest on today’s show is Joe Previte. He is currently working for Digital Air Strike as a Front End Engineer. Previously, he was a Digital Marketing Manager and Web Developer. He is becoming well known for his video tutorials, which can be found on egghead.io. Joe also writes articles about coding, mainly on the subject of JavaScript. In particular, React, Node, Express, Redux and Gatsby. Recently, he has started to run a local meetup called DesertGraphQL. KEY TAKEAWAYS: (1.03) – So Joe, can you expand on that brief introduction and tell us a little bit more about yourself? Joe explains that when he is not busy working or creating video tutorials he writes articles about coding. For example, he has written articles for Twilio. He is a big fan of this cloud communication platform, which has a great API that enables you to build SMS, voice and messaging solutions. (1.47) – Can you please share a unique tip with the I.T. career audience? Joe’s unique piece of career advice is not to forget the power of patterns. When he was in college he studied languages and was able to use patterns to help him to quickly learn several of them. For example, 80% of Portuguese grammar is very similar to Spanish. His advice is to look for patterns when you are trying to learn something new. This particular learning method works really well for programming. Phil agrees taking this approach helps you to tap into the fact that understanding the foundations or the basics of a programming language is pretty much consistent across all the different ones. When learning Redux, Joe took a piece of code and studying it. He started by changing a few things at a time. In particular, things he was familiar with and thought were likely to be similar to other programs he had already worked with. This enabled him to see how it worked and try out more things that were likely to be the same. Doing this made it easier for him to abstract away the pattern. (4.16) – Can you tell us about your worst career moment? And what you learned from that experience. Joe has only been working in the industry for a couple of years. However, he has already been stung by taking someone’s word for something instead of getting it in writing. Someone offered him a front end internship that was supposed to transition into a full-time role. It meant moving from California back to Phoenix. The guy who ran the company said he could only pay him as a contractor. They agreed he would do 20 hours of paid work and 20 hours as a freelancer. He did this for two months. But, wanted to get an idea of the salary he could expect in the longer term, so asked. His boss said about 50k, which was OK with Joe. The plan was for his boss to put it in writing when he returned from New York. But, when he got back he changed his mind and actually only offered him 30k. For Joe, that was a real low point. (7.50) – Phil asks Joe to share his career highlight with the audience. Joe is a big fan of Twilio and is active in the community. So, he was delighted when Twilio inducted him into their “Doers Hall of Fame” in 2018. It was great to be recognized by the Twilio team as someone who had made a significant contribution. His Twilio superclass which he ran at a local meetup and online boot camp was very well received by those who took it. (10.32) – Can you tell us what excites you about the future of the IT industry and careers? Even though he is relatively new to the industry Joe is excited by all of the new technologies and languages that are coming through. There is just so much available to learn that it can be hard to know what to study next. Joe is particularly interested in the potential of GraphQL. He has gone as far as organizing a local meetup group with his co-workers to take full advantage of this data query and manipulation language for APIs. Phil shares Joe’s enthusiasm for all of these new technologies. He notes that they are providing developers and engineers with the chance to broaden their horizons. (12.41) – What drew you to a career in IT? For Joe there were two things. He has always had a passion for building things. He would regularly come up with business ideas only to realize that he needed a developer to bring his idea to life. At the time, Joe did not have the necessary skills to do so. In the end he realized that if he wanted to build any of these businesses learning to code himself was the best way to do it. But, training was expensive. So, when he came across a free code camp he jumped at the chance and began his training. (13.30) – What is the best career advice you have ever received? Joe was once told not to tell yourself you are not ready. You should let others do that. Another way of putting it is ‘don’t self-select’. If you see a job you would love to do, just apply for it. If you do not have all of the qualifications or experience being asked for, do not worry, apply anyway. The worst that can happen is that you do not get the call. On the other hand, you could get called in for an interview and land your dream job. Joe has got a couple of callbacks and interviews by applying regardless of what is asked for in the job advert. (14.40) – If you were to begin your IT career again, right now, what would you do? Joe explains that he would take a different approach to learning how to program. He would focus more on building projects instead of switching between resources or tutorials. The real learning happens when you apply what you have learned when you build a project that you care about. When you hit roadblocks you are motivated to push through them. This ensures that you learn more and take yourself to the next level. (15.22) – What are you currently focusing on in your career? Right now, Joe’s main focus is trying to do more developer relations. He wants to create more of a name for himself within the community. Joe wants to get as many people as possible excited about learning new technologies and helping more of them to find the right resources. He would like to be a general tech developer evangelist. His aim is to be like Wes Bos or someone similar. Joe wants to become a content creator/teacher/educator over the course of the next 5 to 10 years. (16.27) – What is the number one non-technical skill that has helped you the most in your IT career? In all the jobs Joe has done so far, good communication skills have proved invaluable. He also says it is important to learn to speak up sooner rather than later. For example, if you get stuck on a project the sooner you say so and explain the situation the faster you get unstuck and get things finished. (17.31) – Phil asks Joe to share a final piece of career advice with the audience. Joe’s career advice is to help others. Tell others on social media that your door is always open and be there to answer people’s questions. Doing this benefits you as well as those who you are giving guidance to. You will be surprised by how much you learn along the way when trying to help others. BEST MOMENTS: (2.40) JOE– "When you are learning something new, look for the patterns." (9.58) PHIL– “Being recognized by another group or individual is always a great thing." (13.49) JOE– "Don’t close doors before they have been opened." (15.09) JOE– "The real learning happens when you're building a project that you care about." (14.42) JOE– “When you are learning to code, focus more on building projects rather than switching between resources or tutorials" (16.17) PHIL – “The ability to then teach other people actually helps you yourself in terms of the way you learn.” CONTACT JOE: Twitter: https://twitter.com/jsjoeio LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jjprevite/ Website: https://joeprevite.com
Michele is an in-house Front-End Engineer for Vox Media, building innovative software solutions enjoyed by the millions of fans of...
On this episode, I Zoom in Tae'lur Alexis and we chat about her journey to becoming a Front-End Engineer. Tae'lur Alexis is a Seattle, WA.-based Software Engineer and founder of http://codeeveryday.io . When she's not coding, she's advocating for alternative education and building her platform which is dedicated to providing resources and mentorship to web developers, especially those who are underrepresented. She also produces content on her YouTube channel on life in tech. You can connect with Tae'lur on Twitter: https://twitter.com/TaelurAlexis
Bine ai venit la episodul 4 al podcast-ului Drumul Inginerilor. În acest episod am discutat cu Lucian Costin Ailenei, Front-End Engineer la Levi9 IT Services, din Iași. Am vorbit cu Lucian despre evoluția lui profesională, despre cum ar trebui să fie un lider și cum pot evolua studenții din ziua de azi. Pe Lucian îl puteți contacta aici: https://www.linkedin.com/in/lucian-costin-ailenei-1913996b/ Dacă ți-a plăcut discuția cu Lucian dă un like, scrie un comentariu și dă un share!
In this episode, our panelists discuss Blockchain. This discussion took place during #ProductCon NYC 2018, the biggest product management conference in the world! Moderator: Lisa Connelly. Chief Product and Operations Officer. The Panelists: Veena Xavier. Director-Programmatic Demand at PulsePoint. Daniel Brand. Account Manager at AlphaPoint Corp. Julien Tregoat. Front End Engineer & Dapp Developer at Thunder Token Inc.
Today we are spotlighting Ajoke Salaudeen of UpGuard. UpGuard is a digital resilience platform that tests and evaluates the configuration state of your servers, network devices, and applications in your IT infrastructure - providing insights about your configuration state and potential risks in the future. This episode is powered by UpGuard.com, UpGuard's discovery engine brings visibility to complex IT environments, enabling teams to quickly identify risk, confirm compliance and make business safer. Connect with us at womenintechshow.com. Tweet @womenintechshow and @EspreeDevora
Summary Atlassian leaders Trey Shugart (@treshugart) and Jonathon Creenaune (@jcreenaune) chat with us about how and why they created Skate.js. Skate is a lightweight Web Components wrapper created to help the needs of a large and diverse technology stack while providing simplicity and almost no-barrier-to-entry. Only focusing on Custom Elements, Skate has made its code base easy for companies to buy into. O'Reilly Media Partner Discounts The Web Platform Podcast is a proud O'Reilly Media Partner. As such, one of the benefits we provide our listeners are special discounts such as 50% off ebooks and 40% in printed material. This includes but is not limited to books on the web technologies. Your discount code is PCBW so head over to http://www.oreilly.com/ right now to get all your favorite tech books at much lower prices. Your Latest O'Reilly Discounts Free eBook: Data-Informed Product Design http://www.oreilly.com/pub/cpc/1220 Designers must understand user needs to create any product. But what type of data should you look at? In her new book, Data-Informed Product Design, Pamela Pavliscak outlines a way to use data of all kinds to understand the relationship between people and technology. Generally speaking, big data is quantitative; it gives you the what, where, and when, while “thick data” provides the qualitative perspective—the how and the why. Up until now, there hasn't been much information on how to combine quantitative big data with qualitative thick data. That's where this report can help. If you're involved in any aspect of product design, this is indispensable reading. It's useful, and we're pleased to offer it to you, for free! Get the free ebook now. Design Sprint: A fast start to creating a great digital product http://www.oreilly.com/pub/cpc/1221 October 20 | 10:00am PT | Banfield, Lombardo, & Wax The Design Sprint is the first, and for some projects the most significant, phase of a design thinking process. It gets the entire product design and development team on the same page, reduces the risk of downstream mistakes, and generates vision-lead goals for the team to measure their success. Join Richard Banfield, C. Todd Lombardo, and Trace Wax as they explain why and how Design Sprints work and how you can use Design Sprints to enhance your own design process. Resources Skate.js - https://github.com/skatejs/skatejs Custom Elements Polyfill - https://github.com/polymer/CustomElements skate.js website - http://skate.js.org/ Skating with Web Components - http://slides.com/treshugart/skating-with-web-components#/ Skate on Hipchat - https://www.hipchat.com/gB3fMrnzo Contributions file- https://github.com/skatejs/skatejs/blob/master/CONTRIBUTING.md Panelists Erik Isaksen (@eisaksen) - Front End Development Lead at Deloitte Digital & Google Developer Expert in Web Technologies Danny Blue (@dee_bloo) - Front End Engineer at Deloitte Digital Justin Ribeiro (@justinribeiro) - Wearables & HTML5 Google Developer Expert & Partner at Stickman Ventures or random person who keeps finding Hangout link. You decide
Summary Timmy Willison (@TimmyWil) , lead developer at The JQuery Foundation & Senior Engineer at Open Table, joins us to discuss what is new with the most popular JavaScript library of all time- JQuery. We discuss what is new in version 3, struggles and implementation decisions, performance and much more. Resources jQuery - https://jquery.com/ jQuery Foundation - https://jquery.org/ builtwith.com - http://builtwith.com/ jQuery Blog - http://blog.jquery.com/ jQuery Core Source and Issues Tracker - https://github.com/jquery/jquery New York Developor Summit - http://events.jquery.org/2015/developer-summit/ jQuery's Code of Conduct - https://jquery.org/conduct/ jQuery Usage Statistics - http://trends.builtwith.com/javascript/jQuery Mootools - http://mootools.net/ Prototype.js - http://prototypejs.org/ The DoJo Toolkit - https://dojotoolkit.org/ Timmy on Github - https://github.com/timmywil Average Page Weight Statistics - http://www.sitepoint.com/average-page-weights-increase-32-2013/ Web Page Performance Analysis - http://www.webpagetest.org/ Angular Remote Conf Do you want to attend a conference with top level Angular speakers but can afford the cost and inconvenience in travelling? Angular Remote Conf is an online conference Sept. 24th through the 25th with live interactions, a dedicated forum, respected leaders in Angular, and best of all you never have to leave the comfort of your own home to attend. The Web Platform Podcast listeners receive a 20% discount for https://angularremoteconf.com/. All you have to do is use "webplatform" as the coupon code at checkout to get your 20% off. This works for group tickets, standard tickets, and early bird as well. Head over to angularremoteconf.com and sign up ASAP to get the maximum savings Panelists Erik Isaksen (@eisaksen) - Front End Development Lead at Deloitte Digital & Google Developer Expert in Web Technologies Justin Ribeiro (@justinribeiro) - Wearables & HTML5 Google Developer Expert & Partner at Stickman Ventures Danny Blue (@dee_bloo) - Sr. Front End Engineer at Deloitte Digital
Summary Raphaël Rougeron (@goldoraf), one of the Web Components pioneers, along with his team created the Bosonic Project some while back. It was a very different approach to working with Web Components than x-tag and Polymer and it involved a required build step to create Web Components as close to specs as possible with minimal abstractions at runtime. The approach gained a small but respectable following and unfortunately was overshadowed by Polymer Project, the Web Component library by Google. During that time Raphaël began to lose faith in Web Components and went through many personal trials. Now he has been inspired to revisit Bosonic and breathe new life into the project. Let's welcome the return of Bosonic! Resources The Bosonic Project - http://bosonic.github.io/ Bosonic Core Web Components - https://github.com/bosonic/core-elements Bosonic DND Web Components - https://github.com/bosonic/dnd-elements Bosonic Data Web Components - https://github.com/bosonic/data-elements Angular Remote Conf Do you want to attend a conference with top level Angular speakers but can afford the cost and inconvenience in travelling? Angular Remote Conf is an online conference Sept. 24th through the 25th with live interactions, a dedicated forum, respected leaders in Angular, and best of all you never have to leave the comfort of your own home to attend. The Web Platform Podcast listeners receive a 20% discount for https://angularremoteconf.com/. All you have to do is use "webplatform" as the coupon code at checkout to get your 20% off. This works for group tickets, standard tickets, and early bird as well. Head over to angularremoteconf.com and sign up ASAP to get the maximum savings Panelists Erik Isaksen (@eisaksen) - Front End Development Lead at Deloitte Digital & Google Developer Expert in Web Technologies Justin Ribeiro (@justinribeiro) - Wearables & HTML5 Google Developer Expert & Partner at Stickman Ventures Danny Blue (@dee_bloo) - Front End Engineer at Deloitte Digital
Summary Charles Max Wood (@cmaxw) guides us through his thoughts and processes for building out personal & business branding for developers. Learning from his experiences in podcasting and other content creation, Chuck talks with us about why branding is so important today for developers to position themselves in the market today. Resources DevChat.tv - http://devchat.tv/ DevChat.tv Entities Ruby Rogues - http://devchat.tv/ruby-rogues JavaScript Jabber - http://devchat.tv/js-jabber Freelancers Show - http://devchat.tv/freelancers IPhreaks - http://devchat.tv/iphreaks Teach Me To Code - http://teachmetocode.com/ Rails Clips - http://devchat.tv/rails-clips Adventures in Angular - http://devchat.tv/adventures-in-angular Web Security Warriors - http://devchat.tv/web-security-warriors JS Remote Conf - https://jsremoteconf.com/ Ruby Remote Conf - https://rubyremoteconf.com/ Angular Remote Conf - https://angularremoteconf.com/ Rails Remote Conf (in the works) The Ruby Freelancers Show 019 - http://devchat.tv/freelancers/the-ruby-freelancers-show-019-branding Chuck on Twitter - https://twitter.com/cmaxw Podcast Movement 2015 - http://podcastmovement.com/ Podcast Answer Man - http://podcastanswerman.com/ “10 Ideas For Building A Better Relationship With Your Existing Audience” - http://podcastanswerman.com/414/ Toast Masters - https://www.toastmasters.org/ Rails Conf 2015 - http://railsconf.com/ Calendly - https://calendly.com/ Meet Edgar - http://meetedgar.com/ DevFestDC 2015 The Web Platform Podcast is a proud media sponsor of DevFest 2015. DevFest is a conference with Great Sessions and Code Labs on Android, Wearables, Polymer, AngularJS, Google Cloud Platform, Meteor and many others. Show hosts Danny Blue & Erik Isaksen will be speakers and the event will be held at AOL Headquarters in Dulles VA Friday Sept 11th 2015 & Saturday Sept 12th 2015. For event registration details check out devfestdc.org and click on the eventbrite link. www.eventbrite.com/e/devfestdc-2015-google-developer-group-dc-tickets-17538373748 now! Panelists Danny Blue (@dee_bloo) - Front End Engineer at Deloitte Digital Justin Ribeiro (@justinribeiro) - Wearables & HTML5 Google Developer Expert & Partner at Stickman Ventures Erik Isaksen (@eisaksen) - Google Developer Expert in Web Technologies
Summary Andrew Gerrand (@enneff), Developer Advocate at Google & Go core contributor, talks about GoLang and how it is being used in Web Development today as well as the plans for the future of the Go as a platform for the web. Resources Go - https://golang.org/ A Tour of Go - https://tour.golang.org/ (great starting point!) Godoc.org - https://godoc.org/ (Go package index) Go Search package search engine - http://go-search.org/ GoLang on Twitter - https://twitter.com/golang Web programming toolkits and frameworks: The standard HTTP package Gorilla Web Toolkit Revel BeeGo Hugo - a static site generator AJ's articles on Go https://coolaj86.com/articles/getting-started-with-golang-and-vim/ https://coolaj86.com/articles/how-to-test-if-a-port-is-available-in-go/ https://coolaj86.com/articles/today-i-became-a-golang-dev-with-vim-and-caddy/ “Learn Go in One Video” - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CF9S4QZuV30 GopherCon - http://www.gophercon.com/ GopherCon india - http://www.gophercon.in/ Go on Slack - gopher slack channel Go intro talks: Go: code that grows with grace Go concurrency talks: Go Concurrency Patterns Advanced Go Concurrency Patterns Ruby Learning Slack Channel for Go Courses - https://gocourse.slack.com/ The next Go class for Ruby Learning - https://docs.google.com/forms/d/1WXO68p3gH4b-4S3dOS_MUbvoe7uaRNT9tii1syTznYA/viewform Panelists Danny Blue (@dee_bloo) - Front End Engineer at Deloitte Digital Christian Smith (@anvilhacks) - Founder of Anvil Research, hacker, musician, & startup enthusiast Erik Isaksen (@eisaksen) - Google Developer Expert in Web Technologies AJ O'Neal (@coolAJ86) - Podcaster & JavaScript Developer
Summary An honest & candid talk about what we learned since the beginning of Web Components; a hard look at the good, the bad, and the ugly. Christian Heilmann (@codepo8), Wilson Page (@wilsonpage), & Rob Eisenberg (@eisenbergeffect) talk with us on development with these technologies in today's production environments. Developers need to to know what they can expect from the future of Web Components & what they mean to us today in order to make better decisions in their choosing technologies for their engineering efforts. Resources The State of Web Components - https://hacks.mozilla.org/2015/06/the-state-of-web-components/ Web Components and you - http://christianheilmann.com/2014/04/18/web-components-and-you-dangers-to-avoid/ Over The Edge - http://christianheilmann.com/2015/07/01/over-the-edge-web-components-are-an-endangered-species/ aurelia.io - http://aurelia.io/ x-tag - http://www.x-tags.org/ Polymer - https://www.polymer-project.org/ Mozilla Articles on Web Components - https://hacks.mozilla.org/category/web-components/ Konrad Dwinzel's DOM Listener - https://chrome.google.com/webstore/detail/domlistener/jlfdgnlpibogjanomigieemaembjeolj?hl=en Panelists Erik Isaksen (@eisaksen) - Chrome HTML5 Google Developer Expert Daniel Buchner (@csuwildcat) - Microsoft Program Manager & creator of x-tag Justin Ribeiro (@justinribeiro) - Wearables & HTML5 Google Developer Expert & Partner at Stickman Ventures Danny Blue (@dee_bloo) - Front End Engineer at Deloitte Digital
Summary Pascal Precht (@PascalPrecht), Senior Software Engineer at Thoughtram & creator of ng-translate, chats with us about the Angular 2 and how developers can get ready today. Resources Angular 2 - http://angular.io TypeScript - http://www.typescriptlang.org/ Definitely Typed - https://github.com/DefinitelyTyped Quick Start - https://angular.io/docs/js/latest/quickstart.html Upgrade App - https://github.com/angular/ngUpgrade Angular Meeting Notes - https://docs.google.com/document/d/150lerb1LmNLuau_a_EznPV1I1UHMTbEl61t4hZ7ZpS0/edit Angular Universal - https://github.com/angular/universal System.js - https://github.com/systemjs/systemjs Pascal's Decorator article - http://blog.thoughtram.io/angular/2015/05/03/the-difference-between-annotations-and-decorators.html Typescript & Angular 2 - http://victorsavkin.com/post/123555572351/writing-angular-2-in-typescript Routing in Angular http://blog.thoughtram.io/angular/2015/06/16/routing-in-angular-2.html http://blog.thoughtram.io/angularjs/2015/02/19/futuristic-routing-in-angular.html Change Detection - http://victorsavkin.com/post/110170125256/change-detection-in-angular-2 Thoughtram - http://thoughtram.io/ Angular & Git blog at Thoughtram - http://blog.thoughtram.io/ Panelists Erik Isaksen (@eisaksen) - Chrome HTML5 Google Developer Expert Danny Blue (@dee_bloo) - Front End Engineer at Deloitte Digital
Summary In episode 49 Danny Blue (@dee_bloo) has a one-on-one talk with Web Application Master & JavaScript Guru Eric Elliott (@_ericelliott). Danny & Eric cover several exciting development topics including event based development, functional programming, Web Assembly, teaching JavaScript, helping to stop homelessness with code, & more. Resources Learn JavaScript with Eric Elliott - https://ericelliottjs.com/ Eric on Web Assembly - https://medium.com/javascript-scene/what-is-webassembly-the-dawn-of-a-new-era-61256ec5a8f6 StampIt 2.0 - https://github.com/stampit-org/stampit/releases/tag/v2.0.3 Campaign to fight Homelessness - Kickstarter - https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/ericelliott/learn-javascript Blog - https://medium.com/the-backer-army/fighting-poverty-with-code-d1ed3ebd982d react-stampit - https://github.com/stampit-org/react-stampit nodeschool.io functional programming (on runnable) - http://code.runnable.com/VQuZjvia8Gxcqkpy/nodeschool-io-s-functional-programming-in-javascript-course-available-in-your-browser-for-node-js-and-freecodecamp jsx - https://facebook.github.io/react/docs/jsx-in-depth.html Tim Oxley's Functional Programming workshop - https://github.com/timoxley/functional-javascript-workshop TC-39 - http://ecma-international.org/memento/TC39.htm Jafar Husain - https://twitter.com/jhusain Event Machine - https://github.com/eventmachine/eventmachine Twisted - https://github.com/twisted/twisted Host Danny Blue (@dee_bloo) - Sr. Front End Engineer at Deloitte Digital
Nós já revelamos TODOS os segredos mais bem guardados do Google (ou quase isso). Agora chegou a vez de revelar as entranhas do Facebook (ou quase isso). Neste episódio batemos um papo divertido com o Fábio M. Costa, Front-End Engineer no Facebook.
This week, I talked with Atlanta front-end engineer Nathaniel Deal! Nathaniel creates responsive experiences for kick-ass clients. We talk about a little bit of everything: design conferences, web education, mobile development, and more. Show Notes Nathaniel Deal on Twitter Nathaniel Deal's Website Nathaniel Deal's "Death To the Waterfall"
Erik Hanchett is Front End Engineer at Amazon Web Services. He joins the show with Steve to talk about UnoCSS. He begins by explaining what it is. They also discuss the difference between UnoCSS, tailwind CSS, and WindiCSS. He shares his own experience of using UnoCSS and its useful features. On YouTubeUnoCSS with Erik Hanchett - VUE 213SponsorsChuck's Resume TemplateDeveloper Book Club Become a Top 1% Dev with a Top End Devs MembershipLinksUnoCSSunocss/unocssAWS Amplify - Develop Apps With AWS AmplifySocialsprogramwitherik.com Program With Erik | YouTubeLinkedIn: Erik HanchettTwitter: ErikCHPicksErik - BardSteve - Defamed by ChatGPT: My Own Bizarre Experience with Artificiality of “Artificial Intelligence”Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy