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Welcome to Test Automation Experience, hosted by Nikolay Advolodkin. In this episode, Nikolay is joined by guest BekahHW, creator of the community VirtualCoffee and Developer Experience Lead at OpenSauced. Join them as they delve into the world of open-source coding, what the tech landscape looks like for junior developers and those transitioning to software engineering, and the challenges Bekah faced during her own transition to tech. Don't miss this episode of Test Automation Experience to gain valuable insights.
Nesse episódio trouxemos as notícias e novidades do mundo da programação que nos chamaram atenção dos dias 09/04 a 15/04! Breakpoint: A escolha da história é realizada via enquete no Código Fonte TV no YouTube. Nessa semana o tema foi: "Como Gabriel fez faculdade em uma cidade trabalhando em outra?". CallStack: A TRACTIAN, chamada de o “Shazam da Indústria” pela americana Y Combinator – a maior e mais concorrida aceleradora de startups do mundo, está em busca de talentos para área de desenvolvimento de produtos, com oportunidades para Front-End Software Engineer e Front End Web Developer. Você pode conhecer mais a TRACTIAN, suas oportunidade, além de se candidatar através do link https://codft.me/tractian. 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: Novo Canal do Compilado no YouTube: https://codft.me/canalcompilado Receba as Notícias do Compilado no Email: compilado.codigofonte.com.br
Nesse episódio trouxemos as notícias e novidades do mundo da programação que nos chamaram atenção dos dias 09/04 a 15/04! Breakpoint: A escolha da história é realizada via enquete no Código Fonte TV no YouTube. Nessa semana o tema foi: "Como Gabriel fez faculdade em uma cidade trabalhando em outra?". CallStack: A TRACTIAN, chamada de o “Shazam da Indústria” pela americana Y Combinator – a maior e mais concorrida aceleradora de startups do mundo, está em busca de talentos para área de desenvolvimento de produtos, com oportunidades para Front-End Software Engineer e Front End Web Developer. Você pode conhecer mais a TRACTIAN, suas oportunidade, além de se candidatar através do link https://codft.me/tractian. 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: Novo Canal do Compilado no YouTube: https://codft.me/canalcompilado Receba as Notícias do Compilado no Email: compilado.codigofonte.com.br
In episode 55, Danielle shares how we can improve our emotional intelligence through cross-pollinating our teams. Danielle has had an impressive leadership career at GitHub, where she's now the Director of Engineering. Before joining GitHub, she had previously worked at Twilio as a Front End Web Developer and Diversity Co-Chair. We talk about the differences between ask versus guess culture and how managers can make it as easy as possible for their teams to express their opinions. Tune in to hear how Danielle explains how she runs skip-level meetings and goal-setting processes with her team.
I invited 3 graduates from Udacity's Front End Web Developer Nanodegree. Nanodegree's are typically more affordable programs compared to coding bootcamps. The real question is, are they enough? At the very least, we dove into this episode with that question in mind. Let me know what you think. What's your opinion of nanodegrees?Host/Guests:Don Hansen - https://www.linkedin.com/in/donthedeveloperLouis Steimel - https://www.linkedin.com/in/lhsthreePatrick Cayer - https://www.linkedin.com/in/patrick-cayerJudith Ifeoma Nwokike - https://www.linkedin.com/in/judith-ifeoma-nwokike---------------------------------------------------Over a year ago, I created a brand new company (DONTHEDEVELOPER LLC) with a very ambitious goal. By the end of this year (2021), my goal is for my business, that helps junior developers get unstuck and get that first position, to become self-sustainable and allow me to do this full-time. If my content has helped you in any way and you'd like to help support me with this goal or get more involved with our community, please consider taking a look at some of the links below. Thank you so much to everyone who's believed in me and has helped support this venture. You're turning my dream into a reality!**Here are products and services that I've personally used and strongly recommend. Full disclaimer: These are affiliate links that do bring me additional revenue, but these are links to services that I personally recommend.**LEARN TO CODE:Treehouse:https://treehouse.7eer.net/donthedeveloper-----------------**Support me on Patreon ❤️ and get early access to my videos:**https://www.patreon.com/donthedeveloper-----------------**Connect with me for more personalized 1 on 1 help or consider joining our developer community:**
In today’s episode, Joe sat down with Joe Simpson Jr. Joe is a Front-End Web Developer and Graphic Designer specializing in WordPress solutions. During days he works at a top-five transit agency, fighting the good fight to ease the commute around Los Angeles County. They discuss Joe’s responsibilities in the digital strategy team at Metro Los Angeles, how he started in the WordPress space, his continuous effort for the inclusion of people of color in the open source space, and the planning for the 3rd WordCamp Santa Clarita. Tune in to learn how the WordPress environment came to be more diverse! Episode Resources Visit Joe Simpson’s website Tweet Joe Simpson Jr. or visit his Facebook page Check out Dose Media Leave an iTunes review or binge watch past episodes Send questions to yo@wpmrr.com for the next Q&A pod Visit the WPMRR website What to Listen For: 00:00 Intro 01:11 Let’s welcome Joe Simpson! 04:16 Visit The Source 06:02 How did you get into this area of WordPress? 08:13 Getting involved in the WordPress community 11:00 Ahmed Khalifa is a common connection 13:00 African-American representation in the WordPress community 17:27 Creating a more diverse space in the open-source environment 22:14 Changes in the WordPress space since COVID 29:20 Everyone’s first time in a WordCamp 32:10 The backstory behind WPMRR’s new branding and design 35:06 Planning for the 3rd WordCamp Santa Clarita 38:30 Proper documentation helps shape a more successful virtual event
As the seventh season of the Learn to Code With Me podcast draws to a close, I reflect on the inspiring transformation stories we shared, including recaps of my favorite moments. I also share updates on LTCWM and my goals for 2020, including a sneak peek into what we’re working on next through the end of the year. Catch up on all eight episodes from Season 7 here or at learntocodewith.me/podcast: S7E1: Making the Pivot from Pastor to Web Designer with Chris Misterek S7E2: How an English Professor Became a Front-End Web Developer with Bekah Hawrot Weigel S7E3: How a Former Squarespace Developer Helps New Coders Build Strong Technical Resumes with Rebecca Garcia S7E4: An Introduction to Vue.js with Developer and Author Erik Hanchett S7E5: How a Passion for Patients turned this Pharmacist into a Software Developer with Newvick Lee S7E6: An Unexpected Shift from Selling Beer to Coding Bootcamp with Caitlyn Greffly S7E7: From Glassblower to Software Developer using Free Coding Resources with Michael Pimentel S7E8: Building a Robotics Career and the Impact of Mentorship with Camille Eddy You can also check out the podcast on YouTube at learntocodewith.me/youtube. This was a new experiment for Season 7, so we hope you’ll check it out and subscribe.
Resources:CSS TricksCodepen.ioShop Talk ShowThe Web Designer Starter Kit Course
Bekah Hawrot Weigel is a mother of four and a former part-time English teacher who redefined her life through coding. As she was giving birth to her fourth child, Bekah experienced trauma that left her with PTSD, anxiety, panic attacks, and depression. Feeling lost at the time, Bekah finally took on her husband’s crazy suggestion to learn to code (as he had a few years ago). She found coding surprisingly therapeutic, and a few years later, she graduated from Flatiron School and now works as a front-end web developer. To learn more about Bekah, Laurence Bradford, or Learn to Code With Me, visit learntocodewith.me/podcast. ----- The biggest Learn to Code With Me event of the year is right around the corner — the 2020 Ultimate Tech Career Toolbox bundle sale. When you invest in our 2020 bundle, you’ll get access to a collection of products that can help you level up your coding skills and break into the tech industry. Get notified when the sale opens up by signing up at learntocodewith.me/toolbox2020.
ResourcesInterview summaryWhere to find Anne: LinkedIn, websiteAnne's email: anneinaustintx@gmail.com✍︎✍︎✍︎✍︎✍︎✍︎✍︎✍︎✍︎✍︎✍︎✍︎✍︎✍︎✍︎Anne changed her career from social worker to front-end web developer and this is her work in progress story! In the beginning of her career, Anne was a social worker and as time went on, she started to feel that there was something missing and she grew unhappy. Next she worked in telemarketing and customer service but was equally unsatisfied and she knew they were just not right for her. Until a cousin encouraged her to try a coding. She did some free online courses and really fell in love with how coding allowed her to create instead of following protocols. She liked it so much that she couldn’t wait to go back home from work to start coding. Her energy and passion for coding was infectious and I really enjoyed talking to her! I hope her story inspires you to take a step towards a more fulfilling career. Good luck with your quest! Music was used with permission. Credit: Happy by MBB https://soundcloud.com/mbbofficialCreative Commons — Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported — CC BY-SA 3.0 Free Download / Stream: https://bit.ly/Happy-MBBMusic promoted by Audio Library https://youtu.be/g6swHZbWtRc
Are you trying to break into the tech industry? Is front-end web development something you'd consider as a career? Matt lays out the exact path, A-Z, from researching what type of job you'd want, all the way through to the interview stage, the high level steps you need to take in order to get there, from any starting point.It doesn't matter that we run bootcamps - we understand that 99.99% of our audience will never buy a product from us, so this one is for you - and even anyone considering buying one of our bootcamp experiences! Because you follow everything we talk about here, step by step, we would be very surprised if you couldn't get the front-end job you're looking for, without ever having needed to spend a penny
Sponsors Sentry use the code “devchat” for 2 months free on Sentry small plan TripleByte offers a $1000 signing bonus Panel Alyssa Nicoll Joe Eames Charles Wood Episode Summary This weeks panel, Charles Wood, Alyssa Nicholl, and Joe Eames discuss 2 articles: 1st The Great Divide by Chris Coyier and 2nd Tales of a Non-Unicorn by Laura Schenk. These articles tell of the broad meaning for “Front-End Web Developer” talking of how “HTML + CSS along with JavaScript” all fall under the same title causing confusion with job interviews and even once a developer gets into the job. It is neat to hear perspectives of Alyssa Nicholl and Joe Eames together as Alyssa is more on the HTML/CSS side of Web Dev and Joe Eames is more with the JavaScript side. The panel also discusses difficulties with interviewing for jobs. Charles Wood leads a discussion on what the interviewers could improve on in hiring the people they actually want. The panel shares experiences of not getting jobs for reasons that are not super valid. They also touch on the pay difference between the 2 sides of the “WebDev” job description. Links The Great Divide by Chris Coyier The Refactoring UI Youtube Tales of a Non-Unicorn: A Story About The Trouble with Job Titles and Descriptions Why Everyone Is Fighting About CSS/UX and JS Economics CodePen Job Posting Picks Joe Eames: The Refactoring UI Youtube The Refactoring UI Steve Schoger Twitter NestJS Charles Wood: The Checklist Manifesto: How to Get Things Right by Atul Gawandi Alyssa Nicoll: 100 Days CSS Challenge
Sponsors Sentry use the code “devchat” for 2 months free on Sentry small plan TripleByte offers a $1000 signing bonus Panel Alyssa Nicoll Joe Eames Charles Wood Episode Summary This weeks panel, Charles Wood, Alyssa Nicholl, and Joe Eames discuss 2 articles: 1st The Great Divide by Chris Coyier and 2nd Tales of a Non-Unicorn by Laura Schenk. These articles tell of the broad meaning for “Front-End Web Developer” talking of how “HTML + CSS along with JavaScript” all fall under the same title causing confusion with job interviews and even once a developer gets into the job. It is neat to hear perspectives of Alyssa Nicholl and Joe Eames together as Alyssa is more on the HTML/CSS side of Web Dev and Joe Eames is more with the JavaScript side. The panel also discusses difficulties with interviewing for jobs. Charles Wood leads a discussion on what the interviewers could improve on in hiring the people they actually want. The panel shares experiences of not getting jobs for reasons that are not super valid. They also touch on the pay difference between the 2 sides of the “WebDev” job description. Links The Great Divide by Chris Coyier The Refactoring UI Youtube Tales of a Non-Unicorn: A Story About The Trouble with Job Titles and Descriptions Why Everyone Is Fighting About CSS/UX and JS Economics CodePen Job Posting Picks Joe Eames: The Refactoring UI Youtube The Refactoring UI Steve Schoger Twitter NestJS Charles Wood: The Checklist Manifesto: How to Get Things Right by Atul Gawandi Alyssa Nicoll: 100 Days CSS Challenge
Sponsors Sentry use the code “devchat” for 2 months free on Sentry small plan TripleByte offers a $1000 signing bonus Panel Alyssa Nicoll Joe Eames Charles Wood Episode Summary This weeks panel, Charles Wood, Alyssa Nicholl, and Joe Eames discuss 2 articles: 1st The Great Divide by Chris Coyier and 2nd Tales of a Non-Unicorn by Laura Schenk. These articles tell of the broad meaning for “Front-End Web Developer” talking of how “HTML + CSS along with JavaScript” all fall under the same title causing confusion with job interviews and even once a developer gets into the job. It is neat to hear perspectives of Alyssa Nicholl and Joe Eames together as Alyssa is more on the HTML/CSS side of Web Dev and Joe Eames is more with the JavaScript side. The panel also discusses difficulties with interviewing for jobs. Charles Wood leads a discussion on what the interviewers could improve on in hiring the people they actually want. The panel shares experiences of not getting jobs for reasons that are not super valid. They also touch on the pay difference between the 2 sides of the “WebDev” job description. Links The Great Divide by Chris Coyier The Refactoring UI Youtube Tales of a Non-Unicorn: A Story About The Trouble with Job Titles and Descriptions Why Everyone Is Fighting About CSS/UX and JS Economics CodePen Job Posting Picks Joe Eames: The Refactoring UI Youtube The Refactoring UI Steve Schoger Twitter NestJS Charles Wood: The Checklist Manifesto: How to Get Things Right by Atul Gawandi Alyssa Nicoll: 100 Days CSS Challenge
For Season 1, Episode 4, Pariss Athena talks about creating #BlackTechTwitter and her journey of becoming a Resilient Coder. #BlackTechTwitter was created because Pariss wanted to see who else in the Twitter community was Black and working in technology. Pariss aspired to become an actor, but then had to move back to Boston due to her living situation. Pariss found out about the Resilient Coders bootcamp and that is how she became a Front-End Web Developer. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/steamboston/support
Derek Reiff, Front-end Web Developer — and ultra-marathoner! — joins the...
Welcome to episode 95 and today we’ve got an awesome show for you. The front-end-web developer market is extremely viable and you are going to learn 3 places to land more freelance jobs in today’s market… ready?
In this ver. @csell5 talks to @jackkoppa about getting involved in open source. Well really it quickly turns into talking about getting involved in open efforts. Something near and dear to #THATConference and #AskTHAT. Jack is a Front-End Web Developer at SafeNet Consulting, who stumbled into software while studying environmental science & Chinese. Combining those three interests has led him to live in Shanghai, work on clean tech web apps, and contribute to an open-source air quality project; he's at his most excited when finding some helpful way to apply career-related skills. Though he's also pretty excited when discussing SpaceX. Currently working mostly with Angular 4+, TypeScript, Azure, and C#; dabbling in Node, React, and Next. Find Jack at: GitHub - https://github.com/jackkoppa Twitter - https://twitter.com/jackpkoppa Efforts Mentioned in Today's Show: OpenAQ - https://openaq.org OpenAQ Slack - https://openaq-slackin.herokuapp.com/ Feedbot - Slack app for informal feedback - https://github.com/SafeNetConsulting-Milwaukee/feedbot
”I need to fail every day to succeed eventually." Nadja Summerscales-Gunn is a Front End Developer based out of the UK. Her first foray into the field was through a Web Design apprenticeship she began after dropping out of college. Being inspired by her boss, she eventually tried out a few online courses on how to code and fell in love. Fast forward to today and she is now a Lead Developer at the same digital agency. In this episode, we go over getting into the industry, the importance of having a support group, and practicing mindfulness. Among a bunch of other topics. You can find her over on Instagram @_codequeen as well as on her YouTube Channel. Lastly, you can find her as well over at the Tribe of Devs Instagram account. ============================= None of these links are affiliates, just a sampling of things we mentioned in the episode. Hobonichi Planner: https://www.jetpens.com/Hobonichi-A6-Techo-Planner-Book-Monday-Start-Week-2018-January-Start/pd/21615?gclid=Cj0KCQjwkKPVBRDtARIsAA2CG6GloLkjopEKVLqNH_hzzcvGk5icJsV1p0-rzafWIELToKVC_z-y4J4aAi6fEALw_wcB "13 Things That Will Happen When You 'Level-Up' As A Person" by Benjamin P. Hardy: https://medium.com/personal-growth/how-to-know-if-youve-leveled-up-as-a-person-3ff0611e16fc Scorpion: https://www.cbs.com/shows/scorpion/ -------------------------------------------------------- Find us on Facebook and Instagram @smalltalktech, on Twitter @bottalktech, and over at www.smalltalktech.com Small Talk Tech is a podcast series focused on interviewing people who work in various technology fields. From beginners learning their craft to masters at the highest level of proficiency, I believe that everyone has something profound to share. Through sharing their experiences, we hope to draw out the habits and mindset that will help you become better at whatever technological mountains (or molehills) stand in front of you.
Descripcion del programa Hoy hablamos con Antonio desarrollador y parte del equipo de sistemas de la W3C. Nos contará desde el proceso que lleva la W3C para implementar un standard. Veremos que opciones tenemos como "particulares" para poder aportar al código y las diferentes herramientas que hay disponibles. ¡Esperamos que os guste el episodio y como siempre nos vemos al final! ¿Queréis participar? ¿Queréis participar y ayudarnos a decidir que grabar en WeCodeSign y proponer invitad@s? Aquí podéis participar en WeCodeSign. ¿Queréis participar? ¿Queréis participar y ayudarnos a decidir que grabar en WeCodeSign y proponer invitad@s? Aquí podéis participar en WeCodeSign. Recomendaciones Preguntas rápidas: Antonio Quién me ha inspirado: Richard Stallman Recomiéndanos un recurso: JavaScript: The Definitive Guide Recomiéndanos un recurso: Can I Use Recomiéndanos un recurso: All W3C Standards and Drafts Recomiéndanos a un invitado o invitada: Alberto García Recomiéndanos a un invitado o invitada: Igalia ¿Qué tema te gustaría que tratásemos?: ¿Por qué al público no le interesan ya apenas los aspectos éticos de la tecnología (patentes y licencias de software, código abierto, derecho a la intimidad, monopolios, formatos abiertos, etc), y qué podemos hacer? Contacta con: Antonio Web de Antonio Links del programa Lea Verou Jeff Jaffe W3C community groups Markup Validation Service W3C Manuel Rego w3.org Diez cosas que (quizá) no sabías sobre el W3C y sus estándares W3C Jobs W3C Developers W3C Github World Wide Web Consortium Process Document W3C Internationalization (i18n) Activity Web Accessibility Initiative (WAI) Semantic Web WebAssembly WebVR Community W3C Workshop on Web & Virtual Reality w3devcampus edX - W3Cx Front-End Web Developer Siete ideas para estudiantes de la ETSIIT Recomendaciones de Ignacio The Web Standards Project HTML 5.1 2nd Edition HTML 5.2 SVG 2 new features Test suites for Web-platform specs Patrocinadores Fictizia.com Contacta con Ignacio Web de WeCodeSign Twitter de WeCodeSign eMail de WeCodeSign Web de Ignacio Villanueva Twitter de Ignacio Villanueva
When Douglass Turner contacted me via Twitter and said he had a story to tell, I was intrigued. But it wasn't until we sat down and started recording that I really see what he meant. From growing up in NYC surrounded by poets and writers to working at Apple in the 80s and 90s to spending years in Reykjavik, Iceland...Douglass Turner has lived. Our discussion covered all of this and a lot more, including his thoughts on the ubiquity of software in today's world, the work he's doing now with his company Elastic Image Software, and his thoughts on diversity in technology. It's a pretty fascinating conversation from a very fascinating person! Douglass Turner on Twitter Douglass Turner's Email Call Douglass Turner SPECIAL OFFER! Use discount code revisionpath and save 20% off any purchase at Creative Market! goo.gl/kMM0M7 We're on iTunes and Stitcher as well! Visit revisionpath.com/iTunes or revisionpath.com/stitcher, subscribe, and leave us a 5-star rating and a review! Thanks so much to all of you who have already rated and reviewed us! Help support Revision Path by becoming a patron! Check us out at patreon.com/revisionpath. Pledge levels start at just $1/month.
Here's the question: "How do people generally become (front-end) web developers?" Here's the Quora link: http://www.quora.com/How-do-people-generally-become-front-end-web-developers/answer/John-Morris-67 Check out my recommended resources here: http://www.johnmorrisonline.com/recommendations/ Training Center: http://www.johnmorrisonline.com/training Subscribe on YouTube: http://youtube.com/johnmorrisonline Subscribe on SoundCloud: http://soundcloud.com/johnmorrisonline Subscribe on iTunes: http://goo.gl/RggnXW Grab my PHP and MySQL 101 course on BitTorrent here: http://goo.gl/Z7qaaS Grab my Responsive Web Design 101 course on BitTorrent here: http://goo.gl/llk0dj Donate via Fan Funding here: https://www.youtube.com/user/JohnMorrisVideo Oh and share this baby! For real! (And, thanks!)
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"