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In dieser neuen Ausgabe der ShopTechTalks spreche ich mit Adrian Piegsa, Gründer und Geschäftsführer der Agentur tante-e. Wir haben uns in Shopify-Universum kennengelernt und mich hat gleich begeistert, wie konsequent Adrian und sein Team sich darauf konzentrieren, schicke und gut vermarktbare Frontends vor allen für D2C-Brands zu bauen und dabei größtenteils auf Shopify-Standards zu setzen. Adrian betreibt außerdem das erfolgreiche Merchant Inspiration-Format und veröffentlicht regelmäßig einen Podcast, bei dem ich schon häufiger zu Gast sein durfte. Höchste Zeit also für einen Gegenbesuch!
Ein Leitspruch für die Frontend-Welt: Make simple things simple and complex things possibleDie Frontend-Entwicklung hat in den letzten Jahren einen ziemlich großen Wandel erlebt. Es fing alles ganz simpel an: CSS und JavaScript wurden einfach via script-tag inkludiert. Danach kamen Performance-Optimierung durch Minification, mehr JavaScript- und CSS Features (zB Browser-APIs) wurden in die Browser implementiert und die Standards kamen nicht hinterher, doch wir Entwickler*innen wollten wir diese schon in Produktion nutzen (aka Polyfills und Transpilieren). Und auch die Web-Apps wurden immer mehr “Desktop-Like”, was einen Effekt auf die Frontends von heute hat, zB. React, Vue und Co. Und wo sind wir heute? Frameworks wie HTMX, die mit Einfachheit werben, erleben einen neuen Hype.Doch ist das alles neu oder nur “alter Wein in neuen Schläuchen”? Erkaufen wir uns durch diesen großen Tooling-Stack wirklich Einfachheit oder schließen wir uns durch die Komplexität doch nicht in eine "proprietäre API” ein, die es sehr schwer macht, das Framework zu wechseln? Und zu guter letzt: Ist die Komplexität gerechtfertigt?Zu diesem Thema sprechen wir mit Golo Roden. Golo ist Frontend-Experte und spezialisiert auf native Webtechnologien. Mit ihm behandeln wir Themen wie die Probleme von aktuellen UI-Frameworks und woher diese Probleme eigentlich kommen, wie er zu einfacheren Konzepten wie HTMX steht, über mögliche Lösungsansätze für die Probleme, Standards wie Web Components und welche Rolle TypeScript in dem ganzen Mix einnimmt.Bonus: Warum Monkey Island das richtige Spiel für dich und deine Kinder ist.**** Diese Episode wird von der HANDELSBLATT MEDIA GROUP gesponsert.Wirtschaft ist nicht immer einfach. Deswegen lautet die Mission der HANDELSBLATT MEDIA GROUP: „Wir möchten Menschen befähigen, die Wirtschaft zu verstehen.“ Mit ihren Kernprodukten, dem Handelsblatt und der WirtschaftsWoche, sowie 160.000 Abonnements, 15 Millionen Besuchern und 3 Milliarden Anfragen in einem Monat leisten sie einen wichtigen Beitrag zur Orientierung und Meinungsbildung in den Bereichen Wirtschaft und Politik und machen damit einen ausgezeichneten Job.Wenn du Teil dieser Mission sein möchtest, schau auf https://engineeringkiosk.dev/handelsblatt vorbei und werde ein Teil der HANDELSBLATT MEDIA GROUP.********Das schnelle Feedback zur Episode:
In dieser Episode des Loyalty Talk Podcast ist Michael Bregulla zu Gast. Michael ist seit über einem Vierteljahrhundert als Experte für Customer-Loyalty Ansätze aktiv. Er leitet als Co-Geschäftsführer das europaweit aktive Tech-Unternehmen rund um Loyalty- und Giftcard-Programme KNISTR. KNISTR hat sich zum Ziel gesetzt, den Omnikanalhandel erlebbarer zu machen. Das Unternehmen ist dafür führender Loyalty- und Giftcard Full-Service-Anbieter im deutschsprachigen Raum. Zum Angebotsportfolio gehören SaaS-Technologie für Frontends und Backends, ergänzende Payment- und Data-Analytics-Lösungen sowie Beratung und weitere Dienstleistungen rund um die Programmführung. Was KNISTR neben Innovationskraft und tiefer Expertise besonders macht, ist die Fähigkeit zur individuellen Ausgestaltung der Programme und die Begleitung seiner Kunden in schlüsselfertige Gesamtlösungen. Im Loyalty Talk sprechen wir über die historische und aktuelle Entwicklung des Marktes für Loyalty-Marketing, das Thema make or buy eines Loyalty Management Systems, die Nutzung von Daten und Personalisierung als „Knacknuss“ für viele Unternehmen und den Zusammenhang von Retail Media und Loyalty-Marketing. Im letzten Teil gibt Michael einen Einblick in seine persönlichen Best Practices und teilt Empfehlungen für Unternehmen, welche das Thema Loyalty-Marketing auf der Agenda haben. Weiterführende Links: Knistr: www.knistr.com Michael Bregulla auf LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/michael-bregulla Michael Bietenhader auf LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/in/michaelbietenhader Alle Folgen des Loyalty Talk: www.loyaltytalk.ch Mehr zur MilesAhead AG: www.milesahead.ch
Welches das richtige Visualisierungstool ist, hängt stark vom Projekt und auch vom Team ab. Wir erkunden drei Ansätze – interne Umgebungen wie Python Dash oder R Shiny, Dashboard-Tools wie Grafana und Redash, sowie Eigenentwicklung mit JS-Frameworks wie VueJs oder React – und wie sie sich in Bezug auf Entwicklungsgeschwindigkeit, Anpassungsfähigkeit und Skalierbarkeit unterscheiden. Auf dieser Grundlage geben wir eine Entscheidungshilfe, welcher dieser Ansätze "der Richtige" für ein Projekt ist. ***Links*** Dash: https://dash.plotly.com/ Shiny: https://shiny.posit.co/ Vue.js: https://vuejs.org/ Fragen, Feedback und Themenwünsche gern an: podcast@inwt-statistics.de
Jose, Yan, Duncan, and Ceteris discuss the mechanics of value accrual to frontends in crypto, the Solana outage of Feb 06, 2024 and the upcoming Ethereum narratives. Disclosures: Nothing said on The Hivemind is a recommendation to buy or sell securities or tokens. The podcast is strictly for informational purposes only, and any views expressed by anyone on the show are solely our opinions, not financial advice. Jose, Yan, Duncan, Ceteris, and our guests may advise or hold positions in the companies, funds, or projects discussed. Delphi's transparency page can be viewed here. Get a 20% discount on a premium Delphi PRO or PRO+ for listening to this episode! Follow the links below or use the codes on checkout: 20% off Delphi PRO annual Code: PODCASTPRO Direct Link: https://delphi.link/podcastpro 20% off Delphi PRO+ annual Code: PODCASTTEAMS Direct Link: https://delphi.link/podcastteams Follow Delphi Digital Website: https://members.delphidigital.io/home Twitter: https://twitter.com/Delphi_Digital YouTube: https://youtube.com/@Delphi_Digital --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/delphihivemind/message
In dieser Revision haben Hans und Schepp Besuch von Florian Geierstanger (Web / LinkedIn / Mastodon) und Simon Praetorius (Web / LinkedIn / Mastodon), ihres Zeichens TYPO3-Frontend-Dompteur und TYPO3-…
في الحلقة دي بتكلم عن الـ Micro Frontends وايه الاسباب الي ادت لنشأة الفكرة وفي نفس الوقت بتكلم عن مشاكلها علي الصعيد التقني والإداري في الشركات. لو انت بتستعمل Micro Frontends في شركتك، شاركنا بتجربتك واسبابك وممكن نناقشها في حلقة اخري.
Fisk and Matti, from Zee Prime Capital, join us to discuss the rise of crypto's first superapp. In this episode, we cover the Fappening Thesis (superapp), why everyone invests in middleware, how protocols establish moats, the future of Web3 social, how crypto will impact equality and more! Fisk and Mattie have some of the most eccentric and prescient ideas in crypto - you won't want to miss this one. Subscribe to Lightspeed YouTube: https://bit.ly/43o3Syk Apple: https://apple.co/3OhiXgV Spotify: https://spoti.fi/3OkF7PD - - Timestamps (00:00) Introduction (00:54) The Dev2Dev Thesis (08:13) The Fappening: Rise of the Superapp (15:02) How Apps Establish Moats (18:45) Is Blockspace Commoditized? (30:44) Uniswap's New Fee: Protocols vs Frontends (36:24) Web3 Social: Status vs Utility (47:31) Equal Opportunity vs Equal Outcomes (55:58) Advice: Think Different - - Follow Fisk: https://twitter.com/Fiskantes Follow Matti:https://twitter.com/mattigags Follow Mert: https://twitter.com/0xMert_ Follow Garrett: https://twitter.com/GarrettHarper_ Follow Lightspeed: https://twitter.com/Lightspeedpodhq Subscribe on YouTube: https://bit.ly/43o3Syk Subscribe on Apple: https://apple.co/3OhiXgV Subscribe on Spotify: https://spoti.fi/3OkF7PD Get top market insights and the latest in crypto news. Subscribe to Blockworks Daily Newsletter: https://blockworks.co/newsletter/ - - Resources Zee Prime https://zeeprime.capital/ The Future of OwnyFans https://zeeprime.capital/the-future-of-owny-fans The Fappening https://zeeprime.capital/the-fappening The Middleware Thesis https://zeeprime.capital/infrastructure-lego-the-middleware-thesis - - Disclaimers: Lightspeed was kickstarted by a grant from the Solana Foundation. Nothing said on Lightspeed is a recommendation to buy or sell securities or tokens. This podcast is for informational purposes only, and any views expressed by anyone on the show are solely our opinions, not financial advice. Mert, Garrett and our guests may hold positions in the companies, funds, or projects discussed.
Fisk and Matti, from Zee Prime Capital, join us to discuss the rise of crypto's first superapp. In this episode, we cover the Fappening Thesis (superapp), why everyone invests in middleware, how protocols establish moats, the future of Web3 social, how crypto will impact equality and more! Fisk and Mattie have some of the most eccentric and prescient ideas in crypto - you won't want to miss this one. - - Timestamps (00:00) Introduction (00:54) The Dev2Dev Thesis (08:13) The Fappening: Rise of the Superapp (15:02) How Apps Establish Moats (18:45) Is Blockspace Commoditized? (30:44) Uniswap's New Fee: Protocols vs Frontends (36:24) Web3 Social: Status vs Utility (47:31) Equal Opportunity vs Equal Outcomes (55:58) Advice: Think Different - - Follow Fisk: https://twitter.com/Fiskantes Follow Matti:https://twitter.com/mattigags Follow Mert: https://twitter.com/0xMert_ Follow Garrett: https://twitter.com/GarrettHarper_ Follow Lightspeed: https://twitter.com/Lightspeedpodhq Subscribe on YouTube: https://bit.ly/43o3Syk Subscribe on Apple: https://apple.co/3OhiXgV Subscribe on Spotify: https://spoti.fi/3OkF7PD Get top market insights and the latest in crypto news. Subscribe to Blockworks Daily Newsletter: https://blockworks.co/newsletter/ - - Resources Zee Prime https://zeeprime.capital/ The Future of OwnyFans https://zeeprime.capital/the-future-of-owny-fans The Fappening https://zeeprime.capital/the-fappening The Middleware Thesis https://zeeprime.capital/infrastructure-lego-the-middleware-thesis - - Disclaimers: Lightspeed was kickstarted by a grant from the Solana Foundation. Nothing said on Lightspeed is a recommendation to buy or sell securities or tokens. This podcast is for informational purposes only, and any views expressed by anyone on the show are solely our opinions, not financial advice. Mert, Garrett and our guests may hold positions in the companies, funds, or projects discussed.
Kain Warwick, the founder of Synthetix and Infinex, joins us to discuss how permissionless frontends are crypto's next battleground. Crypto has the infrastructure to support the next wave of users, but the user experience is lightyears behind Web2. What can solve this? Permissionless frontends. In this episode, we cover why Kain is building Infinex, the missing piece to get users onchain, crypto's new aggregators, Kain's multichain strategy, where DAOs fail to innovate and more. This might be my favorite episode yet! - - Timestamps (00:00) Introduction (02:04) A Shift from Infrastructure to the User Experience (05:03) Why Synthetix Chose Optimism (09:11) The Missing Ingredient to Compete with Binance (11:53) L2 Liquidity Fragmentation (14:51) Should Projects Launch on Multiple Chains? (17:18) Why Synthetix Might Launch an Appchain (19:10) How to Build Brand Trust & Bring Users Onchain (32:57) Jito MidRoll Plug (34:02) Crypto's New Aggregators: Permissionless Frontends (43:06) Taking Speculation Too Far (51:16) L2 Centralization Vectors & Progressive Decentralization (57:06) Will L2s Have a Power Law Outcome? (59:54) Why Kain is Still in Crypto (01:05:26) Where DAOs Succeed and Fail (01:12:44) Rapid Fire - - Follow Kain: https://twitter.com/kaiynne Follow Mert: https://twitter.com/0xMert_ Follow Garrett: https://twitter.com/GarrettHarper_ Follow Lightspeed: https://twitter.com/Lightspeedpodhq Subscribe on YouTube: https://bit.ly/43o3Syk Subscribe on Apple: https://apple.co/3OhiXgV Subscribe on Spotify: https://spoti.fi/3OkF7PD Get top market insights and the latest in crypto news. Subscribe to Blockworks Daily Newsletter: https://blockworks.co/newsletter/ - - Resources Jito https://www.jito.network/staking/?utm_source=lightspeed&utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=lightspeed_Q323_1 Synthetix https://twitter.com/synthetix_io https://linktr.ee/synthetix Infinex https://twitter.com/infinex_app https://infinex.io/ Kain's Writings https://mirror.xyz/kain.eth - - Disclaimers: Lightspeed was kickstarted by a grant from the Solana Foundation. Nothing said on Lightspeed is a recommendation to buy or sell securities or tokens. This podcast is for informational purposes only, and any views expressed by anyone on the show are solely our opinions, not financial advice. Mert, Garrett and our guests may hold positions in the companies, funds, or projects discussed.
Kain Warwick, the founder of Synthetix and Infinex, joins us to discuss how permissionless frontends are crypto's next battleground. Crypto has the infrastructure to support the next wave of users, but the user experience is lightyears behind Web2. What can solve this? Permissionless frontends. In this episode, we cover why Kain is building Infinex, the missing piece to get users onchain, crypto's new aggregators, Kain's multichain strategy, where DAOs fail to innovate and more. This might be my favorite episode yet! - - Timestamps (00:00) Introduction (02:04) A Shift from Infrastructure to the User Experience (05:03) Why Synthetix Chose Optimism (09:11) The Missing Ingredient to Compete with Binance (11:53) L2 Liquidity Fragmentation (14:51) Should Projects Launch on Multiple Chains? (17:18) Why Synthetix Might Launch an Appchain (19:10) How to Build Brand Trust & Bring Users Onchain (32:57) Jito MidRoll Plug (34:02) Crypto's New Aggregators: Permissionless Frontends (43:06) Taking Speculation Too Far (51:16) L2 Centralization Vectors & Progressive Decentralization (57:06) Will L2s Have a Power Law Outcome? (59:54) Why Kain is Still in Crypto (01:05:26) Where DAOs Succeed and Fail (01:12:44) Rapid Fire - - This episode is brought to you by Jito. Jito is the easiest way to earn MEV rewards on Solana with liquid staking. Stake your SOL with Jito to start earning high yield powered by MEV and access instant liquidity through Jito's liquid staking token JitoSOL so that you can use your staked assets across Solana DeFi. Visit jito.network to get started today! - - Follow Kain: https://twitter.com/kaiynne Follow Mert: https://twitter.com/0xMert_ Follow Garrett: https://twitter.com/GarrettHarper_ Follow Lightspeed: https://twitter.com/Lightspeedpodhq Subscribe on YouTube: https://bit.ly/43o3Syk Subscribe on Apple: https://apple.co/3OhiXgV Subscribe on Spotify: https://spoti.fi/3OkF7PD Get top market insights and the latest in crypto news. Subscribe to Blockworks Daily Newsletter: https://blockworks.co/newsletter/ - - Resources Synthetix https://twitter.com/synthetix_io https://linktr.ee/synthetix Infinex https://twitter.com/infinex_app https://infinex.io/ Kain's Writings https://mirror.xyz/kain.eth - - Disclaimers: Lightspeed was kickstarted by a grant from the Solana Foundation. Nothing said on Lightspeed is a recommendation to buy or sell securities or tokens. This podcast is for informational purposes only, and any views expressed by anyone on the show are solely our opinions, not financial advice. Mert, Garrett and our guests may hold positions in the companies, funds, or projects discussed.
In this episode, Jake and Michael discuss building your own monitor stand, the mysterious world of React micro-frontends, and get confused about JSON API, Open API, Swagger, and JSON Schema.This episode is brought to you by our friends at Workvivo - The leading employee communication app.Show links DIY monitor stand Micro-frontends Module federation JSON:API OpenAPI vs JSON:API JSON:API, OpenAPI, and JSON Schema working in harmony sixlive/json-schema-assertions
Originally published on April 25, 2023. We are taking some time off from production. We will be back with new episodes on September 6, 2023. Natalia Venditto is a Principal Program Manager at Microsoft, she leads the JavaScript and Node.js end-to-end experience on Azure. In this repeat episode from April, Natalia joins us to talk about micro-frontends and how they can help developers. Links https://microfrontend.dev https://twitter.com/AnfibiaCreativa https://www.linkedin.com/in/anfibiacreativa https://github.com/anfibiacreativa Tell us what you think of PodRocket We want to hear from you! We want to know what you love and hate about the podcast. What do you want to hear more about? Who do you want to see on the show? Our producers want to know, and if you talk with us, we'll send you a $25 gift card! If you're interested, schedule a call with us (https://podrocket.logrocket.com/contact-us) or you can email producer Kate Trahan at kate@logrocket.com (mailto:kate@logrocket.com) 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 combines frontend monitoring, product analytics, and session replay to help software teams deliver the ideal product experience. Try LogRocket for free today. (https://logrocket.com/signup/?pdr) Special Guest: Natalia Venditto.
Why Linux reigns for privacy; our recommendations for secure tools from chat to DNS.
In this repeat episode picked by host Paul Mikulskis, Scott Spence, the Svelte Society London Meetup Organizer and a Developer Relations Engineer at Storyblok, joins us to talk about building with SvelteKit, advice for teams who want to get started with Svelte, and more! Links https://twitter.com/spences10 https://scottspence.com https://mas.to/@spences10 https://github.com/spences10 https://svelte.dev/blog/svelte-3-rethinking-reactivity https://twitter.com/dummdidumm_ https://www.youtube.com/scottspenceplease https://www.twitch.tv/spences10 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g-Xr6ygI0VE https://scottspence.com/posts/gradient-animations-in-tailwindcss https://scottspence.com/posts/instagram-image-filters https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2ijSarsHfN0&t=940s Tell us what you think of PodRocket We want to hear from you! We want to know what you love and hate about the podcast. What do you want to hear more about? Who do you want to see on the show? Our producers want to know, and if you talk with us, we'll send you a $25 gift card! If you're interested, schedule a call with us (https://podrocket.logrocket.com/contact-us) or you can email producer Kate Trahan at kate@logrocket.com (mailto:kate@logrocket.com) 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 combines frontend monitoring, product analytics, and session replay to help software teams deliver the ideal product experience. Try LogRocket for free today. (https://logrocket.com/signup/?pdr) Special Guest: Scott Spence.
Ist das ein Vorbote für das was bald im E-Commerce auf uns zukommt? KOmplett aus der KI generierte Frontends und Shops? Wix stellt solch ein Feature jedenfalls für klassische Homepages für einfachere Anwendungen zur Verfügung. In wie weit das ein Gradmesser sein kann darüber diskutieren in dieser Folge Daniel Höhnke und Tim Schestag. In den News der Woche: - BigCommerce veröffentlicht KI Features auf Basis der Google Cloud -Otto stellt GenAI Funktion im Onlineshop auf Basis von Bewertungen vor - Nosto veröffentlicht vollumfängliche Integration für Shopifys Headless Frontend Hydrogen - Mollie und Klaviyo kooperieren. Kundenprofile in Klaviyo können nun auf Basis von paymentdaten aus Mollie angereichert werden - Die Bundesregierung streicht Digitalisierungshaushalt fast vollständig, mit potentiell signifikanten Folgen für unsere Branche - Mirakl erhält 100 Mio € Finanzierung und will dies u.a. für Akquisitionen nutzen
Alex on GitHub - https://github.com/armincerf React Query - https://github.com/TanStack/query Babashka - https://github.com/babashka/babashka SCI - https://github.com/babashka/sci Scittle - https://github.com/babashka/scittle EQL - https://github.com/edn-query-language/eql
Ja, der SCD23 hat abgeliefert. Und wie! Heute sprechen Daniel Höhnke über die Ankündigungen rund um den neuen AI Copilot, die B2B Components, das "neue" Composable Frontend und Tina Müller im Beirat! Unbedingt reinhören...
Robert Cooke is the CTO and co-founder of 3Forge, a real-time data visualization platform.Apple Podcasts | Spotify | Google PodcastsIn this episode, we delve into Wall Street's high-frequency trading evolution and the importance of high-volume trading data observability. We examine traditional software observability tools, such as Datadog, and contrast them with 3Forge's financial observability platform, AMI.GPT-4 generated summaryIn this episode of the Software at Scale podcast, Robert Cooke, CTO and Co-founder of 3Forge, a comprehensive internal tools platform, shares his journey and insights. He outlines his career trajectory, which includes prominent positions such as the Infrastructure Lead at Bear Stearns and the Head of Infrastructure at Liquidnet, and his work on high-frequency trading systems that employ software and hardware to perform rapid, automated trading decisions based on market data.Cooke elucidates how 3Forge empowers subject matter experts to automate trading decisions by encoding business logic. He underscores the criticality of robust monitoring systems around these automated trading systems, drawing an analogy with nuclear reactors due to the potential catastrophic repercussions of any malfunction.The dialogue then shifts to the impact of significant events like the COVID-19 pandemic on high-frequency trading systems. Cooke postulates that these systems can falter under such conditions, as they are designed to follow developer-encoded instructions and lack the flexibility to adjust to unforeseen macro events. He refers to past instances like the Facebook IPO and Knight Capital's downfall, where automated trading systems were unable to handle atypical market conditions, highlighting the necessity for human intervention in such scenarios.Cooke then delves into how 3Forge designs software for mission-critical scenarios, making an analogy with military strategy. Utilizing the OODA loop concept - Observe, Orient, Decide, and Act, they can swiftly respond to situations like outages. He argues that traditional observability tools only address the first step, whereas their solution facilitates quick orientation and decision-making, substantially reducing reaction time.He cites a scenario involving a sudden surge in Facebook orders where their tool allows operators to detect the problem in real time, comprehend the context, decide on the response, and promptly act on it. He extends this example to situations like government incidents or emergencies where an expedited response is paramount.Additionally, Cooke emphasizes the significance of low latency UI updates in their tool. He explains that their software uses an online programming approach, reacting to changes in real-time and only updating the altered components. As data size increases and reaction time becomes more critical, this feature becomes increasingly important.Cooke concludes this segment by discussing the evolution of their clients' use cases, from initially needing static data overviews to progressively demanding real-time information and interactive workflows. He gives the example of users being able to comment on a chart and that comment being immediately visible to others, akin to the real-time collaboration features in tools like Google Docs.In the subsequent segment, Cooke shares his perspective on choosing the right technology to drive business decisions. He stresses the importance of understanding the history and trends of technology, having experienced several shifts in the tech industry since his early software writing days in the 1980s. He projects that while computer speeds might plateau, parallel computing will proliferate, leading to CPUs with more cores. He also predicts continued growth in memory, both in terms of RAM and disk space.He further elucidates his preference for web-based applications due to their security and absence of installation requirements. He underscores the necessity of minimizing the data in the web browser and shares how they have built every component from scratch to achieve this. Their components are designed to handle as much data as possible, constantly pulling in data based on user interaction.He also emphasizes the importance of constructing a high-performing component library that integrates seamlessly with different components, providing a consistent user experience. He asserts that developers often face confusion when required to amalgamate different components since these components tend to behave differently. He envisions a future where software development involves no JavaScript or HTML, a concept that he acknowledges may be unsettling to some developers.Using the example of a dropdown menu, Cooke explains how a component initially designed for a small amount of data might eventually need to handle much larger data sets. He emphasizes the need to design components to handle the maximum possible data from the outset to avoid such issues.The conversation then pivots to the concept of over-engineering. Cooke argues that building a robust and universal solution from the start is not over-engineering but an efficient approach. He notes the significant overlap in applications use cases, making it advantageous to create a component that can cater to a wide variety of needs.In response to the host's query about selling software to Wall Street, Cooke advocates targeting the most demanding customers first. He believes that if a product can satisfy such customers, it's easier to sell to others. They argue that it's challenging to start with a simple product and then scale it up for more complex use cases, but it's feasible to start with a complex product and tailor it for simpler use cases.Cooke further describes their process of creating a software product. Their strategy was to focus on core components, striving to make them as efficient and effective as possible. This involved investing years on foundational elements like string libraries and data marshalling. After establishing a robust foundation, they could then layer on additional features and enhancements. This approach allowed them to produce a mature and capable product eventually.They also underscore the inevitability of users pushing software to its limits, regardless of its optimization. Thus, they argue for creating software that is as fast as possible right from the start. They refer to an interview with Steve Jobs, who argued that the best developers can create software that's substantially faster than others. Cooke's team continually seeks ways to refine and improve the efficiency of their platform.Next, the discussion shifts to team composition and the necessary attributes for software engineers. Cooke emphasizes the importance of a strong work ethic and a passion for crafting good software. He explains how his ambition to become the best software developer from a young age has shaped his company's culture, fostering a virtuous cycle of hard work and dedication among his team.The host then emphasizes the importance of engineers working on high-quality products, suggesting that problems and bugs can sap energy and demotivate a team. Cooke concurs, comparing the experience of working on high-quality software to working on an F1 race car, and how the pursuit of refinement and optimization is a dream for engineers.The conversation then turns to the importance of having a team with diverse thought processes and skillsets. Cooke recounts how the introduction of different disciplines and perspectives in 2019 profoundly transformed his company.The dialogue then transitions to the state of software solutions before the introduction of their high-quality software, touching upon the compartmentalized nature of systems in large corporations and the problems that arise from it. Cooke explains how their solution offers a more comprehensive and holistic overview that cuts across different risk categories.Finally, in response to the host's question about open-source systems, Cooke expresses reservations about the use of open-source software in a corporate setting. However, he acknowledges the extensive overlap and redundancy among the many new systems being developed. Although he does not identify any specific groundbreaking technology, he believes the rapid proliferation of similar technologies might lead to considerable technical debt in the future.Host Utsav wraps up the conversation by asking Cooke about his expectations and concerns for the future of technology and the industry. Cooke voices his concern about the continually growing number of different systems and technologies that companies are adopting, which makes integrating and orchestrating all these components a challenge. He advises companies to exercise caution when adopting multiple technologies simultaneously.However, Cooke also expresses enthusiasm about the future of 3Forge, a platform he has devoted a decade of his life to developing. He expresses confidence in the unique approach and discipline employed in building the platform. Cooke is optimistic about the company's growth and marketing efforts and their focus on fostering a developer community. He believes that the platform will thrive as developers share their experiences, and the product gains momentum.Utsav acknowledges the excitement and potential challenges that lie ahead, especially in managing community-driven systems. They conclude the conversation by inviting Cooke to return for another discussion in the future to review the progression and evolution of the topic. Both express their appreciation for the fruitful discussion before ending the podcast. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.softwareatscale.dev
In dieser Episode des Podcasts "devslove.it" stellen sich die Frontend-Entwickler Alex und Dominik abwechselnd Entweder-Oder-Fragen zu verschiedenen Frontend-Themen. Von Tools und Frameworks bis hin zu Design-Entscheidungen und Best Practices - sie diskutieren ihre Perspektiven und teilen ihre Erfahrungen in der Welt der Frontend-Entwicklung. Tauche ein in ihre lebendige Unterhaltung und erfahre mehr über die Welt des Frontends.
Natalia joins James and Amy and explains Composable Decoupled Frontends and her work at Microsoft.Show Notes00:00 Introduction01:01 Welcome Natalia05:17 Java Script on Azure07:44 Composable Decoupled Front Ends15:53 Purpose of API Gateway19:41 Logging and Air Tracking20:50 Functions25:18 Integrations With GitHub Actions27:56 Serverless29:02 The Edge31:26 microfrontend.dev36:18 Content Creation39:12 Career Success42:08 Picks and Plugs
Natalia Venditto is a Principal Program Manager at Microsoft, she leads the JavaScript and Node.js end-to-end experience on Azure. Natalia joins us today to talk about micro-frontends and how they can help developers. Links https://microfrontend.dev https://twitter.com/AnfibiaCreativa https://www.linkedin.com/in/anfibiacreativa https://github.com/anfibiacreativa Tell us what you think of PodRocket We want to hear from you! We want to know what you love and hate about the podcast. What do you want to hear more about? Who do you want to see on the show? Our producers want to know, and if you talk with us, we'll send you a $25 gift card! If you're interested, schedule a call with us (https://podrocket.logrocket.com/contact-us) or you can email producer Kate Trahan at kate@logrocket.com (mailto:kate@logrocket.com) 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 combines frontend monitoring, product analytics, and session replay to help software teams deliver the ideal product experience. Try LogRocket for free today. (https://logrocket.com/signup/?pdr) Special Guest: Natalia Venditto.
Chance Strickland, Senior Software Engineer at Shopify, returns to the pod to talk about how Remix helps developers create faster frontends from the backend. Links https://www.linkedin.com/in/chaance https://twitter.com/chancethedev https://github.com/chaance https://www.polywork.com/chance https://fronttoback.dev https://podrocket.logrocket.com/remix Tell us what you think of PodRocket We want to hear from you! We want to know what you love and hate about the podcast. What do you want to hear more about? Who do you want to see on the show? Our producers want to know, and if you talk with us, we'll send you a $25 gift card! If you're interested, schedule a call with us (https://podrocket.logrocket.com/contact-us) or you can email producer Kate Trahan at kate@logrocket.com (mailto:kate@logrocket.com) 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 combines frontend monitoring, product analytics, and session replay to help software teams deliver the ideal product experience. Try LogRocket for free today. (https://logrocket.com/signup/?pdr) Special Guest: Chance Strickland.
PARTNERSHIP | PRODUKTENTWICKLUNG | KOMPRESSOREN www.iotusecase.com Diese Podcastfolge zeigt, wie ALMiGs Kompressoren smart wurden und grandcentrix auf diesem Weg ein neues Produkt auf den Markt brachte. In grandcentrix reifte zunehmend die Idee, ein generisches Produkt zu konzipieren, mit dem man viele der immer wieder gleich gelagerten Use Cases abbilden kann. Just dann kam via Vodafone der Kontakt zu ALMiG zustande. ALMiG wurde nicht nur Kunde, sondern Anker-Kunde, mit dem die gemeinsame Arbeit und Entwicklung am neuen Produkt Modus Cloud Connect startete ... Folge 92 auf einen Blick (und Klick): [08:50] Herausforderungen, Potenziale und Status quo – So sieht der Use Case in der Praxis aus [14:18] Lösungen, Angebote und Services – Ein Blick auf die eingesetzten Technologien [28:47] Ergebnisse, Geschäftsmodelle und Best Practices – So wird der Erfolg gemessen Zusammenfassung der Podcastfolge: Druckluft ist eine versteckte Energieform, die den wenigsten wirklich bewusst sein wird. Doch der moderne Alltag funktioniert nicht ohne sie: Brauer füllen mit Druckluft Getränke in Flaschen, Druckluft bringt Zahnarztinstrumente zum Laufen, setzt Schiffsmotoren in Bewegung und treibt die Maschinen an Förderbändern in Industriebetrieben an. Ein defekter Kompressor kann eine Fabrik lahmlegen, die Auswirkungen sind ähnlich wie die eines Stromausfalls. Daher ist es für Hersteller und Kunde wichtig, die Betriebszustände im Blick zu haben und frühzeitig handeln zu können. Die ALMiG Kompressoren GmbH ist einer der führenden Systemanbieter in der Drucklufttechnologie und bedient Kunden in der ganzen Welt. grandcentrix ist zum einen Entwicklungsdienstleister für eine breite Kompetenzspanne von Embedded-Hard-Softwareprojekten über Backends bis zu Apps und Frontends, und zum anderen auch Produktentwickler für die Konzernmutter. Das heißt: grandcentrix entwickelt IoT-Geräte und IT-Systeme, die man schließlich als fertige Produkte bei Vodafone kaufen kann. Eines von diesen Produkten – der Modbus Cloud Connect – wurde gemeinsam mit der Firma ALMiG entwickelt und wird in dieser Podcastfolge vorgestellt. Der Hersteller ALMiG nutzt für die IoT-Anbindung seiner Luftkompressoren nun Modbus Cloud Connect. Durch die Vernetzung der Kompressoren sind umfangreiche Anwendungen wie Statusüberwachungen und Asset Management oder die Visualisierung von Maschinen-Einsätzen und –Auslastungen möglich. ALMiG kann seinen Kunden ein neues, digitales Service-Management anbieten und erhöht damit die Zufriedenheit. Von dieser Zusammenarbeit berichten in Folge 92 des IoT Use Case Podcast Roland Hänel (CTO, grandcentrix) und Ralph Jeschabek (Head of Marketing, ALMiG) bei Ing. Madeleine Mickeleit. ----- Relevante Folgenlinks: Robert Hänel (https://www.linkedin.com/in/rh253762211/) Ralph Jeschabek (https://www.linkedin.com/in/ralph-jeschabek-123769b/) Madeleine (https://www.linkedin.com/in/madeleine-mickeleit/) Use Case zum Lesen: https://iotusecase.com/de/use-cases/vernetzung-von-maschinen-ueber-modbus-rtu/Jetzt IoT Use Case auf LinkedIn folgen
There has been a lot of buzz about micro frontends. In this episode, we are joined by Ruben Casas to talk with us about the pros and cons of leveraging micro frontends. Guests: Ruben Casas - @Infoxicador Panelists: Ryan Burgess - @burgessdryan Jem Young - @JemYoung Picks: Ruben Casas - Building Microfrontends Ruben Casas - Micro-frontend dev Ruben Casas - The Last of Us Ryan Burgess - The Risks of Micro-Frontends - Ruben Casas Ryan Burgess - The Pez Outlaw Ryan Burgess - Beanie Mania Jem Young - Engineering Management for the Rest of Us by Sarah Drasner Jem Young - Valley Silicon: Lomi Food Composter Episode transcript: https://www.frontendhappyhour.com/episodes/micro-frontends-micro-brewing
Scott Spence is the Svelte Society London Meetup organizer and a Developer Relations Engineer at Storyblok. Scott joins us to talk about building with SvelteKit, advice for teams who want to get started with Svelte, and more! Links https://twitter.com/spences10 https://scottspence.com https://mas.to/@spences10 https://github.com/spences10 https://svelte.dev/blog/svelte-3-rethinking-reactivity https://twitter.com/dummdidumm_ https://www.youtube.com/scottspenceplease https://www.twitch.tv/spences10 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g-Xr6ygI0VE https://scottspence.com/posts/gradient-animations-in-tailwindcss https://scottspence.com/posts/instagram-image-filters https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2ijSarsHfN0&t=940s Tell us what you think of PodRocket We want to hear from you! We want to know what you love and hate about the podcast. What do you want to hear more about? Who do you want to see on the show? Our producers want to know, and if you talk with us, we'll send you a $25 gift card! If you're interested, schedule a call with us (https://podrocket.logrocket.com/contact-us) or you can email producer Kate Trahan at kate@logrocket.com (mailto:kate@logrocket.com) 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 combines frontend monitoring, product analytics, and session replay to help software teams deliver the ideal product experience. Try LogRocket for free today (https://logrocket.com/signup/?pdr). Special Guest: Scott Spence.
What are micro-frontends and why are more companies using them? Staff Engineer at Postman, Ruben Casas, joins us to talk about decoupling the monolith with micro-frontends and more. Links https://twitter.com/Infoxicador https://www.infoxicator.com https://www.youtube.com/c/RubenCasas https://github.com/infoxicator Tell us what you think of PodRocket We want to hear from you! We want to know what you love and hate about the podcast. What do you want to hear more about? Who do you want to see on the show? Our producers want to know, and if you talk with us, we'll send you a $25 gift card! If you're interested, schedule a call with us (https://podrocket.logrocket.com/contact-us) or you can email producer Kate Trahan at kate@logrocket.com (mailto:kate@logrocket.com) 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 combines frontend monitoring, product analytics, and session replay to help software teams deliver the ideal product experience. Try LogRocket for free today. (https://logrocket.com/signup/?pdr) Special Guest: Ruben Casas.
SPONSORED BY COMMERCE LAYERAround the world, billions of people can sell their wares online, in part thanks to solutions that handle the complexities of securely and reliably managing transactions. Businesses, large and small, can sell directly to customers. But a lot of these ecommerce services provide a heavier surface than many need by managing product catalogs and requiring inflexible interfaces. On this sponsored podcast episode, Ben and Ryan talk with Filippo Conforti, co-founder of Commerce Layer, an API-only ecommerce platform that focuses on the transaction engine. We talk about his early years building ecommerce at Italian luxury brands, the importance of front-ends (and micro-frontends) to ecom, and how milliseconds of page load speed can cost millions. Episode notesConforti was the first Gucci employee building out their ecommerce, so he got to experience life in a fast-moving startup within a big brand. When he left five years later, the team had grown to around 100 people. The ecommerce space is crowded—one of Commerce Layer's recent clients evaluated around 40 other platforms—but Conforti thinks Commerce Layer stands out by making any web page a shoppable experience. Conforti thinks composable commerce back ends that neglect the front end neutralize the benefits. Commerce Layer provides micro-frontends—standard web components that you can inject into any web page to create shoppable experiences. Getting your ecommerce platform as close to your customer makes real monetary difference. A report from Deloitte finds that a 100ms response time increase on mobile translates to an 8% increase in the conversion rate. Thanks to Mitch, today's Lifeboat badge winner, for their answer to the question, How to get all weekends within a date range in C#?
In der letzten Folge hatten wir über Frontends gesprochen. Um hier mehr Klarheit zu bekommen, haben wir uns den Verantwortlichen von Frontends kurzerhand eingeladen.
Laut Datenschutzbehörde Rheinland-Pfalz kann Shopify nicht legal in Deutschland eingesetzt werden. Aber gilt das nur für Shopify? Mitnichten! Wie die DSGVO und die deutschen Behörden zur Cloud-Bremse werden könnten.... In den News der Woche... Shopsysteme: - Shopware stellt neues Frontend-Framework "Frontends" vor - Shopify stellt neue Universal Search für Shop App vor. Werden sie jetzt zum Marktplatz? - Shopify und Commercetools präsentieren krasse Zahlen vom BFCM - Shopify bekommt offizielle GA4 Integration im März Social Commerce: - Meta stellt neue Shopping Features für WhatsApp vor Allgemeine News: - Small Business Saturday aus NYC könnte Vorbild auch für deutsche Regionen sein - Bei Primark bricht der Umsatz ein und muss erste Läden schließen - P&C will in die Zalando & About You Liga aufsteigen
In this episode we dig into a few technologies that can be used together to great effect. We have discussed Backend for Frontend (BFF) before but in this episode the focus is a bit different. As it turns out, an awesome acronym like BFF gets reused. Setting up a BFF works well with the new minimal APIs that were included in .NET 6. Then we tie everything together with Darker, which is similar to MediatR, but with minimal configuration and features built for BFFs. We had a lot of fun discussing this tech stack with Jonny Olliff-Lee and hope you have just as much fun listening to it. In the episode we ask our listeners to help us with the best way to say BFF. Listen to the episode and let us know on Twitter at @dotnet_Podcast. Sponsors Chuck's Resume Template Developer Book Club starting with Clean Architecture by Robert C. Martin Become a Top 1% Dev with a Top End Devs Membership Links Using .NET 6 Minimal APIs and Darker to build BFFs | by Jonny Olliff-Lee | Medium Minimal APIs quick reference Backends for Frontends pattern - Azure Architecture Center GitHub: DevJonny Jonny Olliff-Lee - Medium Twitter: @DevJonny Picks Caleb - Watch The Peripheral - Season 1 | Prime Video Jonny - Sabaton Shawn - Rainbow Braces - Visual Studio Marketplace Shawn - Viasfora - Visual Studio Marketplace
Auch wenn der Name noch nicht final ist, wir sprechen drüber und sagen euch, wie und wo ihr alles findet um bald schon dank neuer Technik schneller und schöner zu werden. Wobei… Ist es neue Technik? Oder nur ein alter Hut mit neuen Federn? Findet es in dieser wundervollen neuen Shopcast Episode heraus!
Micro-frontends have been gaining in popularity over the last few years. What actually are micro-frontends? Will they make your application better? Should you use them? We'll do an analysis in this episode and answer those questions.Twitter - The React ShowEdited by: The Podcast Editorthereactshow.comPatreonShow LinksMicro-frontends with Micheal GeersSelf Contained SystemsVertical DecompositionIKEA Case StudyReact TutorialReact Tutorial - Jennifer FuOpen ComponentsAmerican Express MicrofrontendsAmerican Express Source CodeHopin MicrofrontendsAirbnb Infrastructure EvoltionUber Infrastructure EvolutionIKEA MicroFrontends
JavaOne 2022 Speaker Preview In this conversation Oracle's Jim Grisanzio talks with JavaOne 2022 speaker Matt Raible from Colorado. Matt is a Java Champion, a Duke's Choice Award winner, and Open Source developer, and a developer advocate. He previews his session at JavaOne on Micro Frontends for Java Developers. The conversation also gets into the Java community, how Matt got into development, and his contributions to the Open Source community. JavaOne 2022 October 17-20 in Las Vegas JavaOne 2022: Registration and Sessions JavaOne 2022: News Updates at Inside Java Matt Raible, Java Champion, Open Source Developer at OktaDev @mraible Java Development and Community OpenJDK Inside Java Dev.Java @java on Twitter Java on YouTube Duke's Corner Podcast Host Jim Grisanzio, Oracle Java Developer Relations, @jimgris
The MapScaping Podcast - GIS, Geospatial, Remote Sensing, earth observation and digital geography
WhiteBox Contains over 500 geospatial analysis tools. Many of these tools have novel functionality that you won't find in other software and it's FREE to use! https://www.whiteboxgeo.com/ Sponsored By Lightbox https://www.lightboxre.com/ More podcast episodes on GIS and GIS careers can be found on our website https://mapscaping.com/podcasts/ Consider supporting this podcast on Patreon https://www.patreon.com/MapScaping? Or go to MapScaping.com to find out about sponsoring our website reach out on Twitter https://twitter.com/MapScaping or LinkedIn https://www.linkedin.com/in/danielodonohue/
What's up everyone, this is Dariusz Kalbarczyk co-founder of NG Poland, JS Poland, AngularMaster.dev & WorkshopFest.dev. Welcome back to the Angular Master Podcast. Today, together with Manfred Steyer, who is an excellent Speaker, Trainer, Consultant and Author with focus on Angular. We will talk about Auth for SPAs and Micro Frontends You started a blog series where you tell us that the browser is no safe place for storing security tokens. However, it's quite modern to directly use JWT tokens, OAuth 2 and OpenId Connect in the browser. What's the reason for this? Do we need to panic, if we still use tokens in the browser? If we should not directly use security tokens in the browser, how to implement Single-Sign-on with existing identity solutions like Active Directory? How to deal with APIs of different origins? You also mention that there is a way to use these ideas to improve security while making everything easier. How is this even possible? Let's assume, we have installed and configured such a Security Gateway. What do I need to do on the client-side for authentication and authorization? And what do I need to do on the server-side? Can you tell us a bit about your reference implementation for this idea? You are using ASP.NET Core for this. What to do, if this is not part of our stack? What Identity Solutions does this implementation support? What's with Cross-Site-Request-Forgery Attacks, now, as we have cookies again? Do we need to protect ourselves from them? You also talked a lot about Micro Frontends recently. Does this approach also work with them or do we have to adjust it? --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/angular-master/message
What's up everyone, this is Dariusz Kalbarczyk co-founder of NG Poland, JS Poland, AngularMaster.dev & WorkshopFest.dev. Welcome back to the Angular Master Podcast. Today, together with Manfred Steyer, who is an excellent Speaker, Trainer, Consultant and Author with focus on Angular. We will talk about Micro Frontends and Standalone Components You are doing quite a lot with Micro Frontends. However, there is the rumor that micro frontends are bad for UX and bundle sizes. Why's that? Well said. But if we decide to do so. How to deal with these problems? I have to ask this question. Does it really make sense to use Module Federation in Monorepo? Continuing the tone of the previous question. Are there technical reasons for introducing Module Federation? It is very interesting what you said. Let us go one step further. What are misconceptions you see in the area of Micro Frontends? How does the mental model behind the standalone components work? How to improve your architecture without NgModules? How to prepare for a NgModule-less world and how to migrate existing projects? How to use Standalone Components with existing code and Angular libs What are your wishes for the future of Micro Frontends? --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/angular-master/message
Plaudertaschen meets S Broker - Wie können Sparkassen von den Trends bei Selbstentscheidern profitieren?In dieser Episode sprechen wir über Trading bzw. Brokerage, ein Thema im Banking, welches gerade in den letzten beiden Jahren einen regelrechten Boom erfahren hat. Allein der Neobroker Trade Republic konnte in dieser Zeit knapp 1 Mio. Neukunden verzeichnen, wovon lt. eigenen Angaben 50% zuvor noch nie am Kapitalmarkt investiert haben. Woran das liegt, was sich geändert hat, welchen Einfluss neue Assetklassen wie Krypto haben und wie die Sparkassen aufgestellt sind, genau darüber wollen wir heute mit unserem Gast Marcus Brinker sprechen. Marcus ist Vorstandsmitglied beim S Broker und hat in seinen über 20 Jahren beim zentralen Online-Broker der Sparkassen Finanzgruppe wesentliche Fußabdrücke hinterlassen - wenn es also um das Thema Brokerage geht, der ideale Gast und nachdem er schon auf unserer Krypto-Konferenz vor einigen Wochen dabei war, nun auch in einer Episode mit uns! Viel Spaß beim hören! Euer Plaudertaschen-Team Fragen, Anregungen und Feedback sehr gerne an mail@plaudertaschen-podcast.de Über unseren Gast:Marcus Brinker verantwortet als Vorstandsmitglied die Bereiche Vorstandsstab & Gesamtbanksteuerung, Finanzen & Controlling, Marketing & Frontends sowie das Produkt- & Handelsangebot beim S Broker. Marcus Brinker kennt das Unternehmen seit langer Zeit. Bereits seit 2000 ist er beim S Broker und entwickelte sich, als Verantwortlicher des Risikomanagements und des Bereichs Finanzen & Controlling, in wichtige Führungspositionen im Unternehmen hinein. Zuletzt war er als Bereichsleiter Vorstandsstab & Gesamtbanksteuerung bereits langjährig als Stellvertreter des Marktfolge- und Überwachungsvorstandes tätig. Dieser Podcast wird präsentiert von:=> unblu - die Kommunikationsplattform für Finanzdienstleister => TABULARAZA by zeb - Wir gestalten Zukunft. Folge direkt herunterladen
This interview was recorded for the GOTO Book Club.gotopia.tech/bookclubLuca Mezzalira - Author of "Building Micro-Frontends" and Principal Solutions Architect at AWSLucas Dohmen - Senior Consultant at INNOQ and Podcast Host at CaSEYou can find more details about Luca here:buildingmicrofrontends.comDESCRIPTIONMicro-frontends are more than just a buzzword. In this GOTO podcast episode, Luca Mezzalira, author of “Building Micro-Frontends,” shares best practices around how to use them. The conversation also sheds light on some key terms like SSI and ESI. The interview is based on Luca's book "Building Micro-Frontends"Read the full transcription of the interview hereRECOMMENDED BOOKSLuca Mezzalira • Building Micro-FrontendsLuca Mezzalira • Front-End Reactive ArchitecturesNoel Rappin • Modern Front-End Development for RailsMichael Geers • Micro Frontends in ActionJeremy Fairbank • Programming ElmTwitterLinkedInFacebookLooking for a unique learning experience?Attend the next GOTO conference near you! Get your ticket at gotopia.techSUBSCRIBE TO OUR YOUTUBE CHANNEL - new videos posted almost daily.Discovery MattersA collection of stories and insights on matters of discovery that advance life...Listen on: Apple Podcasts Spotify Health, Wellness & Performance Catalyst w/ Dr. Brad CooperLooking for a catalyst to optimize your health, wellness & performance? You've found it!!Listen on: Apple Podcasts Spotify The New Arab VoiceA podcast from The New Arab, a leading English-language website based in London...Listen on: Apple Podcasts Spotify
When you visit a web page, the creator's intent is to present you a seamless experience that fills your browser window. That web page or web application is generally divided up in some meaningful way across navigation elements, content, ads, header, footer, and other components. Those components may represent the work of independent teams. Typically The post Micro-Frontends with Luca Mezzalira appeared first on Software Engineering Daily.
When you visit a web page, the creator's intent is to present you a seamless experience that fills your browser window. That web page or web application is generally divided up in some meaningful way across navigation elements, content, ads, header, footer, and other components. Those components may represent the work of independent teams. Typically The post Micro-Frontends with Luca Mezzalira appeared first on Software Engineering Daily.
We're wrangling multiple frontends all at once, trying to onboard Nova users, and Aaron did some fun MySQL stuff.
Micro-what?!? What is a micro frontend, what does it have to do with Angular, why would I want to use this strategy, and how do I go about implementing this in my organization?These are all good questions. Whether you know what a micro frontend is, have never heard of it, or are currently implementing this strategy in your organization, this is an episode of the Angular Show that you do not want to miss.Join panelists Aaron Frost, Brian Love, and Jennifer Wadella as they start their journey in learning about Micro Frontends in Angular. We had the privilege to sit down with Zama Khan Mohamed, who is an expert in Micro Frontends. Zama teaches us the basics of what a micro frontend is and why we would consider this strategy for our applications. Then, we dive into the details on how Angular developers and organizations using Angular, as well as a mix of other frameworks, can leverage Micro Frontends in their architecture. We also discuss some of the benefits and costs of this approach, and why you might want to consider using micro frontends. Finally, we also touch on Webpach version 5's new support for federated modules and the impact this has on how we build modern micro frontends.Phew - that sounds like a lot, but have no fear, your friendly panelists are here to walk with you through this new landscape of micro frontends in the JavaScript ecosystem.Show Notes:https://github.com/single-spa/single-spahttps://webpack.js.org/concepts/module-federation/Connect with us:@mohamedzamakhan@likeOMGitsFEDAY@brian_love@aaronfrost
Wenn die Kinder schlafen und die Eltern gerade wieder wach geworden sind, ist es Zeit für eine Late-Night Show mit etlichen Themen, wenig rotem Faden, dafür gehörig viel Meinung. Kahlil und Stefan hol…
Nos reunimos con Lucas para que nos cuente su experiencia implementando micro frontends como parte de una migración importante dentro de su proyecto. ¿De qué se trata este modelo? ¿Qué problemas viene a solucionar? ¿Qué ventajas y desventajas tiene? Intentamos responder estas preguntas y más, en un nuevo episodio de Pinecast. Participantes: Lucas, Achus, Martín
O termo Micro Frontend surgiu de uma abordagem parecida com a de microsserviços, mas aplicada no front. O pessoal da Conta Azul tinha alguns problemas pra resolver dentro na solução deles e essa técnica caiu como uma luva. Ouça e descubra porque! Participantes: Gabs Ferreira, o host que adora conversar sobre cases de empresasJefferson Amorim, arquiteto frontend na Conta Azul Guilherme Carneiro, desenvolvedor frontend na Conta Azul Ciro Ferreira, desenvolvedor frontend na Conta Azul Fernanda Lemos, desenvolvedora frontend e design system na Conta Azul Alberto Souza, o co-host que aproveitou pra saber tudo que queria sobre micro frontends Links: Vagas na Conta AzulMicrofronteds - Hipsters #164
Nachdem alle Co-Hosts der Reihe nach, aufgrund von verschiedenen dringenden Gründen, ausfielen, interviewte Kahlil im Alleingang Vanessa Otto zum Thema Micro Frontends. UNSER SPONSOR Storyblok is a…
In Episode 70 of Mobycast, we wrap up our bootcamp on Microservices with the discussion on Micro Frontends. Welcome to Mobycast, a weekly conversation about cloud-native development, AWS, and building distributed systems.