Podcasts about gatsbyjs

  • 45PODCASTS
  • 59EPISODES
  • 39mAVG DURATION
  • ?INFREQUENT EPISODES
  • Dec 8, 2023LATEST

POPULARITY

20172018201920202021202220232024


Best podcasts about gatsbyjs

Latest podcast episodes about gatsbyjs

Open Source Startup Podcast
E118: Building React Framework Gatsby

Open Source Startup Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 8, 2023 35:38


Kyle Mathews is Co-Founder & CTO of Gatsby, the front-end web development platform. Their open source framework, GatsbyJS, is widely adopted with 55K GitHub Stars. In Feb 2023, Gatsby was acquired by Netlify. In this episode, we discuss how GatsbyJS was able to grow incredibly fast, what features matter most for front-end development frameworks (speed, approachability, etc.), learnings from going after a smaller portion of the market and over-hiring & more!

Software Social
Getting Into Public Speaking as a Developer

Software Social

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 1, 2022 38:25


Michele chats with indie developer Benedicte Raae about getting into public speaking through streaming. Follow Benedicte on Twitter! https://twitter.com/raaeBenedicte's website: https://queen.raae.codes/StreamYard: https://streamyard.com/A couple friends of this pod have launched their own shows for entrepreneurs lately! Check them out:Ship SaaS Faster (Simon Bennett + Volkan Kaya): https://shipsaasfaster.com/Marketing Retro (Adrienne Barnes + Josh Ho): https://marketingretro.substack.com/The Weekly Build (Marie Ng + Jesse Anderson): https://www.theweeklybuild.com/This Indie Life (James McKinven + Dagobert Renouf): https://indielife.fm/The Non-Tech Founders Podcast (Laura Elizabeth and Nathan Powell): https://nontechfounders.transistor.fm/Huge thanks to all of our listeners who've become Software Socialites and support our show! You can become a supporter for $100 a year at softwaresocial.dev/supporters  Chris from Chipper CI The Daringly Handsome Kevin Griffin And Mike from Gently Used Domains, who has a nice personality Dave from Recut Max of OnlineOrNot Stefan from Talk to Stefan Brendan Andrade of Bright Bits Team Tuple Alex Hillman from The Tiny MBA Ramy from Hovercode and Rocket Gems Jane and Benedikt from Userlist Kendall Morgan Ruben Gamez of SignWell Corey Haines of SwipeWell Mike Wade of Crowd Sentry Nate Ritter of Room Steals Anna Maste of Subscribe Sense Geoff Roberts from Outseta Justin Jackson, MegaMaker Jack Ellis and Paul Jarvis from Fathom Analytics Matthew from Appointment Reminder Andrew Culver at Bullet Train John Kostor Alex of Corso Systems Richard from Stunning Josh,the annoyingly pragmatic founder Ben from Consent Kit John from Credo and EditorNinja Cam Sloan Michael Koper of Nusii Proposals Chris from Urlbox Caeli of Tosslet Greg Park from TraitLab Adam from Rails Autoscale Lana and Alex from Recapsy Joe Masilotti of railsdevs.com Proud MaMa from Oplnet, LLC Anna from Kradl Moncef from Ruby on Mac Steve of Be Inclusive Simon Bennett of SnapShooter Backups Josh Smith of Keyhero.io Jesper Christiansen of FormBackend Matthew Wojtowicz of WorkCited  Chris of Jetboost.io Daryl Shannon of Docamatic Larabelles - the community for women, non-binary and trans Laravel developers    Arvid Kahl James Sowers from Castaway.fm Jessica Malnik Damian Moore of Audio Audit Podcast Checker Eldon from NodleStudios Mitchell Davis from RecruitKit

Po Prostu JS - JavaScript Podcast
Next.js - wywiad z Arturem Chmaro

Po Prostu JS - JavaScript Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 7, 2022 52:01


Kolejny wywiad wjeżdża na salony. Miałem przyjemność porozmawiać z Arturem Chmaro. Artur siedzi w tematach JS, React & blockchain. Artur dzieli się swoją wiedzą na social mediach. Prowadzi kanał na youtube - https://www.youtube.com/c/ArturChmaro oraz konto na instagramie https://www.instagram.com/fullstak_pl/. Artur jest również twórcą kursu Next.js -> https://sklep.fullstak.pl/kurs-nextjsRozmawiamy na temat Next.js, jakie są jego zalety i wady. Wszystko w kontekście doświadczeń Artura w projektach, które tworzy. Omawiamy różne rodzaje renderowania w Next.js - SSR, SSG oraz ISR. Zapraszam do wysłuchania rozmowy na Spotify, Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts i poprostujs.pl

Launch School Podcast
S4E2: Latest News, Interviews and Catch-up with Mandy

Launch School Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 14, 2022 72:26


This episode Karis and Chris discuss the all the latest Launch School interviews and presentations. Karis also catches up with the co-host from last season Mandy who now works at Mozilla. Finally they leave you with a number of new announcements that students should be aware of. Intro (https://podcast.launchschool.com/latest-news-interviews-mandy?t=0) Agenda (https://podcast.launchschool.com/latest-news-interviews-mandy?t=19) Felicia's Interview with Chris (https://podcast.launchschool.com/latest-news-interviews-mandy?t=62) Felicia's Interview with Carolina (https://podcast.launchschool.com/latest-news-interviews-mandy?t=267) Women's Group Employer Speaker Series (https://podcast.launchschool.com/latest-news-interviews-mandy?t=562) Rodney's Tech Talk on GatsbyJS (https://podcast.launchschool.com/latest-news-interviews-mandy?t=1083) New Assessment details: RB189/JS189 (https://podcast.launchschool.com/latest-news-interviews-mandy?t=1301) Answer your Questions on Air: Core Graduates (https://podcast.launchschool.com/latest-news-interviews-mandy?t=1663) Karis' Interview with previous co-host Mandy (https://podcast.launchschool.com/latest-news-interviews-mandy?t=2183) Reminders & Outro (https://podcast.launchschool.com/latest-news-interviews-mandy?t=3986) Show Notes - Felicia's Interview with Chris (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1MSarPQLprU) - Felicia's Interview with Carolina (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=09CFH1Gz_as) - Women's Group Employer Speaker Series (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VKLe_cNpOSY) - Rodney's Tech Talk on GatsbyJS (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3xNVJu1mIY0) - New Assessment details: RB189/JS189 post (https://launchschool.com/posts/fe4ef7eb) - Core Curriculum Results post (https://launchschool.com/posts/6c701be2) - New Practice Problems for RB109 and JS109 Interviews post (https://launchschool.com/posts/c4a938a2) - Introduction to Command Line Book exercise videos (https://launchschool.com/posts/e56d9167) - JS239 Interviews are now deprecated post (https://launchschool.com/posts/38b95bfa) - Peer-led Seminar: JavaScript Testing (https://launchschool.com/posts/db091877) - Capstone Project Presentations Signup Posts: - QMantis (https://launchschool.com/posts/0c0036d3) - Hypha (https://launchschool.com/posts/df7d6a0f) - Waypost (https://launchschool.com/posts/97634bf6) - Artemis (https://launchschool.com/posts/6a213d4f) - SPOTs Gather Town Information (https://launchschool.com/gists/0aae3afb) - Women's Group 24th April meetup post (https://launchschool.com/posts/6a0e54c7) If you have any questions about anything Launch School related whether its our prep course, Core Program, Capstone and beyond please fill out our form below and your question could be answered in our next episode! - Ask a Question Form (https://launchschool.com/podcast-requests)

Front End Nerdery Podcast
8 - Preston So

Front End Nerdery Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 13, 2021 69:37


In this episode, I spoke with Senior Director of Product Strategy at Oracle, developer advocate, speaker, and author, Preston So. We talked about Decoupled Days, a conference focused on headless CMS architectures, his new book from A Book Apart on Voice Content and Usability, and his other book on GatsbyJS coming out in the fall as well as a few other important topics in his new book. Intro/Outro music graciously given permission to use called, "Settle In" by Homer Gaines. Transcripts can be found at https://toddl.dev/podcast/transcripts/so/ Show Notes: https://preston.so - Preston's Personal Site https://twitter.com/prestonso - @prestonso on Twitter https://github.com/prestonso - Preston So on GitHub https://www.linkedin.com/prestonso - Preston So on LinkedIn https://abookapart.com/products/voice-content-and-usability - Voice Content & Usability https://preston.so/books/gatsby/ - Gatsby, The Definitive Guide https://decoupleddays.com/ - DecoupledDays 2021 https://www.apress.com/gp/book/9781484240717 - Decoupled Drupal In Practice https://georgia.gov/chat - AskGeorgiaGov --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/frontendnerdery/support

Agile Digital Transformation
Philipp Melab - Enterprise-level decoupled CMS with Gatsby

Agile Digital Transformation

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 25, 2021 27:53


Philipp Melab is the lead software engineer at the Switzerland-based digital agency Amazee Labs that specializes in creating high-end digital experiences utilizing Drupal, React and GatsbyJS.Recently, Amazee Labs have put Gatsby to great use on several of their projects for enterprise clients, either integrated with a data source such as Google Sheets or as part of a decoupled CMS solution. In this episode, we discuss how enterprise CMS differs from standard CMS and what "decoupled" CMS means. In the second part of the episode, we focus more on the GatsbyJS framework; Philipp explains how they found it and decided to start using it, then he describes a few of their recent interesting projects with Gatsby.Links & mentions:preston.soamazeelabs.comyoutube.com/channel/UCA2BmvPgJiaABiVhEgprdbAtwitter.com/pmelabdrupal.org/slack

Geeksblabla
#67 - Tech News & AMA #7

Geeksblabla

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 27, 2021 140:11


Tech News & AMA #6 with our community members Abderrahim, Youssouf, Abderrahim, Otmane, and Mohamed. During this episode, we discuss the latest Tech News and we answer audience questions about programming, community, new technologies, and much more. Guests Abderrahim Soubai Elidrissi Mohammed Aboullaite Otmane Fettal Notes 0:01 - Introduction. 0:04 - New WhatsApp Privacy. 0:10 - Google Threatens To Shut Down Search Engine In Australia If Forced To Pay Publishers For News. 0:14 - Elastic Changes Licences for Elasticsearch and Kibana: AWS Forks Both 0:30 - The future of React & React Native 0:31 - Micro frontend Apps 0:43 - How to switch your career 0:46 - Parallel Programming 0:54- when we should start using ngrx 1:02 - Self-driving cars updates 1:07 - SEO 1:13 - pub/sub or RabbitMq 1:31 - Gatsbyjs for E-Commerce websites 1:33 - No-Code or low code trends 1:44 - What's the quality strategy used in the projects you worked on? 1:54 - What I should master before get started with devops? 2:04 - Deno.js vs Node 2:18 - Wrap up and goodbye. Prepared and Presented by Youssouf El Azizi

The Bike Shed
265: There Are No Free Lunches

The Bike Shed

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 20, 2020 46:02


On this week's episode, Steph and Chris chat about database transactions and job queues, building static sites with GatsbyJS and NetlifyCMS, the performance impacts of front end frameworks and static content, and lastly they catch up on Hacktoberfest and the complexities of encouraging and supporting work in open source. This episode is brought to you by: ScoutAPM (https://scoutapm.com/bikeshed) - Give Scout a try for free today and Scout will donate $5 to the open source project of your choice when you deploy Datadog (http://datadog.com/thebikeshed). Click through to get a free 14-day trial and a free Datadog t-shirt! Sidekiq (https://sidekiq.org/) delayed_job (https://github.com/collectiveidea/delayed_job) Que (Postgres-backed job queuing system for ruby apps) (https://github.com/que-rb/que) Transactionally Staged Job Drains in Postgres (https://brandur.org/job-drain) Postgres Job Queues & Failure By MVCC (https://brandur.org/postgres-queues) Gatsby.js (https://www.gatsbyjs.com/) Netlify (https://www.netlify.com/) NetlifyCMS (https://www.netlifycms.org/) Middleman (https://middlemanapp.com/) MDX (https://mdxjs.com/) Steph's Monster blog (https://monster-cute.netlify.app/) monster-cute blog repo (https://github.com/SViccari/monster-cute) Svelte (https://svelte.dev/) Rich Harris - creator of Svelte (https://twitter.com/rich_harris) Rich Harris on full stack radio (https://fullstackradio.com/143) Extensity chrome extension (https://chrome.google.com/webstore/detail/extensity/jjmflmamggggndanpgfnpelongoepncg?hl=en) Hacktoberfest (https://hacktoberfest.digitalocean.com/) DigitalOcean's Hacktoberfest is Hurting Open Source (https://blog.domenic.me/hacktoberfest/) Hacktoberfest Update from Digital Ocean (https://hacktoberfest.digitalocean.com/hacktoberfest-update) Goodhart's law (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Goodhart%27s_law) Adam Wathan of Tailwind Labs (https://adamwathan.me/) Remix Run (https://remix.run/) Become a Sponsor (https://thoughtbot.com/sponsorship) of The Bike Shed!

Kentico Rocks Podcast
Kentico Rocks Episode 34

Kentico Rocks Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 5, 2020 25:08


In this episode of Kentico Rocks, Adam Amran, Product Designer at Kentico Kontent, joins host Brian McKeiver. They talk about Adam's experience with creating a GatsbyJS site backed by the Kentico Kontent Headless CMS as a new programmer. Adam and Brian go into the story of how Adam needed to create a new website for a side project he was working on, Untools.co. Being a Designer by trade, Adam wasn’t quite sure where to start as he only had basic programming knowledge of HTML, CSS, and JavaScript. After forming the new idea for the project, creating his content model in Kontent, and settling on GatsbyJS as the right solution, the new site came together quickly and is now blazing fast. Listen to the episode to find out what pitfalls happened along the way, and why Adam us now very happy with the result.

Kentico Rocks Podcast
Kentico Rocks Episode 34

Kentico Rocks Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 5, 2020 25:08


In this episode of Kentico Rocks, Adam Amran, Product Designer at Kentico Kontent, joins host Brian McKeiver. They talk about Adam's experience with creating a GatsbyJS site backed by the Kentico Kontent Headless CMS as a new programmer. Adam and Brian go into the story of how Adam needed to create a new website for a side project he was working on, Untools.co. Being a Designer by trade, Adam wasn’t quite sure where to start as he only had basic programming knowledge of HTML, CSS, and JavaScript. After forming the new idea for the project, creating his content model in Kontent, and settling on GatsbyJS as the right solution, the new site came together quickly and is now blazing fast. Listen to the episode to find out what pitfalls happened along the way, and why Adam us now very happy with the result.In this episode of Kentico Rocks, Adam Amran, Product Designer at Kentico Kontent, joins host Brian McKeiver. They talk about Adam's experience with creating a GatsbyJS site backed by the Kentico Kontent Headless CMS as a new programmer. Adam and Brian go into the story of how Adam needed to create a new website for a side project he was working on, Untools.co. Being a Designer by trade, Adam wasn’t quite sure where to start as he only had basic programming knowledge of HTML, CSS, and JavaScript. After forming the new idea for the project, creating his content model in Kontent, and settling on GatsbyJS as the right solution, the new site came together quickly and is now blazing fast. Listen to the episode to find out what pitfalls happened along the way, and why Adam us now very happy with the result.

That's my JAMstack
S2E4 - Obinna Ekwuno on the shift from engineering to the web, Gatsby and the incremental future

That's my JAMstack

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 1, 2020


Quick show notes Our Guest: Obinna Ekwuno What he'd like for you to see: His Egghead videos His JAMstack Jams: Gatsby Cloud | Netlify His Musical Jam: KOTA the Friend | Fela Kuti Transcript Bryan Robinson 0:03 Hello, everyone, welcome to the next amazing episode of That's My Jamstack the podcast where we ask the age old question, what's your jam in the Jamstack? On today's episode, we talked with the amazing Obinna Ekwuno is a software engineer for Gatsby, a media developer expert, egghead instructor and an accessibility advocate. Bryan Robinson 0:24 Before we dive into that interview, let me take a second to thank our sponsor this week, TakeShape, stick around after the episode to find out more about their content platform, or head over to takeshape.io/thatsmyjamstack for more information. Bryan Robinson 0:40 Obinna, thanks for thanks for being on the podcast with us today. Obinna Ekwuno 0:44 Happy to be here. Bryan Robinson 0:45 Awesome. So tell us a little about yourself. What do you do for work? What do you do for fun? That kind of thing? Obinna Ekwuno 0:50 Oh, um, so I am a software engineer at GatsbyJS. I work on the DevRel team. I originally joined Gatsby to work on the learning team. Like building stuff with like documentation, writing some documentation and working on like plugin automating workflows and like all of those interesting stuff, trying to like make like documentation better for like people to, like, get more information out of out of Gatsby. But now I work on like the DevRel team, which is like really cool, because like, I still do some of the learning work, but like also, like more DevRel right now. Um, that's what I do for work. Obinna Ekwuno 1:25 For fun, like, I like to write poetry. So I just, you know, write poems, hang out my friends. I I started getting into gaming a few months ago, my friend gave me his ps4 to like, try out some games. So yeah, that's that's what I do for fun right now. Bryan Robinson 1:41 So what kind of poetry are you writing? Obinna Ekwuno 1:44 I'm mostly like mostly melancholic poems like just, you know, I'm just writing I'm documenting like, life as a Nigerian boy growing up in Nigeria and you know, just just, you know, writing more for my myself, my future self done, like anybody really Bryan Robinson 2:01 Awesome, I believe of everyone that we've, we've talked to you're the first person who said that poetry is what you do in your spare time. So that's, that's awesome. Obinna Ekwuno 2:09 Thank you. Bryan Robinson 2:10 And then with Gatsby, so you said you were originally on the learning team and the devrel team. That's been an interesting thing that I've heard about Gatsby, what's the main difference between, say, the Education team and and DevRel? Because I've always felt that those kind of overlap in some ways? Obinna Ekwuno 2:26 Yeah. So like, there's not like so much difference is because when working out like when I was working on like, the learning team, because we're still trying to like flesh out the DevRel team at Gatsby, so learning was more like, you know, writing documentation, speaking, podcasts, all of those interests interfacing, like the community, so it was kind of like, it was more like DevRel but then at the same time, like actually having to write documentation as part of your job. But, so like, that's like, those, those are like the, the parts are like overlapped but like so that's why it was really easy for to transition from like learning things. There. Because like it was just same thing I started doing originally, but like, you know, with like, Oh, this is not what you're supposed to do full time. Bryan Robinson 3:07 So let's, let's talk about the the Jamstack a little bit. So what was your entry point into this idea of the Jamstack? Or maybe your static sites? How did you kind of enter this world? Obinna Ekwuno 3:16 Yeah, so, um, I think that was like, two years ago, when I had been writing, like, React for a bit. And, you know, it was really, um, it was really because I had to, I don't, I didn't have like a traditional entry into like tech. Obinna Ekwuno 3:30 I studied engineering in school, and like, it was really in uni. And like, it was really confusing to like, learn how to code. So I was writing, like, React after learning, like a lot of JavaScript. And then, you know, someone just came up one day while I was like, hanging out my friends from computer science, and they were like, hey, look at this cool stuff called Gatsby. Like, what is like The Great Gatsby like the movie, like who would name something who would never framework out of like a movie, but then you know, that then I you know, got into like the documentatioon. And you know, just really just kept going from there. So like Gatsby was like my first introduction to like, oh, when I saw that I think the thing that really got me into it was seeing that I didn't have to like worry about routes anymore. The whole the whole put put the file in the page folder and becomes a router. It got it got me. I was like, What? Yes, this is how I want to build Bryan Robinson 4:20 It definitely. Like I when I got my first intro into like some of the React stuff. I just, I didn't want to handle routing. That was like the worst thing about building a single page application. And now with Gatsby is just drag and drop almost Bryan Robinson 4:33 So when you were studying at university, you said you were like software engineering. Were you specifically looking to get into went into the web world? Or were you looking to do other things with that? Obinna Ekwuno 4:44 So um, I was studying electronics and computer engineering, and you know, like having having so I was doing more of like, smaller electronics like, you know, smaller sector boards, how do waveforms work, all of those things. Interesting stuff that I never really paid attention to. Well, but the thing is like with me, like naturally, I'm just really I'm really curious. So at first I didn't even want to like I didn't know what tech was about, I just really just wanted to be a network engineer. So I was learning a lot about TCP and IPs and network layers and all those like interesting stuff, Voice over IP, you know, the cool things for me at that time, then, I got into like tech, when one of my, my classmates was because I was just going to like, the classes to get my degree, like because I was good at math and physics. And you know, engineering just came like, Oh, that's what you're supposed to do. Obinna Ekwuno 5:34 But then when I really go into like, my classmate taught me to write HTML. And I learned HTML, I was like, Oh, my God, then I go, I go to CSS and I'm like, what's sorcery is this? How, how does this happen? You know, so I've always I think the thing that really got me here was like, always wanting to because everything excites me with like, when it comes to like tech, so like, always know, what's the next thing I can do? How can I use this in another way? So like, that's like, what's really interesting That's, that's what really got me into like, where I am now. Bryan Robinson 6:03 Very cool. So obviously working at Gatsby, your day to day deals a lot with the Jamstack. But how specifically, are you using the Jamstack professionally? How are you using it personally? What are you kind of doing nowadays? Obinna Ekwuno 6:15 Yeah, so um, I first like my, like building on stuff like Jamstack was like kind of building stuff for Gatsby was how I got to like the Jamstack. I like now because like, I work on the on the documentation. So like before, you have to actually write documentation, you kind of need to like test out or you're writing about and actually know if it works. So that's like most of the stuff that I do professionally with the Jamstack. So maybe if you're trying to document how a plugin works like you're actually running up a Gatsby, you're firing up a Gatsby demo site, trying to like implement this plugin, seeing use cases, questions that people might have about implementation and all of those like cool stuff. And mostly on testing out tutorials. When you write, you're trying to write a tutorial on how to use this With Gatsby, I would have to, like, you know, have to understand how this works, and then test it out, build it out and then write the documentation for that. So that's like how I work with it professionally. Um, and mostly just like educating people on it. Obinna Ekwuno 7:13 Personally, I have I have a personal sites that have I have been working my friend always laughs at me every time I mentioned my personal site, because I've been working on this site for like, for like, the past year. And the reason why I haven't really competed is that every time I feel like it's ready, I see some other thing I learned. I work on like, Oh, I want to add this to my site and then I just keep I keep test using it to test stuff. I do recent thing that is really getting me excited is Gatsby recipes. So like that's what I was like, oh, cool, how do I you know, just out of curiosity, how do I remove everything in the Gatsby config js and try to make try to see if I can make like a recipe out of like all of those things. So that's so that's how I use it personally, just I use my I use my site, as like a testing field for everything. Bryan Robinson 8:02 Very cool. I've actually seen a lot recently about how your personal site should be your, like development garden. Like you shouldn't think of it as like a final final place for things that just you should be pruning it and planting new seeds and all sorts of stuff. It's a cool analogy. Obinna Ekwuno 8:18 A good a good example would be this a colleague of mine, Josh. Josh writes a lot about his, um, his like, on this personal site and he adds like a bunch a lot of like, awesome features on that. And like I just whenever I think of my personal site, I'm like, I want I want my sites look like Josh is on. Because he just, you know, he works on like the cloud team, I got to be and then every new awesome feature that's coming up, he just uses a site to test it out. So yeah, Bryan Robinson 8:48 So obviously you're working at Gatsby, but what what would you say kind of your jam in the Jamstack?What's your favorite service or product? Or maybe it's like a philosophy what what do you enjoy the most about the idea of the Jamstack Obinna Ekwuno 9:00 I love that like the Jamsttack community is kind of like it because it's like relatively new, per se. It's like a place where people, you know, the entry level is like, it's not it's not so high. And like the community is really willing to like help people learn more about it because the community is actually just green. I think of like the the companies actually like leveraging of the Jamstack like Netlify, for example. It's like a company started in 2014. Gatsby gate became a company in 2018. Most, most of the technologies that we're using and stuff that we're still figuring out how do we want to make this like, for like, the, what's the code for like community, so I love that, like, the Jamstack community is really, um, it's really trying its best to educate and curious people along and make things simpler. Obinna Ekwuno 9:46 Um, my favorite service at this time and I don't mean to sound salesy, but then I really am in love with like Gatsby cloud, to be honest, because like, like, it's done like, I mean, the first time I heard about it, I thought it was I thought something else, like I don't know what it was, but like right now I'm just appreciating what's like what it does, we like build times and how it helps what's it called: developers like interface with content creators and all of that. I also really love Netlify, because like, I could host stuff without even without even understanding what CI and CD, like all of those DevOps, whatever related, you know, and I just really love that like, um, another thing I love about the Jamstack is like, the thing it does with so I can have different services coming to like a website's site without having to like worry about how those services run under the hood. Like I could host images on Cloudinary. do stuff like Gatsby, try new stuff for like, Auth0, you know, just what I need into where it is. Bryan Robinson 10:51 So out curiosity, so obviously run the speed of Gatsby Cloud is kind of important. It's obviously tooled up to run Gatsby? But kind of how have you been feeling? That's a relatively new product. And I don't actually know a whole lot about it like, What? What's been kind of some of the biggest advantages that you've seen playing with it? Obinna Ekwuno 11:11 Yeah, so, um, Gatsby cloud launched like last year. And like, we recently just shipped a new feature called incremental builds, which is like, really what excites me the most, because what incremental builds offices, so usually whenever you have to, like build, like a site, you know, static sites are fast, like relatively fast, depending on how much data you have, like there. It's, it's fast, but then gets me with incremental builds is trying to like push the limits of what we actually call fast. Obinna Ekwuno 11:43 So incremental builds, like what Gatsby does is also you've built a site, and then cool you build a site in like 22 seconds. That's all right. And then you want to make like a content change. So for example, you kind of do like a content change and then usually what will happen is that your site will be Build for every content change you make. But then what incremental builds offers is that for every content change, it really just compares, like the difference between the first build, and like the new edits that you've done. So I like to think of it in the react and the virtual DOM, um, play of how hot reloads of like, Oh, we measure what's what, what change versus what was, and then just build whatever changed. And that will reduce like, build time. Obinna Ekwuno 12:25 So you could have like, the first build is 22 seconds, the next build can be five seconds. And when you think obviously, like five, six pages, it's, it's, you know, it's cool, but then think of it in like 1000 pages, that that would save you like a lot of time and Gatsby also launched something will it build, which is like, a, like a benchmark site to see, to kind of know how many so if I had like 2000 pages on my on my sites, how long would it theoretically take to build this? So you can actually see that and then yeah, that's that's really wasteful. To me like, and it's awesome when you get the opportunity to walk for a product that you really like love that really just makes you happy. So yeah, definitely. Bryan Robinson 13:09 Yeah. And that's like one of the one of the biggest naturally one of the biggest arguments, but one of the one of the strongest arguments against some, like the static site generation stuff is, well, you know, it's great for little toy sites. But when you get editor, enterprise sites with thousands of pages, it can take forever. But if it's incremental, and it's only generating one new page when you do that, that's beautiful. Obinna Ekwuno 13:29 Exactly. Yeah. That's what makes me happy about that's what I love about the Jamstack. Like, we're always just trying to look for new ways to make things better. So when you so when you think when you think this cannot go past this level, boom, it's something else. Bryan Robinson 13:44 Always kind of standing on the last iteration, and making it better for the for the developer to work with it but also, because it's so powerful and because like the Jamstack is so so quick for performance and all sorts of stuff ends up making the the end user happier, too. Bryan Robinson 14:01 So what's your what's your actual jam right now? What is what's in your headphones where you listen to or your favorite artists? what's what's going on there? Obinna Ekwuno 14:08 So, um, um, cuz because like I write like a little poetry, I tend to listen to a lot of like, poets. Mostly I listened to poetry but like, also listen to rap because I like I call it conscious rap was kind of like those kind of rap songs where actually you kind of feel like you're in tune with the artists. And it's not just the beat that you're listening to. So currently, right now, I listen to a lot of Kota the Friend which is like he's he's like an independent artists out of New York. You know, he's rapping about, you know, trying to raise his son, you know, and all of like those really deep stuff and like I really resonate with him. I also listened to a lot of Fela - Fela Kuti, which, which for me, is is like education because like, cause Fela, Fela like comes from like, a place of What's it called, um, being African and being in Africa, so I'm over a more of a introspective person. So I like to like just listen to people that actually just take time to block out the noise. And like, put all of like all the noise aside and just really just be real with you. So that's so I listen to a lot of different fella could see Kendrick Lamar? Yeah, most of like, yeah, my, my music. My taste in music is actually just very random. Bryan Robinson 15:29 Yeah, sure. No, that's me. I think everyone's got, you know, the the certain artists that they that they really like, and they can span multiple, multiple types of music. So I really appreciate like the idea that like, getting in tune with the artists because that's always that's always like a nice thing to be able to like hear someone that is is as introspective or as thoughtful as you are. Obinna Ekwuno 15:53 Yeah. Thank you. Bryan Robinson 15:55 Cool. So So is there anything that you would like to promote that you're doing anything you want get out to the gym. That community as a whole. Obinna Ekwuno 16:01 Yeah, so I tried to like I try to like create like content because, um, because like I'm really curious so I just really just try to like put stuff together and just you know, I blog a lot on on LogRocket. And then also like I recently go into screencasting so I'm like doing all of that to egghead and I just make community resources because I feel like I really feel like as much as the information should be free as much as like you know, content creators actually need like some support but then yeah, that's it just just put out the content because like people because I love like the community really helped me while I was transitioning from being you know, solving a lot of math that I honestly didn't know that I think of it honestly didn't care about. You're just solving a lot of math and then moving towards like a computer science like background understanding abstract syntax tree all of those like awesome stuff like that. My my friends helped me like understand like, it was for my community resources. So I really just, you know, make resources on egghead basically any blog that would like allow me to, I used to write a lot on Scotch. That that was like the first place to actually like, wrote stuff on. Yeah. Bryan Robinson 17:12 Cool. So as you're kind of transitioning from, from kind of written stuff to the screencasting a, how's that been for you and be? How did you learn? Like when you said, like, all these community resources were important. Did you read more? Or are you more of like a visual learner and followed like, screencasts like what you're doing now? Obinna Ekwuno 17:31 Oh, so I'm transitioning from like, transitioning from the roots into like, screencasting. So writing was like, it comes natural to me. Because like, because like, I write a lot of forms. But then screencasting was something I was like what I did a lot of like, a lot of like, you know, iterations with Zac. Zac works at Egghead. Shout out to Zack because that really helped me because I I would do a video I did have like, oh no this. This is nice and I could say, Oh, no, because you know, people are watching this on your phones, and all of that. So, it was it was really frustrating. But then it got to the point where, you know, Zac, Zac had a lot of corrections for me. And I was like, ah, maybe this isn't for me. And then one night, I'm just laying down and I and I say to myself, you know, it really just boils down to how bad you really want to, like, do something to be honest. And then, you know, I just, I just go to did the recording once and sent it to Zac. And he was like, awesome. I was like, What? Obinna Ekwuno 18:28 So, so that and from there, like, I just, I have like, two videos, I don't know. And I have like, three more coming, you know, just really just looking for how to like, do that. And then I think the second question was, how did I? How was it for me learning to code? Yeah. So um, I first like I started off with like the under law. I did this under law training, where I can't remember I'm talking about my work, and then our learning community. So like, they really just go a lot of mentors and I told us Oh, you know, you're learning HTML today, I did a lot of like Google sponsored things on Udacity. And then at some point, like the visual, the visual learning wasn't really working for me because all I got was like, the perspective of people. And I wanted to, like, understand how it worked. So I, I, I started reading like documentation. Like even right now, like I'm learning I'm learning a bit of like view. So before going into like funding masters or trying to find like a course on Udemy I'm trying to get like documentation because I because as much as I don't think every documentation is that great like this, this this has been a really good experience like so I'm more of like, I like to read documentation and then get opinions, listen to podcasts, you know, talk to people all that so that's that's how I learn and and learnings are continuous for me. Because like, I don't I don't really feel like there's a place where you get to be like Oh, yes now and I I know it's all Bryan Robinson 20:01 I know everything now! Obinna Ekwuno 20:02 Yeah. Yeah. Bryan Robinson 20:05 Nice. Well, as you said, like even with the technologies that we're all kind of playing with, there's always something new like, you know, react with hooks A few years ago, Gatsby now has recipes. Like there's always something new. Obinna Ekwuno 20:16 Before create react app, there was Webpack, configuring Webpack for like a react. I did I did that. And then I was like, No, I never went back again. Bryan Robinson 20:27 Cool. Well, I appreciate you taking the time to talk with us today and kind of share your stories. And I hope you keep doing some amazing things at Gatsby and writing more amazing poetry and stuff. Obinna Ekwuno 20:36 Thank you. Thank you so much for having me. Appreciate it. Bryan Robinson 20:40 Thanks again to Obinna for the great conversation. And thanks to you our dear listeners for tuning in Week after week. Before we get to our sponsor, be sure to like heart star favorite or whatever in your podcast app of choice and spread the word about the amazing people doing awesome stuff in our community. Bryan Robinson 20:58 And now for our sponsor, if you listen to season you're probably aware of TakeShape by now. But as a reminder TakeShape is a content platform for the Jamstack. take shape has a headless content management system an easy to use GraphQL API, a static site generator and amazing new product called Mesh - a service that can tie together multiple API's into their handy GraphQL interface if you're doing anything with content on the Jamstack Be sure to check them out at take shape.io slash That's My Jamstack. Bryan Robinson 21:27 That's it for this week. Thanks again for listening. And we'll see you back here for the next awesome episode. Transcribed by https://otter.ai Intro/outtro music by bensound.com Support That's my JAMstack by donating to their Tip Jar: https://tips.pinecast.com/jar/thats-my-jamstack

Headless { Creator Podcast }
E4 | A Conversation about Gatsby and Static Site Generators | Nikan Shahidi

Headless { Creator Podcast }

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 26, 2020 15:56


My special guest is Nikan Shahidi, the founder of Webstacks, a digital agency who specializes in various web technologies including Contentful and Gatsby.js. In this episode, Nikan and Marcelo chat all about Static Site Generators (SSGs) and more specifically, dig into the details of Gatsby.js ******************************* Questions Asked ******************************* Tell us about your background. What language did you first code in? Tell us about your firm, WebStacks. Are you guys Certified Contentful Professionals? What are SSGs? Are SSGs dynamically generated on request or pre-generated during build time? Explain the 3 different delivery architectures Contentful recommends. What are the positives and negatives dynamic on server and dynamic on client architectures? What are some drawbacks to having an SSG site? How do SSG sites handle personalization? What about having a dynamic on client and SSG hybrid site? What other SSG exists today? Is VUE is considered an SSG framework? What do developers need to know to start creating with Gatsby JS? Where can you host an SSG site? Explain the workflow from content creation to content publishing using an SSG site. Explain webhooks and how they work with Netlify. How is GitHub used with SSGs? Can you use Contentful UI Extensions to trigger builds? Can you use Zappier to trigger builds? What if users need to publish constantly, are SSGs still the right way to go? Explain the relationship between GraphQL and Gatsby? Explain how templates work in GatsbyJS. What are source plug-ins? What are transformer plug-ins? Is there a marketplace for these types of plug-ins? ******************************* Reference Links ******************************* Webstacks (https://www.webstacks.com/) GatsbyJS (https://www.gatsbyjs.org/) Contentful Resource Center (https://www.contentful.com/resources/) GraphQL (https://graphql.org/) VueJS (https://vuejs.org/) ReactJS (https://reactjs.org/)

All Ruby Podcasts by Devchat.tv
RR 455: What's Up, Rogues?

All Ruby Podcasts by Devchat.tv

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 14, 2020 45:50


JavaScript Remote Conf 2020 May 13th to 15th - register now! This episode is a roundup discussion about what the podcast hosts have going on these days. John talks about going freelance working on Ruby, Rails, and React Native. John and Chuck riff on the pros and cons of React Native. Luke then jumps in and talks about a crash-and-burn he ran into with building reports. John sympathizes based on his past experiences. The rest of the show comprises the panel filling in with what they're working on or learning. Panel Charles Max Wood John Epperson Luke Stutters Sponsors Springboard | $500 Scholarship Available for Candidates who Apply with Code "AISPRINGBOARD" ____________________________________________________________ "The MaxCoders Guide to Finding Your Dream Developer Job" by Charles Max Wood is now available on Amazon. Get Your Copy Today! ____________________________________________________________ Links fastlane Swagger About Swagger Specification JavaScript Remote Conf 2020 GatsbyJS Gridsome Picks Charles Max Wood: Journal Notebooks John Epperson: The Freelancers' Show Luke Stutters: Ruby Object Mapper Object-Relational Mapping is the Vietnam of Computer Science Follow Ruby Rogues on Twitter > @rubyrogues

Ruby Rogues
RR 455: What's Up, Rogues?

Ruby Rogues

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 14, 2020 45:50


JavaScript Remote Conf 2020 May 13th to 15th - register now! This episode is a roundup discussion about what the podcast hosts have going on these days. John talks about going freelance working on Ruby, Rails, and React Native. John and Chuck riff on the pros and cons of React Native. Luke then jumps in and talks about a crash-and-burn he ran into with building reports. John sympathizes based on his past experiences. The rest of the show comprises the panel filling in with what they're working on or learning. Panel Charles Max Wood John Epperson Luke Stutters Sponsors Springboard | $500 Scholarship Available for Candidates who Apply with Code "AISPRINGBOARD" ____________________________________________________________ "The MaxCoders Guide to Finding Your Dream Developer Job" by Charles Max Wood is now available on Amazon. Get Your Copy Today! ____________________________________________________________ Links fastlane Swagger About Swagger Specification JavaScript Remote Conf 2020 GatsbyJS Gridsome Picks Charles Max Wood: Journal Notebooks John Epperson: The Freelancers' Show Luke Stutters: Ruby Object Mapper Object-Relational Mapping is the Vietnam of Computer Science Follow Ruby Rogues on Twitter > @rubyrogues

Devchat.tv Master Feed
RR 455: What's Up, Rogues?

Devchat.tv Master Feed

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 14, 2020 45:50


JavaScript Remote Conf 2020 May 13th to 15th - register now! This episode is a roundup discussion about what the podcast hosts have going on these days. John talks about going freelance working on Ruby, Rails, and React Native. John and Chuck riff on the pros and cons of React Native. Luke then jumps in and talks about a crash-and-burn he ran into with building reports. John sympathizes based on his past experiences. The rest of the show comprises the panel filling in with what they're working on or learning. Panel Charles Max Wood John Epperson Luke Stutters Sponsors Springboard | $500 Scholarship Available for Candidates who Apply with Code "AISPRINGBOARD" ____________________________________________________________ "The MaxCoders Guide to Finding Your Dream Developer Job" by Charles Max Wood is now available on Amazon. Get Your Copy Today! ____________________________________________________________ Links fastlane Swagger About Swagger Specification JavaScript Remote Conf 2020 GatsbyJS Gridsome Picks Charles Max Wood: Journal Notebooks John Epperson: The Freelancers' Show Luke Stutters: Ruby Object Mapper Object-Relational Mapping is the Vietnam of Computer Science Follow Ruby Rogues on Twitter > @rubyrogues

Elm Radio
001: Getting started with elm-pages

Elm Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 3, 2020 51:27


elm-pages hydrates into a full Elm app. It solves similar problems to what GatsbyJS solves in the ReactJS ecosystem.Static site generators with JS-free outputhttps://korban.net/elm/elmstatic/https://jekyllrb.com/EleventyMeta TagsOpen Graph tagsAsset management with elm-pages (CSS vs. SASS,etc.)Github issue discussing using the Unix Toolchain Philosophy in the context of keeping elm-pages focused on primitive assets for elm appsCompared to extending the Gatsby webpack configSOLID Open-Closed Principleelm-pages showcaseChandu's art showcase (built with elm-pages) - https://tennety.art/Headless CMSes vs. monolothic site providershttps://www.sanity.io/contentful.comhttps://airtable.com/netlifycms.orgCDN hosting provider NetlifyStatic Site Generators and The JAMstackhttps://jekyllrb.com/ - static site builder in Ruby - perhaps the first static site generator?Eleventy - spritual successor to Jekyll - but more flexibleMore info on what exactly is the JAMstack?Getting started with elm-pageselm-pages-starter repoelm-pages vs. elm/browserPages.Platform.applicationThe elm-pages StaticHttp APIStaticHttp Docs (there's a description of when and why you would use this compared to elm/http)elm-pages.com blog post A is for API - talks about StaticHttp and its lifecycle, including some example code.Core ConceptsSEO - elm-pages SEO API docsSecrets - docsSection in StaticHttp blog post about how you don't use Msgs for your StaticHttp datagenerateFiles hookIncremental Elm Live - Twitch streaming seriesWhere to learn moreelm-pages.comJoin the Elm slack and say hello in the elm-pages channel!

Syntax - Tasty Web Development Treats
Potluck - Bootcamps × Career Change × Figma × Gatsby × AMP × Mongoose × More!

Syntax - Tasty Web Development Treats

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 25, 2020 57:50


It’s another potluck! In this episode, Scott and Wes answer your questions about bootcamps, Figma, Gatsby, AMP, Mongoose, imposter syndrome, and more! .TECH Domains - Sponsor If you need eyes on your project, you’ll need a domain, and .TECH is perfect for representing your brand. Find out if your .TECH domain is available at go.tech/syntax2020. Use the coupon code Syntax2020 and get 90% off 1- 5- and 10-year domain names. LogRocket - Sponsor LogRocket lets you replay what users do on your site, helping you reproduce bugs and fix issues faster. It’s an exception tracker, a session re-player and a performance monitor. Get 14 days free at logrocket.com/syntax. Show Notes 3:02 - Q. Scott, you talk a lot about your workflow with Figma. As a designer going to programming it sounds like the workflow was natural to you. As a programmer trying to move into design, I have no idea how to get started. Could you explain your workflow on starting a new project in Figma through starting to implement in VSCode? 5:36 - The dreaded monitor question, flat or curved? 8:34 - I am relatively new to web development and have learned HTML, CSS, Node and Mongo. I planned on taking your GatsbyJS e-commerce course, however, I have no experience in React whatsoever. Should I learn React first? 12:35 - What is AMP and should I be using it? 16:07 - What are the advantages and disadvantages of building a web app using a framework such as Blitz.js? 21:46 - Would you ever consider moving from Mongo / Mongoose? 24:47 - I am very new to the dev world. Went to college 15 years ago for Comp Sci, but dropped out halfway through to become an electrician. (Wasn’t sure if I could sit in an office all day.) Long story, but I’m wanting to change my career path and I’m very interested in software development. I’ve heard about Modern Labor’s bootcamp and I’m intrigued. I’d like to know what your take is on their program. 33:15 - Loved your recent episode(s) on serverless functions. I’ve implemented a few myself, but I always come back to the same question: how exactly do I secure these endpoints? Because you are charged for compute time, and those endpoints are publicly available, couldn’t anyone just send requests to them and run up your bill? 36:53 - I’ve decided to make a career out of coding and programming and I’m an absolute beginner starting out in HTML and CSS. It might be a weird question but how many/what percentage elements and declaratives do I need to memorize? It’s not that the info is necessarily difficult to parse, it’s the amount of tags that I’m bombarding my brain with is muddying my progress. I’m more of a theory-driven learner so it’s not the biggest obstacle in the world but I’m starting to see the breadth of this endeavor and I’m not sure how to focus my mental acuity. 40:39 - Do you have a standard folder structure that you follow for placing “utility” function JS files? Is there an “industry standard”? I’ve just been using utils or utilities inside src, but curious if there is a more common way. 44:12 - Is figuring out new techs/modules/plugins/whatever really as easy as reading the docs for most people? A common response to “what’s a good way to learn x” seems to be “the docs are good”. I then open the docs and am absolutely clueless. Are these people just giving bad advice, or do the docs actually give most people enough to go on? For example, I tried to implement username login with Passport using their docs, and a lot seemed to be left out, implying you’re supposed to just already know all this other stuff. It’s a bit demoralizing to feel like I can’t figure out much of anything on my own, and I’ve been doing web dev for a few years now, albeit not professionally, but I have done some big projects that are used regularly. So anyway, just wondering what your take on this common advice is, your experience with being able to figure out things on your own without needing an hour-long tutorial, and so on. I know you’re both tutorial makers, but I don’t get the impression that you two have to take a course to understand something new. 48:19 - Do you have any tips for getting over “code shyness” or “imposter syndrome”? I find myself struggling with this issue from time to time and was curious to know your suggestions for dealing with it. 53:36 - If I rename my GitHub repo, will all the links that are in the wild still work. For instance will github.com/webruin map to github.com/newname? Links Cloudflare AMP Blitz.js Brandon Blitz Meteor Mongoose DynamoDB uses.tech Course Report - Modern Labor Passport.js Syntax 058: Advice For Beginners - Tech Skills, Applying for Jobs, Focus, Imposter Syndrome + More Syntax 015: Advice for New Developers, Imposter Syndrome and Interviewing at Google Syntax 075: Hasty Treat - Feedback and Criticism Brendan Eich ××× SIIIIICK ××× PIIIICKS ××× Scott: Stronger by Science Podcast Wes: iStat Menus Shameless Plugs Scott: Animating React with Framer Motion - Sign up for the year and save 25%! Wes: All Courses - Use the coupon code ‘Syntax’ for $10 off! Tweet us your tasty treats! Scott’s Instagram LevelUpTutorials Instagram Wes’ Instagram Wes’ Twitter Wes’ Facebook Scott’s Twitter Make sure to include @SyntaxFM in your tweets

Salt City Code
Ben Lannon: Hit the Go Live Button

Salt City Code

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 24, 2020 47:36


We are all experts in our own different fields...I may be great with something like Gatsby or livestreaming but if you go tell me, "Hey, can you cook me a very professional meal and serve it up?"...I'm probably not going to be able to do that well. Hosts Kelly Corey and Karin Thorne chat with Ben Lannon about livestreaming on Twitch, how he got involved with the GatsbyJS and open source communities, and he shares a big announcement with us at the end of the show! Ben also mentions his favorite computer game and tells us a great idea for a potential Syracuse tech Meetup. Tech Note We've shifted all recordings from in-person to online via Zoom. Please be patient with us as we adjust to using virtual recording tools. We apologize for the glitchiness of spots in this episode. Connect with Ben lannonbr.com (https://lannonbr.com) | Twitch (https://twitch.tv/lannonbr) | Twitter (https://twitter.com/lannonbr) The Live Coders Conference Online Get ready for the first online conference from The Live Coders team! Over 10 hours of content comes your way on Thursday, April 9, 2020 from the comfort of your home. Sign up for the mailing list here (https://www.subscribepage.com/lcc2020#gYmFRoNnSDFuvZMNGXgGGZgjBSxoPxklG) and follow The Live Coders on Twitch (https://www.twitch.tv/thelivecoders) and Twitter (https://twitter.com/thelivecoders)! Music This episode features "Brain Power" by Mela (https://freemusicarchive.org/music/Mela/Mela_two) from the album Mela two. Follow Karin kethorne.com (http://www.kethorne.com/) | Twitter (https://twitter.com/kaythorne) | Instagram (https://www.instagram.com/karin_thorne/) | E-mail (mailto:contact@kethorne.com) JSWebb Development, LLC jswebbdevelopment.com (https://jswebbdevelopment.com/) | Twitter (https://twitter.com/JSWebb_Dev) | Instagram (https://www.instagram.com/jswebbdev/) | E-mail (mailto:jswebbdevelopment@gmail.com) Follow Kelly kell.dev (https://kell.dev/) | Twitter (https://twitter.com/kellytoearth) | Instagram (https://www.instagram.com/kellytoearth/) | E-mail (mailto:hello@kell.dev) Follow Salt City Code Twitter (https://twitter.com/saltcitycode) | Instagram (https://www.instagram.com/saltcitycode/) | E-mail (mailto:saltcitycode@gmail.com) --- Special Guest: Ben Lannon.

Kentico Rocks Podcast
Kentico Rocks Episode 29

Kentico Rocks Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 26, 2020 27:57


In this episode of Kentico Rocks, Brian McKeiver interviews Ryan Overton Kentico Kontent developer evangelist. Brian and Ryan cover quickly how JAMStack is continuing to gain steam, but spend more time discussing the question of can JAMStack do other things beside just static websites. Brian than demos a GatsbyJS implementation connected to Kentico Kontent that Team BizStream has been working on that is multi-channel. In this episode of Kentico Rocks, Brian McKeiver interviews Ryan Overton Kentico Kontent developer evangelist. Brian and Ryan cover quickly how JAMStack is continuing to gain steam, but spend more time discussing the question of can JAMStack do other things beside just static websites. Brian than demos a GatsbyJS implementation connected to Kentico Kontent that Team BizStream has been working on that is multi-channel.

Kentico Rocks Podcast
Kentico Rocks Episode 29

Kentico Rocks Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 26, 2020 27:57


In this episode of Kentico Rocks, Brian McKeiver interviews Ryan Overton Kentico Kontent developer evangelist. Brian and Ryan cover quickly how JAMStack is continuing to gain steam, but spend more time discussing the question of can JAMStack do other things beside just static websites. Brian than demos a GatsbyJS implementation connected to Kentico Kontent that Team BizStream has been working on that is multi-channel.

Modern Web
S06E15 Modern Web Podcast - Making Open Source Inclusive With GatsbyJS

Modern Web

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 12, 2020 52:32


In this episode of the Modern Web podcast, join our hosts, Rob Ocel (@robocell) & Jake Dohm (@JakeDohm), as they sit down with special guests, Marcy Sutton, Aisha Blake, and Laurie Barth!    Guests: Marcy Sutton (@marcysutton) - Head of Learning, GatsbyJS Aisha Blake (@AishaBlake) - Sr. Software Engineer, GatsbyJS Laurie Barth (@laurieontech) - Software Engineer, GatsbyJS   This episode is sponsored by This Dot Labs.

Plugging In The Holes
Crisp chat, GatsbyJS and dotenv (update)

Plugging In The Holes

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 31, 2019 2:30


In this episode, I discuss the update I made to Crisp chat, GatsbyJS, and dotenv issue and what it all means. To view the transcript/post of this podcast, please visit Crisp chat, GatsbyJS and dotenv (update) on interglobalmedianetwork.com --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/maria-campbell/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/maria-campbell/support

Plugging In The Holes
GatsbyJS and dotenv

Plugging In The Holes

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 30, 2019 3:42


In this episode, I discuss what happened when I tried to use the dotenv npm package with the Crisp chat box and GatsbyJS. To view the transcript/post of this podcast, please visit GatsbyJS and dotenv on interglobalmedianetwork.com. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/maria-campbell/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/maria-campbell/support

Plugging In The Holes
The window object, React hooks, and GatsbyJS

Plugging In The Holes

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 29, 2019 4:30


In this episode, I talk discuss how I came about successfully adding media queries to a React element's inline styles. To view the transcript/post of this podcast, please visit The window object, React hooks, and GatsbyJS on interglobalmedianetwork.com. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/maria-campbell/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/maria-campbell/support

Plugging In The Holes
GatsbyJS and the Sharp plugin

Plugging In The Holes

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 23, 2019 2:49


In this episode, I describe how I finally was able to add back the gatsby-plugin-manifest and gatsby-plugin-offline plugins to my interglobalmedianetwork.com site and subsequently successfully deploy to Netlify. To view the transcript/post of this podcast, please visit GatsbyJS and the Sharp plugin on interglobalmedianetwork.com. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/maria-campbell/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/maria-campbell/support

DevNights Podcast
Ransomeware y frazadas de aluminio

DevNights Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 27, 2019


En este episodio platicamos de las oficina vacía de Elder, hacemos flashback al pasado con Flash, XML y AMF, patrones de layout en Nex.js, UX/UI, GatsbyJS, el archivo ártico de GitHub, Ransomeware, el ataque a PEMEX y las opiniones de AMLO, y cerramos con temas de seguridad informática.

BrazilJS
10 anos do npm, Edge no Linux e $15Mi de investimento no GatsbyJS – Weekly #314

BrazilJS

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 4, 2019 18:57


Chegou outubro e o npm está de aniversário, fazendo 10 anos! 🎉 Estamos chegando naquele momento que será um marco na história: Um navegador da Microsoft no Linux. 😮 O GatsbyJS recebeu um investimento de $15Mi! 💸 — Jaydson Gomes, curador e editor Get full access to BrazilJS at www.braziljs.org/subscribe

BrazilJS
10 anos do npm, Edge no Linux e $15Mi de investimento no GatsbyJS – Weekly #314

BrazilJS

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 4, 2019 18:57


Chegou outubro e o npm está de aniversário, fazendo 10 anos!

Mediacurrent Open Waters Podcast
Getting Into Gatsby with Jason Lengstorf

Mediacurrent Open Waters Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 1, 2019 31:51


Meet Gatsby, an open source React-based framework for building super fast websites and apps. In this episode, we talk with Jason Lengstorf to discuss the GatsbyJS project and what it solves.   Project Pick: https://gatsbyjs.org Interview What's your role at Gatsby, when did you start? How did you get involved in the project? What did you do before Gatsby? What is Gatsby? How do you feel about the response from the community about Gatsby? Did you think it would take off as it has? Why should an org choose it over a traditional CMS? What separates Gatsby from other static site generators? What features is the team currently working on? Closing comments Links: Jason’s site Learn With Jason Minus my thoughts  (Jason’s Band)  

Mediacurrent Open Waters Podcast
Open Waters Ep 5: Getting Into Gatsby

Mediacurrent Open Waters Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 1, 2019 31:51


This episode we will be talking with Jason Lengstorf to discuss the GatsbyJS project and what it solves.

TrilogyBytes - Web Development and Technology Conversations

What is GatsbyJS? Why another static site generator? Wait..GraphQL? Jason Lengstorf answers these and more as we talk GatsbyJS

The Product Business
11. Dev Chat - Jason Lengstorf - Should developers learn the newest thing?

The Product Business

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 11, 2019 37:45


Jason Lengstorf, formerly of IBM and then GatsbyJS, is a developer who loves to learn. His YouTube channel Learn with Jason has tons of great videos on a variety of web development topics. In this episode we talk about if learning the hot new framework is a waste of time, where front end web development is heading, and more.

Mediacurrent Open Waters Podcast
All About Training with Mario Hernandez

Mediacurrent Open Waters Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 10, 2019 17:16


In this episode, we talk with Mediacurrent's Mario Hernandez about why training is so important for web teams to grow and stay competitive. And yes, we are once again interviewing one of the hosts. About Mario In addition to his position as Head of Learning, Mario is a Senior Front End Developer with over 15 years of Drupal experience. He and I actually started on the same day, 5 years ago. Mario is a regular speaker and trainer at tech conferences including Drupal Camps and DrupalCons. He is a co-host of the Open Waters podcast and an active participant in the Drupal core project and other open source projects. Prior to Mediacurrent, Mario also has over 10 years of experience in the Federal Government. Project Pick Apollo GraphQL Server Client Platform Interview: The best way to learn is to teach. How did you get started with Drupal and front end development in general? How did you get started doing training? What is your favorite part of training people? Is Mediacurret’s training limited to only events and/or only Drupal? How do you think training is most effective when working with a client’s internal development team? In addition to FE training, does Mediacurrent offer training in other areas?  Yes! We offer training in Accessibility, SEO, Back End, Digital Strategy, GatsbyJS and more How can organizations interested in our training offerings get more information?

Pressing Matters
Episode 16: New Term

Pressing Matters

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 7, 2019 50:26


Welcome to another episode of Pressing Matters. This episode Jack and I discuss the latest news in the WordPress world, taking holidays as a freelancer, GatsbyJS, and working in the digital age. This episode is sponsored by Better Notifications for WP – a simple but powerful plugin that allows you to customise the email notifications …

How To Code Well
S2 E29 What are Static Site Generators - Oliver Davies Interview

How To Code Well

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 19, 2019 48:23


Oliver Davies joins me to talk about Static Site Generators on the How To Code Well Podcast. Static Site Generators are becoming very popular in web development and they come in many shapes and sizes which cater for different website requirements. Many web development programming languages have their own flavours of static site generators such as Jeklly for Ruby, Sculpin for PHP and Gatsby for JavaScript. Oliver and I have both built many websites using static site generators and are aware of some of the pros and cons to using them. We discuss this what static site generators are, when to use them and more importantly when not too. Follow Oliver Davies Twitter: https://twitter.com/opdavies Web: https://www.oliverdavies.uk/ *** My Programming Courses *** Docker In Motion http://bit.ly/2vvz2sA Hands-on Microservices In Python - Packt Publishing: http://bit.ly/2S6aMYB - Udemy: http://bit.ly/2tD8S3Q Python Clean Coding - Packt Publishing: http://bit.ly/2NyUVkr - Udemy: http://bit.ly/2Y5E1tL *** Programming resources *** Programming books from Manning Publications: http://bit.ly/2BIrEx Udemy courses https://www.udemy.com/user/peter-fisher-8/ Skillshare courses https://www.skillshare.com/r/user/howtocodewell *** Follow How To Code Well *** Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/howtocodewell Twitter: http://twitter.com/howToCodeWell Youtube: http://bit.ly/2wf9ufB Instagram: http://instagram.com/howtocodewell/ Website: https://howtocodewell.net *** Subscribe to the news letter *** http://tinyletter.com/howtocodewell *** My Talks *** Using a Framework or Not - PHP South West https://youtu.be/T8R3YTrqt6U How To Put Your Docker Images On A Diet - PHP South West https://youtu.be/uiABt9axPNo Software Complexities - Peter Fisher - PHPSW: Learning About Complexities, August 2018 https://youtu.be/ZQ6AkyvEaHE DISCLAIMER: This video and description contains affiliate links, which means that if you click on one of the product links, I’ll receive a small commission. This helps support the channel and allows me to continue to make web development videos like this. Thank you for the support!

Open Source Developer Podcast
GatsbyJS - Data data everywhere

Open Source Developer Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 16, 2019 13:00


We look at GatsbyJS, a fantastic framework that helps creating websites or applications. Check out the website we built over at https://www.opensourcedevpod.com and support us on Patreon www.patreon.com/opensourcedevpod--- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/appSupport this podcast: https://anchor.fm/opensourcedeveloperpod/support

Devchat.tv Master Feed
Dev Ed 020: Making Learning Fun

Devchat.tv Master Feed

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 9, 2019 48:33


Panel Joe Eames Luis Hernandez Mike Dane Sam Julien Joined by special guest: Shai Reznik Episode Summary In this episode, the panelists talk to Shai Reznik, web developer, educator, consultant, and Angular Google Developer Expert, who teaches courses mainly on Angular and React, and makes sure that they are topped with some humor and fun! Joe kickstarts the show by asking Shai the reasons why he considers humor to be a consistent part of his personality as well as his teaching methods. Shai explains in detail how that makes learning interesting and effective by citing his own experiences. Joe opens up the discussion to the panel and asks their thoughts about using humor in learning, teaching and their opinions on it, in general. They then talk about the techniques they employ or those that others use, in order to make learning fun and memorable. Shai elaborates on what strategies he utilizes to keep a good balance between the technical content, and the jokes and entertainment he resorts to while teaching. In the end, the panel discusses resources and methods to help make the learning process fun and they wrap up the show by each stating one thing they would like to recommend to a friend. Links HiRez.io Angular Testing Shai’s Twitter Picks Mike Dane: Please don’t mock me - Justin Searls Luis Hernandez: GatsbyJS Sam Julien: Luna Display Shai Reznik: What we talk about when we talk about software - Nat Pryce Joe Eames: FIFA Women’s World Cup 2019

DevEd Podcast
Dev Ed 020: Making Learning Fun

DevEd Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 9, 2019 48:33


Panel Joe Eames Luis Hernandez Mike Dane Sam Julien Joined by special guest: Shai Reznik Episode Summary In this episode, the panelists talk to Shai Reznik, web developer, educator, consultant, and Angular Google Developer Expert, who teaches courses mainly on Angular and React, and makes sure that they are topped with some humor and fun! Joe kickstarts the show by asking Shai the reasons why he considers humor to be a consistent part of his personality as well as his teaching methods. Shai explains in detail how that makes learning interesting and effective by citing his own experiences. Joe opens up the discussion to the panel and asks their thoughts about using humor in learning, teaching and their opinions on it, in general. They then talk about the techniques they employ or those that others use, in order to make learning fun and memorable. Shai elaborates on what strategies he utilizes to keep a good balance between the technical content, and the jokes and entertainment he resorts to while teaching. In the end, the panel discusses resources and methods to help make the learning process fun and they wrap up the show by each stating one thing they would like to recommend to a friend. Links HiRez.io Angular Testing Shai’s Twitter Picks Mike Dane: Please don’t mock me - Justin Searls Luis Hernandez: GatsbyJS Sam Julien: Luna Display Shai Reznik: What we talk about when we talk about software - Nat Pryce Joe Eames: FIFA Women’s World Cup 2019

Plugging In The Holes
GatsbyJS and Security

Plugging In The Holes

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 20, 2019 7:44


The past couple of days(and later tonight) has been all about web security, so in this episode I talk about web security and why one would choose GatsbyJS over other static frameworks. To view the transcript/post of this podcast, please visit GatsbyJS and Security on interglobalmedianetwork.com. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/maria-campbell/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/maria-campbell/support

しがないラジオ
sp.62b【ゲスト: onigiri_】楽しいWeb系に転職してすぐに転職活動を再開した理由とマッチング精度を上げるためにやっていること

しがないラジオ

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 12, 2019 68:28


おにぎりマンさんをゲストにお迎えして、Web系企業の多様性、マイクロマネジメント、自分をさらけ出す転職活動、などについて話しました。 【Show Notes】 Wantedly Findy 第1回 転職透明化らぼ-ここが残念だよ採用企業&応募者 カジュアル面談編 - connpass GatsbyJS #しがないラジオmeetup 3 - connpass 配信情報はtwitter ID @shiganaiRadio で確認することができます。 フィードバックは(#しがないラジオ)でつぶやいてください! 感想、話して欲しい話題、改善して欲しいことなどつぶやいてもらえると、今後のポッドキャストをより良いものにしていけるので、ぜひたくさんのフィードバックをお待ちしています。 【パーソナリティ】 gami@jumpei_ikegami zuckey@zuckey_17 【ゲスト】 おにぎりマン@onigiri_ 【機材】 Blue Micro Yeti USB 2.0マイク 15374

React Round Up
RRU 055: Building Static Sites with Gatsby with Ajay NS

React Round Up

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 2, 2019 59:46


Sponsors Netlify Sentry use the code “devchat” for 2 months free on Sentry’s small plan CacheFly Panel Lucas Reis Justin Bennett Charles Max Wood Special Guest: Ajay NS Episode Summary In this episode of React Round Up, the panel talks with Ajay NS, a Computer Engineering student at National Institute of Technology Surat who is passionate about frontend development and design. Ajay talks about his article Why you should use GatsbyJS to build static sites on Medium and why he felt the need to write it. After attending the Plone Conference in Tokyo where he gave a talk about GatsbyJS, he realized that compared to React or Angular, Gatsby helped new developers learn about frontend development without facing too many complications. Ajay explains that he decided to write the article and share his experiences with Gatsby to help ease the learning process for new developers who are curious about frontend development. They discuss best cases to use Gatsby for and also cases where it may not be a good idea to use it. They then discuss the best tools for people who are new to web development and are trying to find jobs as remote developers. One of the best methods recommended is pair programming which can also be done remotely. Links Why you should use GatsbyJS to build static sites Ajay NS — Plone Conference 2018 – Tokyo Ajay's Talk in the Plone Conference Ajay’s LinkedIn Ajay’s Twitter Ajay’s GitHub Netlify Eleventy https://www.facebook.com/React-Round-Up https://twitter.com/reactroundup Picks Justin Bennett: gatsby-starter-typescript-rebass-netlifycms https://github.com/artsy/palette https://github.com/FormidableLabs/inspectpack Lucas Reis: react-spring Charles Max Wood: Green Screen LED lighting for video  Ajay NS: https://github.com/storybooks/storybook Bodymovin Plugin

Devchat.tv Master Feed
RRU 055: Building Static Sites with Gatsby with Ajay NS

Devchat.tv Master Feed

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 2, 2019 59:46


Sponsors Netlify Sentry use the code “devchat” for 2 months free on Sentry’s small plan CacheFly Panel Lucas Reis Justin Bennett Charles Max Wood Special Guest: Ajay NS Episode Summary In this episode of React Round Up, the panel talks with Ajay NS, a Computer Engineering student at National Institute of Technology Surat who is passionate about frontend development and design. Ajay talks about his article Why you should use GatsbyJS to build static sites on Medium and why he felt the need to write it. After attending the Plone Conference in Tokyo where he gave a talk about GatsbyJS, he realized that compared to React or Angular, Gatsby helped new developers learn about frontend development without facing too many complications. Ajay explains that he decided to write the article and share his experiences with Gatsby to help ease the learning process for new developers who are curious about frontend development. They discuss best cases to use Gatsby for and also cases where it may not be a good idea to use it. They then discuss the best tools for people who are new to web development and are trying to find jobs as remote developers. One of the best methods recommended is pair programming which can also be done remotely. Links Why you should use GatsbyJS to build static sites Ajay NS — Plone Conference 2018 – Tokyo Ajay's Talk in the Plone Conference Ajay’s LinkedIn Ajay’s Twitter Ajay’s GitHub Netlify Eleventy https://www.facebook.com/React-Round-Up https://twitter.com/reactroundup Picks Justin Bennett: gatsby-starter-typescript-rebass-netlifycms https://github.com/artsy/palette https://github.com/FormidableLabs/inspectpack Lucas Reis: react-spring Charles Max Wood: Green Screen LED lighting for video  Ajay NS: https://github.com/storybooks/storybook Bodymovin Plugin

Coder Radio
351: Riding the Rails

Coder Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 1, 2019 38:14


Mike explores the state of Xamarin.Android development on Linux, and we talk frameworks versus libraries and what Rails got right. Plus adventures with rust on MacOS, your feedback, and more!

egghead.io developer chats
Heading Gatsby's Learning Experience and Bridging Gaps with Marcy Sutton

egghead.io developer chats

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 15, 2019 39:05


Marcy Sutton is the Head of Learning at GatsbyJS, but what does that mean? One of Gatsby's core focuses is the community, and a part of that is making the experience with Gatsby as friendly as possible. A large part of making Gatsby friendly is having excellent documentation, so that learning and debugging experiences would be smooth. So the learning experience is smooth but what is Gatsby's potential on the web? Marcy talks about how Gatsby has the potential to make a huge impact. Currently WordPress is powering about a third of the web, that's huge, but it has its issues. WordPress is centered around the authoring experience but the front-end experience is not good. Gatsby is looking more towards the future, it doesn't use a database, it can build out static HTML, it's accessible, and it's also democratizing the experience with a themes ecosystem. This brings up the point that JavaScript is eating the web and it's making it more difficult for folks who've had a different intro to webdev. This is a real challenge and people are having their careers impacted, what can we do to reconcile this? The decisions made by tech teams aren't considering this when the pick the technologies that they use, they're picking tech that's going to deliver a high preformance application, where does HTML and CSS fit into this? Marcy discusses how we can bridge the gap and find ways to include people with different skill sets. Marcy also discusses the inclusive community that she has helped build, NW Tech Women, a small group out of Bellingham WA that hosts social events, but also volunteers and pairs with non-profits to make a community impact. Transcript"Heading Gatsby's Learning Experience and Bridging Gaps - with Marcy Sutton" TranscriptResources:NW Tech Women TwitterBlack Girls CodeGatsbyJSMarcy Sutton:TwitterWebsiteGitHubJoel HooksTwitterWebsite

Kompilator
002 - Statiska sajter med Robert Linde

Kompilator

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 13, 2019 30:30


I detta avsnitt träffar vi Robert Linde och pratar statiska sajter och headless CMS. Visste du att det absolut snabbaste sättet att serva en sajt är att ha en uppsättning statiska HTML-filer? Att bygga en sådan sajt för hand kan vara väldigt arbetskrävande, så vi diskuterar verktyg som underlättar detta. Länkar Contentful Nuxt Netlify JAMstack GatsbyJS GraphQL 2G Tuesday

Kompilator
002 - Statiska sajter med Robert Linde

Kompilator

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 12, 2019 30:30


I detta avsnitt träffar vi Robert Linde och pratar statiska sajter och headless CMS. Visste du att det absolut snabbaste sättet att serva en sajt är att ha en uppsättning statiska HTML-filer? Att bygga en sådan sajt för hand kan vara väldigt arbetskrävande, så vi diskuterar verktyg som underlättar detta. Länkar Contentful Nuxt Netlify JAMstack GatsbyJS GraphQL 2G Tuesday

The Drunken UX Podcast
#31: You Got CSS In My JS

The Drunken UX Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 4, 2019 81:24


In this episode, we’re joined by GatsbyJS software engineer Dustin Schau to introduce our listeners to the concept of CSS-in-JS. Using this technique with React applications, you’re able to compartmentalize your styles to your individual...

Developer Muslim
087 Kabar-kabari 06 - Februari 2019

Developer Muslim

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 21, 2019 28:47


Nulis CSS di JS, ide gila apa lagi ini? Apa bedanya JAMstack sama single-page application? Apa saja pertimbangan memilih generator untuk website statis, GatsbyJS atau Hugo? Udah saatnya episode kabar-kabari! Episode kali ini ga hanya menjawab pertanyaan-pertanyaan ini, tapi juga ngabarin library-library seru, tool-tool dan artikel-artikel bermanfaat. Lihat https://devmuslim.id/episode87 untuk catatan dan link yang dibahas di episode ini. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/devmuslimid/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/devmuslimid/support

Developer Muslim
087 Kabar-kabari 06 - Februari 2019

Developer Muslim

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 21, 2019 28:47


Nulis CSS di JS, ide gila apa lagi ini? Apa bedanya JAMstack sama single-page application? Apa saja pertimbangan memilih generator untuk website statis, GatsbyJS atau Hugo? Udah saatnya episode kabar-kabari! Episode kali ini ga hanya menjawab pertanyaan-pertanyaan ini, tapi juga ngabarin library-library seru, tool-tool dan artikel-artikel bermanfaat. Lihat https://devmuslim.id/episode87 untuk catatan dan link yang dibahas di episode ini. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/devmuslimid/support

44BITS 팟캐스트 - 클라우드, 개발, 가젯
stdout_011.log: Node.js 이벤트 스트림 사건, 컨텐츠 보존주의, 정적 웹사이트 생성기 w/ @Outsideris

44BITS 팟캐스트 - 클라우드, 개발, 가젯

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 2, 2019 63:37


stdout.fm 11번째 로그에서는 아웃사이더 님을 모시고, Node.js event-stream 악성 코드 주입 사건, 컨텐츠 보존 주의, 정적 웹사이트 생성기에 대해서 이야기를 나눴습니다. 게스트: @outsideris 참가자: @seapy, @raccoonyy, @nacyo_t Seocho.rb 첫 번째 모임: 서버리스 루비 | Festa! 나 몰래 컴퓨터 자원을 사용하는 블로그(사이트) | 오늘부터 seapy는 랜섬웨어 감염 웹호스팅업체 인터넷나야나, 결국 해커에 굴복 : IT : 경제 : 뉴스 : 한겨레 Adblock Plus and (a little) more: Kicking out Cryptojack How to Use the Google Chrome Task Manager Tree Style Tab – Get this Extension for

Real Talk JavaScript
Episode 13: Building Code Sandbox with Ives van Hoorne

Real Talk JavaScript

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 31, 2018 45:07


Recording date: 2018-11-29 John Papa https://twitter.com/john_papa Ward Bell https://twitter.com/wardbell Dan Wahlin https://twitter.com/danwahlin Ives van Hoorne https://twitter.com/compuives Resources: CodeSandbox https://codesandbox.io Elixr https://elixir-lang.org/ Erlang https://www.erlang.org/ Reactjs https://reactjs.org/ NPM https://www.npmjs.com/ Serverless https://martinfowler.com/articles/serverless.html Unpkg https://unpkg.com/ Pupeteer https://github.com/GoogleChrome/puppeteer Kubernetes https://kubernetes.io/ Redux https://redux.js.org/ Cerebral https://github.com/cerebral/cerebral CodePen https://codepen.io Monaco https://github.com/Microsoft/monaco-editor Code https://code.visualstudio.com/ Typescript https://www.typescriptlang.org/ Flow https://flow.org/en/docs/frameworks/react/ Someone to follow: Netanel Basal https://netbasal.com Ana Cidre https://twitter.com/AnaCidre_ Kyle Matthews https://twitter.com/@kylemathews / Gatsbyjs https://twitter.com/gatsbyjs Timejumps 1:00 Mailbag question: Will VSCode editor replace the current editor? 3:01 What is Codesandbox and how did you get into it? 6:30 What kinds of challenges did you face when launching Codesandbox? 10:00 What are you using for serverless functions? 13:10 Why use serverless? 16:10 Sponsor: Nativescript 17:15 Moving away from serverless for some things? 23:10 What do you think of suspense or hooks? 24:20 Why does the world need Codesandbox? 28:00 What does Codesandbox use for linting? 31:00 Sponsor: IdeaBlade https://www.ideablade.com 32:30 What is Codesandbox written in? 35:20 How are the users of Codesandbox using types? 36:20 How do you keep up with the latest versions of software? 41:00 How do you handle concurrent users? 42:10 Someone to follow

egghead.io developer chats
Jason Lengstorf on GatsbyJS

egghead.io developer chats

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 14, 2018 23:07


Jason Lengstorf is a developer on the GatsbyJS team.Jason didn't start his career even remotely in the tech field. He was a musician.Jason's band didn't have much money, so he learned design to make merch, learned some markup to edit their myspace, eventually learned to build a website for them, then learned backend so his bandmates could upload images and post things.Jason talks about Gatsby's plans to compete with the more seamless WordPress model. He also talks about gatsby's differences from WordPress and the use cases for each service.One of Gatsby's strengths is how good it is for learning Javascript and React, you can quickly go from the command line to getting stuff on the screen in two minutes, much like create-react-app, the differences is that with Gatsby you get a data layer and a good deployment story.Finally, they talk about what it's like to manage a repo that has 964 contributors, 5500 commits, and 936 issues. It was more chaotic in the early days, but they have brought on some people who are helping manage it and are defining better processes.If you are interested in learning Gatsby, they have recently put much work into revamping their official tutorials.Check them out hereTranscript"Jason Lengstorf on GatsbyJS" TranscriptTopics:His early musical aspirations that lead to his career as a developerGatsby's goals in creating an agnostic unified data layer.The differences between Gatsby and other static site generatorsGatsby 2 and its many performance upgradesManaging a large and active repositoryResources:GatsbyGatsby on TwitterGatsby TutorialsNetlifyJason Lengstorf:WebsiteTwitterGithubJohn Lindquist:TwitterWebsite

Lullabot Podcast
GatsbyJS with Creator Kyle Mathews

Lullabot Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 16, 2018


Mike and Matt are joined by Lullabot John Hannah to talk with the creator of GatsbyJS

Changelog Master Feed
The Great GatsbyJS (The Changelog #306)

Changelog Master Feed

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 18, 2018 72:15 Transcription Available


From open source project to a $3.8 million dollar seed round to transform Gatsby.js into a full-blown startup that’s building what’s becoming the defacto modern web frontend. In this episode, we talk with Jason Lengstorf about this blazing-fast static site generator, its building blocks and how they all fit together, the future of web development on the JAMstack (JavaScript + APIs), the importance of site performance, site rebuilds, getting started, and how they’re focused on building an awesome product and an awesome community.

The Changelog
The Great GatsbyJS

The Changelog

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 18, 2018 72:15 Transcription Available


From open source project to a $3.8 million dollar seed round to transform Gatsby.js into a full-blown startup that’s building what’s becoming the defacto modern web frontend. In this episode, we talk with Jason Lengstorf about this blazing-fast static site generator, its building blocks and how they all fit together, the future of web development on the JAMstack (JavaScript + APIs), the importance of site performance, site rebuilds, getting started, and how they’re focused on building an awesome product and an awesome community.

Learn With Us
#22 - GatsbyJS With Jason Lengstorf

Learn With Us

Play Episode Listen Later May 7, 2018 28:41


In this episode Ken talks with Jason Lengstorf, a contributor to GatsbyJS - A Blazing-fast static site generator for React. Jason recently spoke at The Lead Developer conference in NYC. As of this episode the video for his talk is not available. Check out The Lead Developer conference website to learn more. The Lead Developer Website GatsbyJS Website - Tutorials - Documentation Jason Lengstorf Website Shannon Soper - Shannon has been writing helpful documentation for GatsbyJS. Level Up Tuts - Headless Wordpress with GatsbyJS - Scott Tonlinski Walks you through setting up WordPress to be headless and configuring GatsbyJS to work with your existing data. You can follow Learn With Us on Twitter @learnwithuspod. Give us 5 stars in your application so others can find us.

Cross Cutting Concerns Podcast
Podcast 081 - Calvin Allen on a potpourri of topics

Cross Cutting Concerns Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 6, 2018 19:36


Calvin Allen talks with me on a variety of topics. This episode is sponsored by Smartsheet. Show Notes: I think Calvin may have done some rebranding since we recorded. Check out CalvinAllen83 on Twitch. Streaming services mentioned: Mixer, YouTube, and Twitch. restream.io, which I’m now using for…​ Couchbase Coding with Matt Groves, a show where I’m streaming daily. Jeff Fritz’s live stream: Fritz and Friends SQLite Toolbox Visual Studio extension Visual Studio extensions by Mads Kristensen Calvin’s Open in Notepad++ extension (GitHub), Couchbase extension on GitHub I used the term MVP in this episode to mean Minimum Viable Product Netlify GatsbyJS Man-in-the-middle attack SSL Labs rating Calvin Allen is on Twitter. Want to be on the next episode? You can! All you need is the willingness to talk about something technical. Music is by Joe Ferg, check out more music on JoeFerg.com!

Javascript to Elm
26: Ports, JSON, and Elm render

Javascript to Elm

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 22, 2018 25:55


We left off our app with being able to pass the return JSON from our fetch promise to get a list of notes through ports to Elm, and debug logging that out. At this point I thought, “success!”. You might even recall, I glossed over rendering it to a list, totally spaced the click event needed to make the list actually do something. So today we take the work of getting the data to work, to the work needed to get it back to working functionality using Elm.

JavaScript – Software Engineering Daily
GatsbyJS with Kyle Mathews

JavaScript – Software Engineering Daily

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 17, 2017 57:49


GatsbyJS is a framework for building web applications for JavaScript. Gatsby’s original goal was to allow users to create super fast static web sites that could be hosted and served efficiently at a low cost. Most web pages have components from a framework like React or Angular that need to render after the user requests The post GatsbyJS with Kyle Mathews appeared first on Software Engineering Daily.