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What an EPIC month Alicia has had her first SEMA, her first Git Down, she pulled her motor and than the podcast - nice work kid. I hope you guys enjoy getting to know her as she is passionate about these trucks and our RAD ASS community. Check her out and give her a follow, thanks Ronnie Episode #304 is brought to you by out title www.lmctruck.com https://upcarparts.com/c10-chevy-truck/ -Get your parts. Build your passion. www.brotherstrucks.com - Your source for 1947 Chevy and GMC restoration truck parts. www.classicperform.com - Have you seen their new X10 Spindle, how about their fuel cells? www.psiconversion.com - When you are swapping that motor for an LS or LT based motor PSI has everything you need, including technical support! Use "C10 Talk" to save 5% off your total order. www.dakotadigital.com - The best upgrade for your cab - VHX, HDX, and the Retro Rad RTX! www.vintageair.com - Vintage Air has a sure fit kit for you and your C10 - Made in the USA! www.azproperformance.com - When you are ready to upgrade from stock - Pro Performance has what you need.
DINOS DINOS DINOS - interview from the 14th annual Git Down, and some 2024 SEMA as well.
We talk about our weekend at Dino's...which was a ton of fun.
10 years ago in a small parking lot Dino was hosting his 4th annual "Dino's Chevy Only Git Down" Pre-Party! Which ironically was a Pre-Party to the Good Guys Show held in Scottsdale. I had just started the Podcast, and wasn't sure if I should do interviews from the event. I remember talking to people and explaining to them what the interview was and it would be part of a "podcast" and most were like "a what"! LOL - 10 years and 300 episodes later, we are still talking trucks! Thanks to those that allowed to interview them. Great memories for sure, Ronnie.
We talk about Brians weekend at the Gitdown and Franks vacation in San Diego.
Coverge from the 13th Annual Dino's "Chevy Only" Git Down. WOW - So many trucks, what a great show.
Today's guest is the ultimate Chevy truck enthusiast, Dino Battilana. Dino is the founder of Dino's Chevy Only, a brand dedicated to GM truck enthusiasts, and the event Dino's Git-Down, a show for those who share his obsession with classic GM trucks. What started as a small gathering in Dino's appliance shop parking lot before the Goodguys event has turned into an annual event taking over the Arizona Cardinals' Stadium parking lot. To learn more about Dino and to stay up-to-date with the latest information about Dino's Git-Down, visit dinoschevyonly.shop. You can follow also follow Dino and the Git-Down on Instagram @dinoschevyonly and @dinosgitdown Don't miss the latest from The Roadster Shop. Be sure to follow us on Instagram @roadstershop Oil and Whiskey is an IRONCLAD original.
@robesp90The scene:We are in Manchaca, Texas on a warm evening in May, sitting at a wooden picnic table under an umbrella strung with cafe lights. We're about to head to the Manchaca Springs Saloon to continue hanging with the Model Citizens classic car club who are coming off a weekend of cruising after the Lone Star Roundup classic car show. It's been epic. Scraping down Congress St. in a classic car parade is a definite bucket list item. Join us for a chill chat about drifting, racing, scraping, and making OCD your friend.Highlights:+ Classic car builder since 2018+ Currently owns: '65 bagged C10 (Chevy square body truck), '65 4-door Chevy Nova (V8 swapped, Ford rear-end), '71 wagon+ Used to own: '91 240 SX, imported from Japan…+ Drift raced for 10-15 years+ Learned to work on cars by racing them+ Hand sketches all his design ideas+ Works through Gringo's Auto and Custom - an auto shop that does custom work+ Model Citizens' annual ‘Git Down at Manchaca Springs Saloon+ Getting recognition for your passion+ Grew up riding BMX and teaching himself to build+ Enjoys teaching others what he has taught himself+ Grew up in Manchaca, his grandparents live here+ OCD helps him produce beautiful cars and complete jobs+ Downside of OCD: exhaustion, burnout, not feeling appreciated+ Community support keeps him on track and reconfirms his direction+ Seeing your hard work pan out makes it all worthwhile+ Trial and error all the time+ Excitement about working with customers+ Innovating classic cars through customization+ Air ride, bags, hydraulics, scraping+ “Scraping's just a way of life”+ It's gotta go lower or higher - some things do need to be lifted+ Working on cars (7 days/week) is tough on relationships+ Life balance, relaxing in-between+ Working for yourself, investing in yourself+ You can make 10k+ competing in fishing (WTF!)+ Being gifted with a mechanical mind and capable hands+ True “failure” is something you can't repair, most “accidents” are repairableA taste:“It's basically OCD and obsession on everything and anything. Super crazy about what I do and then OCD enough to where everything has to be done right and finished. I hate unfinished projects.”Favorite saying:“Fuck around and find out.” (Try things, don't give up, learn what you don't know).Support the showThank you for listening! Please subscribe to support this project.Love, Sagewolf xoxo
@manchaca_springs_saloonThe scene:We are in Manchaca, Texas (South Austin) sitting at an old wooden table inside the saloon (where we have taken at least one shot of tequila once upon a time…). This place is what I would consider the ideal bar: decorated all over with badass collected artifacts, huge outdoor space with a stage for live music, and food trucks. Basically, one could live here. And Josh almost does. Not only is he here daily, but he lives down the road. Join us in the saloon for the story of where Josh came from and how he ended up sitting across from me.Highlights:+ The annual “Git Down” classic car show at the saloon+ Likes entertaining+ A BBQ joint became the saloon+ Business name: Rodriguez Rod and Cycles+ Started painting lowrider bicycles when he was 13+ 1939 Chevrolet Master Deluxe is his daily beater (it's gorgeous)+ Built every bike he ever had from scratch+ Had his own TV show on the Discovery Channel: Texas Car Wars+ Now he's ready to chill (and wouldn't do TV life again)+ His uncle gave him his first paint gun+ First car at 15: '77 Monte Carlo dropped to the ground, primer grey with a red velvet interior+ Lots of drag races, way too fast on motorcycles+ Has taught a few painters - those who showed genuine interest+ Grew up in South Austin - was the cool spot back in the 80's+ Manchaca is the last part of South Austin that feels like it hasn't changed+ Manchaca is in Travis County, not part of Austin City (so, still the wild west)+ The history of Manchaca and the springs/Onion Creek dates to the 1400's+ Has found over 1000 arrowheads in the area since he was a kid+ Grew up across from the green belt (literally a paradise)+ Growing up shooting bb guns+ Lost an eye at 4 years old (not from a bb gun, it made his other eye stronger)+ Making OCD work for you - developing an acute sense of detail+ Being a big risk-taker+ “Nobody ever wakes up in the morning and says, “Man, I'm glad I did that cocaine.”+ Being a fighter, staying one step ahead, nobody else gets the last word+ Doing a lot for your community, and your community helping you+ Grew up in a house full of people, and then invited all the neighbors over :)+ Growing up fast (too fast)+ He's an old soul, living young soul lessons (over and over)+ Making mistakes, recognizing them, and choosing betterA taste:“I grew up in South Austin…it was really the cool spot in Austin back in the '80's during my era of growing up. Everybody was wearing cut-off blue jeans and had their hair cut long and drank a lot of beer and sat underneath all the trees at every park you could find. And nobody got in trouble or got fucked with.”Favorite Sayings:“Higher than giraffe pussy.”“You should only regret something once.”"To thine own self be true.""Always keep your mind open - there's always two sides to the story.""Keep your eyes open, and your ear to the ground.""Be grateful for every new day."Support the showThank you for listening! Please subscribe to support this project.Love, Sagewolf xoxo
Ronnie sits down with Tawny and Miguel from C10's at the Ranch. They will be hosting their 3rd show at their Ranch in Agua Dulce, CA. this weekend and I thought I would catch uop with them. One of the things they will also be doing is raffling of a 6.0 LS motor to help raise some funds to help repair/replace not only the "Battleship C10" but all of the "Drive Your Shit" merch they lost in a fire they experienced while driving to the 2022 Git Down. Check out this bonus episode and support the cause by buying a raffle ticket. www.c10sattheranch.com
We recap our Dinos Gitdown weekend and answer a few questions.
Sponsors: Orange Beach Invasion, Scrapin the Coast, & Bayou Showdown ODB & The Mayor intros the episode covering Scene Updates & more The Mayor asks for forgiveness & attempts to become part of the team again ODB touches base with ///RA Ruben The Booker discussing SEMA 2022 Dino's Git Down + so much more!!! RIP Mark “Papa Smurf” Ballard! We miss you Dad. Stay On Da Rise!
Wow - what a huge event. This 2 day Classic Truck Show did not disappoint. Enjoy the Pod! 12:52 - Carlos @droppedlower talking about his CorvAIR ramp truck. 22:48 - Carlos from @c10streetstyle talking about his converted first gen Blazer. 30:11 - Ross from @premierstreetrod talking about the new first gen Blazer tubs they now have for sale. 44:51 - Alfredo from @drive_auto_collision talking about his "Top Gun" C10 that was buillt in 2 months! WoW! 51:50 - Mike Bigalko, @sweet_tina68 talking about his RAD ASS '68 C10 and the 5 year build. Oh ya he debut the truck at Dino's and he lives in Florda. 67:37 - The WINNERS of the Motor, the LT4 Give away winners, @Lonnie_Sumner 74:09 - Jose', Erika, and Kevin - Jose is the cousin @j.garcia_ek @teh_real_bigmak and his wife Erika who were recently drove out from Atlanta. #roadtrip 83:10 - Lee Warner and his Sweet RestoMod '77 GMC. @apachelee 129:20 - The one and only Wayne Dick, from @dickindustriesinc chatting it up about his Corviar Ramp truck with 2002 C5 corvette donor throughout. One Bad Bitch! Enjoy the pod and thanks fro tuning in, Ronnie
Adam and Chris have been working on this unique project for years now and it is all starting to come together. They will debut the truck at Dino's Git Down this year in a few weeks. Oh ya, they both have really cool "day jobs" too! I hope you like the pod, thanks for tuning in, Ronnie
Former UFC middleweight champion Michael Bisping and #5 Ranked UFC light heavyweight Anthony Smith discuss the large slate of fights leaked from Dana's office including Anthony's and Nate Diaz being targeted for Khamzat Chimaev, Luke Rockhold being targeted for an August return against Paulo Costa, Dave Chapelle getting attacked during a set plus a full breakdown of all the main card fights at UFC 274 and so much more!Support Our Sponsorshttps://www.betterhelp.com/believe/ - Click the link for 10% off your first monthhttps://www.truebill.com/believe - Click the link to save thousands over the course of the year!Believe You Me is available for early pre release on GaS Digital Network every Monday. Sign-up with code BYM to get access to the archives, bonus content and more! https://bit.ly/2YXEoZH"Free Cain" Shirts Herehttps://derekbrunson.com/collections/mensFollow the show on social media:Twitter: https://twitter.com/BYMPodSubscribe on YouTube: https://bit.ly/3drq6psFollow the hosts on social:Michael Bisping Twitter https://twitter.com/bispingMichael Bisping Instagram https://www.instagram.com/mikebisping/Michael Bisping YouTube https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCDrG2_1TcVkXKXXsD6KjwigWebsite https://gasdigitalnetwork.com/gdn-show-channels/believe-you-me/Anthony Smith Twitter: https://twitter.com/lionheartasmithAnthony Smith Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/lionheartasmith/Mike's debut book "Quitters Never Win" is available wherever books are sold, click here to get a copy! https://bit.ly/2V9ZqDkFollow the team on social:Brian MacKay Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/bmackayisrightBrian MacKay Twitter: https://twitter.com/bmackayisrightMike Harrington Twitter: https://twitter.com/TheMHarringtonMike Harrington Instagram https://www.instagram.com/themharringtonMike Harrington Twitch https://www.twitch.tv/themharringtonBelieve You Me is a twice weekly podcast covering MMA news in a comedy podcast format hosted by former UFC Middleweight Champion Michael Bisping.Michael Bisping is a Former UFC Middleweight Champion. He transitioned to commentary in his post fight career and regularly calls the biggest fights. In addition to analyst work Michael has been cast in shows on Netflix, CBS and Showtime and has appeared in movies such as XXX: Return of Xander Cage, Den Of Thieves and Triple Threat. His next project slated for release is Warrior on Netflix in October, his self titled documentary "Bisping" is out now and just made #1 on the US and UK charts.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Steph celebrates Utah's adoption day and Daylight Savings Time and troubleshoots a CI build time that had suddenly spiked for a client project using TeamCity. She also shares a minor update regarding the work that thoughtbot is doing to scale horizontally and add more machines quickly and efficiently to process more RSpec tests. Chris was alarmed by logs and unknown-unknowns and had some fun using Git down. Git bless his heart! 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. TeamCity (https://www.jetbrains.com/teamcity/) lograge (https://github.com/roidrage/lograge) Cleaning up local git branches deleted on a remote (https://www.erikschierboom.com/2020/02/17/cleaning-up-local-git-branches-deleted-on-a-remote/) Become a Sponsor (https://thoughtbot.com/sponsorship) of The Bike Shed! Transcript: CHRIS: Hello and welcome to another episode of The Bike Shed, a weekly podcast from your friends at thoughtbot about developing great software. I'm Chris Toomey. STEPH: And I'm Steph Viccari. CHRIS: And together, we're here to share a bit of what we've learned along the way. So, Steph, what's new in your world? STEPH: Hey, Chris. Today is Utah's adoption day. So officially, one year ago, we adopted Utah. He's about a year and a half years old now because we got him when he was around the six-month mark. So Utah, aka Raptor, which is the nickname that you gave him, and aka UD [spelling] the cutie is his other nickname...which I've forgotten, why do you call him Raptor? Why is that a name? CHRIS: Because there's a Utah Raptor. STEPH: A person? [laughs] CHRIS: No, I think it was like the fossils were found in Utah. But the Utah Raptor is a type of dinosaur. And so when I heard Utah, my brain went to Raptor, and then I dropped the Utah sort of a Cockney rhyming slang sort of thing. Shout out to Matt Sumner real quick. But yeah, Raptor. STEPH: Cool. Cool. Cool. I'm so glad I asked. Now I know. I just accepted it when you called him Raptor. I was like, sure, he can be a Raptor. [laughs] CHRIS: I feel like that says a lot about me that you were just like, okay, why not? STEPH: [laughs] CHRIS: That's different and has no apparent connection to the actual name of the creature, but that's fine. I might be a nonsense person. STEPH: Or me for accepting it. You share a lot of nonsense, and I accept a lot of nonsense. That might be our dynamic. [laughs] So it works out. CHRIS: That just may be our dynamic. STEPH: That's why I'm always so nice with the good idea, bad idea, or even terrible. [laughs] CHRIS: You're like, it's all nonsense 100% of the time, but yeah. So Utah is one year into living with you folks. So that's lovely. STEPH: Yeah, and he's growing up so well. Oh, and I've been training him for one of his latest tricks. I'm very excited because it seems to be really sinking in. So every night, we take him out for his final bathroom potty but then before we go to bed. And one night, for some reason, I started singing The Final Countdown. [singing] It's the final countdown. But I started singing it's the final potty instead. So now, when it's time to go out for the bathroom late at night, I look at him, and I start singing. And I start singing [vocalization], and it's working. He's starting to recognize that when I started singing that tune, he's like, okay, and he gets up from his comfy spot, and we go outside. And it brings me a lot of joy. CHRIS: That is perhaps the best use of Pavlovian conditioning that I've ever heard of. Also, I really appreciate that you both mentioned the final countdown but then said just in case anyone is unfamiliar with the tune, let me hum a few bars. Thank you for doing the service there. STEPH: I have been singing so much this week. I don't know if Joël Quenneville, who I've been pairing with a lot, appreciates that. Sorry, Joël. But I have been singing so much. And I think that's post-vacation vibes. That's what vacation does for you. And it helps you get back into, you know, lots of singing or at least it does for me. Let's see, what else is going on this week? So this is the week that we have DST in the USA, so Daylight Savings Time, aka summertime, where we advance our clocks so everybody...although this is going to be late. So at this point, by the time people are hearing this, you're going to have already dealt with all those bugs that have crept up. But those are creeping up this week, where people are starting to notice a lot of those flaky specs that aren't technically flaky. They're actually breaking for real reasons because they were tested in a way that shows that they're not considering that daytime boundary. CHRIS: It's as if you spend some of your time fixing flaky specs that that's where your mind goes with DST. Because I'm going, to be honest, part of what you're doing right now is telling me that this is coming up, and I didn't know. I had forgotten about that, which is very exciting, except you lose an hour asleep for this one, right? Or is it that you gain? STEPH: We're going forward. Yeah, it's fall back and then spring forward. That's how I remember it. CHRIS: Worth it. I'll take the sunshine at night. STEPH: Yeah, it's supposed to be so we have more sunshine during the daylight hours. That's the reasoning for the nonsense, the headaches. On some more technical news, when I came back from vacation, we noticed that the CI build time has suddenly spiked for the client project where previously we were averaging, I'd say, around 25-26 minutes. There's definitely a range there. But that seems to be pretty consistent. And right now, builds are taking more about 35, sometimes upwards to 45 minutes. And so it's been a bit of who done it or what caused it adventure of figuring out why, what's causing the spike. And so Joël and I have been pairing heavily on that to investigate what's going on and learned a lot of features that TeamCity offers and just diving into this particular issue. One thing that brought me joy is by looking through all the builds that are taking place on TeamCity. As I noticed, there are a number of builds that are using the RSpec selective testing that I added where if you only change a test to then we're only going to run those tests instead of the whole suite. And it was one of those changes where I thought, okay, maybe someone's going to get use out of this. Joël and I will probably get use out of this. But I'm actually seeing it about one every ten build something like that. And I'm just like, oh, this is awesome. One, people are improving tests. That's amazing. And then two, that then they're benefiting especially while we have this spike going on. So that was a suggestion from you that I appreciate because that is paying dividends. And so that brought me a lot of joy while looking into this other issue, which we haven't resolved yet. We think it has something to do with how the tests are being balanced across all the different parallelized processes. And we think that there is an imbalance that has happened. And then that's what's really throwing things off. So we can see that one particular process is taking around 26-27 minutes, but then the next process that's highest in time is only taking 17 minutes. So it's like, why is there suddenly ten more minutes that's being attributed to one process? And why is that not getting spread out? So still looking into that. That's the mystery for this week. But that's mostly what's going on in my world. What's up in your world? CHRIS: What is up in my world? I'm going to say a quite alarming thing happened this week, which was we were investigating some changes, or we were investigating some behavior where the particular portion of the system ended up in the logs, just sort of combing through. And I happened to notice this one log line that...our logs tend to be somewhat verbose. They're JSON-structured log format. I've talked about the lograge setup that we use in the past, but there's a bunch. These are long lines of JSON-structured data. But this line that caught my eye was not. It was just some text, and it said, "Unreported event: and then some other texts." And I was like, ah, what? Who didn't report which to when? I did some digging, eventually figured out that this was Sentry. Sentry was logging that it had not reported an event to us. But had we not randomly happened upon this in the logs, which is sort of a random thing to see, we would have missed this, which is scary. I mean, it was missed for a little while. And so Sentry was not reporting certain events. We had made a change, particularly to Sentry's before_send configuration. So there's a way that you can do some amount of filtering client-side or client being, in this case, our Ruby app. So that's like the client-side of Sentry, and then there's their server backend. So that would, weirdly, that's the way the client-server work in this case. But the idea is you can do some proactive filtering of being like, you know what? Rather than sending a ton of noise...because we know there's this one error that we can't stop for reasons. It's a JavaScript Chrome extension that's getting embedded in the app. That doesn't mean anything; that's just noise. Rather than even sending those over to Sentry, let's proactively filter them out. before_send is a function within the Sentry SDK that allows you to do this. But it turns out if you raise an error in there, if you happen to have introduced something that doesn't cover all the possible edge cases, then Sentry will just not let you know and will log, interestingly, that they did not report the event. I'm going to throw it out there that I would love if Sentry were to say Sentry me...that's where I put something very bad happened, and you should look at it. And they're just like, well, something pretty darn bad happened. We'll log it. Supposedly, my understanding is before_send can be used to filter out like PII or other things like that. And so their failure mode is quiet intentionally. That's my understanding as to maybe why this is true. I wish there were configuration that said, no, please fail as loudly as humanly possible. But that was terrifying. STEPH: Yeah, absolutely. I'm going to piggyback on what you just said for a minute because I was also thinking earlier and related to the sudden spike in our CI builds where I was like, it would be really nice if there's...because I suspect there's one particular change that has caused this to happen. I don't know what it is yet, but that's just my suspicion. And it would be great if when that build ran, let's say that build went from an average of 25 minutes and suddenly we have a build that took 35 minutes if TeamCity had alerted us or if something more aggressive had to happen to say like, "Hey, your team..." or maybe it's just in the logs somewhere. Okay, not in the logs somewhere more visible on the build where it's like, "Hey, your build took an extra 10 minutes compared to the average, just letting you know. I don't have a diagnosis for you, but we're just letting you know." So yeah, plus-one to getting those types of alerts out to people and notifying us when there's an average that's not being met or when things aren't getting logged like you'd expect them to. CHRIS: As part of what we were doing in the logs...like how to get to that anomaly detection place is a really interesting question in my mind. And this is a case where we were in the logs, and we wanted to instrument more things. So we have a bunch of stuff right now that goes in. It's either a warn or error log level. And the error should be pretty rare because, ideally, those are going to Sentry instead, but we still want to keep an eye on them. But we introduced a new search within log entries, which is what we're using for logging aggregation and searching. And the idea was to group all warn-level messages and to group it on the message string. So ideally, what this allows us to do is say, "Oh, we've seen 200 instances in the past two days of this new warning that we didn't see before." The difficulty is, as a human, I would see unhandled error blah as one bucket of warning, or I might want to see it that way. I might want to group it on part of the message. So it becomes really hard to find the signal in the noise on these, but at least it was a start. We now have this little graph for both warning and error-level log messages that we can see are there any new anomalies that are occurring pretty regularly? But this, again, was just this weird edge case where we were lucky to catch it. But it was very scary that it was just throwing stuff away. So the universe might have been true that our error log did get a little quiet for a little while, which was nice, but it wasn't 100%. It wasn't like we were at 10 hours, an hour, and then we went to zero. It was like some, and then we went to a lower number because we were still getting some. We were only filtering out certain ones. But yeah, it's how do you know at runtime that the system is doing the thing? This is increasingly the question that I have in my mind. But yeah, so that was the thing. We fixed it. It's fixed now. I also set up an alert in log entries to say, "If you ever see this particular phrase again unhandled or unreported," then please tell me about that post-haste. So we've got that now. STEPH: That's perfect. That's what I was about to ask us if there's a way that you could add a filter or add a warning for that anomaly detection. So that sounds great. CHRIS: I've got that now because this became a known-unknown, but there are still the unknown-unknowns, and there are so many of them. And I can't know them is my understanding of how they work. I would love to know them. I would love to pin them down and be like, "Hey, what are you doing here?" Someday maybe. But anyway, that was the thing in my world. [laughs] It was fun. It was a great little time. What else is up in your world? STEPH: I feel like you can always judge the level of fun based on how high someone's voice goes. No, it was fun. It was great. It was fun. [laughter] CHRIS: I believe that is an accurate assessment, yes. STEPH: I've caught myself doing that. I'm like, my voice is extra high, so I don't think I really mean that when I'm using the word fun. [laughs] Mid-roll Ad Hi, friends, and now a quick break to hear from today's sponsor, Scout APM. Scout APM is an application performance monitoring tool that's designed to help developers find and fix performance issues quickly. With an intuitive user interface, Scout will tie bottlenecks to source code, so you can quickly pinpoint and resolve performance abnormalities like N+1 queries, slow database queries, and memory bloat. Scout also recently implemented external service monitoring, adding even more granularity when it comes to HTTP requests and API calls. So give Scout a try today with a free 14-day trial and experience first-hand why developers worldwide call Scout their best friend. And as an added bonus for Bike Shed listeners, Scout will donate $5 to the open-source project of your choice when you deploy. To learn more, visit scoutapm.com/bikeshed. That's scoutapm.com/bikeshed. I do have a small update that I can share regarding the work that we're doing to be able to scale horizontally. So we want to be able to add more machines quickly and easily so we can then process more RSpec tests. And we have discovered with TeamCity that we're pushing forward on that particular path because they have something called a composite build. And with a composite build, it's essentially your parent or your supervisor build. And then, from there, you can create other subsequent builds. So we can then say, all right, let's have multiple builds that then run the RSpec test, and then we can separate in that way. And right now, we're going about it in the hacky way because we just want a proof of concept. So we are saying specifically in this particular step, we want you to run spec models. And in this other process, we want you to run these particular tests just because we want to see how this works. And so far, the aggregation seemed great. So when you look at that composite parent build, it's showing you how each of those builds are doing. It's also reporting back the failures. It's even de-duping them. Because initially, we set it up where we were running the full test suite in parallel on both of these builds, [laughs] not what we wanted, fixed that. But it did highlight that it was de-duping the test failures. So that part was nice. So the UI seems great and seems quite very capable of doing this. Composite build seems to be the way that we can do this with TeamCity. But we're still diving into actually getting the metrics like, okay, how much is this actually going to speed us up? And what does this look like if we want to be able to scale up to say from 5 to 10 where we went from 5 machines to 10 machines? And that part doesn't feel graceful because then you have to go in and change the configuration and copy the configuration to then add a new build that then is going to process RSpec test. So other services like Buildkite make it very easy. I can't remember if it's like literally a slider or if it's a number that you enter. But you can say, "This is how many processes that I want to run," in which it would be a lot nicer for that actual scaling. Versus TeamCity, it feels far more manual and intentional where you then have to duplicate and add those settings. But it's a really good first step because, as we'd highlighted before, there's a lot of risk in moving over from an existing infrastructure to something totally new. So if we can have some wins with this approach and help out the team and reduce build time, then that gives us more grace period. So then we can assess, okay, do we really want to move over to Buildkite? What do we want to do next? What does this look like? And have further discussions. So that's a small update there. Next time I should have some more updates around actual data on how things are looking. CHRIS: Oh, cool. Yeah, I appreciate the update and definitely interested to hear how this continues to play out. This is a large project that you're undertaking and all the facets and whatnot, so yeah, super interested to hear the continued journey of the test build time reduction. Let's see, other news in my world. I've been exploring something that I'm intrigued by the idea. Let's go with that. [chuckles] That's going to be my start. I always start with these lead-ins that build things up too much. But I am finding a small tension in trying to just keep up with what the team is doing, which is a wonderful place to be. Our team is growing. We actually have someone new joining tomorrow, very exciting. But I'm trying to find the right version of I don't want to block things. I don't want all code review to have to go through me. But I do want to keep an eye on everything. I want to kind of know what we're doing collectively. And ideally, mostly, that's me being like, yep, that makes sense. We're doing that. I remember that, cool. Wait, what's this? And rarely, occasionally, there'll be a point where I'm like, oh, I want to intervene here. I want to have a conversation. I want to rethink how we're building this. And so it's moving from a place of any sort of blocking synchronous review or the necessity for that to ad hoc post-review sort of thing. And so the way that I'm trying to poke around with this, of course, I'm writing some code to do it because of me. So the two systems that we're using that seem most of interest are GitHub and Trello. And so it turns out GitHub has a wonderful search, and I can create a search that is parameterized like create a URL that jumps into a parameterized search saying, "Show me everything that was merged in the past X amount of time, " so I can say the past two days because I haven't checked it in two days. So I'll see all of the PRs that were merged, and some of them I'll have already reviewed. So I maybe could even filter further there. But for anything that I haven't seen, I'm like, oh, what was this? What was that? What was this other change? Similarly, on Trello, there's a way via the API to get all of the card update actions. And then I can filter down to say whenever a card was moved, which in our system that means...we're doing Kanban-style, so a card being moved from this column to that column that tells me that someone is progressing forward with some work. And then I can further filter down because, again, I don't really want to be blocking on this. I'm most interested in what have we done or completed in the most recent timeframe. And thus far, it's an interesting data set. And it's an interesting way to switch the problem around such that I'm not feeling...there was FOMO or organizational FOMO is perhaps how I would describe it of like, I want to try and keep an eye on stuff and make sure I'm responsive. But I'm now blocking, so I have to step away. But now I'm worried that I'm missing things. And so I'm trying to find that good middle spot. And this feels like an interesting exploration of that. STEPH: I'm intrigued when you mentioned the card moving over, so then you can tell things are progressing. And then you're answering the question of what did we do in this particular chunk of time? When you move stuff over, is there a clear sweep of we have finished this sprint, and then you have the date of that sprint at the top, and so then you essentially have a column that represents all the work that was done in that sprint? Is that an approach that you're using? Because that's the one that immediately came to mind for me when you're wondering what was accomplished during this week or two-week period? CHRIS: Interesting question. So we're not really doing sprints, or there are no real iterations. We're doing more of the I think Kanban is the way to describe it. But basically, we have a prioritized next up column. And then every day, I can say continuously, the work has the same shape, which is pick up the next most important thing, work on it, move it through the various columns. I did introduce in Trello just the idea of, like, here's a month, so we can see by month what we're doing, but that's too low granularity in my mind. I want to review it a month at a time. The whole point of this in my mind is to see stuff as it's happening vaguely in real-time but not requiring me to constantly be monitoring everything. So it gives me an opportunity at the end of the day to be like, what happened today? What do we do? But yeah, so there's no real sprint that I would couple this to because we're not really doing sprints. STEPH: Got it. Yeah, that gives me more context. I understand why you're then looking for ways as to how to answer that question of, like, what did we accomplish in this week or a particular time period? CHRIS: And to name it, this is not an intention on my part to be like, I need to control everything. I need to make all the decisions. I very much want to empower the team. And in my mind, this is actually a mechanism to empower the team. I want to give them more freedom and then have the opportunity occasionally to check back in and be like, oh, actually, there was some context that was missing here the way we did this. Let's actually unwind that, do it this other way for these reasons. But it gives me the ability to potentially have that conversation after the fact. We're trying very hard to have the tickets be as representative and complete, and well documented as possible. But that's very difficult to get to. And there are also things that I don't even know to mention. Again, I think the critical bit is this is not an attempt to make sure everything aligns with what I think; it's more I want to empower the team to move without me most of the time. And then, where there are things that potentially should have a small conversation or a redirection, then we have the ability to do that. And so, I'm trying to build that back into my workflow while basically loosening up my connection to the work in progress at any given point in time. STEPH: So you just touched on a topic that's really interesting to me or a particular space. You're doing a very kind thing where you want tickets to have lots of context so that people feel confident when they're picking up what's the action item to be done. And for someone that's new, that's incredibly helpful, and I think more important since they are new to that world. But in general, my spicy take of the moment is going to be as developers; that's part of our job. If we notice that context is missing or if we're not clear about the action item, is to think through what is it that I'm missing? Who do I reach out to? Who can I go to for help? How can I scope this work? All of that, to me, is very much part of our role. And the idea that tickets always have to be perfectly curated, which I don't think you're saying, but you're just trying to be extra helpful. But if someone were to have that expectation, I think that expectation is wrong. And I do think it is part of our work that then we help make sure that tickets are well-scoped and well-defined and have those conversations with the people creating the tickets or creating them ourselves. CHRIS: I love the clarification there, and I'm definitely in agreement with you. I don't know how picante of a take it is. I would be intrigued. Listeners, let us know. Are we breaking your mold of what things should be? But I do like the idea that it is a conversation so back and forth. And so the idea that as developers, there should just be this very clear list of things to do and you just kind of pick up a card and heads down, just get it done, I don't think that should be the mold. But I do think; ideally, the why is the most important thing that I think should be in a card. So ideally, a card should have little in terms of technical implementation notes and should have more in terms of here's the goal that we're going for, here's the problem, or here's the thing that we're trying to solve. And then maybe a suggestion of like, I think it could be an X, Y, and Z, but I'm not sure. Or we want to be able to send transactional emails, but I don't know any more than that. Our goal is to engage users. Like that last sentence, that last little bit of our goal is to engage users is a critical, critical data point, versus our goal is to solve for a regulatory and compliance issue. It's like, well, those are different. And they will lead to different solutions and different implementations and all that. So yeah, I definitely share the idea that cards don't need to be perfectly specified. And if anything, I think I'm closer to that than it probably sounded like I was. But for that reason, it's totally possible in my mind, that work will be done in a way that after the fact, I'm like, "Oh, sorry, there was a misunderstanding here. Let's revisit this work." And so, my goal is to try and stay connected and have a feedback mechanism at the end of the process. So when the work is done, be able to spot-check it rather than trying to have to watch it as it's happening or proactively define everything in excruciating detail such that exactly the right things happen all the time. So I'm moving to a place of ask forgiveness, not permission. That's the wrong analogy here. But that idea of like, we can clean it up after the fact, that's fine. And we don't need to try and prevent any sort of things, or at least that's what I'm exploring. STEPH: Yeah, I love that you highlighted having the why. I adore that when that's on a card just because I then I want to know the goal because then that's going to help me ask questions and think about scoping versus if it's like a very specific implementation, then I feel so narrowly scoped that I don't feel as confident that I can be like, okay, I know why I'm doing this versus I just feel very directed to do a thing, and that's incredibly helpful. I have also felt the pain that you're mentioning where it does feel like a ticket has all of the work clearly defined, and the goals, and the whys, and it can have everything there, but just something gets lost in the communication. And so someone implements something in a way that is how they interpreted the work versus it's not actually what the ticket or what the goal of the work was to be done. So I appreciate that where you are looking for ways to tweak things to make sure that whoever is picking up that ticket will have the same interpretation that the author intended for them to have. And then if that does happen, and things get misaligned, then you chat and figure out ways to improve it. I think that's the point that I was really thinking about, and my air quotes, "hot take," is that as developers, a big part of our job is communication, and then also sharing the knowledge that we have with other people. And so if someone is expecting that they can just always pick up work and never talk to someone, I don't know, maybe you're in the wrong business. [laughs] That's my hot take. CHRIS: I, for one, like the hot take. It is nice and ever so slightly spicy. STEPH: Thanks. Yeah, I just think communication is incredibly important. Earlier, you mentioned, I don't think we were on mic at the moment, but you mentioned something about a new Git alias. And I am very intrigued on hearing about what you've added, what it does, all the details. CHRIS: All the details, that's probably too many, but some of the details I can certainly provide. So I have two new Git aliases; one is Git gone, which is probably the heart of the whole thing. And so the background of this is I found myself pushing the green merge button on GitHub more. We've introduced some branch protection stuff, which I've talked about in previous episodes. And I dream of the day that one of my good, good friends at GitHub will give me access to the merge queue beta. Please, please, I implore thee. But in the interim, still clicking the green merge button more often than not. STEPH: Wait. I have to ask to help you in this dream. Are you forwarding these episodes to someone? You can just take a clip of you saying, "Please, please, please give me access," [chuckles] and just forwarding that or mentioning someone at GitHub or GitHub in general. CHRIS: Just leaving voicemails for people with a Bike Shed section of me begging for access to the merge queue beta? STEPH: Yeah. [laughs] CHRIS: No, I'm not. But maybe I need to up my game. You're right. [laughs] Someday, I'll get there. And that will only exacerbate this issue that I'm feeling, which is again, I'm clicking the merge button. That's what's happening. And as a result, that means my local branch is now like it's done its job. You've served me well. And in the Marie Kondo sense, I need to hold you up, thank you for your service, and then let you go. But I obviously wanted to automate that. So Git gone does that automation, and it was fun. So I found a blog post which we'll include in the show notes, that had most of the pieces here, but it was still fun to play with the shell pipeline in a way that I hadn't in a while. So it does a Git fetch and then git-for-each-ref with a particular structured format that references the upstream of the branch then uses awk to search for the word gone. Because Git, if you print it out in this particular way using this format, it will say the local branch name and then the upstream. But if you've deleted the upstream, it will specifically say (gone) in brackets, so you can actually use that to filter them down. And then I pipe that to git branch-D so..well, xargs of course. I love a little shell pipeline. As an aside, these are fun little things to build up. So that is Git gone. And then the other one that I have is Git down, which is what I use more. And Git down works on top of Git gone, so it's Git checkout main and and Git pull and and Git gone. But that means I get to type Git down into my terminal whenever a branch happens to get merged in the upstream land. [laughs] STEPH: [laughs] Oh, that's adorable. I love it. I like the Git gone, and yeah, I like the Git down just for fun. You are inspiring me where I now really want a Git bless your heart that's like maybe a Git blame or a Git revert. [laughs] CHRIS: I've definitely seen people do Git praise as an alias for Git blame. STEPH: That's nice. CHRIS: But Git bless your heart is...ooh, I love that. STEPH: [laughs] I might have to add that just so I can type it, and then someone can say, "What are you doing?" [laughs] Cool, I love it. CHRIS: Little things, little fun bits to add to your day and to automate and have a little fun while you're at it. So that's where I'm at. STEPH: All about the communication and fun. That's what I'm here for and the singing. Let's not forget the singing. CHRIS: And the singing, of course. STEPH: [singing] On that note, shall we wrap up? CHRIS: Let's shall. Oh. STEPH: [laughs] CHRIS: The show notes for this episode can be found at bikeshed.fm. STEPH: This show is produced and edited by Mandy Moore. CHRIS: If you enjoyed listening, one really easy way to support the show is to leave us a quick rating or even a review on iTunes, as it really helps other folks find the show. STEPH: If you have any feedback for this or any of our other episodes, you can reach us at @_bikeshed or reach me on Twitter @SViccari. CHRIS: And I'm @christoomey. STEPH: Or you can reach us at hosts@bikeshed.fm via email. CHRIS: Thanks so much for listening to The Bike Shed, and we'll see you next week. ALL: Bye. ANNOUNCER: This podcast was brought to you by thoughtbot. thoughtbot is your expert design and development partner. Let's make your product and team a success.
Lightning convinces Dino from Dino's Git Down to let him come hang out and grabs a few interviews from within the C10 world, while Holman gives a peak behind the scenes at Four Wheeler's annual “Of The Year” competition.
Sponsors: Orange Beach Invasion, Scrapin the Coast, & Bayou Showdown + Mini Truck Showdown (June 2022 Las Vegas) & Kern County Showdown (Feb 2022 Bakersfield, CA) ODB intros the episode covering Scene Updates ODB touches base with Ron Perkins to discuss HDWW's Black Friday, Open Enrollment & more Ruben Arteaga to discuss Dino's Git Down & a bit of the Sport Truck Era Eddie Gordy Junior to discuss his setup and showing at the 61st Houston Auto Rama ODB touches base with Max Fish to see what he's been up to since his initial interview on OLP RIP Mark “Papa Smurf” Ballard! We miss you Dad. Stay On Da Rise!
OBS Talk is brought to you by these OBSponsors - Title Sponsor - www.lmctruck.com - When you need OBS Parts, think LMC Truck. http://www.baer.com - Baer is your OBS truck Specialist. www.us-mags.com - Rad wheels for Rad Trucks. www.belltech.com - The most trusted source in lowering your truck! www.airliftperformance.com - When you are thinking about Air Management - Think Air Lift! www.azproperformance.com - Have you heard about their new REACT OBS spindle? Yep! Interviews from the 2021 Dino's Git Down, and a bonus SEMA interview with CK Syndicate Chris Stafford as well. Enjoy the Pod, and thanks for tuning in - remember, stay OBSESSED!
Episode #226 is brought to you by out Title Sponsor United Pacific Industries. www.UPcarParts.com - More than just truck lighting; bumpers, brackets, door parts and more. www.brotherstrucks.com - Your source for 1947 Chevy and GMC restoration truck parts. www.classicperform.com - Have you seen their new X10 Spindle, how about their fuel cells? Use "C10 Talk" at check out and save 10% www.psiconversion.com - When you are swapping that motor for an LS or LT based motor PSI has everything you need, including technical support! Use "C10 Talk" to save 5% off your total order. www.painlessperformance.com - Is it time to rewire that chassis - Painless Wiring has a wiring harness for you and your truck! Interviews from this years event.
I sit down with Chevy Only Dino, and we chat about the 11th annual Git Down, which is just around the corner - Nov. 12th and 13th in Glendale Arizona. Enjoy the Pod!
As a member of the Newark, New Jersey group Artifacts alongside Tame One and DJ Kaos, El Da Sensei is responsible for some bona fide 90s hip hop classics, including "C'mon with the Git Down” and "Wrong Side of da Tracks," the group's homage to the art of graffiti. After Artifacts split up following their second album 'That's Them' in 1997, El went on to have a prolific solo career, releasing nearly a dozen projects and consistently touring the globe on his own as well as with Polish hip hop duo The Returners. El's a true working class emcee, and his dedication to his craft as a writer and as an independent artist has granted him a pretty unique experience that we uncover throughout this conversation. We also talk a little bit about the impromptu Artifacts reunion in 2009 that brought El and Tame together and set the stage for their upcoming third Artifacts album, produced entirely by Buckwild and carrying the torch for DJ Kaos, who unfortunately passed away in 2019 ; the album is scheduled to be released later this year. In this episode, we discuss: "Speakin'" ('Relax, Relate, Release', 2003) "Live Noise" feat. Akrobatik (w/ The Returners, 'GT2: Nu World', 2010) "Wrong Side of Da Tracks" (Artifacts, 'Between a Rock and a Hard Place', 1994) "It Takes Two" (w/ Sadat X, 'XL,' 2018) "Money" feat Roc Marciano and Reef the Lost Cause ('The Money EP', 2009) "Got Fire" (w/ The Returners, 'Global Takeover', 2008) "31 Bumrush" (Artifacts, 'That's Them,' 1997) El Da Sensei: instagram.com/senseifromnj cantknocktheshuffle.com questionshiphop.com instagram.com/seandammit twitter.com/seandammit Email: cantknocktheshuffle@gmail.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Git DOWN!!! - Weed and Teens - Masked Singer
www.belltech.com - Use BEST for your OBS truck, use BellTech! www.dakotadigital.com - Yep, they have a gauge cluster for your OBS truck! www.us-mags.com - Check out their Retro Rad styles for OBS Trucks! www.lmctruck.com - Keeping Generations on the road. OBS truck interviews of OBS Truck owners from Dino's 10th annual Git Down. We've got a great variety of OBS truck coverage from the show - tune in and enjoy the show!
Episode #201 is brought to you by these Rad Ass Sponsors - www.classicperform.com - Spindles, Brakes, Lowering and more - Use "C10 Talk" at check out to save 10% off your total order. www.brothertrucks.com - Parts, and DIY videos, check out their YouTube for help and answers. www.vintageair.com - The Leader in aftermarket Heat/AC for your truck. www.mar-k.com - The absolute BEST trim for your truck - Made in the USA! www.painlessperformance.com - Is it time to rewire that chassis? Painless has a set up for you and your truck. Interviews from the 10th annual Dino's Git Down in Glendale Arizona. Over 2000 Chevy trucks embark on Westgate Entertainment District for nothing but Rad Rides and People that match!
F100 Talk is brought to you by - Title Sponsor - www.lmctruck.com - Keeping generations on the road. www.fatfendergarage.com - Your Coyote Swap Specialist. www.mar-k.com - More then just the BEST wood for your F100! www.vintageair.com - With over 40 years in the business, they have an AC kit for your classic Ford Truck. This is the first year that Fords have been asked to be part of the BIGGEST classic truck show in Arizona, and the SouthWest, Dinos' Git Down Party! The Ford Truck Community Showed up and represented, Big Time! Solomon was on location to capture it all. Tune in and enjoy!
Thursday - Tre5 Open House 6pm, Friday - 1pm - Prom Queen Reveal, Provost Motorsports booth 2pm - TCI, C10 Chassis Reveal, Total Cost involved booth. 3pm - King of Beats contest!!! Stop by the C10 Talk, C10 Nation booth for your free name tag sticker.
Hosts: TJ, Jason, & Brett This week on the show: Segment One: Jason's living a life of pain and gets out shot by a 12 year old. Brett's dogs are hoarders. TJ loves the Raiders beating the Chiefs and concern for out of town travels. Segment Two: FGS brings a bucket of hilarity as we talk crack smoking Floridians and new t-shirt ideas. HOT TAKES covers the cover of Amazing Spider Man #129 going to auction for $2 million. Then, the boys are joined by DAVID HOWARD THORNTON (Art The Clown from the Terrifier film franchise) full of laughs, behind the scenes info, impersonations, and amazing pizza ideas. Segment Three: REDDIT FUN asks “What apocalypse would you prefer to end humanity?” Pus, PICKS O' THE WEEK! Ain't no clownin' around here! It's THE QUAD M SHOW!
Episode 24. This episode I caught Jason Bittle out of Sydney. Jason has two awesome Chevy Apache trucks in his Garage. One is a 59 Stepside, the other a 58 Fleetside. I first met Jason in Arizona at Dino’s Gitdown where he had his 58’, it was built by Rick from @home_grown_rides in AZ. We had a good chat about both trucks and the process of building a custom truck from scratch, from another country. You can check Jason’s trucks on his Instagram @58_59_slammed. The podcast is sponsored in part by Classic Pickup Supplies. Please support them if you need parts for US build Ford and Chevy vehicles. www.classicpickupsupplies.com.au To get in contact with me please email me at classicpickuppodcast@gmail.com Thank you for listening. Whipps.
Episode 17. This episode I caught up with Dino Battilana, host of Dino’s Getdown in Arizona and the man behind the Chevy Only brand. Dino has been driving a C10 ever since he was 13 years old and he has never not owned one! You can see info on Instagram at @dinoschevyonly, @dinosgitdown, facebook, and at his website, www.chevyonly.com The podcast is sponsored in part by Classic Pickup Supplies. Please support them if you need parts for US build Ford and Chevy vehicles. www.classicpickupsupplies.com.au To get in contact with me please email me at classicpickuppodcast@gmail.com Thank you for listening. Whipps.
Been a while but I tell you keep the faith --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/phillip-jordan1/support
Brad did some events, we again discuss the Mach E and cover a few project car updates. Some house keeping, occasionally due to the way we have to record remotely, there may be an echo at certain points. We do the best we can to avoid this and edit it out and we are aware of the issue. Thank you Please Rate, review and subscribe to the podcast on your favorite listening platform.Comments, Questions, complaints; email us at autoofftopic@gmail.com"Z/28" by Z/28 is our title music. Listen to Z/28 at https://nobodyridesforfree.bandcamp.com/album/z28 and like them on FB at https://www.facebook.com/nobodyridesforfreeKeep your cars analog and Aim for the Roses!
Episode #156 is brought to you by these Rad Ass Sponsors. www.classicperform.com - Save 10% off your total order when you use code "C10 Talk" at check out. Yep - new brakes, new tanks, new whatever - save 10% www.dakotadigital.com - Upgrade that interior - choose VHX, HDX, or the Retro style RTX. Either way your truck will love you for it! www.azproperformance.com - When you want to upgrade from stock, matched with the BEST customer service - Call Travis and Nick. www.vintageair.com - Wether your truck has stock AC or not - its time to upgrade to a new more efficient system, Vintage Air has a system for you. Holy Crap what a great weekend!! The Git Down did not disappoint AT ALL! Over 1500 amazing HIGH QUALITY builds. If you're not making new friends at the Git Down, its because you're not here! That sums it ALL up it was an awesome fun filled weekend! Thanks Dino and Crew for all of your hard work and efforts. Krysta - amazing job. Seth - Damn Son that was fun. The trucks are cool, but YOU the PEOPLE are cooler!!
Episode #155 is brought to you by these Rad Ass Sponsors. www.accuair.com - The Leader in aftermarket Air Management, ACCUAIR! www.classicperform.com - Use "C10 Talk" at check out and save 10% off your entire order. www.prp.com - Precision Replacement Parts, ask for PRP at your favorite parts dealer and "Seal Your Build Right!" Mar-k.com - When you want the best Bed Wood, Side Molding and so much more - you want Mar-K. Made in America. SEMA 2019 did not disappoint. So many rad builds, and builders. The Journey for some of these builders has been well over two years. A journey that at times, had them not finishing. Not knowing if they would have a spot for their build. So many up's and down's and they prevailed. Congrats to all of those that made it. Dino also joins me on this episode as we talk all things 2019 Git Down. Rules, Parking layout and the weekends activities. Good Times ahead! Drive safe KATS!!
A special night at One80 where all three of our campus high school ministries came together to ride a mechanical bull, dress up like cowboys and here a message about whether we were being real or fake when it came to living out our faith.
I just found out about Cody's situation and wanted to help. Cody is a 20 year old who has fought cancer twice in the last 3 years. He also loves C10 Trucks and has one that he is trying to get finished before he turns 21. With the help of so many great companies like GSI, Accuair, Budnick Wheels, Black Widow exhaust, CPP, Nitto Tire, and many more - the truck is well on his way and he is on the home stretch along with the help of the Make-a-Wish foundation. There's a catch, he would like to get it done before he turns 21, Nov 15th. Which is also the day of the infamous Git Down. Our goal is to help Cody, and the Make-A-Wish foundation to complete the truck so Cody can have it done before Nov 15th and if he wants, he can bring it to the 9th annual Git Down in Phoenix, Arizona. Damn Son!!
Jake and Michael discuss all the latest Laravel releases, tutorials, and happenings in the community.
In this weeks episode, we talk to our traveling, truck building friend Phill Cann. We lightly touch upon his C10 build that will be in Issue No.003 of the magazine but we really get into his travels to the Git Down show in AZ this past November. We also discuss some happenings at the Detroit Auto Show!
Episode #119 is brought to you by these Rad Ass Sponsors. www.brotherstrucks.com www.classicperform.com www.accuair.com www.mar-k.com www.squarebodytrim.com www.jo-han.com Live coverage interviews from the 8th annual Dino's Git Down. New location and over 700 trucks - DAMN SON!!! This 3 day event has easily turned into the C10 Party of the Year. Trinity "Its like a family reunion and Class reunion combined!"
Episode Notes Notes go here
Highlights: -Quick Audio Check -“Why Hello!” -Magical Beeds -How are Mike and Armando doing? -Skateboarding -Youtube Shout Outs! -Armando’s Advice to fellow Vegans -Alex Jones Takes over the show…again... -Emotional Butterfly! Official Team Awesome Inc Youtube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/simmermike Awesome Links: https://www.facebook.com/jibberjabberbs https://twitter.com/TeamAwesomeInc https://twitter.com/KMTMPodcast https://twitter.com/simmermike www.teamawesomeshows.com teamawesomeshows@gmail.com "La Luz" link's: http://www.laluznyc.com https://twitter.com/LaLuzNYC Stoddard's Links: www.stoddardblackall.com https://twitter.com/stoddyblackall https://twitter.com/thestodcast www.soundcloud.com/stoddardblackall
BANG! @southernvangard #radio Ep 104! Doe was on a solo mission this week as Meeks was out - that stomach bug is NASTY this year folks - wash your hands please! Nonetheless we still cranked another quality episode with all new music and even had a few guest phone-ins from none other than J Scienide, Kev Brown and Shabaam Sahdeeq! Pretty likely there's no interview session this week, so go back and listen to the El Gant interview or any other interview you haven't listened to yet! Like the Bowling Green Massacre, never forget - it's that #smithsonian #grade #twiceaweek // southernvangard.com // @southernvangard on #itunes #podcast #stitcherradio #soundcloud #mixcloud // #hiphop #rap #underground #DJ #mix #interview #podcasts #ATL #WORLDWIDE Recorded live February 06, 2017 @ Dirty Blanket Studios, Marietta, GA southernvangard.com @southernvangard on #itunes #podcast #stitcherradio #soundcloud #mixcloud twitter/IG: @jondoeatl @southernvangard @cappuccinomeeks @beatlabusa Inst. beds by Jakk Wonder "The Git Down" - Stik Figa feat. Rappin' 4-Tay & Exile "Nomads" - M-Dot feat. Krumbsnatcha "Hot Damn” - Venomous2000 & Trilian (feat. The Artifacts, Tiye Phoenix & DJ Trickalome) "This Is What It Comes Too" - Raekwon "Just Rhyming Wit Frost" - Jakk Frost "NY Fashion Week" - J Scienide "Orange is the New Wack" - IT (Alsaska & Cryptic One) "The Exorcism" - Quadir Lateef & Statik Selektah "Bugged Out" - DJ Rybe feat. Reef the Lost Cauze, Shaz Illyork & Cap Cizz "In The Streets" - Monsta Mook feat. Conway "Serious" - OC "Marlon Brando" - Agallah Don Bishop & Duke Westlake "FOH Pt. 2 (J57 Remix)" - Da Villins feat. Prodigy (prod. J57) "Tommy Gun" - Heem Stogied feat. Tha God Fahim "Street Code" - Shabaam Sahdeeq feat Milano Constantine & Parakhan prod by DJ Ready Cee
WATCH OUT, jive turkey! GIT DOWN, mothalubba! GO HIDE, Mary Jane! Like a human tornado, Hero BLOB's gonna rip his way through the 1970s! With rat-soup-eater extraordinaire ROGER MCTUFFSON on his tail and the mysterious CHILIPEPPERMAN spicin' things up, can BLOB take on the forces of DRUG CRIME in the seventies? And can he do it all in the wonders of 7D?! Follow BLOB on this journey through time and to the depths of danger in the newest and possibly the greatest adventure, HERO BLOB 7D: RISE OF THE JIVE TURKEYS!!! [Note: the above is the last known photograph featuring BLOB's nose. If you know of its whereabouts or have seen it, please call the anonymous toll-free hotline 1-800-3463-25627-6673]
ILL MuRRaY (aka Mustache Marty) and once known as MC DoG is a South Pasadena native. A Dj, MC, and drummer who traveled south from the Pacific Northwest back in fall of 2006. ILL MuRRaY has played with various bands including Domex5, The Negatives, and The Suits. Had 2 albums releases with hip-hop group Ebonic $ymphonic in 2004 and 2005. And under the previous alias of MC DoG, Ill MuRRay recorded a solo hip-hop album in his senior year, titled The Pullout Method (2006). At the University of Puget Sound in Tacoma, WA. ILL MuRRaY met Amygdla, (Listen to his Soundcloud Here). Together they performed at house parties and events that took them deeper into mixing house and producing their own beats soon after. Under the group name, Same Cup they began making their own Punk/Reggae sound and performing at house parties and events. Until finally they formed the live band, The Doom Clap. Spinning dubstep, glitch and hip-hop and even incorporating live drum sets within their mixes. Marty quickly decided to become a Dj after being blown away at a Flying Lotus show in Portland on New Year’s Eve, and thus the ILL MuRRaY moniker was born. ILL MuRRaY/Mustache Marty represents The Emergency Music Systems crew out of Hood River OR alongside DJ's Liggo, DJ Vertigo, and Grimey Griff who have been dropping beats at bars, outdoor snow parties, festivals, and camp-outs since 2011! At one of the outdoor snow parties is where ILL MuRRaY met GitDown and now form a part of the Boom box In Da Boondox Team!