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The NoDegree Podcast – No Degree Success Stories for Job Searching, Careers, and Entrepreneurship
This episode features Dr. Andrea Isoni, an expert in AI and data sciences. The conversation focuses on the journey to becoming a machine learning engineer or data scientist without a degree. The interview covers topics such as understanding Linux and the command line, learning programming languages, using frameworks like Django, and collaborating with others using Git/GitHub.Andrea also shares insights on finding the right internships and job opportunities, staying competitive in the field, and building a strong CV.On the topic of boot camps, Andrea cautions against believing in boot camps that promise quick results and high-paying jobs, highlighting the competitive and saturated job market. He suggests researching boot camps and online courses thoroughly, considering reviews, and talking to others who have gone through them.Finally, He encourages perseverance and dedication for those looking to break into the field without a college degree, acknowledging that it is a challenging but possible journey. Need career or resume advice? Follow and/or connect with Jonaed Iqbal on LinkedIn.- LinkedIn: https://bit.ly/JonaedIqbalND Connect with us on social media!- LinkedIn: https://bit.ly/NoDegreeLinkedIn- Facebook: https://bit.ly/NoDegreeFB- Instagram: https://bit.ly/NoDegreeIG- Twitter: https://bit.ly/NoDegreeTW- TikTok: https://bit.ly/3qfUD2V Thank you for sponsoring our show. If you'd like to support our mission to end the stigma and economic disparity that comes along with not having a college degree, please share with a friend, drop us a review on Apple Podcast and/or subscribe to our Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/nodegree. Remember, no degree? No problem! Whether you're contemplating college or you're a college dropout, get started with your no-degree job search at nodegree.com.
Renée-Louise Nzegbulem is a #SoftwareEngineer @Beamery . Prior to this, Renée was a Mathematics Teacher after completing her Economics degree, and a year later took a leap of faith into the tech industry. The serendipities of life landed Renée a fulfilling role at a scale up, as a software engineer. She now specializes in #frontend development, building products for some of the biggest fortune 500 companies in the world. She introduces us to version control, git & github PLUS, she spills the tech tea on the lack of representation in tech. Stay up to date by following us on our socials: Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/glowingintech Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/glowingintech Follow our guest, Renée here: www.instagram.com/blaqbyte www.twitter.com/blaqbyte www.twitter.com/reneelouisedev Show notes with all resources mentioned: https://rebel-budget-35b.notion.site/Episode-15-Ren-e-Louise-Part-1-Maths-Teacher-to-Software-Engineer-Code-First-Girls-Nanodegree--257d183834104be5b5d6c93ea02f01ea Chapters: 00:00 Intro 00:26 Tech topic in 10, version control, git @GitHub 07:45 Why is it important to have pull requests? 10:07 Tech Tea: Representation in tech 12:25 Building a tech community --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/glowing-in-tech/message
Versionscontrol System Git vs Hostet Git (GitHub / Gitlab)
I spoke with Mariot Tsitoara. He is a Full Stack Developer focused on React and Python. Mariot lives in Bordeaux, France but he is originally from Madagascar. I was very excited to be speaking with someone from Madagascar for the first time in my life. Beyond that, Mariot is also a book author and speaker. I came across his name because I bought his book "Beginning Git and GitHub" which he got published by Apress. Very well put together and beginner friendly book about git. The book was a result of a presentation he give. We spoke about the process of putting the book together and the strategies he used to get it done, which included the Pomodoro Technique, of which I'm a big fan myself. He shared the story about a tough situation he found himself in. He was asked to create code to check people's productivity. Then he should come up with a list of employees that they should be fired! Check it out how he handled this odd situation. Enjoy the chat! Full show notes and links: https://SoloCoder.com/81
If you're new to programming you will undoubtedly come across GitHub & Git pretty early on. This episode describes the difference between the two, and explains how you'll use both as you learn to code. If you're ready to get started, here are some of the beginner tutorials I found helpful when I first started using Git & GitHub: Install Git Create a GitHub account Tutorial to put a project from your local computer onto GitHub How To Do The GitHub (YouTube) Dev Tips ‘GitHub For Noobs' video playlist (YouTube) And once you're more comfortable, some additional resources to check out: How To Write a Git Commit Message Learn Enough Command Line To Be Dangerous This episode was originally published 10 May, 2017.
Bad For Education - Coding Tips For The Junior Developer & Beyond
This episode we discuss the difference between Git and Github. We then talk about the new work from home changes in the workforce as well as how it can contribute to bore out.Git is a version control system that lets you manage and keep track of your source code history. GitHub is a cloud-based hosting service that lets you manage Git repositories. Originating from Peter Werder and Philippe Rothin, in 2007 —"bore out" is when you’ve simply become a body in the workplace rather than a contributor. It’s the person who shows up to work every day without a purpose, those forgotten by peers and management who simply float on and settle into the flow of office life. Bore Out provides the same adverse effects of Burn Out by being boring and creating a work situation where you do not feel challenged. It is a growing issue that applies to people working at home. Andrew and Jason have felt this way before and provide new information on how to combat it. Connect With Us!Instagram: @badforeducationpodcastTwitter: @badforedupodEmail: badforeducationpodcast@gmail.comReading LinksGithub CheatsheetWhat is Bore Out?Want a free $20 Amazon gift card and to start your own podcast with Buzzsprout?It's as simple as one click in our link below. Get started today, and have access to their extensive network and assistance. Podcasting isn't hard when you have the right partners!Click our link here
Brian Dote has been orbiting near “Black Swan” (type) events all of his professional life. To qualify as a “Black Swan,” an event has to be: Completely unpredictable and rare: Hugely impactful: People love to say after the event, we saw it coming (which they didn't). Brian worked on Steve Jobs' team that designed, built and launched the first iPhone, which changed the arc of and accelerated the course of history. He also worked near the center of the Human Genome Project, which equally changed mankind's understanding of…mankind. Later in his career, he was selected as Mid-Pacific Institute's (a cutting edge independent school in Honolulu) first Chief Innovation Officer, where, over five years, he shifted its faculty and students into exploration of virtual and augmented reality, maker mindsets, artificial intelligence and enhanced robotics. Along the way he was named as one of Hawaiʻi Business Magazine's “20 for the Next 20,” meaning an influential figure who will help shape the future of the 50th State for decades to come. At Brian's LinkedIn page we read: “Shall we play a game? How about a nice game of chess? Ahhh WOPR. =) I was a child of the 80s and from the popular movies of my youth spawned a love for computers and programming. I had a voracious appetite for all things programming. In elementary school I learned AppleSoft BASIC and programmed my own Choose Your Own Adventure/Zork games. In high school I went on to learn FORTRAN and satisfied my senior year math requirement by taking a class in “computer math.” Neither I nor my teacher knew what that heck that was, LOL, but it was a lot of fun and since then I've always been a life-long learner. I strongly believe, if you are not learning, you're dying. And I've got too much left to do to die now! After getting my Master of Science in Information Systems, I made my way to Silicon Valley and worked at a DSL provider, bioinformatics/genomics/proteomics company, Cisco Systems, and finally, at Apple. I have a passion for innovation and problem-solving and I'm always the person in the room that tries to use a different lens to solve the hard problems. I aim to leverage my diverse toolbox of skills and experiences to bring a unique perspective. That's how I ended up with five USA patents for my work on the amazingly talented team building some of the first mobile web software for the world's first iPhone. I am the lead mobile developer (iOS/Swift) at Ecobot, an early stage startup that has received $1.1 million in funding to-date. Ecobot allows environmental consultants to swiftly enter field data via their mobile device, access the data for report building, and automatically generate regulatory PDFs. I have a strong passion for the intersection of technology and education and I love to provide time and expertise in these areas. I am a board member of the Education Incubator, a member of the Innovation Committee at PBS Hawaii, and a member of the Advisory Board for the Academy of Industrial & Engineering Technology at Waipahu High. I was a 2017 honoree in Hawaii Business Magazine's 20 for the next 20 and a Webby Honoree for my web development work on Springfield Town Center in 2009. My specialties include: UI and UX design, customer journey mapping and workflows, Swift development for iOS, visual design, responsive design principles, website optimization, CMS, JavaScript, AJAX, HTML, CSS, Git/Github, DevOps principles, JIRA, Confluence, and an enthusiastic Slacker, err, user of Slack. While I don't know everything, there is nothing I can't learn, and master quickly. Except maybe baking. To learn more about why Brian was named “20 for the Next 20,” click here. The post 39. Here's to the Crazy Ones, with Brian Dote (Part 1) appeared first on @MLTSinHawaii .
Chuck's Python course: (Discounted at $10): https://bit.ly/2lsDZeo Chuck's SDN book: https://amzn.to/2lCp6WN Chuck's SDN Startup: http://www.tallac.com Connect with Chuck on LinkedIn here: https://www.linkedin.com/in/chuck-black-1017676/ Connect with David on LinkedIn here: https://www.linkedin.com/in/davidbombal/ In these series of videos David Bombal, CCIE and Chuck Black, Developer discuss the future of networking. SDN, Network automation, network programmability, APIs, NETCONF, REST APIs and lots of other technologies! What is Cloud? OVS? Git? GitHub? Jira? Jenkins? Open vSwitch (OVS): http://www.openvswitch.org/ GitHub: https://github.com/ Jenkins: https://jenkins.io/ Learn from someone who wrote SDN code. Who wrote SDN books. Who understands how SDN code actually works. David's details: YouTube: www.youtube.com/davidbombal Twitter: twitter.com/davidbombal Instagram: www.instagram.com/davidbombal/ LinkedinIn: www.linkedin.com/in/davidbombal/ #Cloud #OVS #Open_vSwitch
Git hat sich zum quasi Standard für Source Control entwickelt. Aber wie arbeiten wir mit Git / GitHub zusammen? Welche Branching und Merging Strategien gibt es? Wie arbeiten wir effizient in Open Source Projekten auf Basis von Git Zusammen? Diese und weitere Fragen besprechen wir in Folge 1.
Emprendedores y Freelancers Episodio número 53 – FreelanceTip de la Semana – Código colaborativo con Git, GitHub, GitLab Bienvenidos al podcast Emprendedores y Freelancers. Mi nombre es Anibal Ardid, soy consultor y desarrollador web desde hace mas de 18 años, especializado en startups y nuevos emprendimientos. Los freelancetips son episodios donde les hablaré sobre una […]
Se você pensa em programar você deveria aprender git ontem. • Os benefícios de usar o git.
This week on WPblab we’ll be talking with surgeon Dr Andy Fragen about how he builds WordPress plugins as a hobby.Andy FragenGeek Surgeon / Plugin Developer* thefragens.com* afragen (Andy Fragen)* Andy Fragen (@andyfragen)Andy doesn't do WordPress during the day, he does it as a hobby* CSS Zen Garden:The Beauty of CSS Design* The Events Calendar Category ColorsScratching your own itch has lead to making some plugins for favorite things* Github Updater* Software Licensing-Updater Implementation for WordPress PluginsSome people go home from a crazy day at work and do puzzles to unwind…Coding is a puzzle – figuring out how to accomplish something or meet a need with a pluginStarted using Git/GitHub mainly for version control for his own purposes … not primarily seeking help/input to startRachelle Wise: I've written a bunch of plugins, but they've been mostly specific to client sites and haven't submitted anything yet, but I've been thinking about it. Any tips for submitting to the WP directory?Andy Fragen: Use some batch script to make it easier – but definitely go for it! What’s the worse that could happen? You’ll have to support it
This week on WPblab we’ll be talking with surgeon Dr Andy Fragen about how he builds WordPress plugins as a hobby.Andy FragenGeek Surgeon / Plugin Developerthefragens.comafragen (Andy Fragen)Andy Fragen (@andyfragen)Andy doesn't do WordPress during the day, he does it as a hobbyCSS Zen Garden:The Beauty of CSS DesignThe Events Calendar Category ColorsScratching your own itch has lead to making some plugins for favorite thingsGithub UpdaterSoftware Licensing-Updater Implementation for WordPress PluginsSome people go home from a crazy day at work and do puzzles to unwind…Coding is a puzzle – figuring out how to accomplish something or meet a need with a pluginStarted using Git/GitHub mainly for version control for his own purposes … not primarily seeking help/input to startRachelle Wise: I've written a bunch of plugins, but they've been mostly specific to client sites and haven't submitted anything yet, but I've been thinking about it. Any tips for submitting to the WP directory?Andy Fragen: Use some batch script to make it easier – but definitely go for it! What’s the worse that could happen? You’ll have to support it Use hooks, use filters, use the WordPress APITry to test plugins in both single site and multi-site environmentsBridget: How do you handle support when it’s just a hobby / side job?James Tryon: Brian Hogg had great advice about saying in the warranty “you only support the plugin on base WordPress with no other plugins installed and a default theme”… so you are not stuck with all the support– WordPress – Profiles – Andy FragenGreat plugin:– Local DevelopmentNo meetups in Palm Springs?There are some people who livestream their meetups – good alternative for people without a local meetupBridget: How do you start contributing?Andy: Hang out in support forums and answer questions – if you have a product you really like, start there … more than one person has gotten hired by volunteering their time in support!Use the proper tools – PHPstorm is a good onePhpStorm IDELocal DevelopmentPippins PluginsTom McFarlin | A Perspective on Professional WordPress DevelopmentDeploys a WordPress plugin from Github (git) to the WordPress Plugin Repostiory (svn), taking account of git-flow usage. Thanks to these people for helping us with these show notes!Jen Miller @jenblogs4uJames Tryon – @jamestryonSherie LaPrade – @HeySherieThe post WPblab EP63 – Building WordPress plugins as a hobby w/ Andy Fragen appeared first on WPwatercooler. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
In this episode we talk to Mary Rose Cook about her recent experimental implementation of Git in JavaScript: Gitlet. We also talk about all kinds of things around understanding Git, and teaching it. If you cannot see the audio controls, your browser does not support the audio element. Use the link below to download the mp3 manually. Link to mp3 Listen to the episode on YouTubeMary's homepageMary on GitHub, TwitterMary's speech to new Hacker-SchoolersGitletGitlet annotated source codeLearn Git Branching (interactive in the browser)Try Git on try.github.ioDocco, the annotated source documentation toolWe should have talked about Ungit, but we didn't. Teaser: It will be mentioned in the next episode!Here's a rough outline of questions asked:00:00:46 Welcome to the show 00:01:18 Tell us your background 00:03:02 Do you teach Git at Hacker school? 00:03:49 Is Hacker School for programmers who want to get better? 00:04:37 Is Hacker School remote? 00:04:56 What does it cost? 00:06:25 Would you accept anyone who already has a job? 00:07:07 Is the Hacker School concept a common thing? 00:08:33 Any links for those who want to learn more about Hacker School? 00:08:51 What your Git experience? 00:10:09 How were you using Git/GitHub? 00:10:33 When/why did you start planning Gitlet? 00:12:21 What is Gitlet? 00:13:45 Can you install it and use it as a normal Git client? 00:14:38 What does it lack compared to the real Git? 00:16:04 Could you make it production ready if you outsourced the inner operations to libgit2? 00:18:12 Didn't the Learn Git Branching already implement Git in browser? 00:19:37 How did implementing Gitlet change the way you teach GIt? 00:21:08 Would I be a better Git teacher if I taught people the internals instead of the porcelain? 00:26:31 When should people who know Git take the next step to learn it deeper? 00:30:18 Why is it safer to do fetch before you go on an airplane? 00:31:01 Doesn't pull just update current branch while fetch gets everything? 00:32:10 Git fetch vs git pull 00:33:39 How can I get people to avoid merging origin/master to master? 00:39:53 Talk about the repeating patterns you found inside the Git operations 00:47:42 Talk about the beautifully annotated source code of Gitlet 00:52:50 Do you feel a lot of Git internals have leaked out in the user interface? 00:54:58 How can git reset and checkout be the same command for so different things? 00:57:53 Is it the same thing with git reset? 00:59:08 What would be your ideal Git tool? 01:01:54 Any plans for the future? 01:03:21 Anything you'd like to promote? 01:03:40 Where can people find you online? 01:04:00 What is your favorite Git pro tip? 01:04:43 Thank you for coming onto the show!
本期由 Daniel 主持,参与嘉宾有 SaitoWu, Dingding Ye。武鑫(Saito) 是著名自托管 Git 项目仓库开源项目 GitLab 的核心开发者之一,也是 RubyConfChina 2012 的讲师,给大家做了期很精彩的 GitLab 实现介绍。本期我们很荣幸能请到 SaitoWu 同学来跟大家聊聊他的从业经历,他所感兴趣的话题,包括 Git,GitHub,以及 GitLab。 Why Git is better than X Git 为什么这么好? Unlocking the Secrets of Git Git scaling at GitHub Chatops at Github Sinatra How gitlab works SVN VPN git-svn 蓝光党 Ruby Tuesday http://clojure.org/ Haskell Rich Hickey 七周七语言 JDK8 Github Enterprise authorized_keys Gitosis Gitolite Twisted GitHub is Moving to Rackspace! Engine Yard And GitHub Transition Zach Holman Github Boxen libgit2 Hubot Play - Company's DJ Redcarpet Unicorn html-pipeline Resque Gitcafe Redmine Use pull request Scrum要素 Component Hexo Special Guest: saitowu.