POPULARITY
#starknet #airdrop #bitcoin АИРДРОП ОТ STARKNET , ЦЕНА ТОКЕНА STARK ?! БИТКОИН ИДЕТ НА 60000$ !? ► ENTANGLE - https://entangle.fi/ ► X ENTANGLE - https://twitter.com/Entanglefi ► BLOG - https://blog.entangle.fi/ ► DISCORD - https://discord.gg/entangle ► GITBOOK - https://entangle.gitbook.io/entangle/ ► SMOG - https://smogtoken.com/ru?tid=1315 ► БЕСПЛАТНЫЙ ВЕБИНАР "AIRDROP: ГЛАВНЫЙ ТРЕНД КРИПТО-РЫНКА 2024" - https://airdrop2024.pro-blockchain.com/?utm_source=youtube ► CoinW - https://www.coinw.com/frontweb/ru_RU/active/landingPage?aId=17&r=2162091&language=ru_RU ► БЕСПЛАТНАЯ ЭКСКУРСИЯ ПО ЧАТУ DEFI XXX HUNTERS - https://bit.ly/3ttWXbh ► НАШИ ПАРТНЕРЫ - https://web3mb.pro-blockchain.com/ ----------------
Documentation is something that everyone knows is important but it's often difficult to get right. On software teams, good documentation can help to onboard new people, improve communication across teams, and troubleshoot technical issues. When an application, API, or library is a commercial product, the quality of its documentation can determine whether it attracts users The post GitBook with Addison Schultz appeared first on Software Engineering Daily.
Documentation is something that everyone knows is important but it’s often difficult to get right. On software teams, good documentation can help to onboard new people, improve communication across teams, and troubleshoot technical issues. When an application, API, or library is a commercial product, the quality of its documentation can determine whether it attracts users The post GitBook with Addison Schultz appeared first on Software Engineering Daily.
Documentation is something that everyone knows is important but it’s often difficult to get right. On software teams, good documentation can help to onboard new people, improve communication across teams, and troubleshoot technical issues. When an application, API, or library is a commercial product, the quality of its documentation can determine whether it attracts The post GitBook with Addison Schultz appeared first on Software Engineering Daily.
Si parla delle ultime novità su Orbstack, Obsidian e Gitbook, esploreremo come utilizzare il vostro iPad come monitor esterno HDMI e vi daremo qualche consiglio su come tradurre i messaggi in tedesco su iMessage. Inoltre, parleremo di Aruba Drive e...
The Yakuverse is one of the most anticipated cyberpunk metaverse games being built on Solana. PapiChuloGrim, Chief Marketing Officer at Yaku Corp joins Brian Friel to talk about their approach to building open world games that facilitate social interactions and e-commerce, and what the future holds for metaverse games being built in web3. Show Notes:00:06 - Intro01:13 - PapiChuloGrim background03:57 - Background on Yaku, an open world gaming experience05:30 - Overview of Yaku API08:55 - Overview of Yaku App11:47 - Overview of Yakuverse game17:49 - What the future looks like for blockchain Metaverse games21:36 - A builder he admires in the ecosystem Full Transcript:Brian Friel (00:06):Hey, everyone and welcome to The Zeitgeist, the show where we highlight the founders, developers, and designers who are pushing the Web3 space forward. I'm Brian Friel, developer relations at Phantom, and I'm super excited to introduce our guest, Papi, the chief marketing officer of Yaku Corp. Yaku Corp is developing one of the most anticipated cyberpunk metaverse games on Solana. Papi, welcome to the show.Cole McMillian (00:29):Glad to be here, Brian, thank you for having me. Excited to dive in a little bit to what we've got going on.Brian Friel (00:34):Yeah, likewise. I think you have one of the most unique names of any guest we've had on here on The Zeitgeist so far, so you're already winning an award for that.Cole McMillian (00:42):Anything is possible on Web3, right?Brian Friel (00:45):Yeah, exactly. You never know who you're talking to on some of these shows, but I'm really excited to talk to you guys. You guys are building a really ambitious game on Solana, which I think has a lot of promise in the gaming space on Solana, and some of the stuff you guys are doing, building foundational pieces of connecting gaming environments to Phantom and Solana wallets, so really excited to dive into all that today. But maybe before we do all that, I would love to learn a little bit about you. Who are you and how did you get involved with Solana and Yaku?Cole McMillian (01:13):Absolutely. My real name is Cole. We were actually joking a little before this, at the in-person events, I'll introduce myself as Cole because people feel strange calling me Papi in real life, but then ultimately, they just keep calling me Papi. My background is primarily digital marketing. Before making the dive full-time into Web3, the majority of my career, I was the head of digital strategy and on the side, I had a small digital consultancy that was primarily focused on media production and paid media. Then, I ultimately made a short transition into sales before diving headlong into Web3. The sales pivot really was actually what got me here. I moved from Kansas City, where I'm originally from, to the Oregon Coast and had a lot of free time on my hand making such a big move. During that time I just was able to dig a little deeper into the world of crypto, which had always intrigued me.(02:13):Naturally, got involved in Solana, based on some poor experiences on Ethereum and what I thought was not a conducive ecosystem, actually, on the crypto.com Cro coin ecosystem to the sort of things I was interested in and how I wanted to grow in my pursuits in this space. Ultimately, I joined Yaku just by organically finding the project. I was one of the first couple hundred people to join the Discord and when I saw the vision and the scope, I said, "This is awesome. Why is there not more attention on it yet?" Ultimately, I became very close friends with our CEO, Kevin, and we've had a really great rapport and he asked me to join the team in a larger capacity. A few months later, I said, "Web2, we're good for now. I'm going to go chase this Web3 thing full-time" I've been full-time coming up on, I believe, 10 months now. What a crazy time to go full-time, by the way.Brian Friel (03:10):Well, 10 months is ancient in crypto, as well. 10 months is about five years experience there in most jobs.Cole McMillian (03:16):It's fun to try to explain that to people. In my sales job, I had another regional manager who was a little further south of me down in the California area who said, "I think that guy, Cole, left to do Bitcoin," so we've still got some education to do, right?Brian Friel (03:31):Yeah, for sure. Well, let's dive into a little bit of what you were saying. You found this project early on, one of the first people in the Discord, and you were blown away by the scope and the ambition of this project. For those who aren't familiar with Yaku, what is Yaku, what is this concept of a Yakuverse? It sounds like there's more than just a game here, maybe just a whole ecosystem, but can you give us a little high-level understanding of everything that you guys are up to?Cole McMillian (03:57):Absolutely. The high-level overview, short pitch of Yaku is I like to refer to it as an interactive open world gaming experience, so a lot of people will sum this up as metaverse. I think that just the word metaverse has had a very strange connotation evolve over the last year or two, because people are confused as to what that really means. There's so many ways you can view a metaverse, there's so many different lenses through which people absorb it, and so to me, I've tried to get a little bit away from that terminology, but I definitely want to stick to the ethos of it.(04:32):We're very centered around gaming, online interactions, I'd say that it's, in some ways, the next evolution of social media. Instead of repping a profile picture, you're repping an avatar, you're having these live, in-person chats. I think that you will see a good evolution from things like Twitter spaces to more, quote unquote, in-person digital experiences like that via these virtual worlds. I think for us, the three main things, to sum it up, are we are centered on gaming, facilitating social experiences, and then the third key is we want to elevate the experience of online commerce, of e-commerce.Brian Friel (05:08):That's awesome. In addition to the game that you guys have, which I introed it saying that there's some cyberpunk elements to this, but I'll let you describe that in your own words, but you guys have really built out a whole infrastructure side of this, as well. You guys actually have what you call Yaku API. Can you talk a little bit about what is that and how do you envision developers working with this API?Cole McMillian (05:30):Absolutely. It's been something we've been working on for quite a while that we haven't really been publicly disclosing, not because it's anything to hide, but just because it's maybe getting a little into the weeds, but now that we're getting close to getting to a first version of these final product layers, as we call them, it's really good for people to, I guess, visualize how do these things all work together? The Yaku API is what we call layer one of our product layer. What we are doing is we are constantly listening to nodes, we're gathering transactions on the blockchain. We're doing that on both Solana and Ethereum, by the way, which we can dive a little bit more into that. We're very much built on Solana, but sticking to that metaverse ethos, we want to do our best to include some of these other communities, because ultimately, the ships will all rise with the tide and there's great communities everywhere. So, built on Solana and we're checking these nodes.(06:29):The second part of that is we're also continually scraping social media data. Not only do we have, through the second layer of our products, the capability in our Yaku app at Yaku.ai to connect your social accounts to the profile you build there, but on the API side of things, we're just continually gathering this data. This is data, everything from how many profile pictures are there being worn by users from a particular collection to the size and scope of the ecosystem as a whole, how many generally are there across the board and just trying to track those user data points. I think how we see people being able to use this in the future is being able to utilize it to create their own interactive experiences, because we are really trying to be focused on this gaming and social side of things. We're not necessarily positioning this, I think, as an opportunity to go out and create a DeFi application.(07:29):There's been some really cool innovations, actually, on this open API front right now. I believe it was Helios Labs rolled out some really cool innovations recently, as did Hello Moon shortly after. Data's really important. People need it as easy to read, as accessible as possible, for them to make the correct decisions to format it and ultimately, to springboard them to what it is they're trying to build long term. I think for us, the goal for this is to facilitate the gaming side of that thing. For us, what we are using it for, as it feeds into the funnel, is to help create a experience that aligns with users' interests and activities and what it is that they're doing from a day-to-day basis, whether that be the NFTs they are buying, how they are trading with their friends, how they are interacting and representing on social media. That's how we are using it internally and I assume that others will find the data the way that we've collected it and will be distributing it, good for similar use cases.Brian Friel (08:30):That's awesome. I like the analogy there of you saying that the API is the layer one and then you hinted at you have this app at Yaku.ai and then you have this game, as well. Maybe before we dive into the game, which is maybe what most people really want to know about, let's talk briefly about that app, as well. What is currently at Yaku.ai? I see you guys have a number of different widgets and applications there. Who's using this and what are they using it for?Cole McMillian (08:55):The Yaku.ai application is really viewed as the partner application to the Yakuverse. We're talking about layers, the third layer is the Yakuverse, so the API feeds into the app and the app feeds into the game. The app allows you to create your own profile, you can connect with Phantom and also MetaMask, which is hilarious because initially, when we talk about including these other communities, MetaMask was the one. We're very excited, because we work more frequently with Phantom, that you all have finally onboarded these other communities because it makes our lives a little easier. Not to shill for the audience out there, but I do think Phantom far exceeds the user experience on MetaMask. I'm just waiting for the day that Phantom takes that crown away.Brian Friel (09:45):Oh, love that, appreciate that. Hopefully, by the time this episode's out, we'll be very, very close to opening up our beta to the public, but that day is coming soon. I can't wait.Cole McMillian (09:54):Yes, absolutely. The app, generally, is a place where you can manage your entire Web3 life, both on the financial side and on the social side. On the social side, we've got Dialect Chat already pulled in there so you can communicate freely with people, we have some base functionality, where you could do things like earn social badges that display on your profile, you can connect with friends. In a soon-to-be-released update, so here's some alpha, I don't know exactly when this is going live, but my guess is it may beat this update, we are introducing communities, so you can actually see how many users there are within the application that also own the NFTs that you do, in hopes that we can facilitate some social congregation within that app amongst holders, in addition to a bunch of other stuff.(10:42):We have everything from burning multiple NFTs, multiple NFTs send. Probably the coolest on, I guess, the project management side of things is we've got an automated HR tool, so if you want to go in and set up automatic ACH-style payments for your moderators, alpha hunters, whatever it might be, you could just go in there, set the intervals, what the pay is, and you don't have to think about it, it just does it on its own.Brian Friel (11:07):I love that. The alpha drop on the podcast, that's great.Cole McMillian (11:09):Got to get it out there a little bit. I'm notorious for having loose lips, so if our community tunes in and they hear that I didn't drop any, I might get skewered in the general chat.Brian Friel (11:20):Oh, that's great. Well, that's a great picture you painted of the first layer of the API, the second layer, the app. Now, let's talk about the game. Ostensibly, this is what most people that I see on Twitter, whenever I tweet anything about Yaku, my notifications get flooded with your guys' user base. You've got a lot of rabid fans for this game. Can you talk a little bit about what this game is, how do I play this game, what's the story, and how do you see this game evolving?Cole McMillian (11:47):This is, for me, my favorite thing. I am also the marketing guy, so I am biased. The numbers side of things, sometimes, I won't lie, I gloss out just a little, so this for me is my favorite thing, especially being a longtime gamer. The general feel, I would say, for a traditional gamer that we are going for is a cyberpunk-themed futuristic, neon-lit world with a similar general play style to something like Grand Theft Auto. We actually are currently testing our alpha version of the open map internally with the community and letting them poke around and in a few weeks, we will have a much larger public launch, where we'll be able to go in and fix those bugs, as well as add in some added functionality.(12:36):On that first public version that we are really trying to get out there, what you'll be able to do is sign in using our Yaku Relay, which is our connection between Phantom and Unreal Engine. It essentially serves as a single signature to read all of your profile data on the app, on Yaku.ai. What that allows us to do is create token-gated experiences. Not only can anyone come in and drive a motorcycle around, race their motorcycle, use proximity chat to hang out with their friends, go hit the shooting range, there's some more fun information for you, we already started impslementing some PVP stuff, so they'll be able to go in and race and shoot and congregate and hang out and explore the open world, which is pretty large actually.(13:20):That's been the first feedback we've gotten from in this first alpha test is, "Wow, this is a lot bigger than I thought it would be." But additionally, through this API input through the Yaku Relay, we can do things like create a tower for Monkey Dow, which currently sits in the center of downtown, and create a token-gated experience, where only holders of that NFT can get into that area. That is really able to be extrapolated out to innumerable experiences. If you were interested, you could create a specific minigame that's only accessible to your holders. We could do a special short-time promotional event for Phantom, as an example, if you were wanting to have a virtual conference, to some degree. There's just a lot of ways that this can unfold and create these unique experiences. That's really what we're trying to facilitate, is an open world that's accessible to everyone and based on the communities you take part in and how you interact within that world, you'll be able to elevate the base experience. Brian Friel (14:24):That's super cool. This game, you mentioned it briefly, but it's currently in alpha, is that correct?Cole McMillian (14:29):It is, yes. It's the first alpha version of the full open map.Brian Friel (14:33):That's awesome. I think this is a great use case for crypto gaming. Like you said, you can build these expansive worlds for games we know and love, like Grand Theft Auto, I'm also thinking a World of Warcraft, you're exploring through this world, finding things.Cole McMillian (14:46):Absolutely.Brian Friel (14:48):But there's so much open public data on crypto already, you can just bring that in and enhance the experiences. I'm interested to hearing from you, too, you mentioned that it probably best resembles a metaverse, but maybe you don't like the term metaverse.Cole McMillian (15:02):Right.Brian Friel (15:03):Do you see a world where the Yaku universe in which you are is blending with other games that are on chain, as well, and you can bring other games' assets into Yaku, you could bring your Yaku character into other games? Do you guys think about that much and how do you see that unfolding?Cole McMillian (15:18):That's definitely something that we are using as a cornerstone of our general growth ideology, I would say. We already have, in this alpha version, avatars representing, I think, nine other communities currently live, and in the first public version that goes out, we'll probably have five more, if I had to guess. We'll be starting off with a pretty good representation of several different communities and for us, that serves many benefits. Number one, it really sticks with our company ethos of decentralization, number two, it enhances the experience, both for people who own those assets and are able to utilize them in more ways, but also for people who maybe don't and they are just looking for a broader experience generally. We're definitely going to continue to do that. We've talked to other collections above and beyond the avatars about things like vehicles.(16:18):We had a collection that we worked with closely leading up to their mint, we sort of incubated them, called Cha Cha Vans, that their branding is around the digital nomad lifestyle. They have these awesome 3D vans, so those will also be available in that first public version as a drivable vehicle. We don't want to really slow it down there. We've talked for a long time that if we can create something akin to a software platform for other creators to leverage, it will just make the experience that much more grand and ultimately, drive more users to the platforms. At the end of the day, we're a small team. I'm very proud of what we've made, but we are a big bottleneck. If we want to centralize all of it to ourselves, we're really doing the community and ourselves a bit of a disservice.Brian Friel (17:00):I totally agree. I love that thinking of it. It's funny, because most games today, the whole story of the game and what you decide to go out in the world to do is often set very top-down by whoever the game publisher is, then you get these MMOs and you can just go out in the world and do your own thing or get creative. It feels like this is the next evolution of that, you are basically giving everyone the tools to bring whatever assets they want into this sandbox world that you've created. Who knows, maybe one day someone else could even drive the storyline? Do you guys see that in the future, someone else coming in and almost co-owning development of this? Do you think that you guys will always be driving the vision of this? That's a pretty far-out there question, but I do wonder what the future for these metaverse game developments, where the vision for it goes.Cole McMillian (17:49):I think long term, again, it just makes sense, because when you're working with a world that is so large and so flexible and the attention economy is so fast, people are moving from place to place so quickly, especially in this world, it is lightning fast as compared to the traditional gaming world, I think providing more experiences, providing opportunities for people to build on what you have set out for them, is a win-win across the board. It's driving more traffic to us and ultimately, if they're driving traffic to their particular storyline, their particular experience within our world, we will benefit as a result, because they have to come to our world to experience it. I definitely see that in the future as being part of what we are implementing.(18:37):I know from our end, we are very excited to... You talk about, "Oh, I can see the ideas of questing and exploring in this sandbox feel." I think that that's something we've really embraced, because for me, personally, this is a personal opinion, I think, a lot of the, quote unquote, metaverse experiences that are out there now do not have player retention. You get in, there's an open map, there's things to look at, but there's not really much to do. I think that's why we're trying to hammer more on the gaming side of things rather than just creating, necessarily, this open world, because that's what we want is people who come in and stay and as a result, have all of these benefits around them that they can leverage, in addition to whatever is the core driver for them.(19:22):We do have, coming out soon, a new GitBook, what we're calling the YakuWiki, and it includes general information about the project as it sits right now, things like our community. We always get the question what's with the lemons, because there's constantly lemons in our content, and so now, forever and always, I'll be able to send people there and go, "Hey, I, you check out the Wiki, it's in there. You get the full history of it." Part of the Wiki is also the future though, where are we headed? We're waiting to release that, but I will give you a snippet that part of that future is that we want to, I think, change what does a multiverse of game modes look like under a single umbrella and concept.(20:02):We're working on a point system that we can implement in the future that is basically as a result of all of these different inputs. It is based on your racing outcomes, when the racing game portion is live, it's based on your completion of quests, as there are quest lines that are created, it's based on your activity in the application, it's based on your activity on socials, all these data points feeding into what is one larger goal that everyone is achieving. I think that that is going to be a really good opportunity for what you're talking about, where you're not siloed to a single style or experience and you're also empowering other people to create their own that can feed into this larger concept.Brian Friel (20:43):That's really awesome. I love the vision you're laying out there, that's really cool. I also want to know what's up with the lemons, but we can save that little bit of alpha for the Wiki release. I don't want to steal too much.Cole McMillian (20:53):The really short version is we had one member early, early on in the Discord who reacted to every single announcement with a lemon emoji. It just slowly picked up steam until the point where it got to 1,200, 1,300 lemon reactions on a single post. We were like, "You know what? The community is making a stance on this emoji here, so we're just going to adopt it as one of our own."Brian Friel (21:17):I love it, that's the best. When stuff like that arises organically, that's 100% the best, one of the best parts of working in this space, as well. Well, Papi, this has been an awesome discussion. One question we ask all of our guests, and given the vision you just laid out, I'd love to hear this answer from you, is who is a builder that you admire in the Web3 ecosystem?Cole McMillian (21:36):This one is really easy for me, actually. I saw this question and I said, "I know exactly who it is." It's someone I talk to, I would say regularly, not super frequently, but regularly, we're doing some stuff together. They're, I think, a really good balance between someone who is a heads-down shipper and someone who is an active participant, as well, and is no bullshit, which is maybe my favorite thing, and it's got to be Foxy Dev from the Famous Foxes, man.Brian Friel (22:05):Love it.Cole McMillian (22:05):He always keeps it like it is, he is a straight shooter. What I think I appreciate most about him is one of the hangups I think we have in the space, in general, is because of that attention economy I was talking about earlier, the question when arises all the time. There's so much pressure, there's announcements for announcements for announcements because you've got to keep the attention here and there's always people moving to do things. He is very, very good at staying active, really reaching out to his community and getting their feedback, but shipping things when they're ready and not trying to play the it's coming, it's coming game. He is a guy who just builds relentlessly and when it's ready, it's ready and if you want it sooner, well, you'd better just chill out and wait for it.Brian Friel (22:49):I couldn't agree more. You're not the first to bring him up and we have had the Famous Foxes on the pod before. But I agree, when, when, when is we went mobile all the time back in the day. It's definitely part of the culture, but when you can back it up with shipping quality on your timeline, that's the best place to be.Cole McMillian (23:06):100%, man.Brian Friel (23:07):Well, Papi, this has been an awesome discussion. Thank you so much for coming on the show. Where can people go to learn more about Yaku?Cole McMillian (23:13):If you want to learn some more about Yaku, I would suggest jumping in the Discord, for sure. Custom URL, so just /YakuCorp, and go to the website, check out Yaku.ai. Make a profile, claim your name, and start checking out what's there, because it is about to have a pretty big facelift, as well, and I think that people will be excited for the direction that it's headed.Brian Friel (23:36):I love it. Bring your lemons to the Discord, too. Get them ready.Cole McMillian (23:39):Yes. We'll make fresh lemonade or limoncello, whatever you prefer.Brian Friel (23:43):Beautiful. Papi, the chief marketing officer of Yaku Corp. Thank you so much.Cole McMillian:I appreciate it Brian.
2022-05-17 Weekly News - Episode 148Watch the video version on YouTube at https://youtu.be/ArUgrF-YL9k Hosts: Gavin Pickin - Senior Developer at Ortus Solutions Daniel Garcia - Senior Developer at Ortus Solutions Thanks to our Sponsor - Ortus SolutionsThe makers of ColdBox, CommandBox, ForgeBox, TestBox and all your favorite box-en out there. A few ways to say thanks back to Ortus Solutions: BUY SOME ITB TICKETS - COME TO THE CONFERENCE Like and subscribe to our videos on YouTube. Help ORTUS reach for the Stars - Star and Fork our Repos Star all of your Github Box Dependencies from CommandBox with https://www.forgebox.io/view/commandbox-github Subscribe to our Podcast on your Podcast Apps and leave us a review Sign up for a free or paid account on CFCasts, which is releasing new content every week Buy Ortus's Book - 102 ColdBox HMVC Quick Tips and Tricks on GumRoad (http://gum.co/coldbox-tips) Patreon SupportGoal 1 - We have 36 patreons providing 100% of the funding for our Modernize or Die Podcasts via our Patreon site: https://www.patreon.com/ortussolutions. Goal 2 - We are 46% of the way to fully fund the hosting of ForgeBox.io PATREON SPONSORED JOB POSTING!Hagerty - MotorSportReg2 Job Opportunities for Senior Software Engineer, Motorsport - more in the job section.Watch this video with Brian Ghidinelli from Hagerty MotorsportReg Ready to get in the driver's seat? Join us!https://bit.ly/3985J3U News and AnnouncementsINTO THE BOX - UpdatesAnnouncing Speakers and Sessions for Into the Box 2022 - Round 1We are excited to announce the first set of speakers and sessions. We have a great mix of Ortus Speakers and Community speakers too. We'll be announcing round 2 later this week, and then we'll be finalizing the last few spots next week as we confirm some special items (hopefully). Here is the first 12 speakers and their sessions.https://www.intothebox.org/blog/announcing-speakers-for-into-the-box-2022-round-1 Into the Box 2022 - First Workshops Announced Async Programming & Scheduling Containerizing & Scaling Your Applications Legacy Code Conversion To The Modern World! TestBox: Getting started with BDD-TDD Oh My! https://www.ortussolutions.com/blog/into-the-box-2022-first-workshops-announced/The final Workshop - decided by Twitter poll - VueJs SPA and Mobile App with Rest APIsDear Amazing Boss - I would like to ask for your approval to attend Into The Box 2022http://www.intothebox.org/blog/dear-amazing-boss-i-would-like-to-ask-for-your-approval-to-attend-into-the-box-2022 Computer Know How - Sponsors Into The Box 2022http://www.intothebox.org/blog/computer-know-how-sponsors-into-the-box-2022 TryCF has started a PatreonYou can now contribute to the project by sending a one-time gift of any increment of $25 or support the project monthly by becoming a Patron. Your gifts are much appreciated and will help keep TryCF.com the awesome resource it is!https://www.patreon.com/trycf/posts StackOverflow QuestionaireHey CF devs, fill out this year's Stack Overflow survey, and make sure you write in your CFML engine and frameworks into all the write-in spots :) https://stackoverflow.az1.qualtrics.com/jfe/form/SV_5jeoE1pq9sFcwIe ICYMI - CFWheels Guides Moved to GitBookWe are glad to announce that the CFWheels Guides have been moved to GitBook.com. The good folks at GitBook are proud to support CFWheels and have granted us an Open Source Community account. We have migrated all the guides from our old provider to GitBook and will be making some more changes as we review all the links now that the domain has been switched.https://cfwheels.org/blog/cfwheels-guides-moved-to-gitbook/New Releases and UpdatesAdobe CF Engine Updates are in CommandBox nowAdobe CF engines 2018.0.14+330003 and 2021.0.04+330004 are now available on ForgeBox for your usage. When started on CommandBox 5.5, ACF 2021 is finally free of Log4j 1.x. ACF 2018 seems to still be using Log4j 1.x however.CFWheels 2.3.0 Stable ReleasedThis is the official v2.3.0 release. It is dropping a little over a week from Release Candidate 1. We simply wanted to make sure the new CI/CD workflow was functioning before calling the release final. We feel confident that we're good to mark this release as final. There are no new enhancements or bug fixes in this release from 2.3.0.rc.1.Blog: https://cfwheels.org/blog/cfwheels-2-3-0-released/ Lucee 5.3.9.141-RC ReleasedFollowing up on our 5.3.9.133 stable release, we found a number of regression which have now all been addressed. We are doing a quick 5.3.9.141-RC before releasing the second stable 5.3.9 release on Monday.https://dev.lucee.org/t/lucee-5-3-9-141-rc-released/10162 Lucee - Has the ForgeBox and Docker Builds triggering Automatically Nowhttps://github.com/lucee/Lucee/runs/6401534261?check_suite_focus=true#step:17:2517 ICYMI - ColdFusion 2021 and 2018 May Security Updateshttps://coldfusion.adobe.com/2022/05/coldfusion-2021-and-2018-may-security-updates/ICYMI - cbElasticSearch v2.3.0 ReleasedWe are pleased to announce the release of cbElasticsearch version 2.3.0. cbElasticsearch is the Elasticsearch module for the Coldbox platform, and provides a fluent CFML API for interacting with, searching, and serializing to Elasticsearch servers.This release includes documentation updates and and enhancements to core functions of the Document, SearchBuilder and IndexBuilder components, as well as additional error handling for async tasks.https://www.ortussolutions.com/blog/cbelasticsearch-230-released/WEBINARS / MEETUPS AND WORKSHOPSOrtus Webinar - May - Clearing the Fuzzies on Fuzzy Search with Michael BornMay 27th 2022: Time 11:00 AM Central Time ( US and Canada )Take a walk through the world of search in this webinar which will show why your database search is not smart enough, explain the basics of how fuzzy search works, and show how to use CBElasticsearch to bring the power of fuzzy searching to your CF application.https://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZIqd-6ppz0qGtGPJxmywPST06e74ExsmshB/ View all Webinars: https://www.ortussolutions.com/events/webinars ICYMI - Online ColdFusion Meetup - “Code Reuse in ColdFusion - Is Spaghetti Code still Spaghetti if it is DRY?” with Gavin PickinThursday, May 12 20229:00 AM to 10:00 AM PDTFind out the difference between DRY code and WET code, and what one is better, and more importantly, WHY.We write code once, but we read it over and over again, maintaining our code is 90% of the job... code reuse is our friend. You are already Re-using code, even if you didn't know you were.We'll learn about the different types of Code Reuse in ColdFusion, and the pros and cons of each.https://www.meetup.com/coldfusionmeetup/events/285524970/ Recording: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MnOW6G5MVqE&list=PLG2EHzEbhy0-QirMKgSxhjkUyTSSTvHjL&index=1Adobe WorkshopsJoin the Adobe ColdFusion Workshop to learn how you and your agency can leverage ColdFusion to create amazing web content. This one-day training will cover all facets of Adobe ColdFusion that developers need to build applications that can run across multiple cloud providers or on-premiseTUESDAY, MAY 24, 20229:00 AM CETAdobe ColdFusion WorkshopDamien Bruyndonckx (Brew-en-dohnx) https://workshop-cf.meetus.adobeevents.com/ WEDNESDAY, MAY 26, 202210AM PTWebinar - Exploring the CF Administrator: pt1Mark TakataIn part one of exploring the capabilities of the ColdFusion Administrator, Mark will explore the GUI of this powerful, unique ColdFusion tool, explaining how to use many of the capabilities exposed and available for tuning.https://exploring-coldfusion-administrator-1.meetus.adobeevents.com/ WEDNESDAY, JUNE 15, 20229:00 AM EDTAdobe ColdFusion WorkshopBrian Sappeyhttps://1-day-coldfusion-workshop.meetus.adobeevents.com/ WEDNESDAY, JUNE 22, 20229:00 AM CETAdobe ColdFusion WorkshopDamien Bruyndonckx (Brew-en-dohnx) https://adobe-cf-workshop.meetus.adobeevents.com/ FREE :)Full list - https://meetus.adobeevents.com/coldfusion/ CFCasts Content Updateshttps://www.cfcasts.comNews Several ITB 2021 Videos are now Free so you can watch them and get in the mood for ITB 2022. https://cfcasts.com/series/into-the-box-2021 All of the Publish Your First ForgeBox Package Videos are now Free Just Released Gavin Pickin - Publish Your First ForgeBox Package How to update a package via the CLIhttps://cfcasts.com/series/publish-your-first-forgebox-package/videos/how-to-update-a-package-via-the-cli How to use Box Scripts and CommandBox Command Lifecycle Eventshttps://cfcasts.com/series/publish-your-first-forgebox-package/videos/how-to-use-box-scripts-and-commandbox-command-lifecycle-events How to update a package via the Web UIhttps://cfcasts.com/series/publish-your-first-forgebox-package/videos/how-to-update-a-package-via-the-web-ui 2022 ForgeBox Module of the Week Series - 5 new Videoshttps://cfcasts.com/series/2022-forgebox-modules-of-the-week 2022 VS Code Hint tip and Trick of the Week Series - 5 new Videoshttps://cfcasts.com/series/2022-vs-code-hint-tip-and-trick-of-the-week Coming Soon More… Gavin Pickin - Publish Your First ForgeBox Package LogBox 101 More ForgeBox and VS Code Podcast snippet videos Conferences and TrainingICYMI - DockerConMay 10, 2022Free Online Virtual ConferenceDockerCon will be a free, immersive online experience complete with Docker product demos, breakout sessions, deep technical sessions from Docker and our partners, Docker experts, Docker Captains, our community and luminaries from across the industry, and much more. Don't miss your chance to gather and connect with colleagues from around the world at the largest developer conference of the year. Sign up to pre-register for DockerCon 2022!https://www.docker.com/dockercon/ On Demand https://docker.events.cube365.net/dockercon/2022 MS BuildMay 24-26, 2022Come together at Microsoft Build May 24–26 2022, to explore the latest innovations in code and application development—and to gain insights from peers and experts from around the world.Regional Spotlights, One on One bookings available and more.https://mybuild.microsoft.com/en-US/home Ioniconf (Free Online Ionic conference)May 25, 2022Join us for a full day of talks from experts and leaders in the web community, showing how the web is pushing the boundaries of mobile app development. Get insights on the latest web libraries, frameworks, and tools that are empowering web developers to build stunning mobile and cross-platform apps using the power of the web.https://ionic.io/ioniconfUS VueJS ConfFORT LAUDERDALE, FL • JUNE 8-10, 2022Beach. Code. Vue.Workshop day: June 8Main Conference: June 9-10https://us.vuejs.org/Speakers and Schedule Announced https://us.vuejs.org/schedule/ THAT ConferenceHowdy. We're a full-stack, tech-obsessed community of fun, code-loving humans who share and learn together.We geek-out in Texas and Wisconsin once a year but we host digital events all the time.WISCONSIN DELLS, WI / JULY 25TH - 28TH, 2022A four-day summer camp for developers passionate about learning all things mobile, web, cloud, and technology.https://that.us/events/wi/2022/ Our very own Daniel Garcia is speaking there https://that.us/activities/sb6dRP8ZNIBIKngxswIt Adobe Developer Week 2022July 18-22, 2022Online - Virtual - FreeThe Adobe ColdFusion Developer Week is back - bigger and better than ever! This year, our experts are gearing up to host a series of webinars on all things ColdFusion. This is your chance to learn with them, get your questions answered, and build cloud-native applications with ease.Note: Speakers listed are 2021 speakers currently - check back for updatesI heard speakers were being contacted, and info coming very soon!!! Wink wink nudge nudgehttps://adobe-coldfusion-devweek-2022.attendease.com/registration/form CF SummitIn person at Las Vegas, NV in October 2022!Official-”ish” dates:Oct 3rd & 4th - CFSummit ConferenceOct 5th - Adobe Certified Professional: Adobe ColdFusion Certification Classes & Testshttps://twitter.com/MarkTakata/status/1511210472518787073VueJS Forge June 29-30thOrganized by Vue School_The largest hands-on Vue.js EventTeam up with 1000s of fellow Vue.js devs from around the globe to build a real-world application in just 2 days in this FREE hackathon-style event.Make connections. Build together. Learn together.Sign up as an Individual or signup as a companyCompany Deal - $2000 for a team of 5, includes VueSchool annual membership and guaranteed seat at the workshops at VueJS Forge as well… and you can pick your teamhttps://vuejsforge.com/Into The Box 2022Solid Dates - September 6, 7 and 8, 2022One day workshops before the two day conference!Early bird pricing available until May 31st, 2022Conference Website:https://intothebox.orgFirst round or two of Speakers and Session Descriptions are being announced this week!ITB 2021 Videos - Several videos are now Free so you can watch them and get in the mood for ITB 2022. https://cfcasts.com/series/into-the-box-2021 ITB Blog has new updates almost every day!Into the Box Latam 2022Actual Date - Dec 7thMore information coming very soon.CFCampNo CFCAMP 2022, we're trying again for summer 2023TLDR is that it's just too hard and there's too much uncertainty right now.Heading into winter with a date around October is less than ideal from a Covid point of viewat the same time hotels in Germany have already removed the "no questions asked" cancellation policies. So, yeah - that's not great. And then there's a war going on 2 countries down the road, which adds at least some economic uncertainties and concerns about sanctions, people willing to travel and spend money on events etc. Then there is all of the general annoyances around international travel - the organizers are being very careful and "wanting to do everything to avoid international travel for anyone when running an event" side of things when it comes to Covid.So, a lot of energy would have to be spent on making the event safe enough from our own point of view… so best to wait until hopefully Summer 2023More conferencesNeed more conferences, this site has a huge list of conferences for almost any language/community.https://confs.tech/Blogs, Tweets, and Videos of the Week 5/17/22 - Blog - Into the Box - Announcing Speakers for Into the Box 2022 - Round 1We are excited to announce the first set of speakers and sessions. We have a great mix of Ortus Speakers and Community speakers too. We'll be announcing round 2 later this week, and then we'll be finalizing the last few spots next week as we confirm some special items (hopefully). Here is the first 12 speakers and their sessions.https://www.intothebox.org/blog/announcing-speakers-for-into-the-box-2022-round-1 5/17/22 - Blog - Adam Cameron - If yer a CFML dev, you should consider financially supporting trycf.comIf you are a CFML developer, you will be aware and likely use trycf.com. Whenever I have an issue with some CFML that needs to be demonstrated to someone else; eg: I'm asking for help on Slack or Stack Overflow, or demonstrating an answer to someone else's question: I create a portable / repeatable repro case on trycf.com. I use it to demonstrate bugs and behavioural differences to Adobe or Lucee when both vendors don't give the same result from the same code. I use it every day.I believe trycf.com is the handiest resource available to CFML developers.https://blog.adamcameron.me/2022/05/if-yer-cfml-dev-you-should-consider.html 5/16/22 - Blog - Peter Amiri - CFWheels - CFWheels Announces a Bug BountyWe are happy to launch a new program that we hope will lead to a more stable framework for all of us. Effective immediately we are launching our Bug Bounty program. When we first conceived of the bounty program we were looking at programs from IssueHunt and BountySource and the main goal was to widen the field of contributors to the CFWheels project as well as crush some of the long standing bugs in the framework.https://cfwheels.org/blog/cfwheels-announces-a-bug-bounty/ 5/16/22 - Blog - Gavin Pickin - Ortus Solutions - Into the Box - Updates as of May 16th, 2022Into the Box is sneaking up closer and closer. With so many announcements, we can't post them all to the Ortus Solutions blog, so we're going to just give you updates when we can. To read all of our blog posts from ITB, visit the site or subscribe to RSS https://intothebox.org/blog This week we're going to be announcing the first set of Sessions, some of the Speakers, and some more sponsors. Last week was a big week for Into the Box too, check out the highlightshttps://www.ortussolutions.com/blog/into-the-box-updates-as-of-may-16th-2022/?utm_medium=referral&utm_source=podcast 5/16/22 - Blog - Into the Box - Computer Know How - Sponsors Into The Box 2022We are excited to announce the bronze sponsorship of Computer Know How for the Into The Box 2022 Conference this coming September. We have been partners with CKH for several years and they are an amazing web application development company. Thank you for your patronage, and continuing support. We are excited to see them in Houston this September!https://www.intothebox.org/blog/computer-know-how-sponsors-into-the-box-2022/?utm_medium=referral&utm_source=podcast 5/13/22 - Blog - Ortus Solutions - Ortus Content Digest for week of May 13thWe were busy this week, we released a lot of content for you... on the podcast, cfcasts, youtube, and our blog. Here's the summary in bite size pieceshttps://www.ortussolutions.com/blog/ortus-content-digest-for-week-of-may-13th 5/12/22 - Podcast - Wicked Good Development - Developer and Open Source Contributor Stories at Devnexus Part 2 - Brad WoodMagic happens when we learn and have honest conversations. @bdw429s thank you for coming on Wicked Good Development and discussing #ColdFusion and what it takes to be a maintainer or contributor #jvm https://anchor.fm/wickedgooddevelopment/episodes/Developer-and-Open-Source-Contributor-Stories-at-Devnexus-Part-2-e1if4g1 5/12/22 - Blog - Into the Box - Dear Amazing Boss - I would like to ask for your approval to attend Into The Box 2022We think you should come to the conference but may need some help convincing your boss to send you. To assist with that, we created a draft letter, inspired by Smashing Magazine, VueJS Conf, and many others, which you can use to send to your boss to help convince them why attending Into the Box in 2022 is going to be a great thing for you and your company.Please use the below letter to convince your boss to let you attend the best ColdFusion Conference of the Year! Remember, the Super Early Bird prices end soon. Hope to see you in September!https://www.intothebox.org/blog/dear-amazing-boss-i-would-like-to-ask-for-your-approval-to-attend-into-the-box-2022/?utm_medium=referral&utm_source=podcast 5/12/22 - Blog - Matthew Clemente - Quick and Dirty CFML Slack Notifications with HyperWhile there may be times you need a full-featured Slack integration, just being able to send messages to a channel can be a win for many applications. I recently needed to alert a Slack channel whenever an application was deployed, and found that using Eric Peterson's module Hyper along with Slack's Incoming Webhooks did the trick nicely.I'll share how to do this with a FW/1 application - just know that with ColdBox it would be even easier, and the general approach could even be modified to work without a framework.https://blog.mattclemente.com/2022/05/12/cfml-slack-incoming-webhook-hyper/ 5/12/22 - Blog - Gavin Pickin - Ortus Solutions - Tips, Tricks and Tools to write DRYer more Reusable Code in ColdFusionIn the last blog post, we learned many reasons why we wanted DRYer more reusable code in ColdFusion. This blog post will talk about some of the different tools ColdFusion / CFML gives you to achieve that.https://www.ortussolutions.com/blog/tips-tricks-and-tools-to-write-dryer-more-reusable-code-in-coldfusion/?utm_medium=referral&utm_source=podcast Adam Cameron Corner 5/12/22 - Blog - Adam Cameron - CFML: Adding beforeEach handlers to my TinyTestFramework. Another exercise in TDDI have to admit I'm not sure where I'm going with this one yet. I dunno how to implement what I'm needing to do, but I'm gonna start with a test and see where I go from there.Context: I've been messing around with this TinyTestFramework thing for a bit… it's intended to be a test framework one can run in trycf.com, so I need to squeeze it all into one include file, and at the same time make it not seem too rubbish in the coding dept. The current state of affairs is here: tinyTestFramework.cfm, and its tests: testTinyTestFramework.cfm. Runnable here: on trycf.comhttps://blog.adamcameron.me/2022/05/cfml-adding-beforeeach-handlers-to-my.html 5/12/22 - Blog - Adam Cameron - CFML: for the sake of completeness, here's the afterEach treatmentThis immediately follows on from "CFML: Adding beforeEach handlers to my TinyTestFramework. Another exercise in TDD".Having done the beforeEach implementation for my TinyTestFramework, I reckoned afterEach would be super easy: barely an inconvenience. And indeed it was. Took me about 15min, given most of the logic is the same as for beforeEach.https://blog.adamcameron.me/2022/05/cfml-for-sake-of-completeness-heres.html 5/13/22 - Blog - Adam Cameron - CFML: adding aroundEach to TinyTestFramework was way easier than I expectedI'm still pottering around with my TinyTestFramework. Last night I added beforeEach and afterEach handlers, but then thought about how the hell I could easily implement aroundEach support, and I could only see about 50% of it, so I decided to sleep on it.After a night's sleep I spent about 30min before work doing a quick spike (read: no tests, just "will this even work?"), and surprisingly it did work. First time. Well except for a coupla typos, but I nailed the logic first time. I'm sorta halfway chuffed by this, sorta halfway worried that even though what I decided would probably work - and it did - I haven't quite got my head around how it works, or even quite what it's doing. So let's blog about that.https://blog.adamcameron.me/2022/05/cfml-adding-aroundeach-to.html 5/15/22 - Blog - Adam Cameron - CFML: fixing a coupla bugs in my recent work on TinyTestFrameworkLast week I did some more work on my TinyTestFramework:CFML: for the sake of completeness, here's the afterEach treatmentCFML: adding aroundEach to TinyTestFramework was way easier than I expectedOn Saturday, I found a bug in each of those. Same bug, basically, surfacing in two different ways. Here's an example:https://blog.adamcameron.me/2022/05/cfml-fixing-coupla-bugs-in-my-recent.html CFML JobsSeveral positions available on https://www.getcfmljobs.com/Listing over 83 ColdFusion positions from 46 companies across 40 locations in 5 Countries.4 new jobs listedFull-Time - Senior Coldfusion Developer WORK |LATAM| at Colon, PA - United States Posted May 15https://www.getcfmljobs.com/jobs/index.cfm/united-states/Senior-Coldfusion-Developer-WORK-LATAM-at-Colon-PA/11470 Full-Time - ColdFusion Developer at Cleveland, OH (Remote) - United States Posted May 13https://www.getcfmljobs.com/jobs/index.cfm/united-states/CFDev-at-CL-OH-Remote/11464 Full-Time - Coldfusion Developer at Bengaluru, Karnataka - India Posted May 11https://www.getcfmljobs.com/jobs/index.cfm/india/Coldfusion-Developer-at-Bengaluru-Karnataka/11465 Full-Time - ColdFusion Developer at India - India Posted May 10https://www.getcfmljobs.com/jobs/index.cfm/india/ColdFusion-Developer-at-India/11466 PATREON SPONSORED JOB POSTING!Hagerty - MotorSportRegSenior Software Engineer, MotorsportWe are seeking a Senior Software Engineer to work primarily with Node/Vue.js, ColdFusion, and AWS to improve our platform and build greenfield experiences.We are a 25-person team supporting 1,600 organizations with our SaaS CRM, commerce and event management platform. With 8,000 events managed in our marketplace annually by our customers, our goal is to be the number one software platform for automotive and motorsport events.Ready to get in the driver's seat? Join us!https://bit.ly/3985J3U Other Job Links Ortus Solutionshttps://www.ortussolutions.com/about-us/careers There is a jobs channel in the cfml slack team, and in the box team slack now too ForgeBox Module of the WeekFacebook Leadgen Forms - CFMLA CFML wrapper for the Facebook Leadgen Forms API. Create and manage Facebook's lead forms via their marketing API.Feel free to use the issue tracker to report bugs or suggest improvements!https://www.forgebox.io/view/fblgfcfml VS Code Hint Tips and Tricks of the WeekVue 3 SnippetsThis extension adds Vue 2 Snippets and Vue 3 Snippets into Visual Studio Code.Including all of the API of Vue.js 2 and Vue.js 3. The code snippet of the extension is shown in the following table. You don't need to remember something, just write code as usual in vscode. You can type vcom, choose VueConfigOptionMergeStrategies, and press ENTER, then Vue.config.optionMergeStrategies appear on the screen.https://marketplace.visualstudio.com/items?itemName=hollowtree.vue-snippets Thank you to all of our Patreon SupportersThese individuals are personally supporting our open source initiatives to ensure the great toolings like CommandBox, ForgeBox, ColdBox, ContentBox, TestBox and all the other boxes keep getting the continuous development they need, and funds the cloud infrastructure at our community relies on like ForgeBox for our Package Management with CommandBox. You can support us on Patreon here https://www.patreon.com/ortussolutionsDon't forget, we have Annual Memberships, pay for the year and save 10% - great for businesses. Bronze Packages and up, now get a ForgeBox Pro and CFCasts subscriptions as a perk for their Patreon Subscription. All Patreon supporters have a Profile badge on the Community Website All Patreon supporters have their own Private Forum access on the Community Website https://community.ortussolutions.com/ Patreons Brand new Big Patreon SponsorBrian Ghidinelli - Hagerty MotorsportReg John Wilson - Synaptrix Eric Hoffman Gary Knight Mario Rodrigues Giancarlo Gomez David Belanger (Bell-an-jer) Dan Card Jonathan Perret Jeffry McGee - Sunstar Media Dean Maunder Joseph Lamoree (Lah-more-ee)? Don Bellamy Jan Jannek (Yan Yannek) Laksma Tirtohadi (Lah-ksma Turt-o-hah-dee) Carl Von Stetten Jeremy Adams Didier Lesnicki Matthew Clemente Daniel Garcia Scott Steinbeck - Agri Tracking Systems Ben Nadel Brett DeLine Kai Koenig Charlie Arehart Jonas Eriksson Jason Daiger Shawn Oden Matthew Darby Ross Phillips Edgardo Cabezas Patrick Flynn Stephany Monge (Monghee) John Whish Kevin Wright Peter Amiri You can see an up to date list of all sponsors on Ortus Solutions' Websitehttps://ortussolutions.com/about-us/sponsors ★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★
2022-05-10 Weekly News - Episode 147Watch the video version on YouTube at https://youtu.be/Z4JmOKQVGIU Hosts: Eric Peterson - Senior Developer at Ortus SolutionsDaniel Garcia - Senior Developer at Ortus SolutionsThanks to our Sponsor - Ortus SolutionsThe makers of ColdBox, CommandBox, ForgeBox, TestBox and all your favorite box-en out there. A few ways to say thanks back to Ortus Solutions: Like and subscribe to our videos on YouTube. Help ORTUS reach for the Stars - Star and Fork our Repos Star all of your Github Box Dependencies from CommandBox with https://www.forgebox.io/view/commandbox-github Subscribe to our Podcast on your Podcast Apps and leave us a review Sign up for a free or paid account on CFCasts, which is releasing new content every week Buy Ortus's Book - 102 ColdBox HMVC Quick Tips and Tricks on GumRoad (http://gum.co/coldbox-tips) Patreon SupportGoal 1 - We have 36 patreons providing 100% of the funding for our Modernize or Die Podcasts via our Patreon site: https://www.patreon.com/ortussolutions. Goal 2 - We are 46% of the way to fully fund the hosting of ForgeBox.io PATREON SPONSORED JOB POSTING!New Sponsor Hagerty - MotorSportReg2 Job Opportunities for Senior Software Engineer, Motorsport - more in the job section.Brian Ghidinelli - Hagerty MotorsportReg talks about his company and their roles available.See the Video or Listen to the AudioNews and AnnouncementsINTO THE BOX - First Workshops AnnouncedConfirmed Workshops Async Programming & Scheduling Containerizing & Scaling Your Applications Legacy Code Conversion To The Modern World! TestBox: Getting started with BDD-TDD Oh My! Help us decide on the other workshops CommandBox CLI Scripting/Productivity Up and Running with Quick VueJs SPA and Mobile App with Rest APIs https://www.ortussolutions.com/blog/into-the-box-2022-first-workshops-announced/CFWheels Guides Moved to GitBookWe are glad to announce that the CFWheels Guides have been moved to GitBook.com. The good folks at GitBook are proud to support CFWheels and have granted us an Open Source Community account. We have migrated all the guides from our old provider to GitBook and will be making some more changes as we review all the links now that the domain has been switched.https://cfwheels.org/blog/cfwheels-guides-moved-to-gitbook/New Releases and UpdatesICYMI - Lucee 5.3.9.131 Released Last week the stable release of Lucee 5.3.9 was made available. Available in CommandBox and from the Lucee Downloads Sitehttps://download.lucee.org/Brad releases some Community posts on Issues reported - Lucee 5.3.9 losing sessions over HTTP2 SSLhttps://community.ortussolutions.com/t/lucee-5-3-9-losing-sessions-over-ssl/9229ICYMI - CommandBox v5.5.0 and v5.5.1 releasedCommandBox 5.5.0 was released. We found some issues due to a last minute change, we rolled out a 5.5.1 patch yesterday, that seems to solve that initial issue.https://www.ortussolutions.com/blog/commandbox-551-released/ICYMI - CommandBox Docker v3.5.0 Images ReleasedToday we are pleased to announce the release of version 3.5.0 of our CommandBox Docker images, which contains significant upgrades to the underlying CommandBox engine.Most significantly, this release upgrades the CommandBox binary to 5.5.1, which uses Lucee 5.3.9 as the underlying CFML engine. In addition, this release changes the underlying base image over to use the eclipse-temurin image builds, as the adoptopenjdk builds are being sunsetted. With this change, the underlying Debian version changes to use Ubuntu 20.0.0 (focal). As such, some custom installs in Dockerfiles may need updates to available packages from this distro.https://www.ortussolutions.com/blog/commandbox-docker-v350-images-released ColdFusion 2021 and 2018 May Security UpdatesWe are pleased to announce that we have released the updates for the following ColdFusion versions: ColdFusion (2021 release) Update 4 ColdFusion (2018 release) Update 14 Note: The ColdFusion Add-Ons and lockdown installers are also refreshed. The refreshed installers are available at ColdFusion downloads.https://coldfusion.adobe.com/2022/05/coldfusion-2021-and-2018-may-security-updates/ICYMI - ColdBox Elixir v4 ReleasedHot off the presses, ColdBox Elixir v4 is now available on NPM. This is a massive upgrade under the hood, but it shouldn't require any API changes if you are using just Elixir methods. (If you are customizing Webpack directly, you may need to make additional changes.) Please check out the Migration Guide for help upgrading.https://www.ortussolutions.com/blog/coldbox-elixir-v4-released/ cbElasticSearch v2.3.0 ReleasedWe are pleased to announce the release of cbElasticsearch version 2.3.0. cbElasticsearch is the Elasticsearch module for the Coldbox platform, and provides a fluent CFML API for interacting with, searching, and serializing to Elasticsearch servers.This release includes documentation updates and and enhancements to core functions of the Document, SearchBuilder and IndexBuilder components, as well as additional error handling for async tasks.https://www.ortussolutions.com/blog/cbelasticsearch-230-released/ICYMI - CFWheels 2.3.0-rc.1 ReleasedView the changelog at https://cfwheels.org/blog/cfwheels-2-3-0-rc-1/WEBINARS / MEETUPS AND WORKSHOPSOrtus Webinar - May - Clearing the Fuzzies on Fuzzy Search with Michael BornMay 27th 2022: Time 11:00 AM Central Time ( US and Canada )Take a walk through the world of search in this webinar which will show why your database search is not smart enough, explain the basics of how fuzzy search works, and show how to use CBElasticsearch to bring the power of fuzzy searching to your CF application.https://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZIqd-6ppz0qGtGPJxmywPST06e74ExsmshB/ View all Webinars: https://www.ortussolutions.com/events/webinars Online ColdFusion Meetup - “Code Reuse in ColdFusion - Is Spaghetti Code still Spaghetti if it is DRY?” with Gavin PickinThursday, May 12 20229:00 AM to 10:00 AM PDTFind out the difference between DRY code and WET code, and what one is better, and more importantly, WHY.We write code once, but we read it over and over again, maintaining our code is 90% of the job... code reuse is our friend. You are already Re-using code, even if you didn't know you were.We'll learn about the different types of Code Reuse in ColdFusion, and the pros and cons of each.https://www.meetup.com/coldfusionmeetup/events/285524970/ Adobe WorkshopsJoin the Adobe ColdFusion Workshop to learn how you and your agency can leverage ColdFusion to create amazing web content. This one-day training will cover all facets of Adobe ColdFusion that developers need to build applications that can run across multiple cloud providers or on-premiseTUESDAY, MAY 14, 20229:00 AM CETAdobe ColdFusion WorkshopDamien Bruyndonckx (Brew-en-dohnx) https://workshop-cf.meetus.adobeevents.com/ WEDNESDAY, JUNE 22, 20229:00 AM CETAdobe ColdFusion WorkshopDamien Bruyndonckx (Brew-en-dohnx) https://adobe-cf-workshop.meetus.adobeevents.com/ FREE :)Full list - https://meetus.adobeevents.com/coldfusion/ CFCasts Content Updateshttps://www.cfcasts.comNews Several ITB 2021 Videos are now Free so you can watch them and get in the mood for ITB 2022. https://cfcasts.com/series/into-the-box-2021 All of the Publish Your First ForgeBox Package Videos are now Free Just Released Gavin Pickin - Publish Your First ForgeBox Package Logging into ForgeBox Onlinehttps://cfcasts.com/series/publish-your-first-forgebox-package/videos/logging-into-forgebox-online Publish a Package via ForgeBox.iohttps://cfcasts.com/series/publish-your-first-forgebox-package/videos/publish-a-package-via-forgebox 2022 ForgeBox Module of the Week Series - 3 Videos and Countinghttps://cfcasts.com/series/2022-forgebox-modules-of-the-week 2022 VS Code Hint tip and Trick of the Week Series - 3 Videos and Countinghttps://cfcasts.com/series/2022-vs-code-hint-tip-and-trick-of-the-week Coming Soon More… Gavin Pickin - Publish Your First ForgeBox Package LogBox 101 More ForgeBox and VS Code Podcast snippet videos Conferences and TrainingDockerCon - THIS WEEKMay 10, 2022Free Online Virtual ConferenceDockerCon will be a free, immersive online experience complete with Docker product demos , breakout sessions, deep technical sessions from Docker and our partners, Docker experts, Docker Captains, our community and luminaries from across the industry and much more. Don't miss your chance to gather and connect with colleagues from around the world at the largest developer conference of the year. Sign up to pre-register for DockerCon 2022!https://www.docker.com/dockercon/ MS BuildMay 24-26, 2022Come together at Microsoft Build May 24–26 2022, to explore the latest innovations in code and application development—and to gain insights from peers and experts from around the world.Regional Spotlights, One on One bookings available and more.https://mybuild.microsoft.com/en-US/home Ioniconf (Free Online Ionic conference)May 25, 2022Join us for a full day of talks from experts and leaders in the web community, showing how the web is pushing the boundaries of mobile app development. Get insights on the latest web libraries, frameworks, and tools that are empowering web developers to build stunning mobile and cross-platform apps using the power of the web.https://ionic.io/ioniconfUS VueJS ConfFORT LAUDERDALE, FL • JUNE 8-10, 2022Beach. Code. Vue.Workshop day: June 8Main Conference: June 9-10https://us.vuejs.org/Speakers and Schedule Announced https://us.vuejs.org/schedule/ THAT ConferenceHowdy. We're a full-stack, tech-obsessed community of fun, code-loving humans who share and learn together.We geek-out in Texas and Wisconsin once a year but we host digital events all the time.WISCONSIN DELLS, WI / JULY 25TH - 28TH, 2022A four-day summer camp for developers passionate about learning all things mobile, web, cloud, and technology.https://that.us/events/wi/2022/ Our very own Daniel Garcia is speaking there https://that.us/activities/sb6dRP8ZNIBIKngxswIt Adobe Developer Week 2022July 18-22, 2022Online - Virtual - FreeThe Adobe ColdFusion Developer Week is back - bigger and better than ever! This year, our experts are gearing up to host a series of webinars on all things ColdFusion. This is your chance to learn with them, get your questions answered, and build cloud-native applications with ease.Note: Speakers listed are 2021 speakers currently - check back for updateshttps://adobe-coldfusion-devweek-2022.attendease.com/registration/form CF SummitIn person at Las Vegas, NV in October 2022!Official-”ish” dates:Oct 3rd & 4th - CFSummit ConferenceOct 5th - Adobe Certified Professional: Adobe ColdFusion Certification Classes & Testshttps://twitter.com/MarkTakata/status/1511210472518787073VueJS Forge June 29-30thOrganized by Vue School_The largest hands-on Vue.js EventTeam up with 1000s of fellow Vue.js devs from around the globe to build a real-world application in just 2 days in this FREE hackathon-style event.Make connections. Build together. Learn together.Sign up as an Individual or signup as a company (by booking a call)https://vuejsforge.com/Into The Box 2022Solid Dates - September 6, 7 and 8, 2022One day workshops before the two day conference!Early bird pricing available until April 30, 2022Conference Website:https://intothebox.orgITB 2021 Videos - Several videos are now Free so you can watch them and get in the mood for ITB 2022. https://cfcasts.com/series/into-the-box-2021 Into the Box Latam 2022Tentative dates - Dec 1-2CFCampNo CFCAMP 2022, we're trying again for summer 2023TLDR is that it's just too hard and there's too much uncertainty right now.Heading into winter with a date around October is less than ideal from a Covid point of viewat the same time hotels in Germany have already removed the "no questions asked" cancellation policies. So, yeah - that's not great. And then there's a war going on 2 countries down the road, which adds at least some economic uncertainties and concerns about sanctions, people willing to travel and spend money on events etc. Then there is all of the general annoyances around international travel - the organizers are being very careful and "wanting to do everything to avoid international travel for anyone when running an event" side of things when it comes to Covid.So, a lot of energy would have to be spent on making the event safe enough from our own point of view… so best to wait until hopefully Summer 2023More conferencesNeed more conferences, this site has a huge list of conferences for almost any language/community.https://confs.tech/Blogs, Tweets, and Videos of the Week5/10/22 Tweet - Charlie Arehart - Shame on you, Adobe!Shame on you, Adobe! Following on my earlier post, I've learned these May 2022 #coldfusion updates DO NOT include any bug fixes--for things that have plagued us since the Sept 2021 updates. Worse, they remove special hotfixes if added. See my comment here: https://twitter.com/carehart/status/1524070239973089283 https://twitter.com/careharthttps://coldfusion.adobe.com/2022/05/coldfusion-2021-and-2018-may-security-updates/#comment-471585/4/22 Blog - Mark Takata - Adobe - Comparing Adobe ColdFusion Enterprise API Manager to 3rd Party OptionsOne of the big myths about ColdFusion Enterprise is how “expensive” it is. Now, it could be argued that any programming language that costs more than $0 is “expensive”, as generally languages are free to use.But, of course, Adobe ColdFusion isn't “just” a language. It is an entire ecosystem of functionality, including an incredibly useful administrator, performance monitoring toolkit and (if you use Enterprise), the API Manager.Many folks have covered the fantastic features of the API Manager, but what is talked about less is what someone might use instead of API Manager. I'm going to look at a few common 3rd party tools and compare the costs.https://coldfusion.adobe.com/2022/05/comparing-adobe-coldfusion-enterprise-api-manager-to-3rd-party-options/5/5/22 Blog - James Moberg - Identifying Random Uploaded Form FilesThe benefit to this approach is that it returns a single struct containing keys that match all form "file" field names with extra information identifying the original filename, type, size and temporary file path. Enjoy!https://dev.to/gamesover/identifying-random-uploaded-form-files-57n75/6/22 Blog - Brad Wood - Java regression and UndertowIn the most recent updates of Java 8 u333 and 11.0.15, there was a regression introduced that affects the XNIO libraries that power Undertow, which CommandBox uses. This issue appears to only affect Windows. If you are getting any of the error messages here, the TL; DR; is simply to update to CommandBox 5.5.1, where we have a workaround already in place.https://community.ortussolutions.com/t/java-regression-and-undertow/92285/6/22 Blog - Brad Wood - Lucee 5.3.9 losing sessions over SSLIf you've started using Lucee 5.3.9 for your CommandBox servers (which is the new default in CommandBox 5.5) and you have SSL enabled, you may have noticed your session scope getting lost in your application as well as the Lucee administrator.https://community.ortussolutions.com/t/lucee-5-3-9-losing-sessions-over-ssl/92295/6/22 Blog - Brad Wood - CommandBox 5.5 and injecting models into Task RunnersCommandBox 5.5 has a lot of new features, but there are just as many bug fixes and improvements. Sometimes these tickets unintentionally change some internal behavior you may have been depending on, but was never guaranteed.One such change that caught a couple people out was that the underlying “web root” that Lucee uses under the covers changed from the folder box.exe was started in to the root of your drive (C:/ or / in *nix). This was done for a handful of reasons, one of which being a super annoying Lucee bug where it's literally impossible to create a CF mapping that points to / on Linux.https://community.ortussolutions.com/t/commandbox-5-5-and-injecting-models-into-task-runners/9230https://xkcd.com/1172/CFML JobsSeveral positions available on https://www.getcfmljobs.com/Listing over 76 ColdFusion positions from 44 companies across 37 locations in 5 Countries.1 new job listedFull-Time - Senior Application Developer UK at Remote - United Kingdom - Work with Adam CameronMay 03https://www.getcfmljobs.com/jobs/index.cfm/united-kingdom/Sr-AppDeveloper-RemoteUK/11463 PATREON SPONSORED JOB POSTING!Hagerty - MotorSportRegSenior Software Engineer, MotorsportWe are seeking a Senior Software Engineer to work primarily with Node/Vue.js, ColdFusion, and AWS to improve our platform and build greenfield experiences.We are a 25-person team supporting 1,600 organizations with our SaaS CRM, commerce and event management platform. With 8,000 events managed in our marketplace annually by our customers, our goal is to be the number one software platform for automotive and motorsport events.Ready to get in the driver's seat? Join us!https://bit.ly/3985J3U Other Job Links Ortus Solutionshttps://www.ortussolutions.com/about-us/careers Consortium Inchttps://www.dice.com/jobs/detail/-/10183574/7322396 There is a jobs channel in the cfml slack team, and in the box team slack now too ForgeBox Module of the WeekCommandBox Task Local Model ResolverA simple module that allows Task Runners to inject CFCs from the shell's working dir. This module listens to the beforeInstanceAutowire interception point in WireBox and looks for any propery injections whose DSL matches the name of a CFC in the shell's working directory. This allows a Task Runner to inject a CFC in the working directory without creating a mapping for it.https://forgebox.io/view/commandbox-task-local-model-resolverVS Code Hint Tips and Tricks of the WeekVScode CounterVS Code extension: counts blank lines, comment lines, and physical lines of source code in many programming languages.This extension uses other language extensions to determine the line of code. Therefore, you may need to install the language extension to support a new language.Conversely, as the number of language extensions increases, the range of support for this feature also increases.https://marketplace.visualstudio.com/items?itemName=uctakeoff.vscode-counter Thank you to all of our Patreon SupportersThese individuals are personally supporting our open source initiatives to ensure the great toolings like CommandBox, ForgeBox, ColdBox, ContentBox, TestBox and all the other boxes keep getting the continuous development they need, and funds the cloud infrastructure at our community relies on like ForgeBox for our Package Management with CommandBox. You can support us on Patreon here https://www.patreon.com/ortussolutions Don't forget, we have Annual Memberships, pay for the year and save 10% - great for businesses. Bronze Packages and up, now get a ForgeBox Pro and CFCasts subscriptions as a perk for their Patreon Subscription. All Patreon supporters have a Profile badge on the Community Website All Patreon supporters have their own Private Forum access on the Community Website https://community.ortussolutions.com/ PatreonsBrand new Big Patreon SponsorBrian Ghidinelli - Hagerty MotorsportReg John Wilson - Synaptrix Eric Hoffman Gary Knight Mario Rodrigues Giancarlo Gomez David Belanger Dan Card Jonathan Perret Jeffry McGee - Sunstar Media Dean Maunder Joseph Lamoree Don Bellamy Jan Jannek Laksma Tirtohadi Carl Von Stetten Jeremy Adams Didier Lesnicki Matthew Clemente Daniel Garcia Scott Steinbeck - Agri Tracking Systems Ben Nadel Brett DeLine Kai Koenig Charlie Arehart Jonas Eriksson Jason Daiger Shawn Oden Matthew Darby Ross Phillips Edgardo Cabezas Patrick Flynn Stephany Monge John Whish Kevin Wright Peter Amiri You can see an up to date list of all sponsors on Ortus Solutions' Websitehttps://ortussolutions.com/about-us/sponsors ★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★
This "litepaper" is to give a high-level look at the new community-driven project by the SmartCoin community, tentatively titled, "Project X / SUBLAYER" and due for confirmation on-chain vote.Read the full litepaper in GitBook, here: http://smarterdao.xyz/0:00 - Overview8:15 - Project Pitch15:09 - Team25:32 - Funding36:27 - NFKey36:48 - Treasure Farm Tokenomics1:13:39 - System Diagram1:14:18 - Early GovernancePurpose:To create a new project concept and native token that is layered on top of the pre-existing SmarterCoin token, giving $SMRTR new utility and bringing value to the SmartCoin Diamond Tier community.This will be accomplished by creating a new DeFi loop and NFT Marketplace with unique and differentiated value propositions for both buyers and sellers. Buyers can use gamified bidding such as "rafflenomics" to acquire NFTs at below-floor pricing while sellers can expect faster liquidity and better price control.The Treasure Farm, briefly outlined below will be established to reward Diamond Handers & other holders of SMRTr (loose or JLP) while building the native token infrastructure to run what was outlined in Discord as "sublayer".How it Works:Stake your NFKeyUpgrade key by burning $SMRTR (to increase rewards rate)Open Treasure Boxes (to increase rewards rate)Earn $TRESRUnlock Raffle Swap to buy/sell NFTs & digital assetsBridge NFTs to earn more rewardsOur sheer numbers will allow us to quickly become the go-to NFT Marketplace on Avalanche.
Pour ce second épisode du podcast Future of Work with WO.MEN j'ai le plaisir d'interviewer
10X helps Entrepreneurs become FIT, RICH & HAPPY
ROI Overload is a daily radio show/video podcast show focused on the latest in trending topics in business, tech, finance and startups hosted by Scott D. Clary (@scottdclary). Available in audio (roioverload.sounder.fm) or video (youtube.com/c/scottdclary).
Andy and Dave discuss the latest in AI news and research, including, the UK government releases its National AI Strategy, a 10-year plan to make the country a global AI superpower [1:28]. Stanford University's One Hundred Year Study on AI Project releases its second report, Gathering Strength, Gathering Storms, assessing developments in AI between 2016 and 2021 around fourteen framing questions. [4:57] The UN High Commissioner for Human Rights calls for a moratorium on the sale and use of AI systems that pose series risks to human rights until adequate safeguards are put into place. [10:07] Jack Poulson at Tech Inquiry maps out US government use of AI-based weapons and surveillance, using publicly available information. [12:07] Researchers at Hebrew University examine the potential of single cortical neurons as deep artificial neural networks, finding that a deep neural network with 5-8 layers are necessary to approximate them. [16:10] Researchers at Stanford review the different architectures of neuronal circuits in the human brain, identifying different circuit motifs. [20:02] Other research at Stanford shows the ability to image and track moving non-line-of-sight objects using a single optical path (shining a laser through a keyhole). [22:05] And researchers at MIT, Nvidia, and Technion demonstrate that a neural network can identify the number and activity of people in a room, solely by examining a blank wall in the room. [26:33] The Nils Theory research group publishes Physics-Based Deep Learning, introducing physical models into deep learning to reconcile data-centered viewpoints with physical simulations. [30:34] Ori Cohen compiles the Machine and Deep Learning Compendium, an open resource (GitBook) on over 500 topics with summaries, links, and articles. [32:21] The Allen Institute for AI releases a web tool that converts PDF papers into HTML for more rapid web publishing of scientific papers. [33:20] And the Museum of Wild and Newfangled Art: This Show is Curated by a Machine invites viewers to ponder on why they think an AI chose the works within. [34:43]
I am a mentor for the Notion Advanced track of Tiago Forte's Building a Second Brain, Cohort 12. You can catch Weeks 1, 2, 3, and 4 in the previous weekend episodes. This is the cleaned up audio of the last of 5 mentorship sessions with Q&A at the end. Video version: https://youtu.be/emUfFWixQwETimestamps Recap of Last 4 Weeks [00:02:08] Shifting Perception to Sharing [00:03:07] IP's Personal Progress [00:09:38] How to Solve the Cold Start Problem [00:10:57] The Invisible Pipeline and the 1% Rule [00:14:00] Peer Group Progress [00:15:48] Course Recap: Convergence vs Divergence, CO vs DE [00:20:41] Your First Brain vs Your Second Brain [00:22:43] Project Kickoff Checklist [00:24:06] Favorite Quotes [00:25:26] Q&A: Denys on Learning in Public in YouTube [00:32:47] Q&A: Meryl Johnston on Learning in Public [00:43:34] The Resistance and Gratitude Journaling [00:46:04] Don't Just Write Essays: Remove Resistance [00:48:37] Three Strikes Rule [00:52:51] Guy Margalith on Fear and Your Second Brain [00:53:40] Organizing Files on your Mac [01:00:59] Swyx Twitter Journey [01:04:18] Tropical MBA and Balaji Srinivasan [01:09:05] Closing Remarks [01:10:20] Transcriptswyx: [00:00:00] Okay, so we're in week five. I didn't know what to call it. So I just called it finale week. I, at this point I feel like everyone knows each other even.But feel free to say hi, if you're new you're still totally woke up and to jump around and visit the each other's sessions. I'm also going to blast through the housekeeping just because there's not that much more housekeeping left to do. And I will also want it to shout out what I did for last week's.Events which well that's Swyx week app, which was essentially right up my own experience of intermediate packets. And I broke my own journey down into eight intermediate packets. So that's tweet, tweet, livestream, blog posts, conference, conference conference, a job interview. And this took place over the course of a year.So it, it shocked me because even though I went through it, you don't, you never really think about intermediate packets dripping out over a year. And the thing that I really wanted to get across was that I think the way that immediate packets, which was presented last time was very much of a top-down thing.Like I want to do something big, let me work backwards and break it down into intranet, small things that can ship. But it also equally works for bottom up where you have no idea what the end goal is, but you're just like. That's just ship of small things, and try to build up to something big if the interest is there. Glen G says, paddle reminds me of bubbling off events. Yep. That's a very WebDev analogy and that's fully true there. The two directions of bubbling. I forget what the opposite of bubbling is in the dumb, but that's beside the point anyway. I wanted to offer that as my own perspective on intermediate packets.Oh, yeah. Dave says he is bubbling up NIST insider today. Yeah, totally. Yeah. We are bubbling ideas. That's great. That title doesn't resonate with me. So I just went with bottom up, but feel free to write your own policy. And I think that's something that we should talk about as well.Who's written stuff as a result of this course. And what post ideas do you have to share? You can feel free to throw that in the chat as well. Housekeeping, we've covered this plenty of times, but stupid questions are welcome. Often beats. Perfect. And then this is the discussion and not a lecture.Recap of Last 4 Weeks [00:02:08]All right. So we've covered all these 12. I think it actually works out without the 12. So it's cohort 12 with 12 items. I think so. I grabbed this, I went back to lecture one and grab this slide. And actually the last week changed quite a bit, I think, but the first 3 have been relatively stable.And it's quite a bit of content if you walk back and think about it. So I just wanted to acknowledge and pause for a bit and say I think the last five weeks have been a real blast in terms of flights and just a lot of ideas, especially if you're new to them for the first time. But even for me going through them the second time I felt like I just had a lot more to think about each on each in each time, because I've lived through it and I've had a year to really sit with it. I think it'd be interesting to hear from you in in, in the chat or if you wanna, if you want to speak up, I'm just going to pause here and it's just go was there, was there a particular idea that really stuck out to you during this these this whole curriculum w what's your favorite sort of takeaway that you really liked?Shifting Perception to Sharing [00:03:07]Speaker 2: [00:03:07] The one thing that I found which wasn't actually to deal with lessons wasn't to do with systems and processes. It was his perception for me. It's just been a shift in perception, but that's been the benefit of building a second brain, but I've taken that and I've applied that to everything. And I'm looking at, whether it be a task or whether it be something I want to do, what is the perception that motivates me most?And I've realized from second brain that all I came in, they wanted to share more and I wanted an output and I think it came from a selfish point of view of, I just want to share, I want to share, I'm going to attract more people, get more business, be a thought leader, et cetera. What I realized when I was sharing that circle and sharing, and here I'm not having that going a backwards and forwards.I like helping people and I look at even day-to-day friendships. I have conversations, anything that goes to the people I'm interested in they're gold as well. And I've realized that the perception was wrong for me to just look at output in isolation and say, oh, you just want to help her instead of, Hey, how do we respond most positively to actually get output?And for me now, I realized that for helping other people I'm building connections, like even the last week I've been really lucky people that they messaging me, ask them to connect. I've had zoom calls with people. I'm emailing people and we're all having backwards and forwards dialogue, but that wouldn't have happened unless I output in the first place to share my opinion, to actually attract those like-minded people as well.So that's where I say now to perception is going to help me. And I'm going to look at any future problem rather than just looking at like it's a task or a project on big into kind of alleviate and willpower and not having this battle that you have to get up every day and you have to do something against your will to finally get to the end of a journey.And for me, if there's that kind of, if there's those breadcrumbs of emotion for me and breadcrumbs of connection with people, I'll get more addicted to it. I'll enjoy it more. It will be easier for me all the time. And I think it will become more and more natural to do. swyx: [00:05:10] Yeah, that's brilliant. Thanks so much for sharing that.There's so many things I can go off in that, Diego and ended the his lecture by saying, chase what excites you and that's, I think that's definitely something that you're doing. I personally and th Speaker 2: [00:05:23] that's a good point. I think we have to shape it into a way that does excite you.It does not always naturally. That's what I didn't realize. It wasn't just, oh, that's, output is going to excite me. I have to find what does excite me and how can I tie that into output. And now what's going to, swyx: [00:05:41] I call it. So I call it a nexus of interest because it's not just X, if it only excites you and no one else, then you're just going to do it yourself.Ikigai and the Nexus of Interest [00:05:49]So you have to find the intersection. Okay. All right. A little bonus idea for you guys. All so, the internet is very In love with this idea of ikigai, because it's a foreign sounding word and we love foreign sounding words as thought leaders. So Zettelkasten and Ikigai, anything is not English.Speaker 1: [00:06:04] Sean, just real quick, my wife is Japanese from Japan. I've been married 27 years. But I asked her about Ikigai and she's what the hell is Speaker 3: [00:06:11] that? swyx: [00:06:13] I just wanted to share. It's not, Speaker 1: [00:06:17] it's real. But it's not just some secret thing that all Japanese people know about.So I just wanted to put that out there. All Japanese people do know about ninjas, but they don't know about Jesus, but they don't know about easy guy. So perfect. They're Speaker 2: [00:06:29] just not an air cold yet. That's all. swyx: [00:06:31] No worries. I was just going to say it's very invoke. And I think if it works for you, it doesn't really matter what the origin is, whether it's true or not.So my point is that it's this, there's this four circles. It says, what do you love? What you're good at, what you can be paid for and what the world needs. And I think that actually, it just, it really draws, drives down to... What you love becomes, what you're good at, if you just do it long enough.And if you're good at it, you eventually start to love it so that this collapses into one circle and then where you can be paid for and what the world needs. Basically collapse the one circle as well, because the creator economy and just the internet economy has funneled, has created a lot of ways to make money for as long as you, as long as can supply the world of what it needs.They'll find a way to Speaker 2: [00:07:10] pay for this is 40, where you're going with this, because this reminds me of a conversation I had maybe a week ago about all peers and how I couldn't understand them. And I couldn't wrap my head around them. And when I did understand them, I realized that just done them naturally.And it wasn't a Eureka moment. And part of what we want to do is I want to help educate people and especially creative business owners to have more confidence in themselves. But what you're showing me here is actually making me realize that there's so many things that I do naturally. So even when I said, what excites me, that's in a conversation with you.But to me it would just be a given that it would make no sense to me just to talk. Self-serving really just about me. I'm going to empathize with other people, but. Th the point here is that it's sometimes I don't realize that I do things naturally and they're just in there and their parents were processed and not explain them.And that's one of the big things that I've learned here is to actually explain the full idea rather than what I do automatically that I don't even think about. And I think writing has made me document that better. This is really good. I like swyx: [00:08:16] this. Exactly. It's actually the advice that I give people.So B be sure that you're not only paying attention to what excites you, but also what excites others. The first part of my sort of IPS is respond to others. It's very other oriented because that guarantees feedback that people are more people are the most interested in themselves.So if you're not appealing to other people's self-interests, then. Yeah. People often, like when they start out re creating content online, they're wondering how come they don't get response. Like you're much higher. You're much more likely to get a response. Speaker 2: [00:08:50] And I heard this is in my newsletter today, which the challenge for people is to actually respond to people.If they've helped you, if they've saved you time, if they've made you think, go and respond to them. And I actually set a challenge to myself, the response. swyx: [00:09:04] Yeah. Pick up what others put down. I also have this.I refer to it so much that we have a shortcut for it, it's in our community. But yeah, you want to plug your newsletter actually, if people are, have like newsletters and blogs and stuff throw it in the chat so that we can actually see and sign up for each other and keep and stay in touch, but anyway, it's a dance, it's not a one-way street. You absolutely are engaging with other people on that. I have a bunch of other hands now thanks, David. I'm gonna, I'm gonna move on to someone else. So who is this zoom? Doesn't show me your name Speaker 3: [00:09:30] and IP and Glen have their hands up.IP was first all swyx: [00:09:34] okay. IP. All right. Thanks guys. Yeah. IP's Personal Progress [00:09:38] Speaker 2: [00:09:38] Hey guys. I completely agree with what Dave said. It's the community aspect of building the second brain that has really helped me as well, this connecting to people and just to see what they're doing has really helped me. And one more funny thing I wanted to show you.I w I just did that swyx: [00:09:54] icky guy thing.What do you mean? What do you mean you did it? What do you mean you did? No, I thought icky guy it's architecture. I just hadn't been able to pinpoint, but I've always been in love with it. And this is something which I really want to pursue. And with building a second brain, what I've actually seen is it's, since it's relieved so much of cognitive overload, that.I can, that's helped me scale up like previously I could just manage one or two project at a particular time. Now I can see by making it by making more intermediate packets, I can actually scale up my work. I can add this same moment in time. I can work on different projects, which I previously couldn't, so that's really helped me out.That's awesome. Awesome. Are you a practicing artist architect? Yes, I am. Yes I am. Yeah, that's awesome. I'm glad you really clarified that for yourself and yeah. Thanks for sharing that. Yeah, it's been amazing. Awesome. Thank you so much. Thank you. All right. Let's see.How to Solve the Cold Start Problem [00:10:57] Okay. Something's wrong with my zoom because it really doesn't show names. But Glenn, go ahead.Speaker 2: [00:11:02] I, I read Pick up what they put down post. But I was wondering if you had a few more example or four could show something, cause it seems key and kick-starting things when you don't really have so much of a following yet and how you generally engage with people or what it would look like for example, do you make a blog post or do you just respond on a tweet or do you, swyx: [00:11:25] yeah those are quite, those are most often the common examples. One of the key examples, say I do is write a book review. If an author puts out a book you want to go through it and jot down like your top learnings and then send it back to them, they would probably really appreciate it.And even if you're not on social media at all, just emailing them old school style they'll probably read through your response and like either, really appreciate it probably make their day. And if you got anything wrong, they'll probably correct you and that's free consultation or teaching that you just don't get anywhere else.And I think if you do it often enough, or if you have a really high quality correspondence, then you become partners in the, you become collaborators, because then there'll be like the next time you're working on something, they'll send it to you first and go what do you think? Because. You don't have to be an expert. You do have something that you don't have. It's just at the beginning of my mind, I say that a lot. This doesn't have to be a whole lecture on ethic of what they put down, but I, if anyone else has similar ideas that, I'm interested to hear them as well.But I think I can keep coming up with stuff if you want. Does that help? I can show you, I'm still sharing my screen, so let's see. Swyx what it's node design patterns. So I read I got sent a review copy of this book, and then went through then I went through it and I just listed my top five learnings. And it really resonated with a bunch of people. I don't know if we can see the stats on this. And then they sent me the book, Speaker 3: [00:12:47] soswyx: [00:12:48] autographed and everything. I didn't have, I just had the PDF before, but not then they just send it to me from Italy. I don't know if this is like the most, this is the one that comes up for me now, because I didn't know them before. And I was just interested in this book, like no, no design patterns.And then, I started chatting with them and now they're. Some of my go-to people for no JS. And these are experts at the subject. I think all it is just like looking for opportunities in which like you're interested in something and someone else has just put out something that's super relevant to them.And just going out all out and picking up on it, like actually trying out the demo, reading the book, giving you honest feedback. A lot of the times they're not going to bite, especially if they're the superstars celebrity type people, but some of them will. And you'll you start having an honest conversation between them.And I think if you focus on people who are like, just a little bit ahead of you and not like the same celebrities that everyone goes for you have a pretty good shot at building your network. And it's often that forming that peer group, that's all you're all on like roundabout, the same level in your industry.And then you progress together over years that you build up a very strong bond. Cause that's, that becomes your cohort. And and that's all it is. I don't, I'm not a believer in any sort of growth hacky style. Like there, there are tons of like how to crush it on Twitter courses out there.The Invisible Pipeline and the 1% Rule [00:14:00]Speaker 2: [00:14:00] Can I add something in? Yeah. One of the things that I realized when I started with, whether it be writing, blogging, sharing stuff, is. The amount of people that consume information and don't actually interact with you, there will be tons and tons of people. And look, we just spoke a minute ago about, me challenge people to say, thank you.And Swyx doing the same thing that there's a term called the invisible pipeline, which is people consuming. And all of a sudden they may come along and pull your broker cars or whatever. I'm just like, yeah, I've been following you for two years. I love everything. But you may not know about those people.So I think you have to either have somebody specific in mind that you're going to write for, or you have to write for yourself what I don't mean produce content, whatever way you're going to do it. There has to be a goal or either you're really interested in and you're going to share it in your learning on your growth are there's so many mind, whether it be you a few years ago, you in the future are a friend who somebody who's obsessed about something.But I think there has to be someone in mind for. That kind of that white noise of emptiness initially, because it's not going to metrics game of subscribers and how many people and stuff like that. I think slowly you will build a following. It has to be authentic and true to you to get your true, the slow part of it at the start.swyx: [00:15:20] Yeah, totally agree with that. I pulled up my favorite version of this, which is the 1% rule. So 90% of people lurk on the internet. And then 9% actually comment or contribute and then 1% actually have original creations. So yeah, you're going to have a lot of liquors and, but they're still paying attention anyway.It just takes a while for them to come out. You've got, sometimes you've got to encourage them a little bit as well. I don't know if anyone else has like how do you start an interaction and build a following? I'm definitely not the only source I have my own perspective.Peer Group Progress [00:15:48]Speaker 1: [00:15:48] I'm happy to share just since it's new for me. One thing, I did the Rite of passage program just prior to doing this and out of that, I met a cohort of people. And so now we meet daily as a writing group. So we don't necessarily have a common interest other than writing, but it's like this group of people that I went through the program with that I know I'm supporting them, they're supporting me.That feels really nice. The other thing I did ship 30 for 30 did it get super into it? But one thing I did get out of that I really loved my accountability partner. And what I learned was I could go up and start to follow some people on Twitter and reply to their stuff and give feedback and interact with them.And then it turned not all of them. Some of them will come and start to follow me, especially if I'm producing some content. And to give an example, I think I had six Twitter followers in my. Whatever 14 years on Twitter. Cause basically I wasn't on Twitter and suddenly I'm on Twitter.And now I have 96 followers, which is it's not necessarily the number but I now know that those 90 people definitely are from like me writing and producing some content. And in turn I go and look at those people and I'm like, oh, that person's producing content. Oh, that stuff's neat.And so it becomes very personable and fun. Like you slowly start to get to know these other people and interact with them. And, and some of them I've even hopped on like a zoom call with them or whatever, or, exchanged emails to have a lengthier discussion off.Whatever platform. I would say, there's the circle group up here and BA SB, maybe you have some particular thing that you're interested in. Glen. I don't know, like some topic area, whether it's coding or psychology or downhill skiing,or maybe the intersection of all three of those, downhills gears that coded, that are into psychology, cool group discuss existentialism issue, ski downhill, and then code about it later. No but you probably can find people that you Speaker 3: [00:17:38] can Speaker 1: [00:17:39] interact with. And I guess what I'm trying to say is like meeting some people where you have some similar background, like there's already a little bit of, I want to say vulnerability, but commonality, even too, you know people versus just going out and trying to meet complete strangers, which can work, but you might get more of the crickets or as Dave was saying the invisible pipeline.swyx: [00:17:57] So yeah. Basically connects with people who are like, eh, add to your level and share your interests, right? And yeah. Yeah, like a small group of 10 or 15, like people who are also going through the same thing. It's much better than like a hundred people who have no idea who you are and never interacted with you.Speaker 2: [00:18:14] I connect with people with strong opinions. And whether they agree or disagree, I think that's whether it be online or friendships. I think I want somebody to have a viewpoint and stuff. I don't want somebody just to factually and say, this is how I deal with this. And sometimes that can happen in coding and stuff like that as well.Somebody can share some amazing code, but none of our personality or the benefit of why they saw it, how they got the realization of what they're doing or how they're going to utilize this later on as well. Those little small things I do think really help as well. They're just for me, because we're in that kind of overload of so much stuff that, everything's a Google way, but I find I follow more people who are not along and say, yeah, I have that same problem.Yeah. That really annoys me as well. swyx: [00:18:59] Yeah, you shared sharing problems. I don't know maybe it's community. This is where we're trying to Speaker 1: [00:19:05] quick shot seeing you. I saw you bringing up Dave for a Rite of passage for people now that we've been studying this code pipeline to C O D and E that Rite of passage really focuses.It jumps in at D and goes to eat pretty quickly. So it's all D and E with a little bit of CNO, like Dave Burrell gives you like a 45 minute recorded essays. Like here's how to set up the second brain. Good luck. In terms of the having someplace to collect your notes and to use it, he doesn't go deeply into that part.And and then for others who are maybe considering it, you can sign up for his 50 days of writing essays. And really if you just want the straight information, just like building a second brain where all the information is up on Chicago's blog, Dave, for L's 50 days of writing That's a hundred percent of the information that's in the course, but really you're doing it for the the community and the accountability.Speaker 2: [00:19:51] I'm happy to share a notes on his 50 days as well. I only started it the other day and know, been documented each day and I'm just pulling out tips and what he does, how he connects with people and stuff like that far, my newsletter as well. swyx: [00:20:04] That's great. That's great. Yeah. Don't forget to you're collecting all this information.You're taking all this in don't forget. Don't forget that you need to practice it. And sometimes you can do too much learning as well. But no, this is great. I actually was a subscriber for this thing. It was going to be a book of a hundred tips and then he got to 50 and then he stopped.I think he, I think, cause he, he found some other opportunity that he wanted to pursue. So he just stopped at 50 and then turned into like an email sequence. Speaker 2: [00:20:27] She was pretty fun. I finally realized as everybody's talking to know what I do in chat now or progressively somewhere else, everybody can talkyeah. swyx: [00:20:38] Use the knowledge. There we go. There we go. Appreciate that. Course Recap: Convergence vs Divergence, CO vs DE [00:20:41] Okay. W we don't have to w we'll have more conversations as we go, Glenn. I hope that's okay. I don't hear from you again, but Yeah, let us know if you have This is this is an ongoing topic anyway, but I was just going to go ahead and try to recap a little bit more, and then we can just go to the general discussion. I think I'm also trying to try to go from super granular in the course to less granular and then least granular and congrats.Can you hit 101 followers? Nice. You can all get donation coats. But, okay so what, we're, what we're trying step back from everything and go really into is to understand the structure of code, right? Cod we diverge and then we converge. We defined what it means to capture, what the capture habit is and how we focus on to our favorite problems when they find how it means to organize with the para system. And then we try to emphasize converging as well with distilling progressive summarization and then expressing the intermediate packets.And then we defined a little bit last week on project completion, as well as project kickoff this week. So that's the rough structure of this, but I think the diamond shape is really important to me. And I hope that it really comes across to you as well. That our natural tendency is to spend 90% of our time here in the divergence space.Cause it's fun because you're always learning new stuff and you don't have to lock yourself down and delete things and commit yourself to a single phrase or a sentence or paragraph or essay. But the real work comes here and it is safe and fun. Yeah. That's, let's put it that way. Yeah. No, Speaker 2: [00:22:12] but it's safe.You don't have to expose yourself to the world. You still have a sense of achievement. I've spent hours collecting and reading and stuff like that, but none of that is, self-expression swyx: [00:22:22] right, exactly. You have to realize that a bulk of the learning that happens comes when you go through the act of distillation and especially particularly when you express and you get feedback, which starts to loop to go back again.The reason that people stop is they don't get feedback. And you do need that feedback to, to keep going. That's something I wanna, I really want to distress.Your First Brain vs Your Second Brain [00:22:43] And then at the highest level, what we're really here about is I wanna, I should probably have presented this if I was any good at this this is what we, this is why we're here, right?Fundamentally understanding that the way that we are historically trained to ingest information is to put everything in our first sprain and then try to have a single threaded output that, that doesn't really have a system to it. And the way that Tiago phrases it is that, all the routine stuff to your second rate your your, the stuff that machines are good at.So your second brain, and then the stuff that humans are good at, which is all the fun stuff creative writing, problem, solving, storytelling imagination, generating hypothesis, free that up. And to step aside the flow of information. Me personally, I tend to extend this as well. The two things that machines to do better, better than us is storage and search. So it's not just remembering, but also recalling things. It can be pretty good at that as well. I love by the way, I love people who are dropping their profiles and blog posts and newsletter in the chat.If you do want to connect I'd be happy to follow up on there and I'm putting together a list on the slides as well, so people can follow up. Okay. This is not supposed to be there anyway. Okay. Yeah. Okay. So the final piece of content that Tiago talks about.So what do Speaker 2: [00:23:49] you feel is a dev all the tech problems. You have so many tech problems,swyx: [00:23:57] I'm thinking at a different level there. Speaker 2: [00:23:59] Oh yeah. Your friend's too fast for the machine. Yeah. Sorry. I forgot. swyx: [00:24:03] So go on our genius one and it's fine. Project Kickoff Checklist [00:24:06]What I really liked was the commencement style of Tiago covering how to kick off a project at the end of this course, which. I don't think we had doing cohort 10.But it was really, it would have been really helpful for me to have this mental model of okay, when you kick off a project there's a way you do this, assuming that you have set up your second brain, you first ignore your second brain first. They just bring up everything that you currently think, and then go through your second brain by going through the notebooks, searching for terms and then re rearranging things, moving things up in the para system towards your current project that you've just, that you've just formed.And I find that a, an interesting parallel to the project completion checklist that was featured last week. So you can see like a nice. One-to-one correspondence of of the, each of the sections here. And it's how you promote stuff to projects and how you demold stuff to archive or something that's not project area resource.But yeah, I just wanted to note this parallelism and I think it's something that when you have a functioning second brain and it's and it's set up to make you productive in your, in subsequent projects. Having a system like this helps you get up and running really quickly. And I saw, and I think, seeing it in motion in the demo that he did this week was really helpful.So I'll just leave it at that. Favorite Quotes [00:25:26] Okay. I'm not sure what I have after this. Oh, then I have coats. Ha my favorite part. Again, I really encourage you to collect coats, whatever resonates with you. This is just what resonates with me. So the first quote that I, that outlines is one from his slide, a modern piece of work isn't created, it's assembled, right? So we're not. We're starting from abundance. We're starting from a place of we have 80% of the work done, which is a quote from last week. We don't start anything before it's 80% complete some things, something ridiculous like that, which is obviously an exaggeration, but it goes to show how much work should be done ahead of time and through intermediate packets.So that when you're at, when you're embarking on a project, you're really doing final assembly. And that's a step change from how people normally view their projects in their creative endeavors. Second quote, your second brain is not a library. It's an idea factory. It's not the place to do research.It's where you take action. Again, so similarly I think I'm still here, so I don't want to say I've done everything that's been recommended here. I definitely treat my second brain as a library. I look at the stuff that I read and I store stuff in the right place, like a digital.Librarian I have my own Dewey decimal system and I just slept there according stuff there. And I don't really set it up for internalization or summarization. So I need to do more personally to, to make it a, more of an idea factory where I take action, because right now I just do a lot of just in case storage.And it's not meant to do that. You can do that all day long and not really produce more. So the goal is not storing more information that you're not, you shouldn't measure yourself by the amount of megabytes that you store in your second brain. It's about the output. Your first brain is the bottleneck, give it a different job, step off the flow of information.So this is the, this, the one that I really resonated with in this in this thing, right? This is the first brain and it's like the bottleneck for the information. And this is the second brain where it's doing a lot more fun stuff. Give up low value work. We know how to do it, but it gives us a false sense of security.This one's really, so to me it actually makes a lot of sense. I don't know how well it relates for you guys, but I do a lot of things that give me a sense of security. Like something that's familiar and comfortable. I just do it more because I know how to do it, and it's not really stressing, stretching my brain very much.I can listen to podcasts or watch a movie while I do it. And yeah, it's shallow work, if we really want to do deep work we have to push past that free our brains up to do the deep work. And finally the piece that we already talked about, chase what excites you and take some notes along the way.Tiago's very much promoting an inspiration driven approach where you live life more in the moment than others. Among like startup founders and tech people there's this very, there's a very involved trend of being detached right.To meditate a lot, to be stoic and to not let your emotions wash over you in any particular good or bad scenario. And telcos took us like pushing back against that and saying you should live in the moment more and see what can see where that takes you. So I liked that spiritually.Even though I know that, stoicism has, its has its benefits as well, but I just want to center that in terms of What Tiago is saying versus what he's not saying. So he's not saying be dispassionate about everything he's saying, really look for what excites you. And when that comes up, use a second brain to, to pursue that with all your heart.So yeah, that's those are my quotes. So does anyone else have, of course they want to share.Speaker 2: [00:28:35] Let's see. I want to know what you do with the quotes. swyx: [00:28:38] Right now I'm Speaker 2: [00:28:39] having to use the lowest them. Cause they're just, they're somebody else's words now. So I just want to know where they go when you were tagged as a quote, or do you add journal boards? preference tots underneath it, like you explained them swyx: [00:28:53] to us.They would be eventually quoted somewhere in one of my blog posts. That's my action. Or with tweeted. But I tried to tweet all the stuff. That's my words. Whereas if it's a blog yeah. That's Speaker 2: [00:29:02] exactly why I poured a war. That's why I would put my and perspective, on the need.And are maybe trying to see what question they're trying to answer. swyx: [00:29:10] Yeah. Yep. Sure, exactly. Okay. There's some conversation going on there. Does anyone want to share quotes? Okay. Emma D says I really like "productivity is for people with no leverage". Whoa. Who said that? Was it Tiago? Yeah, I think so. I think there Speaker 3: [00:29:24] was in the last or second swyx: [00:29:25] to last session.Yeah. Okay. I missed that. That's that's fire, man. I got nothing else to say apart from yeah. Good job. I'm stealing that one. Okay. Who else? Guy says guy, he went, why you, when you come on and then explain what your quote is. I started Speaker 3: [00:29:41] your, I've been following your practice of collecting quotes for my session.So first of all, thank you for the inspiration. I think it's really helpful to focus my thoughts, but one of the quotes that resonated was the purpose of this second brain. And Dave, you were hinting at it before as well. Like why are we doing this? And I, and Tiago mentioned it a little bit in the Q and a for this week.He said that you can use your second brain to be a better citizen, family member and human. And a lot of times we may use our second brain to collect these internet points in quotes. It doesn't really, it's like a, in a video game. It's nice. It doesn't really do anything. The purpose should be something bigger than yourself.And when you have that kind of purpose, it makes things a little bit easier and better to be of service to others that resonated with me. swyx: [00:30:22] That's really great. Yeah. Yeah, that's true. I'm very, I'm definitely easily gamified by internet points, but I know that there's more important things out there.Yeah. Glen says regarding meditation, it's rather the opposite of detaching. It's coming into closer harmony with the actuality of the experience. Whoa, whose audio Shante.John Glenn. What's the context? Speaker 2: [00:30:43] Adia. Shanti is a Rotter popular now swyx: [00:30:47] a meditation teacher. I think it's mainly popular in the states are well known, but he's also one of the few legit teachers. swyx: [00:30:57] Got it. Cool. Awesome. Yeah, I think there's a place for both. But definitely at work I try to do the more detached and stoic thing.And then in my personal stuff I definitely live in the moment more. Alright. That's it for our featured quotes? I was, I didn't have actually much else to talk about I haven't done this yet, we all have homework and there's still homework today which is to fill out the second brain snapshot thing and get access to second brain habits.I think habits are just like trending in general. If there's one thing that's probably not, there's only lightly touched on is habits here. And of course, James Clear owns that one. I'm curious and curious if if you all have have actually done this, I didn't have thoughts on habits that you're trying to develop.But think that's definitely one of those things where. Everything here that's in second brain is more or less conscious. And it's a step-change approach every single time. Whereas habits are much more focused on what James clear says, like being 1% better every single day and being automatic, they point that you don't think about it.Part of that is definitely being having your identity change to, towards being someone who does the habit without even thinking rather than having a, be some heavy lifts, like you don't even count it as work anymore. So that's something I really appreciate with with the habit faction of the productivity group type.Okay. Yeah, I was just going to open up for discussion before, before we leave. And that was definitely, I was going to share all the slides. I think we have all the sights in slide five sorry. We have all the slides in zoom. I was also going to offer my discord.I usually run a pay discord. But I'm just going to share it with everyone here, if, as a thank you for coming along if you want to, continue the conversation. I have a small group of people who talk about this stuff and we share our work and we learned in public and we talk about just, all sorts of stuff.It's more coding related. But you're all welcome to join because you've been through this journey with me. And, and this is discord, so not everyone's on this cord and I understand that, but I'm in discord. It's it's a nice place to hang out throughout the day. Q&A: Denys on Learning in Public in YouTube [00:32:47] Okay. Yeah, I'm just going to open it up for general questions and answers or if anyone has a question that has a takeaway that they want to share about this course how they've changed in, in, in their perspective.Speaker 4: [00:32:58] Hi at first I wanted to publicly thank Sean for letting me use his learn in public posts. I used it to send to my newsletter subscribers about some thoughts I was having around learning in public so I could get feedback from them.And then I could actually do a public blog post on it. And when I discovered, when I sent it to my newsletter, subscribers is their idea of learning in public was gathering information and discussing it with other people. It really wasn't like producing work. So I need a different term for it, for my field.It's not, I, so it's given me something to noodle about, and it's just interesting. How things don't always translate the way you think they're going to translate. And then the one thing I learned in doing this course, I have this thing about always wanting to do everything, right?There's one best way to do it, and I'm going to figure out the way to do it and I'm going to do it right. And then I'm going to be super effective and productive or something. And what I got from the mentor sessions is each mentor took the BSAP course materials and really customized it for what they needed to produce, what they wanted to make in the world.And so Like you Sean were talking about you know, podcasts and blog posts and a newsletter. And I was like, that was awesome. And then I go to Ali and Elizabeth's session and they during YouTube videos and they're like, yeah, I don't do any of this other stuff. I just like, I use like these two pieces and this is what I use.And I don't worry about that. No, I don't worry about doing habits. I just do what I feel like, no, I don't do a routine. I just do whatever. I feel like I have energy for that day. Like, they're just like complete opposite of like a lot of other people. So it was really helpful cause it's just like, yeah, there's like no way to mess this up.There's here's a bunch of tools you can use them how you want. Pick what you need. This is how it works together. Don't get obsessed about, you know, notion or Rome or, you know, whatever, like just, you know, make life easier for yourself here. Here's an invitation, you know, and I was like, oh, this is so much such a relief, such a relief.I I've had a good time then implementing pieces of this in making my YouTube videos. And now I have a clear vision of what I want to do with it and how to keep adding onto it without punishing myself and trying to set up this really rigid structure. swyx: [00:35:23] So, yeah, it's is that your primary, medium? I actually don't know.Is it, is it, is your YouTube connected to P ancestors Speaker 4: [00:35:33] podcast page the high swyx: [00:35:35] CAS? I'm still not used to video podcasts. This is awesome. Speaker 4: [00:35:38] Okay. Well, I started, I said the podcast started with doing like interviews with people. And then this last season, I thought I'd make it more a narrative and actually do the work in public.Right. And like, you know, but I do have interviews on there with archivists and librarians and historians and authors and stuff like that. That was the first season. And. They're just like audio without the video component. And I can't believe you're going to watch this. Oh my goodness. Of course, swyx: [00:36:09] you're doing more.You are more on YouTube than I am. I'm just, I'm just messing around. Speaker 4: [00:36:13] I am so excited. I now have a hundred subscribers and I am like, oh yeah, I hit a hundred this weekend. And what's funny is in the statistics, like when YouTube shows you the statistics, like I know like people watched like 26 hours of my videos, like in the last week.Right. But like I have a hundred subscribers, right. Like I know how many people have watched and you know, it's really funny. So it is that 1% like that are actually interacting and commenting. So swyx: [00:36:45] it is, it is. That's why, that's why I think there's. That's what, that's the rule for general audiences? Because they don't necessarily have to have anything to say.But if the response rates are much higher, if you have a conversation with someone actively in that field, right. Which is why I always wanted to try to push people towards you know, picking what others put down in a sense of like, who else is doing this work? Who else can you bounce the energy off of so that you're, you're, you're both pushing yourself in, in, in new ways.So, so that's great. Thanks. Thanks so much for sharing. Yep. No, Speaker 4: [00:37:14] you're free to watch my videos. Now. I'm used to hearing myself talk now I'm watching myself so I can handle it. But that's the hardest part. swyx: [00:37:22] The imperfection piece, like this is, this is an ideal, right? Like, particularly cause you know, Tiago has to has the model, his behavior.We shouldn't, we shouldn't, we shouldn't think that we all have to do it exactly like he does. Because we all, we don't all teach building a second brain. We have other contexts as well. So I definitely view it as like a menu where you just pick off the stuff that you like. I really like para I really like the capture tool toolkit.I think 12 favorite fibers. The 12 number is bullshit. Yeah, Speaker 4: [00:37:52] I do too. I did seven cause then I had one for each day of the week that I could like pick up and look at, you know, and kind of unit one. When I journal in the morning, I could look, you know, so yeah. But yeah, I. Be a mentor in the next session.Oh, absolutely not now. There's swyx: [00:38:08] I think it, I think it really, Speaker 4: [00:38:11] this is all the stuff I don't use with this. Wonderful. Maybe I'll maybe I'll have more done, but I swyx: [00:38:18] don't know. Well, I mean, if you, if you just see like how disorganized I am, like you're, you're, you're doing fine. Speaker 4: [00:38:24] Beautiful though. I, I really love it.It made me like re I only subscribed for a few weeks, but it it, it inspired me to be more I don't know what the word is. I guess it's vulnerability or just sharing in my newsletter part. So rather than just saying, oh, here's the latest podcast, here's the latest blog post, you know, and, you know, a couple of nice things.So it was just like, oh, I'm just going to dump. And just like, just really talk to people. Like I'm actually talking to somebody on the other end of this email versus, you know what I mean? Yeah, yeah. swyx: [00:38:54] Right, right. To your friends, right. Your friend, and, you know, make a, a letter to your friend would be like, you know, like here's, here's, what's going on in my life.And then here's some other, like, so recently what I've done, just, just to show people I forget, what's the CK thing. Oh Speaker 4: [00:39:09] God. Like I just moved my oldest daughter into her first apartment. Right. So like, you know, like talking about that a little bit, it's like, oh, you use, I can use convert kit swyx: [00:39:19] kit too.It's awesome. Yeah. I reluctantly use it. There's so many bugs. Oh, it's not Speaker 4: [00:39:23] as bad as MailChimp. That thing is awful swyx: [00:39:26] booking software, as you see all the bugs and you're like, I could fix that, but I can't. Speaker 4: [00:39:30] Oh, I do have to tell you something funny. Cause I used to script to edit my videos. And when you switch like the temporal switch or whatever, but the the transcription transcribed, like the automatic transcription instead of Denise Allen, it calls me Sid Sydney salad.swyx: [00:39:45] That's bad. It's Speaker 4: [00:39:47] really funny. No, it cracks me up. I put it on Instagram. I was like, oh, I didn't say just scripted it. I, you know, I wasn't going to say it, but it was just like my transcriber's like Sydney salad. This is Sydney salad swyx: [00:39:59] with PAs. I don't know if anyone else uses district, but you can train it.You can, you can train it. Yeah. Speaker 4: [00:40:05] I noticed that. Yeah. You've looked into it every week. I learned something new and descript to make my life easier because then at least once a week they update the software. So they're constantly like, Hey, restart it, restart it. Can you restart it again? We added more updates.I'm like stop. And they add like new swyx: [00:40:21] buttons. Oh, there we go. Yep. Right there.Yep. Every time. Well, they're, you know, they're hard for your, for your money? No, Speaker 4: [00:40:32] no, it's a great product. I, swyx: [00:40:34] i, I wanted to show people like so the, the way I do my newsletter now is I don't just drop the link. I tell you why, why. My pitch for you reading it. And then if you're not going to read it, I'm going to tell you the, the, the punchline anyway.So I don't know. I'm just like innovating. I'm just like messing around with it. Cause I don't know if this helps people or not, but it's just to kind of let it out. I would want, so that's, that's just, that's just my only guideline. So yeah, too Speaker 2: [00:41:00] pitchy, swyx: [00:41:00] just give me a link is what Speaker 2: [00:41:03] it's it's too salesy or too pitchy.Just giving me a link. Yeah. Well, I, I, I like a description and a little bit of kind of what's in it before you click. swyx: [00:41:13] Yeah, exactly. Like I just, like, I want to do things that are different from everything else I'm seeing out there. So that's my only thing. It's just like, don't even do Speaker 2: [00:41:22] that Speaker 4: [00:41:22] the same way and there's no other, there's no other genealogists doing what I'm doing.There's nobody yet. No, I'm it. I'm the only one doing this format of podcasts. There's two guys that do like a. I'm just going to say the boomer show. I'm sorry. They're just like two older guys and they're just talking, you know, and it's fun and it's, it's horrible, but it's just, it's, you know, swyx: [00:41:44] if you like, if you like storytelling, have you, have you come across them off Speaker 4: [00:41:47] the moth?No. Oh no. I mean, my kids listened to it Speaker 2: [00:41:52] and handling, Speaker 4: [00:41:53] oh wait, let me, let me write this down. Hold Speaker 2: [00:41:58] on. She's a great book called everybody writes and she has a newsletter. She has a newsletter, which she writes as a letter to you. So it's not, and I know you started doing the same thing. It's a real newsletter.We're real content. That's kind of, it's completely separate. It's nearly like a blog post and an email, but it's really, really good. And she sends it on the Sunday. Speaker 4: [00:42:21] Oh, let's do that. Okay. I've been using the, do you know the story grid format from who's the guy that wrote to do the work, the guy that works with him?swyx: [00:42:33] I have no idea. Speaker 4: [00:42:36] Yes. I don't know where my book is. Yeah. You know, the S the story grid. I use that book somewhere. The whole idea of conflict and the, the number of beats per minute. I don't have it down at all, but I'm like, I, it was one of those things. Like I could either wait till I get it perfect.Practicing it on my own, or I could just start producing episodes and people will. Yes, the story grid book. That's, it's fantastic for developing nurse narrative storytelling. swyx: [00:43:09] Okay. That's awesome. Yeah. Wow. Okay. Well, thanks for sharing. Oh, I was just going to finish the thought with if you find a really good story to tell you might want to go on the math and then tell it because they, they really, they really like good stories and you, I'm sure you have a ton.I have a Speaker 4: [00:43:27] ton. I'm doing gene genealogy research. Yeah. I have a swyx: [00:43:31] ton. Cool. I'm gonna, let's see, let's see what they did. Q&A: Meryl Johnston on Learning in Public [00:43:34] A bunch of, a bunch of people commenting. I want to answer some questions. Meryl Johnston says, what about working in public? That's actually a title of a book that someone who has, has built but that's, that's more on open source.But yeah, it's, it's absolutely a thing building in public working public producing in public Speaker 3: [00:43:48] was suggesting that I'll just quickly jump in. I was suggesting that for Dennis, when she was saying that the public term didn't resonate with her group, you are suggesting a different name for that. Yeah.I came across working in public. Cause as a concept before I, before I heard of your concept, Swyx with the learning in public. So I've done the work in public before with public podcasts to share accountability of what I'm working on. But I like the framing of the learning in public. Yeah. That's something that I've actually taken away from, from the, from these courses, trying to get things out there earlier, even if I'm learning, if it's something that I'm learning about and trying to think through and making my own knowledge face more public.So that's actually something, an outcome that I really am happy about with the course that I got my own notion, my personal blog page up using notion as part that was one of my intermediate packet tasks. That's awesome.swyx: [00:44:46] Yeah. I like the framing of learning because if you just come across like that, no one can get angry at you for them.If you've got stuff wrong, then then you, even your strongest critics can just become your, your teachers, right? Like if you, if you just listen to what they're trying to say, some people get really offended when, when you get things in their domain wrong and you just go like, yeah, I'm just, I'm just learning this thing.And, and, and listen with an open mind. I think, I think you can learn something from almost everybody. So that's, that's something I, I, I prefer the term learning rather than building or working, but they're all in the same vein, which is, you know, do, do more put stuff out earlier and get more feedback.Are there so congrats on doing that. Okay, awesome. Thanks Merrill. Let's see, Dave Dave says, I think it could help giving members of the same, the group, same guidance, guidance on how you see effective learning. Maybe share your process with them. I'm not sure is that, that address to be Speaker 2: [00:45:38] no, that was the Denise. That was both the name. I think the name is somewhat important, but I think actual guidance on helping frame things. Cause I think we have the idea of airway is the best way. And also theater people who are doing it, not your way will think their way is the best way on thing. You're going to lead by example and say, this is how I do it this way.And this is why it's so good. And this is why it's so helpful, kind of, you know, dangled the carrot in front of them.The Resistance and Gratitude Journaling [00:46:04] swyx: [00:46:04] Cool. Very cool. Steven Pressfield is also known for the war of art which I feel like it would be a travesty not to mention that because it's, as one of the most cited books for pushing through the resistance that I feel often you know, so I have a commitment to myself to publish one blog post a week.And today I did it. Literally sometimes I get unblocked and then sometimes I feel the resistance and I don't push out anything in between May 28th and June 7th. I didn't, I didn't write anything. So I did technically miss a week. But I just, I pushed out the one I knew I could deliver today just for this group, essentially.That, that I thought like, yeah. Okay. I felt guilty about last week having poor internet issues. So I just wrote up what I was going to say anyway. But yeah, War of Art, really great for identifying the resistance and saying like, it's a, it's something that everyone, everybody deals with.Okay. Dave, Dave has a screenshot here. I don't know what the screenshot says. Quick to open. All right. Am I going to regret opening this, Dave? All right. You want to talk through this? What is this? Speaker 2: [00:47:02] You have some brilliant. If it was like, like a side profile in a year or something was like, I'm in the room.This is at the end of my newsletter. That's going out later on today. So I just thought it was quite relevant to share what we were talking about. Derek could have, you know, actually I'm panting people and that's what I'm trying to do. And that's what I'm trying to encourage. And that's kind of prior to the forum, I thought I'm going to put on the bottom of my newsletters is people that have inspired me or given me a voice or helped me out.I'm going to try to actually kind of those people as well to mention them. swyx: [00:47:35] Yeah. Yeah. That's really, that's really great. Yeah. So I think a gratitude practice is really helpful, particularly for just like enjoying life in, in Just, I think sometimes when we feel down, when we don't, we don't necessarily remember how, how lucky we are sometimes.So having a gratitude journal like that can be, can be really helpful. It's like Speaker 2: [00:47:53] you wrote this newsletter today. It really is. You're talking about gratitude minors that are starting to put technology on how I went on the tour and looked at old famine houses in Ireland from the 18th century on how technology back then was a blacksmith and a forage and a hammer and how we're.So, you know, we've luxury of kind of multinational media company of 20 years ago. We've more reached than they data right now from our laptop. And I was talking about how we needed to kind of be grateful and actually shared it with the world as well. This is so strange. It's like take a screenshot to my machine today.swyx: [00:48:32] Well, I mean, I I'm saying it based off of your prompt, so I did have something to go off of. Don't Just Write Essays: Remove Resistance [00:48:37]Oh, I should mention for those people who are starting on new blondes you might get caught in this. I I'm currently in this trap, so I'll, I'll show you something I'm struggling with right now, which is that everything I write is basically an essay.Some of them are very high. A very high impact. So for example, this was a very, this was a very highly traffic blog posts of mine. And people expect quite a lot out of it. But some of them are just tutorials, like how to do X and it's just my notes for myself. So I think, I think there's, there should be some kind of hierarchy in your, in your blogs.If you're setting up a blog of like something, that's an essay, something that's a tutorial or something, that's a note. So I don't think I necessarily do this very well. But I want it to give you an idea that like having some kind of separation of like, okay, these are essays. I don't have to put these out constantly, but notes are very low bar that I don't have to be a big deal.They can just be like a three you three sentence thing. And, and that's something that I see, I see coming up a lot in, in other people's work. So I think I may have covered this, but I just want to cover it again. Who's the guy that does five years. I care. There we go. This guy I may have talked about this, but a lot of these tiles are just like PIL, and then you just kind of block this here and that's, that's, that's an intermediate packet, right?Because that's a, that's a reusable thing that you can you can come back and tie up into a bigger blog post, or just use that as a reference for yourself. So that's, that's one form of Tio. The other one I did not cover in previous sessions is Nikita Boulevard. If there's, if there's a proper Russian speaker here, let me know.But this is, he has his own Wiki, so he just throws in like, okay, I'm interested in writing writing prompts. Great. And it's just, it's just updated over time, you know? I'm gonna, I'm gonna drop the link here so that you can see it. Glen says, it looks like he's using dead. John. I think he's using GitBook maybe then John's the, the trading tool.I'm not sure, but like having a place essentially where it's not a big deal to drop a piece of information and store it somewhere. And this is a public second brain, essentially. Right? I really like this compared to what I have. I just have a bunch of messages. And I feel restricted. I feel restricted.I feel the resistance, you know, like every, like, AF especially after I have a good one, then the next one has to top it and I, and I never do. So then I just stopped writing for two weeks. So set yourself up so that you don't Yeah, fall into this trap, essentially because I'm facing it right now. And it's a real problem that I'm dealing with.So I like this, I like this approach. I like the TIL approach. And just any other way, which in which you can unblock itself from, from publishing something out there that doesn't have to be a big deal. Okay. Okay. I'll give you one more example and then I'll shut up, which is this, these CSS-Tricks has been doing this a lot again, so I, you know, I'm very developer focused, but here, this blog post is one paragraph.Sorry. No, well, it it's, it's riffing off of someone else's blog posts. Let me, let me see if I can find a better example for you. Cause I don't think maybe I can just find his work. Speaker 2: [00:51:32] I know what you're talking about, but do you like swyx: [00:51:34] those posts? Well, he's, he's adding his commentary, you know, that's that's it it's it's it doesn't have to be a big deal.So maybe you don't, maybe you don't like it just cause like it's, it's, it's so minor. But it's actually substantial part Speaker 2: [00:51:46] of the behind CSS tricks that, that I find the value is to go and look for something. And then I learned that their article, I would be thinking, great, I'm going to get what I've used to.I'm going to get to swyx: [00:51:56] detail in here, look at this, like it's someone else's blog posts and he's just taking the most relevant parts. And then it says link to the blog posts. So it's a form of progressive summarization, but it's a blog post for him. But like, Hey, you know, he agrees. That's why he's quoting it.Speaker 2: [00:52:12] Well, I do agree with that, that if it can be as short as possible card is too much of that going to influence I'm writing a blog, it has to be at least 800 awards swyx: [00:52:23] know, I'll ask you what Speaker 2: [00:52:23] SEO bullshit swyx: [00:52:25] stuff. Yeah, exactly, exactly. So I really like this. I really like this idea of like, just removing resistance, you know, it doesn't, it's not about this format.It's not about my format or whatever, but just if you feel resistance like I don't Speaker 2: [00:52:38] think for people to start note though, I think for people starting now, you need to be cautious that this is not a shortcut to publishing more and more, and you haven't given it that time to kind of marinade in your consciousness as well.Three Strikes Rule [00:52:51]swyx: [00:52:51] Yeah. So yeah, th I would say, I would say to something on the order of like, that's why, that's why I have the three strikes rule. Right. Something, I, I definitely think about a lot in terms of like the first time you come across, the first time you come across something, you've just heard about it.So you don't have that much of an opinion. The second time you've started to explain it, but you also found it useful to, to explain the second time and the third time you have enough of a context to start writing about it. So I find, I find this very helpful for moving that, that diamond leftwards because there are natural positions for the diamond to be all, all the way shifted to the right this diamond the code diamond, right?Like the natural position is to be all the way here. We need to, we need to find ways to move it all the way, all the way left as much as possible to, to try to convert more. Okay. So, IP says 35 principles post. You got it coming up. I do have a search on my site. Okay. So, yeah. All right. All right.Guy Margalith on Fear and Your Second Brain [00:53:40]So I'm gonna, I'm gonna leave it there in terms of like the content that I have. But I wanted to leave some room for a guy since you're, since guys here. Not to put you on the spot again, but like, people love no last time you took over, what, what do you normally cover in your session?Yeah, I just recap Speaker 3: [00:53:55] yours actually. No, I mean only partially joking. I I've gotten such wonderful content today from you and also from others, Denise in particular. So thank you for that. I'm actually going to quote you. I hope you don't mind Denise in my session tomorrow. For me it's tomorrow, I don't know for others.So I would say the, the one big takeaway I got from your sessions and from Tiago sessions and from taking the course again and teaching it is something that's been really bugging me about my second brain. And I couldn't really articulate it as clearly until this until probably this week. There was a, in the premium Q and a, for those who are in the premium option for building a second brain Tiago had, well, one of the, I think one of the students also had a fantastic quote and I'm going to piece it in the chat here because it really resonated with me.And here I found it and just bear with me for one second. While I pasted in here, the student was Andrea Ames and she said she was talking about fear, fear, and your second brain. And for me, this really resonated you're talking about the resistance a bit. Swyx and for me it's that resistance is fear b
This episode not about the CKA preparation because there are a lot of stories already.It seems we are ready for the CKAP (Certified Kubernetes Administrator Professional)Let's speak about CKA and its future maybe.In this episode:- what is CKA- "lifehack how to save 60 minutes"- and how I see the future of this certificationMy Medium Article:https://medium.com/@den.vasyliev/it-seems-we-are-ready-for-the-ckp-certified-kubernetes-professional-91b1e3e0f9b6CNCF Official:https://www.cncf.io/certification/cka/gitBook:https://docs.linuxfoundation.org/tc-docs/certification/lf-candidate-handbookhttps://docs.linuxfoundation.org/tc-docs/certification/tips-cka-and-ckadhttps://onlinecoursedownloads.com/certified-kubernetes-administrator-cka-full-courseExam Consists:Application Lifecycle Management 8%Installation, Configuration & Validation 12%Core Concepts 19%Networking 11%Scheduling 5%Security 12%Cluster Maintenance 11%Logging / Monitoring 5%Storage 7%Troubleshooting 10%Some useful lifehacks:1. bind ‘“e[A”: history-search-backward'&&bind ‘“e[B”: history-search-forward'2. source >~/.vimrc
On this week's episode, Steph is joined by thoughtbotter German Velasco. German and Steph chat about remote work and the rewards and challenges of their new(ish) roles as Development Team Leads. German also shares that he is writing a book! German shares his approach for defining a MVB (Minimum Viable Book), ideas for how to collect feedback, and plans for publishing. Lastly, they discuss a vim plugin that lives up to the hype. This episode is brought to you by Datadog (http://datadog.com/thebikeshed). Click through to get a free 14-day trial and a free Datadog t-shirt! To register for the free online workshop "How to Supercharge Your Rails App with a Code Audit", visit https://thoughtbot.com/events/code-audit-workshop. GitBook (https://www.gitbook.com/) Michael Hartl - The Ruby on Rails Tutorial (https://www.railstutorial.org/) Workshop - Being Human in the Absence of Humans (https://info.thoughtbot.com/remote-product-team-resources) Workshop - How to stay agile when building compliant health tech products (https://info.thoughtbot.com/building-compliant-health-tech-products-recording) vim-fugitive (https://github.com/tpope/vim-fugitive) Write good commit messages by blaming others (https://thoughtbot.com/blog/write-good-commit-messages-by-blaming-others) Upcase course featuring vim-fugitive (https://thoughtbot.com/upcase/videos/git-vim-and-git) More episodes with German: - 188: A Function by Any Other Name (https://www.bikeshed.fm/188) - 167: I Feel Like We Should've Solved This By Now (https://www.bikeshed.fm/167)
Gavin flies solo on this weeks show. We discuss the release or Ortus's new commercial product CommandBox Service Manager 1.0.0. We talk about an update to the CommandBox Fusion Reactor module that now supports external conf files. We also discussed an upcoming Webinar on CBORM which just released version 2.2.0 last week. We talked about 15% end of summer discounts for CFCamp and how the early bird is still going for Adobe's CF Summit Conference in Las Vegas in October, get your tickets before they remember to up the prices. The CF Summit call for speakers is now closed and speakers and sessions for CF Summit have been announced. In addition to the ColdFusion Specialist Certificate Program workshop prior to the conference, there are now 3 more workshops. We also discuss the CF Summit Ortus Trainings for after the Conference and how to register for them... including a new Discount Code for all of our trainings. We talk about Ortus Solutions' Bootcamp training in India with Luis Majano ( which is getting closer to being sold out ) and mention how CF Camp is coming up fast, tickets are now available, and Brad and Eric announce the workshops they'll be leading at CF Camp. We spotlight a lot of great blog posts, too many to list, so listen to the show. We show off our ForgeBox module of the Week, this week, we discuss how the new CommandBox Gitbook Formatter module from Brad Wood and Scott Steinbeck to help export your Gitbook into PDF and mobi and epub in the near future. Our VS Code Hint Tip and Trick of the week is Import Cost to give you a better feel of the cost of your dependencies in Javascript and or TypeScript. We finish the podcast by thanking our Patreon supporters. For the show notes - visit the website https://cfmlnews.modernizeordie.io/episodes/modernize-or-die-cfml-news-for-august-27th-2019 Music from this podcast used under Royalty Free license from SoundDotCom https://www.soundotcom.com/ and BlueTreeAudio https://bluetreeaudio.com
Voici l'épisode #34 de Gône Digital ! Mon invitée est Simmoni de Weck, Directrice talent & opérations chez Gitbook, une startup qui a développé un outil open-source permettant aux développeurs de créer de la documentation interne et externe. Simmoni nous parle de son parcours entre le Japon et la France, ses engagements dans diverses associations et bien d'autres choses, à découvrir dès maintenant. Bonne écoute ! Tous ses liens, outils, bonnes adresses ici
We discuss the security vulnerability patched by Adobe, urging you to patch your servers. CBORM 2.0 is released, with a new GitBook for CBORM, as well as the new OrtusBooks.com landing page to get to all of Ortus' Git books easily, all from one place. We ask for your help to spread the word about the podcast. We discuss early bird being extended for Adobe's CF Summit Conference in Las Vegas in October, call for speakers is now closed and speakers and sessions for CF Summit have been announced. In addition to the ColdFusion Specialist Certificate Program workshop prior to the conference, there are now 2 more workshops. We also discuss the CF Summit Ortus Trainings for after the Conference and how to register for them... including a new Discount Code for all of our trainings. We talk about Ortus Solutions' Bootcamp training in India with Luis Majano and mention how CF Camp is coming up fast, tickets are now available, and Brad and Eric announce the workshops they'll be leading at CF Camp. The call for speakers is now closed for CF Camp and speakers will be announced soon.We spotlight a lot of great blog posts, too many to list, so listen to the show. We show off our ForgeBox module of the Week,JSON Web Tokens JWT and our VS Code Hint Tip and Trick of the week being LiveShare. We finish the podcast by thanking our Patreon supporters. For the show notes - visit the website https://cfmlnews.modernizeordie.io/episodes/modernize-or-die-cfml-news-for-july-30th-2019 Music from this podcast used under Royalty Free license from SoundDotCom https://www.soundotcom.com/ and BlueTreeAudio https://bluetreeaudio.com
Jarrett Quon is our guest this episode! Los Angeles in tha house! We talk about the fallacy of "talent" and the hard-workin fun-work of practice and learning and practicing some more. Rob wears his arm out drilling holes. Jarrett asks what a swimming pool, BBQ grill, and water bottle have in common. Taylor hones his routing and printing skillz! Oh, and ABOLISH ICE. We also talk to Jarrett about his experiences with the Glowforge laser cutter. You can check out our projects at http://projects.opposablepodcast.com Props to Blondihacks, Nik, Walter, Federico, Kelly, Luke, Mike and Tim! They're our top Patreon supporters! Join 'em at: https://www.patreon.com/opposablethumbs Special Guest: Jarrett Quon.
Wir gehen über die Bücher, und zwar Elektronische, sogenannte E-Books. Dabei gibts natürlich Lesetips, aber vorallem gehts auch um die verschiedenen Formate, Kopierschutz, Programme und Lesegeräte. In dieser Folge durften wir Seegras als Gast begrüssen. Trackliste: Deine Eltern – Lied, Buch, Film Jakob Bienenhalm – Schau mich bitte nicht so an Felibejo – Gutes Buch Rocketbook :: Rocketbook Test bei Golem 1998 Kepub :: Kobos ePub Format Standard E-Books :: Free and liberated E-Books Izzy's E-Book Library :: Deutsche und englische E-Books Manybooks :: Free E-Books Archive.org :: The Internet Archive (alle möglichen Medien) Project Gutenberg :: Free E-Books Projekt Gutenberg :: Freie deutsche E-Books Onyx Neon Press :: Onyx Neon Press Apress :: Apress Open Free Learning :: Free Learning Programming E-Books Baen :: Free Baen Library FiM Fiction :: My Little Pony: Friendship is Magic Fanfiction Project Sunflower :: Excellent Sci-Fi Story where Humans meet Ponies Long Road To Friendship :: Spielt nach dem ersten Equestria Girls Film Spectacular Seven :: Fortsetzung zu "Long Road To Friendship" HumbleBundle :: Humble Comics Bundles Gitbook :: Free E-Books about various computer topics FBReader built-in :: FBReader's built in book sources Feedbooks :: Deutsche E-Books unter Public Domain Smashwords :: E-Books from independent authors E-Book Reader Software :: Seegras' Liste von E-Book Reader Programmen und Tools Leanpub :: Publish E-Books Bookbaby :: Print E-Books on demand Lulu :: Online Self Publishing Books and E-Books Book on Demand :: Eigenes Buch und E-Book produzieren Press Books :: Print Books on demand Epubli :: Print Books on demand MBook :: Print Books on demand Publisher Index :: A head to head comparison of major Print On Demand publishers. Bookmarket :: Print Books on demand File Download (178:36 min / 189 MB)
Wir gehen über die Bücher, und zwar Elektronische, sogenannte E-Books. Dabei gibts natürlich Lesetips, aber vorallem gehts auch um die verschiedenen Formate, Kopierschutz, Programme und Lesegeräte. In dieser Folge durften wir Seegras als Gast begrüssen. Trackliste: Deine Eltern – Lied, Buch, Film Jakob Bienenhalm – Schau mich bitte nicht so an Felibejo – Gutes Buch Rocketbook :: Rocketbook Test bei Golem 1998 Kepub :: Kobos ePub Format Standard E-Books :: Free and liberated E-Books Izzy's E-Book Library :: Deutsche und englische E-Books Manybooks :: Free E-Books Archive.org :: The Internet Archive (alle möglichen Medien) Project Gutenberg :: Free E-Books Projekt Gutenberg :: Freie deutsche E-Books Onyx Neon Press :: Onyx Neon Press Apress :: Apress Open Free Learning :: Free Learning Programming E-Books Baen :: Free Baen Library FiM Fiction :: My Little Pony: Friendship is Magic Fanfiction Project Sunflower :: Excellent Sci-Fi Story where Humans meet Ponies Long Road To Friendship :: Spielt nach dem ersten Equestria Girls Film Spectacular Seven :: Fortsetzung zu "Long Road To Friendship" HumbleBundle :: Humble Comics Bundles Gitbook :: Free E-Books about various computer topics FBReader built-in :: FBReader's built in book sources Feedbooks :: Deutsche E-Books unter Public Domain Smashwords :: E-Books from independent authors E-Book Reader Software :: Seegras' Liste von E-Book Reader Programmen und Tools Leanpub :: Publish E-Books Bookbaby :: Print E-Books on demand Lulu :: Online Self Publishing Books and E-Books Book on Demand :: Eigenes Buch und E-Book produzieren Press Books :: Print Books on demand Epubli :: Print Books on demand MBook :: Print Books on demand Publisher Index :: A head to head comparison of major Print On Demand publishers. Bookmarket :: Print Books on demand File Download (178:36 min / 189 MB)
関連リンク Kyoto.js 12 - connpass 2017-01-04のJS: PostCSS概要、Chrome開発者ツール、FuseBox - JSer.info PostCSS まとめ - Qiita Optimise your web development workflow 2016 Fuse-Box bundler / API Reference Node.js Interview Questions and Answers (2017 Edition) | @RisingStack [https://tylermcginnis.com/react-interview-questions/) Front-End Performance Checklist 2017 (PDF, Apple Pages) – Smashing Magazine 2017-01-11のJS: Node.js v7.4.0とnpm v4、PhantomJS 2.5.0 Beta、クリーンコード - JSer.info npm/CHANGELOG.md at v4.0.5 · npm/npm · GitHub Comparison with QtWebKit 5.6 · annulen/webkit Wiki · GitHub 縦書きWeb普及委員会 たてよこWebアワード Flow Runtime Front-end Handbook 2017 · GitBook JavaScript Weekly Issue 316: January 5, 2017 The Web Bluetooth module for Angular – Google Developers Experts – Medium Web Bluetooth API - Chrome Platform Status Procedural Texture Generator in javascript
Ben talks to Sir John Hargrave, CEO of Media Shower, about his new book Mind Hacking on the power of reprogramming one's thoughts to maintain new habits, and innovations to the traditional publishing model. Media Shower Mind Hacking CBT Therapy Philsophy Software is Eating the World- Marc Andreessen GitBook Sir John on Twitter
This week, Dave and Gunnar talk about: Dave’s Russian agents, VMware’s nightmarish Docker future, everyone learns what “navigator” is in Greek. Cпасибо? Dave’s article is mentioned in Russian D&G bait: Will Docker and VMware Compete? Betteridge’s law of headlines Libswarm and Apache Mesos will help with management Red Hat and Google Collaborate on Kubernetes to Manage Docker Containers at Scale Learn more here Linux Wants Automakers to Stop Failing at Infotainment by Using Common Software Joe Brockmeier has a new podcast Silence is golden: Video Essay Beautifully Shows Martin Scorsese’s Use of Silence in Film 10 Cent Beer Night Tim Russert of NBC’s Meet the Press was a student at at the time: “I went with $2 in my pocket. You do the math.” Cutting Room Floor Today in Videoconferencing Entlistungsfreude: The satisfaction achieved by crossing things off lists GitBook: no excuses HT Erich Morisse: DOD’s industry is “Accounting”, per LinkedIn Ohio news flash: Alice Cooper inducted into the White Castle Hall of Fame Speaking of Cleveland You talkin’ to me? Next time you’re in Austin, check out Robert De Niro’s Taxi Cab License Used to Prepare for Taxi Driver Also at the Ransom Center, a chilling World War I exhibit that Gunnar really enjoyed We Give Thanks Erich Morisse for the civics lesson.
本期由 Terry 和 Daniel 主持,邀请到了 Andor Chen 以及 Rei 一起聊聊技术类书籍的翻译以及自出版的相关,包括现状,工具,平台,方法等一系列问题。 Ruby on Rails 教程 How to build a blog engine in 15 minutes with ruby on rails Creative Commons The Ruby on Rails Tutorial Michael Hartl Web开发敏捷之道 Ruby程序设计语言 burr Leanpub 豆瓣阅读 CoffeeScript小书 J·K·罗琳 图灵社区 SelfStore Stripe Sphinx Doc AsciiDoc Atlas Design Code GitBook softcover Special Guests: Andor Chen and Rei.