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In this episode, JB and Robert Guss (DX Engineer @ Coherence) discuss what is like being a follower of Jesus Christ and a Developer within a secular industry, that is, the tech industry. This can be very hard for many to discuss because of possible persecution in today's society. Still, JB and Robert step out in faith to encourage fellow Christian Developers to remain strong in Christ. Robert Guss' Mentions & Links: Coherence - https://withcoherence.com/ How To Code - https://www.howtocode.io/ Twitter - https://twitter.com/howtocode_io/ You are invited to join us over at the codeFellowship( ) Community - https://discord.gg/eK97ZnECPk Follow us on Social Media: Twitter - https://twitter.com/code_fellowship LinkedIn - https://www.linkedin.com/company/codefellowship/ You can support the podcast and our ministry by buying us a
Today, we talk to Tom Arra. Tom is a Program Manager at Very Good Ventures. Previously, he worked as Product Owner at BMW, Microsoft, and Nokia. We talked about his experience with Flutter as a Product Owner.First, we briefly discussed how Tom switched from Software Development to Product Ownership and Program Management. Then, Tom shared his experience with Flutter at BMW and Very Good Ventures.We learned how Flutter got its way into BMW, and how the company managed to adopt the technology. Tom's and BMW's experience with Flutter was positive: most developers could focus on writing Dart code, ship apps for multiple platforms while maintaining app quality, performance and delivering value to customers on time. Flutter also helped with working with designers and delivering beautiful apps on both iOS and Android.We talked about open-source at bigger organizations, as well as a couple of examples from VGV's open-source projects. We talked about how software quality matters and why the 100% test coverage can improve stability and prevent regressions.Guest: Tom ArraWeb tomarra.comLinkedIn linkedin.com/in/tomarraVery Good VenturesWeb verygood.venturesSuccess StoriesBetterment Success StoryHamilton Success StoryOpen-source projectsGitHub organizations @VGVentures, @VeryGoodOpenSourcevery_good_clivery_good_analysisvery_good_coverageHost: Vince VargaTwitter @vincevargadevGitHub @vincevargadevLinkedIn @vincevargadevWeb vincevarga.dev
For more information on how to get Blake’s help for your company, or if you want to know more about Blake Connally's work, Visit:http://modsi.com/https://www.instagram.com/eazy/Join our Facebook community here!https://www.facebook.com/groups/faceyourfreedom/LINK TO YOUTUBE VIDEO VERSION:https://rebrand.ly/abc15CONNECT WITH US:James Westinhttps://www.instagram.com/jameswestin/https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCiqtNvzoNRah409jpohg7aQ
Dan was a blast to talk to. He has a very real approach to development and hearing him talk about how "If I can do this anyone can" will give anyone the permission to shoot for that project you feel you cannot do.
A great time talking to Dan about more general development topics. Dan has a lot of practical advice and some opinions that I could not agree with more around failing fast, knowing how to identify what will bring value to your project and team communication.
Another aftershow with Matthew where we discuss community, using domain knowledge and types can make complex projects easier, and sometimes forcing yourself to think how you use data by not using primitives in a project.
Matthew and I dive deep into why he built elm-markup and the power that the Elm parser and types give you. You have to listen to this episode. Matthew is a really fun guy to talk to, but also a really smart one too and he breaks the implementation down in a way that will help anyone.
Another fun conversation after the implementation story stops. Jim has a lot of experience and wisdom to share so buckle up and enjoy the conversation.
In this episode Jim Carlson and I discuss how he brought Latex to the browser and made a better writing experience for Markdown and LaTex on the web.
In this after show episode Martin and I talk about how Elm empowers you as a developer to tackle the projects or problems that you did not feel confident in taking on in other languages.
In this episode I chat with Martin Janiczek to discuss how he built elm-browser and what it took him to build a custom elm text editor.
In this after show episode Brian and I talk about premortems, the most important skills he has learned the longer he works in Elm, and the main differences between large Elm applications and other small projects.
In this episode I chat with Brian Hicks from NoRedInk to discuss how they use a custom element to interface with Quill, a JavaScript rich text editor.
The reason for the this podcast is straightforward, to help Elm developers get better together by listening to real implementation stories from the people who have done the work. Elm as a language and the community are young and the amount of resources and examples from teams or individuals covering the details of implementing an Elm codebase could be better, and that is what I want to help with.
Chris Oliver is founder of Go Rails an online computer programming teaching program that teaches developers how to create new website features. Chris Oliver is an extraordinary thinker, a person that can imagine entirely novel solutions to very complex problems.Find Chris on Twitter @Excid3Find Vance of Twitter @VanceCroweChris Oliver's Go Rails program is used by more than 22,000 people and Oliver is considered an expert in his field, being regularly invited to deliver talks at software developer conferences.Chris, along with Square founder Jim McKelvey, founded Launch Code a nationally recognized pair-programming school that teaches people to code. Chris uses the mantra "Do things that scare you" which has led him to programming at companies in New York City, Saint Louis, Germany and be regularly recruited by Silicon Valley companies. Chris Oliver hosts two podcasts "Business Time" a podcast about what it is like to start a business from the perspective of two software developers, and "Remote Ruby" a podcast for Ruby developers.