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Sponsored By: Panelists Richard Littauer | Justin Dorfman | Eric Berry Guest Zeno Rocha (https://zenorocha.com/) Liferay Cloud (https://www.liferay.com/products/dxp-cloud) | Dracula Pro (https://draculatheme.com/pro/) Show Notes In this episode we talk with Zeno Rocha. He is the Chief Product Officer at Liferay Cloud, a newly created Liferay, Inc division. He is responsible for crafting the product strategy, shaping the features, and defining the future of DXP Cloud. Zeno also created the popular Dracula theme. We talk about the success of clipboard.js, Dracula theme, and the importance not just creating the code, but promoting is as well. 2:38 Zeno talks about how he started out as an Open Source developer. He also explains what the developer scene is like in Brazil. 05:15 Zeno has spoken at over 110 conferences now and Richard is interested to know why he has this drive to get more views and work on social problems. 9:54 Zeno explains how he got involved in Dracula Theme and clipboard.js. Let’s just say there are 28,000 stars. 11:54 Zeno gets into the importance of promoting libraries that we create. If you want to reach and help more people. We as a group need to promote! He discusses what he did to promote his stuff. 15:45 One of the guys asked Zeno how did he get from zero to 5,000 stars overnight. He explains it’s not because of Hacker News but from something else. 18:20 Zeno talks about his design capabilities with Dracula. He says he’s not a designer or a marketeer. 20:18 Justin mentions about how he founded a project called BootstrapCDN and how an influencer helped shoot the usage up in one night. 22:54 Richard wonders how Zeno chooses his projects and how does he plan to have projects live beyond him, in terms of Dracula, which is a theming project that has grown beyond him. Zeno explains a hospital stay and a stolen computer is involved in this, so listen on. 30:34 Richard is curious about Dracula Pro and that it’s monetized but how does it work. Zeno answers this talking about dark mode and a keyboard that was crated for Dracula that had record sales. 32:57 Zeno reaches a point where he says he needs to learn about sales to make money. He finds a book that he reads that taught his some very interesting lessons. Quotes 07:14 “If you really want to learn something you have to teach it.” 08:10 “If I learn that one framework and learn that one language, then I am going to be successful.” 12:07 “If you want to get traction, if you want to reach more people…then you have to spend time promoting to others. 22:36 “Teach first, be welcoming first, communicate 10 times more than you code.” 30:56 “Typically I never monetize my work.” 39:49 “Email is not dead. Whoever says that never sent a newsletter. It works.” Spotlight 41:07 Justin’s spotlight this week is SHML.xyz (shell markup language) 41:49 Eric’s spotlight is Thoughtbot. Go on github.com/thoughtbot/laptop also a subscription to Dracula Pro, found on Draculatheme.com. 43:41 Richard’s spotlight is Caigmod.com (a newsletter). 44:30 Zeno’s spotlight is HTML5 Boilerplate. Links Zeno Rocha (https://zenorocha.com/) Zeno Rocha Twitter (https://twitter.com/zenorocha?ref_src=twsrc%5Egoogle%7Ctwcamp%5Eserp%7Ctwgr%5Eauthor) Zeno Rocha Linkedin (https://www.linkedin.com/in/zenorocha) Zeno Rocha GitHub (https://github.com/zenorocha) Dracula Theme (https://draculatheme.com/) GitHub/Alfred Workflows (https://github.com/zenorocha) Launch: An Internet Millionaire’s Secret Formula TO Sell Almost Anything Online, Build A Business You Love, And Live The Life Of Your Dreams. (https://www.amazon.com/Launch-Internet-Millionaires-Anything-Business/dp/1630470171/ref=sr_1_5?keywords=launch&qid=1583117642&sr=8-5) SHML.xyz (https://odb.github.io/shml/) Thoughtbot (https://github.com/thoughtbot/laptop) Craigmod.com (https://craigmod.com/) HTML5 Boilerplate (https://html5boilerplate.com/) GitHub: How did the repo get 5000 stars in a few days? (https://github.com/zenorocha/clipboard.js/issues/56) Hacker News-Modern Copy to Clipboard (https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=10301881) Special Guest: Zeno Rocha.
Di episode bonus ini saya akan bercerita tentang pengalaman pertama saya menghadiri Chrome Dev Summit 2018. Sehari sebelum acara Chrome Dev Summit, saya bertemu dengan Mas Ariya Hidayat yang memang domisili di San Jose, dekat dengan lokasi hotel dan venue Experts Summit. Dan saya diberi bocoran bahwa Chrome Dev Summititu serunya adalah bagian networking-nya karena untuk sesi talks-nya dapat dinikmati secara live-streaming via youtube. Dan itulah yang saya lakukan! Pastinya banyak developer kelas dunia berseliweran disana, sebagian besar karyawan Google sih, beberapa idola saya. Jadi sekalian berburu selfie atau sekedar say hi. Setelah nonton beberapa sesi, terutama sesi yang dibawakan oleh pak Paul Irish tentang performa dan tools lighthouse.. eh, ternyata pak Paul malah nongkrong jaga stand lighthouse. Ngga kebayang sih, orang sepenting beliau masih sempat ikutan jaga stand. Ya mumpung beliau idola saya sejak HTML5 Boilerplate, say hi dan foto bareng tentunya. Saat dulu diminta untuk membawakan materi tentang Progressive Web Apps di TechInAsia Product Development Conference 2017 saya banyak belajar topik tersebut dari online course ini. Instrukturnya Pete LePage yang sangat, sangat lucu dan membawakan materi dengan menarik. Jauh dari kata boring. Saya yakin beberapa teman-teman di Indonesia pernah bertemu atau melihat bapak Pete ini karena beliau pernah datang ke Indonesia untuk mengisi materi workshop PWA. Di hari kedua CDS sekilas saya melihat sosok tersebut. Awalnya saya lupa namanya sampai harus googling dulu supaya ingat namanya. Kemudian tentu, saya bertemu dengan Jeff Posnick yang menginterview saya dan meloloskan saya menjadi GDE. Menariknya, saya sempat bertemu pak Jeff ini dihari pertama, tapi saya ngga ngeh kalo itu dia. Beda banget tampilannya di video call dengan aslinya, jadi pangling saya. Ketika ngobrol dengan Mas Yohan saya bilang pengen ketemu pak Jeff, dia kaget. “Lah, yang kemaren sebelah gue i Lalu di hari kedua atau hari terakhir, saya bisa bertemu developer heroes seperti pak Ben Galbraith, pak Dion Almaer, ibu Elizabeth Sweeny, bang Addy Osmanidan om Alex Russell! Itu dia cerita singkatnya. Oh iya, agar tidak ketinggalan informasi terbaru dari podcast ini, silakan subscribe ke email newsletter disini.
Darcy Clarke joined the show to talk about his repo on the HTML5 Boilerplate org on GitHub “Front-end Developer Interview Questions”. We discussed why the repo has been so successful, the challenges of translating a text document into multiple languages, managing contributions, the art of interviewing, how the expectations of front-end developers have evolved over time, and how to stay relevant in our fast moving industry.
Darcy Clarke joined the show to talk about his repo on the HTML5 Boilerplate org on GitHub “Front-end Developer Interview Questions”. We discussed why the repo has been so successful, the challenges of translating a text document into multiple languages, managing contributions, the art of interviewing, how the expectations of front-end developers have evolved over time, and how to stay relevant in our fast moving industry.
Divya and Jim discuss web tools for the open web, some of the tools that the Adobe Web Platform team has created, and some of the open source projects like HTML5 Please and HTML5 Boilerplate. We end with a brief talk of SVG and some of the SVG tools that Divya's team is working on.
In this Treehouse Quick Tip, Nick explains how to get a head start on your next project with HTML5 Boilerplate. Boilerplate is a front-end template that gives you everything you need to make your HTML5-based site ready for any browser.
In this Treehouse Quick Tip, Nick explains how to get a head start on your next project with HTML5 Boilerplate. Boilerplate is a front-end template that gives you everything you need to make your HTML5-based site ready for any browser.
In this episode of The Treehouse Show, Nick Pettit (@nickrp) and Jason Seifer (@jseifer) talk about HTML5 Boilerplate, the new Firefox beta, and the app review of the week is Moom.
In this episode of The Treehouse Show, Nick Pettit (@nickrp) and Jason Seifer (@jseifer) talk about HTML5 Boilerplate, the new Firefox beta, and the app review of the week is Moom.
Adam and Wynn caught up with Paul Irish of Google’s Chrome developer relations team to talk about HTML5, JavaScript, CSS3, polyfills, and more.
Adam and Wynn caught up with Paul Irish of Google’s Chrome developer relations team to talk about HTML5, JavaScript, CSS3, polyfills, and more.
Being a front-end designer used to mean pixel hacking and endless rounds of pain while trying to make sites and applications "look the same in each browser". Thankfully, we now live in more interesting times. But as we strive to make our web apps a pleasure to use, the vast array of tools and techniques available to us present their own set of challenges. In this session you will learn to ask the right questions to guide your choice of tools and the design. Find out how to creatively use new features of CSS3 (gradients, multiple backgrounds, generated content, and many more) to give life to your design ideas, make them adaptable and maintainable, and provide the best experience possible on an array of platforms. Finally, you’ll hear how to create a library of simple and ready-to-use design patterns, that you can incorporate into your workflow to bring your designs to life much faster. Divya Manian is a Web Designer in Seattle. She made the jump from developing device drivers for Motorola phones to designing websites and has not looked back since. She takes her duties as an Open Web vigilante seriously which has resulted in collaborative projects such as HTML5 Readiness and HTML5 Boilerplate. Speaker Photo: © Mohini Patel Glanz. Follow Divya on Twitter: @nimbuin Licensed as Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/).
Peter Gumeson shows off his compass-html5-boilerplate gem, which uses Compass to make it easier to integrate the HTML5 Boilerplate template into Rails apps.
Web technologies are evolving at such a frenetic pace that it becomes almost mandatory to learn on your own. A lot of us still depend on other people to do this learning for us, and we tend to use their answers to solve our everyday problems. Inconsistent implementations, rapidly evolving specs, questionable performance impacts and maintenance implications mean we cannot always depend on others for answers but must involve ourselves actively in the process of developing specifications for new Web technologies. But how do we go about it? There are some simple rituals we can all do, which can have us be better-informed and also better inform the people and groups who are most directly involved in the development of new Web technologies. Divya Manian is a Web Designer in Seattle. She made the jump from developing device drivers for Motorola phones to designing websites and has not looked back since. She takes her duties as an Open Web vigilante seriously which has resulted in collaborative projects such as HTML5 Readiness and HTML5 Boilerplate. Follow Divya on Twitter: @nimbuin Licensed as Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/).