Podcasts about jc hiatt

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  • Nov 12, 2019LATEST

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Best podcasts about jc hiatt

Latest podcast episodes about jc hiatt

JavaScript Jabber
JSJ 407: Reactive JavaScript and Storybook with Dean Radcliffe

JavaScript Jabber

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 12, 2019 43:48


Dean is a developer from Chicago and was previously on React Round Up 083. Today he has come over to JavaScript Jabber to talk about reactive programming and Storybook. Reactive programming is the opposite of imperative programming, where it will change exactly when needed instead of change only when told to. Reactivity existed long before React, and Dean talks about his history with reactive programming. He illustrates this difference by talking about Trello and Jira. In Trello, as you move cards from swimlane to another swimlane, everyone on the board sees those changes right away. In Jira,  if you have 11 tabs open, and you update data in one tab, probably 10 of your tabs are stale now and you might have to refresh. Reactive programming is the difference between Trello and Jira. The panel discusses why reactive JavaScript is not more widely used. People now tend to look for more focused tools to solve a particular part of the problem than an all in one tool like Meteor.js. Dean talks about the problems that Storybook solves. Storybook has hot reloading environments in frontend components, so you don’t need the backend to run. Storybook also allows you to create a catalogue of UI states. JC and Dean talk about how Storybook could create opportunities for collaboration between engineers and designers. They discuss some causes of breakage that automation could help solve, such as styles not being applied properly and internationalization issues. Dean shares how to solve some network issues, such as having operators in RxJs. RxJs is useful for overlapping calls because it was built with cancelability from the beginning.  Dean talks about his tool Storybook Animate, which allows you to see what the user sees. Storybook is an actively updated product, and Dean talks about how to get started with it. The show concludes with Dean talking about some things coming down the pipe and how he is actively involved in looking for good general solutions to help people write bulletproof code.  Panelists JC Hiatt With special guest: Dean Radcliffe Sponsors Hasura, Inc. Sentry use the code “devchat” for 2 months free on Sentry’s small plan Adventures in Angular ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ "The MaxCoders Guide to Finding Your Dream Developer Job" by Charles Max Wood will be out on November 20th on Amazon.  Get your copy on that date only for $1. ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Links RRU 083 Knockout.js  Node.js Meteor.js RXJS Storybook Animate RX Helper library Follow DevChatTV on Facebook and Twitter Picks JC Hiatt: Joker DevLifts Dean Radcliffe:  Twitter @deaniusol and Github @deanius The Keyframers Action for Healthy Kids

Devchat.tv Master Feed
JSJ 407: Reactive JavaScript and Storybook with Dean Radcliffe

Devchat.tv Master Feed

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 12, 2019 43:48


Dean is a developer from Chicago and was previously on React Round Up 083. Today he has come over to JavaScript Jabber to talk about reactive programming and Storybook. Reactive programming is the opposite of imperative programming, where it will change exactly when needed instead of change only when told to. Reactivity existed long before React, and Dean talks about his history with reactive programming. He illustrates this difference by talking about Trello and Jira. In Trello, as you move cards from swimlane to another swimlane, everyone on the board sees those changes right away. In Jira,  if you have 11 tabs open, and you update data in one tab, probably 10 of your tabs are stale now and you might have to refresh. Reactive programming is the difference between Trello and Jira. The panel discusses why reactive JavaScript is not more widely used. People now tend to look for more focused tools to solve a particular part of the problem than an all in one tool like Meteor.js. Dean talks about the problems that Storybook solves. Storybook has hot reloading environments in frontend components, so you don’t need the backend to run. Storybook also allows you to create a catalogue of UI states. JC and Dean talk about how Storybook could create opportunities for collaboration between engineers and designers. They discuss some causes of breakage that automation could help solve, such as styles not being applied properly and internationalization issues. Dean shares how to solve some network issues, such as having operators in RxJs. RxJs is useful for overlapping calls because it was built with cancelability from the beginning.  Dean talks about his tool Storybook Animate, which allows you to see what the user sees. Storybook is an actively updated product, and Dean talks about how to get started with it. The show concludes with Dean talking about some things coming down the pipe and how he is actively involved in looking for good general solutions to help people write bulletproof code.  Panelists JC Hiatt With special guest: Dean Radcliffe Sponsors Hasura, Inc. Sentry use the code “devchat” for 2 months free on Sentry’s small plan Adventures in Angular ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ "The MaxCoders Guide to Finding Your Dream Developer Job" by Charles Max Wood will be out on November 20th on Amazon.  Get your copy on that date only for $1. ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Links RRU 083 Knockout.js  Node.js Meteor.js RXJS Storybook Animate RX Helper library Follow DevChatTV on Facebook and Twitter Picks JC Hiatt: Joker DevLifts Dean Radcliffe:  Twitter @deaniusol and Github @deanius The Keyframers Action for Healthy Kids

All JavaScript Podcasts by Devchat.tv
JSJ 407: Reactive JavaScript and Storybook with Dean Radcliffe

All JavaScript Podcasts by Devchat.tv

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 12, 2019 43:48


Dean is a developer from Chicago and was previously on React Round Up 083. Today he has come over to JavaScript Jabber to talk about reactive programming and Storybook. Reactive programming is the opposite of imperative programming, where it will change exactly when needed instead of change only when told to. Reactivity existed long before React, and Dean talks about his history with reactive programming. He illustrates this difference by talking about Trello and Jira. In Trello, as you move cards from swimlane to another swimlane, everyone on the board sees those changes right away. In Jira,  if you have 11 tabs open, and you update data in one tab, probably 10 of your tabs are stale now and you might have to refresh. Reactive programming is the difference between Trello and Jira. The panel discusses why reactive JavaScript is not more widely used. People now tend to look for more focused tools to solve a particular part of the problem than an all in one tool like Meteor.js. Dean talks about the problems that Storybook solves. Storybook has hot reloading environments in frontend components, so you don’t need the backend to run. Storybook also allows you to create a catalogue of UI states. JC and Dean talk about how Storybook could create opportunities for collaboration between engineers and designers. They discuss some causes of breakage that automation could help solve, such as styles not being applied properly and internationalization issues. Dean shares how to solve some network issues, such as having operators in RxJs. RxJs is useful for overlapping calls because it was built with cancelability from the beginning.  Dean talks about his tool Storybook Animate, which allows you to see what the user sees. Storybook is an actively updated product, and Dean talks about how to get started with it. The show concludes with Dean talking about some things coming down the pipe and how he is actively involved in looking for good general solutions to help people write bulletproof code.  Panelists JC Hiatt With special guest: Dean Radcliffe Sponsors Hasura, Inc. Sentry use the code “devchat” for 2 months free on Sentry’s small plan Adventures in Angular ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ "The MaxCoders Guide to Finding Your Dream Developer Job" by Charles Max Wood will be out on November 20th on Amazon.  Get your copy on that date only for $1. ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Links RRU 083 Knockout.js  Node.js Meteor.js RXJS Storybook Animate RX Helper library Follow DevChatTV on Facebook and Twitter Picks JC Hiatt: Joker DevLifts Dean Radcliffe:  Twitter @deaniusol and Github @deanius The Keyframers Action for Healthy Kids

Devchat.tv Master Feed
RRU 044: TypeScript with Spencer Miskoviak

Devchat.tv Master Feed

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 15, 2019 44:29


Sponsors KendoUI Sentry use the code “devchat” for $100 credit TripleByte CacheFly Panel Charles Max Wood Nader Dabit JC Hiatt Joined by Special Guest: Spencer Miskoviak Summary In this episode, Spencer Miskoviak shares his experience and answers questions about using typescript in React. Spencer starts by answering why react developers tend to use es6 and what the tradeoff is using typescript instead. The panel contemplates the advantages and disadvantages of using typescript and its gaining momentum in the React community. Spencer discusses how they are using typescript at Handshake and how it has paid off. Create react app and its support of typescript is discussed. The episode ends with Spencer answering questions about using dot notation with typescript and how it works. Links https://webpack.js.org/ https://parceljs.org/ https://medium.com/@skovy/using-component-dot-notation-with-typescript-to-create-a-set-of-components-b0b2aad4892b https://app.joinhandshake.com/login https://medium.com/@skovy https://twitter.com/SpencerSkovy https://github.com/Skovy Picks Nader Dabit https://medium.com/open-graphql https://reinvent.awsevents.com/ JC Hiatt Sony Noise Cancelling Headphones WH1000XM3 Charles Max Wood https://devchat.tv/dev-rev/ https://www.garyvaynerchuk.com/podcast/ https://player.fm/series/refactor-your-body Spencer Miskoviak http://www.rubberducking.fm/ The Future of React Endurance: My Year in Space, A Lifetime of Discovery by Scott Kelly  

React Round Up
RRU 044: TypeScript with Spencer Miskoviak

React Round Up

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 15, 2019 44:29


Sponsors KendoUI Sentry use the code “devchat” for $100 credit TripleByte CacheFly Panel Charles Max Wood Nader Dabit JC Hiatt Joined by Special Guest: Spencer Miskoviak Summary In this episode, Spencer Miskoviak shares his experience and answers questions about using typescript in React. Spencer starts by answering why react developers tend to use es6 and what the tradeoff is using typescript instead. The panel contemplates the advantages and disadvantages of using typescript and its gaining momentum in the React community. Spencer discusses how they are using typescript at Handshake and how it has paid off. Create react app and its support of typescript is discussed. The episode ends with Spencer answering questions about using dot notation with typescript and how it works. Links https://webpack.js.org/ https://parceljs.org/ https://medium.com/@skovy/using-component-dot-notation-with-typescript-to-create-a-set-of-components-b0b2aad4892b https://app.joinhandshake.com/login https://medium.com/@skovy https://twitter.com/SpencerSkovy https://github.com/Skovy Picks Nader Dabit https://medium.com/open-graphql https://reinvent.awsevents.com/ JC Hiatt Sony Noise Cancelling Headphones WH1000XM3 Charles Max Wood https://devchat.tv/dev-rev/ https://www.garyvaynerchuk.com/podcast/ https://player.fm/series/refactor-your-body Spencer Miskoviak http://www.rubberducking.fm/ The Future of React Endurance: My Year in Space, A Lifetime of Discovery by Scott Kelly  

Conversation Matters
A simple conversation about #cryptocurrency

Conversation Matters

Play Episode Listen Later May 10, 2018 15:27


In this episode I am joined with JC Hiatt from HODL Daily where we discuss the what and why around #cryptocurrency.

Devchat.tv Master Feed
MJS 048: JC Hiatt

Devchat.tv Master Feed

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 14, 2018 34:01


Panel: Charles Max Wood Guest: JC Hiatt This week on My JavaScript Story, Charles speaks with JC Hiatt. JC is a 25-year-old software consultant from Jackson, Mississippi. He first got into programming in the 7th grade when he had the desire to create a website. He has since done a lot of work with WordPress, helped to found DevLifts, and much more. Now, he is doing a lot of little things to help make an impact on the programming world, including running multiple podcasts and creating tutorials for new programmers. In particular, we dive pretty deep on: How did you get into programming? w3schools.com HTML and CSS What got you into JavaScript? Hackers HackThisSite.com jQuery WordPress What are you most proud of? Tutorial involving React and WordPress Consulting Cryptocurrencies Podcast: HODL Daily DevLifts and DevLifts Podcast Cryptocurrency interest Balance And much, much more! Links:  Linode w3schools.com DevLifts Website and Podcast HODL Daily Podcast FreshBooks JCHiatt.com @JCHiatt   Picks JC CSS Grid The Punisher Charles Artemis by Andy Weir Star Wars: The Last Jedi React Dev Summit

My JavaScript Story
MJS 048: JC Hiatt

My JavaScript Story

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 14, 2018 34:01


Panel: Charles Max Wood Guest: JC Hiatt This week on My JavaScript Story, Charles speaks with JC Hiatt. JC is a 25-year-old software consultant from Jackson, Mississippi. He first got into programming in the 7th grade when he had the desire to create a website. He has since done a lot of work with WordPress, helped to found DevLifts, and much more. Now, he is doing a lot of little things to help make an impact on the programming world, including running multiple podcasts and creating tutorials for new programmers. In particular, we dive pretty deep on: How did you get into programming? w3schools.com HTML and CSS What got you into JavaScript? Hackers HackThisSite.com jQuery WordPress What are you most proud of? Tutorial involving React and WordPress Consulting Cryptocurrencies Podcast: HODL Daily DevLifts and DevLifts Podcast Cryptocurrency interest Balance And much, much more! Links:  Linode w3schools.com DevLifts Website and Podcast HODL Daily Podcast FreshBooks JCHiatt.com @JCHiatt   Picks JC CSS Grid The Punisher Charles Artemis by Andy Weir Star Wars: The Last Jedi React Dev Summit

All JavaScript Podcasts by Devchat.tv

Panel: Charles Max Wood Guest: JC Hiatt This week on My JavaScript Story, Charles speaks with JC Hiatt. JC is a 25-year-old software consultant from Jackson, Mississippi. He first got into programming in the 7th grade when he had the desire to create a website. He has since done a lot of work with WordPress, helped to found DevLifts, and much more. Now, he is doing a lot of little things to help make an impact on the programming world, including running multiple podcasts and creating tutorials for new programmers. In particular, we dive pretty deep on: How did you get into programming? w3schools.com HTML and CSS What got you into JavaScript? Hackers HackThisSite.com jQuery WordPress What are you most proud of? Tutorial involving React and WordPress Consulting Cryptocurrencies Podcast: HODL Daily DevLifts and DevLifts Podcast Cryptocurrency interest Balance And much, much more! Links:  Linode w3schools.com DevLifts Website and Podcast HODL Daily Podcast FreshBooks JCHiatt.com @JCHiatt   Picks JC CSS Grid The Punisher Charles Artemis by Andy Weir Star Wars: The Last Jedi React Dev Summit

Devchat.tv Master Feed
JSJ 284 : Helping Developers Build Healthy Bodies

Devchat.tv Master Feed

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 25, 2017 57:01


Panel: Amiee Knight Charles Max Wood Special Guests:  JC Hiatt In this episode, JavaScript Jabbers speak with JC Hiatt. JC is a software consultant, and working a starting a company called DevLifts. DevLifts is a company that helps developers learn to live healthier lives. JC mentions this business was base on this health journey. JC and the panel discuss output and mental clarity to get work done in a healthy fashion. Also, the benefits of eating a healthy diet, rather it is the Keto Diet or others types of healthy clean eating, there is a physical and mental benefit. JC and the panel talk about count macros, healthy food intake, and a basic outline of getting into ketosis. Also, the panel discusses finding the motivation to get into a healthy lifestyle to benefit work and your lifestyle. In particular, we dive pretty deep on: Mental Clarity Keto Diet Cutting out processed foods Counting Macros Getting into Ketosis Supporting brain function Motivation for a healthy lifestyle Gaining energy Getting started  - Walking, Eat Whole. Etc. Pack your own lunch Mindset change -  you are responsible for anyone else’s healthy choices Drink Water You can find a healthy balance and practice moderation Cheat day? Sugar Sitting to0 long at work Sleep - brain wave activity, caffeine, and light Naps And much more! Links: @jchiatt @devlifts devlifts.io Picks: Amiee https://www.womenwhotech.com/panelist-bios https://github.com/AllThingsSmitty/css-protips Charles Gunnar blue blockers  Flux ReactDevSummit.com JSDevSummit.com   JC American Vandal Confession Tapes  Qalo https://lodash.com

JavaScript Jabber
JSJ 284 : Helping Developers Build Healthy Bodies

JavaScript Jabber

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 25, 2017 57:01


Panel: Amiee Knight Charles Max Wood Special Guests:  JC Hiatt In this episode, JavaScript Jabbers speak with JC Hiatt. JC is a software consultant, and working a starting a company called DevLifts. DevLifts is a company that helps developers learn to live healthier lives. JC mentions this business was base on this health journey. JC and the panel discuss output and mental clarity to get work done in a healthy fashion. Also, the benefits of eating a healthy diet, rather it is the Keto Diet or others types of healthy clean eating, there is a physical and mental benefit. JC and the panel talk about count macros, healthy food intake, and a basic outline of getting into ketosis. Also, the panel discusses finding the motivation to get into a healthy lifestyle to benefit work and your lifestyle. In particular, we dive pretty deep on: Mental Clarity Keto Diet Cutting out processed foods Counting Macros Getting into Ketosis Supporting brain function Motivation for a healthy lifestyle Gaining energy Getting started  - Walking, Eat Whole. Etc. Pack your own lunch Mindset change -  you are responsible for anyone else’s healthy choices Drink Water You can find a healthy balance and practice moderation Cheat day? Sugar Sitting to0 long at work Sleep - brain wave activity, caffeine, and light Naps And much more! Links: @jchiatt @devlifts devlifts.io Picks: Amiee https://www.womenwhotech.com/panelist-bios https://github.com/AllThingsSmitty/css-protips Charles Gunnar blue blockers  Flux ReactDevSummit.com JSDevSummit.com   JC American Vandal Confession Tapes  Qalo https://lodash.com

All JavaScript Podcasts by Devchat.tv
JSJ 284 : Helping Developers Build Healthy Bodies

All JavaScript Podcasts by Devchat.tv

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 25, 2017 57:01


Panel: Amiee Knight Charles Max Wood Special Guests:  JC Hiatt In this episode, JavaScript Jabbers speak with JC Hiatt. JC is a software consultant, and working a starting a company called DevLifts. DevLifts is a company that helps developers learn to live healthier lives. JC mentions this business was base on this health journey. JC and the panel discuss output and mental clarity to get work done in a healthy fashion. Also, the benefits of eating a healthy diet, rather it is the Keto Diet or others types of healthy clean eating, there is a physical and mental benefit. JC and the panel talk about count macros, healthy food intake, and a basic outline of getting into ketosis. Also, the panel discusses finding the motivation to get into a healthy lifestyle to benefit work and your lifestyle. In particular, we dive pretty deep on: Mental Clarity Keto Diet Cutting out processed foods Counting Macros Getting into Ketosis Supporting brain function Motivation for a healthy lifestyle Gaining energy Getting started  - Walking, Eat Whole. Etc. Pack your own lunch Mindset change -  you are responsible for anyone else’s healthy choices Drink Water You can find a healthy balance and practice moderation Cheat day? Sugar Sitting to0 long at work Sleep - brain wave activity, caffeine, and light Naps And much more! Links: @jchiatt @devlifts devlifts.io Picks: Amiee https://www.womenwhotech.com/panelist-bios https://github.com/AllThingsSmitty/css-protips Charles Gunnar blue blockers  Flux ReactDevSummit.com JSDevSummit.com   JC American Vandal Confession Tapes  Qalo https://lodash.com