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This week we talk to Jeff Dickey, the creator of Mise, Usage, and Pitchfork. You might know him from his work on Oclif, a CLI framework for Node.js. With his latest tools he is focused on making development easier and faster. https://www.linkedin.com/in/jdxcode/ https://jdx.dev/ https://github.com/jdx/mise https://github.com/jdx/usage https://github.com/jdx/pitchfork https://github.com/oclif/oclif Apply to sponsor the podcast: https://devtools.fm/sponsor Become a paid subscriber our patreon, spotify, or apple podcasts for the ad-free episode. https://www.patreon.com/devtoolsfm https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/devtoolsfm/subscribe https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/devtools-fm/id1566647758 https://www.youtube.com/@devtoolsfm/membership
Welcome return guest the Job Board Doctor Jeff Dickey-Chasins Jeff consults to 100's of job boards from around the world, he brings a wealth of knowledge on how, why and what's happening. Highlights Cost per apply on Indeed was a self fulfilling prophecy - who knew, creating a problem and then solving the problem was a business model. The little blue box on Google, friend or enemy? It still does not give people what we want, that is great jobs by direct employers. Like William and Harry, ZipRecruiter is the spare. Duration based job ads still dominate globally. Jeff shares his favorite job board and what he likes about them and his greatest frustration with job ads.
Welcome return guest the Job Board Doctor Jeff Dickey-Chasins Jeff consults to 100's of job boards from around the world, he brings a wealth of knowledge on how, why and what's happening. Highlights Cost per apply on Indeed was a self fulfilling prophecy - who knew, creating a problem and then solving the problem was a business model. The little blue box on Google, friend or enemy? It still does not give people what we want, that is great jobs by direct employers. Like William and Harry, ZipRecruiter is the spare. Duration based job ads still dominate globally. Jeff shares his favorite job board and what he likes about them and his greatest frustration with job ads.
#JobBoardDoctor #JeffDickey-Chasins #indeed.com #revopswithanedge The Job Board Doctor is Jeff Dickey-Chasins and he joins the SAASholes Revenue Operations Podcast with Pete Jansons and Jamie Carney to discuss who will knock off Indeed.com as the #1 Job Board The Job Board Doctor is Jeff Dickey-Chasins, a job board consultant and veteran of the job board, publishing, and e-learning industries. The consulting services he provides will help your job board increase sales, profitability, and customers.Jeff Dickey-Chasins, job board consultant Jeff was the original marketing director for Dice.com, growing it from $7 million to $65+ million in three years. He has worked with over 650 job boards and HR-related sites over the past 20 years, in almost every sector, including finance, technology, education, health care, sales and marketing, energy, and specific geographic regions. He has published research, e-books, and blog posts on almost every aspect of the industry. He also speaks at industry conferences on key topics in the online recruiting industry --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/saasholes/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/saasholes/support
We're excited to have Jeff Dickey-Chasins host a special episode called The Breakdown with all the news on Recruitment Tech and the Job board World. Jeff breaks down everything that happened in this space in 2021 and I can tell you it's a lot of news!
While attending the Maryland Fire & Rescue Institute’s National Fire Service Staff & Command School I had an opportunity to interview Washington, D.C. Fire Lieutenant, Jeff Dickey. Jeff was on the second alarm assignment to a structure fire incident where a firefighter fell through the floor and died. Jeff’s crew was able to locate and remove the fallen firefighter.
David Linthicum speaks with Jeff Dickey of NetApp about what it takes a company to accelerate the adoption of new technologies to transform their business, drive ROI and compete in a new marketplace. Voices in Cloud – Episode 18: A Conversation with Jeff Dickey of NetApp
David Linthicum speaks with Jeff Dickey of NetApp about what it takes a company to accelerate the adoption of new technologies to transform their business, drive ROI and compete in a new marketplace. Voices in Cloud – Episode 18: A Conversation with Jeff Dickey of NetApp
David Linthicum speaks with Jeff Dickey of NetApp about what it takes a company to accelerate the adoption of new technologies to transform their business, drive ROI and compete in a new marketplace. Voices in Cloud – Episode 18: A Conversation with Jeff Dickey of NetApp
David Linthicum speaks with Jeff Dickey of NetApp about what it takes a company to accelerate the adoption of new technologies to transform their business, drive ROI and compete in a new marketplace. Voices in Cloud – Episode 18: A Conversation with Jeff Dickey of NetApp
For many years, Jeff Dickey was a lead architect for Heroku's CLI tool, which was used by application developers to get their apps deployed to Heroku's platform. He muses on his history with CLIs with Nahid Samsami, a director of product at Heroku, as the two of them worked together on oclif. oclif was designed from the start to be a framework for developers to use when building their own command-line interfaces. It's currently written in TypeScript, but Jeff goes through its four-year history, starting with its roots in Ruby and on thorough its Frankenstein's monster mashup of Go and JavaScript. While each language had its pros and cons, the key constraint was how the resulting command-line binary program would be distributed. The project has been incredibly popular, both through internal adoption at Heroku and Salesforce, to its reception and use from other companies, as well as the active contributions made on GitHub. The episode concludes with some theories about the future of CLI tooling. PowerShell, for example, is a fully object-oriented environment which a developer can program against. Jeff is also interested in better integration between the terminal and UI elements. Links from this episode oclif.io, the main landing page for learning more about oclif Microsoft's Powershell, which Jeff believes is the most incredibly advanced CLI platform
Spring time is upon us and many of you are making plans to buy or sell a home. Maybe you're moving into the River Region, changing school zones, or just needing more space. Whatever the reason we want to make sure you avoid some of the common mistakes and make the best move for your family. That's why we sat down with two of our areas best when it comes to real estate and financing, Jeff Dickey with New Waters Realty and Jimmy Parsons with Guild Mortgage.
If someone tells you they have the secret to a fast, seamless digital transformation for your enterprise, don't believe them, says Jeff Dickey. The reality, says Dickey, Chief Innovation Officer at Redapt, is that there is no Easy Button, as much as we wish there were. So should enterprises think about transitioning from legacy infrastructure and newer, modern platforms? Jeff shares his wisdom in this week's episode of Pivotal Conversations.
If someone tells you they have the secret to a fast, seamless digital transformation for your enterprise, don't believe them, says Jeff Dickey. The reality, says Dickey, Chief Innovation Officer at Redapt, is that there is no Easy Button, as much as we wish there were. So should enterprises think about transitioning from legacy infrastructure and newer, modern platforms? Jeff shares his wisdom in this week's episode of Pivotal Conversations.
Jeff Dickey is the Chief Innovation officer at Redapt, and he's got some serious opinions about OpenStack, open source, vendor lock-in, and containers. Want the low-down on the cloud space from someone who is close to the action and doesn't pull a punch? This is the episode for you.
Aaron and Nick Weaver (@lynxbat) talk to Jeff Dickey(@jeffdickey; Chief Innovation Officer @Redapt) about building Clouds and DevOps environments for both small and large customers and the real world challenges they face. Thank you to the Linux Foundation for hosting us as a media sponsor! Check out O-Reilly's new initiative: Learning Paths Topic 1 - This will be a quick follow up from our podcast at DockerCon, this has to be the fastest follow up ever on the show. We wanted to thank Rich for his great feedback and questions. Topic 2 - Let’s start at the start. What does a company like Redapt see when it has a customer engagement. What is a typical customer? What market? What application needs? How often do they deploy? What's the developer's environment? Topic 3 - When Redapt is proposing a solution, what is the "usual" target environment that Redapt tries to influence. Where have you seen success? Where have you “learned some lessons”? Topic 4 - What are the typical barriers to adoption and success/failure? How do customers handle cultural shifts? Can it be done? Topic 5 - If you had to label an industry or customer type that is the “poster child” for success, what would they look like? How long does it take most customers to get there?
Aaron and Brian talk to Jeff Dickey (@jeffdickey; Chief Innovation Officer @Redapt) and John Griffith (@jdg_8, Software Engineer @SolidFire) about the evolution of Redapt, best practices for building large-scale clouds, comparing OpenStack to Docker communities and how the ecosystem is changing from Vendor to SP to VAR. Links from the show: Redapt Homepage Jeff Dickey's Bio NextCast Podcasts Thanks for the Docker folks for having us! - DockerCon 2015 on YouTube Topic 1 - Tell us about yourself and some background on Redapt. Topic 1a - You both have OpenStack background. Why are you here at DockerCon? Topic 2 - Aaron knows Redapt from his day job, but you really got on our radar the past few weeks with a bunch of announcements recently (eg CoreOS Fest + Tectonic). How did Redapt get involved with delivering solutions around these new Cloud Native frameworks? Topic 3 - What you do is really a next-step in how companies are able to build or consume these new Cloud Native frameworks. How does Redapt go about pulling these systems together? Topic 4 - We talked yesterday about your team. How do you keep the talent levels up to date on your team? Topic 5 - Redapt is well-known in the cloud circles. What best practices can you take from your learnings and apply them to all these Enterprise and Mid-Market companies that want to do all the cool stuff we hear about here at DockerCon?