Podcast appearances and mentions of jeremy likness

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Best podcasts about jeremy likness

Latest podcast episodes about jeremy likness

The .NET Core Podcast
Open-Source and Our Digital Legacies with Scott Harden

The .NET Core Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 13, 2024 75:27


RJJ Software's Software Development Service This episode of The Modern .NET Show is supported, in part, by RJJ Software's Podcasting Services, whether your company is looking to elevate its UK operations or reshape its US strategy, we can provide tailored solutions that exceed expectations. Show Notes "I don't want to go into the details right now, but for the listeners, I will say that we are right in the middle of an explosive situation right now with some WordPress drama. WordPress and WP Engine are experiencing a lot of the fallout, kind of related to what we talked about in the last episode, where you start out with some good intentions and then you get in a situation where both sides kind of feel burned. And I'm not going to say that there's a perfect solution out there, But I do think that this frequent check-ins and asking, you know, "is this good for me and what needs to change for this to be good for my life?" is important."— Scott Harden Welcome friends to The Modern .NET Show; the premier .NET podcast, focusing entirely on the knowledge, tools, and frameworks that all .NET developers should have in their toolbox. We are the go-to podcast for .NET developers worldwide, and I am not your host: Jamie. I'm Delilah and I will be recording the intro for this episode because Jamie is suffering with a throat infection. In this episode, Scott Harden joined us to talk more about open-source, software licensing, and a little on some of the most recent NuGet package updates that .NET developers should know about. It's important to note, Scott and Jamie talked about the WordPress controversy which was still unfolding as we recorded (which on October 19th, 2024). They brought it up not to make fun of WordPress or to add fuel to the flames, but to talk about the fact that it highlighted Scott's point about checking in with yourself regularly, as an open-source developer, about whether you're getting what you want from your public repos. Whilst talking about open-source development and licensing, Scott brought up a question on our collective and individual digital legacies. "And this is kind of a startling topic to bring up, but what if you just disappeared tomorrow? Because people just leave because they have some medical situation or some life situation, or they die. And this happens. This happens in software. We'll talk about some specific examples in a minute. But, you know, if you disappear tomorrow, it's interesting to think about kind of what your digital legacy would be. And, you know, you could have left this thing behind in a way that it could have been used by everyone or anyone."— Scott Harden This episode has a lot of resources in the accompanying show notes, so if you're listening along in a podcast player make sure to head to the website (there'll be a link). That way you don't miss out on all the wonderful things Scott and Jamie talked about. As a form of trigger warning, at around the 58 minute mark Scott talks about how his own journey with cancer brought the idea of his digital legacy to the forefront for him. Both Scott and Jamie also talk about the late Abel Wang and Pieter Hintjens. And they talk about other examples of developers who are very public with their health struggles: Jeremy Likness and (previous guest of the show) Jon Smith, who suffer with Alzheimer's disease and dementia respectively. We understand completely if you want to skip this entire section. But we also feel that there are very important points raised whilst talking about these, less cheery, matters. This conversation makes up the bulk for the final 10-15 minutes of the episode. Aside from a teaser for the next part (which is all about NuGet packages), you won't miss anything .NET specific if you choose to skip this part. Anyway, without further ado, let's sit back, open up a terminal, type in `dotnet new podcast` and we'll dive into the core of Modern .NET. Supporting the Show If you find this episode useful in any way, please consider supporting the show by either leaving a review (check our review page for ways to do that), sharing the episode with a friend or colleague, buying the host a coffee, or considering becoming a Patron of the show. Full Show Notes The full show notes, including links to some of the things we discussed and a full transcription of this episode, can be found at: https://dotnetcore.show/season-7/open-source-and-our-digital-legacies-with-scott-harden/ Scott's Links: scottplot.net swharden.com GitHub LinkedIn Jamie's Public NuGet Packages: OwaspHeaders.Core ClackMiddleware OnionArch.Mvc Useful Links GNU Terry Pratchett OWASP Secure Headers Project GitHub sponsors Jamie on Coffee and Open Source with Isaac Levin The WordPress vs VP Engine drama, explained What we know about the xz Utils backdoor that almost infected the world .NET Foundation Finding Strength in Weakness by Jeremy Likness How to update a NuGet library once the author isn't available by Jon Smith Entity Framework Core with Jon Smith A protocol for dying Get Busy Living with Abel Wang ScottPlot.NET: GitHub NuGet scottplot.net The charts that Scott was referring to when talking about downloads per day, can be seen here Supporting the show: Leave a rating or review Buy the show a coffee Become a patron Getting in Touch: Via the contact page Joining the Discord Remember to rate and review the show on Apple Podcasts, Podchaser, or wherever you find your podcasts, this will help the show's audience grow. Or you can just share the show with a friend. And don't forget to reach out via our Contact page. We're very interested in your opinion of the show, so please get in touch. You can support the show by making a monthly donation on the show's Patreon page at: https://www.patreon.com/TheDotNetCorePodcast.

2 Mikes Parkinson's Podcast
EPISODE 1: YOPN Founder Anna Grill along with YOPN board members Mark Kohus and Jeremy Likness

2 Mikes Parkinson's Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 1, 2022 51:32


RePost from LIVE show, Thursday February 24, 2022 6:00 on radioparkies.com for our first podcast as YOPN "living well starts here" podcast. Tonight we speak with Young Onset Parkinson's Network (YOPN) founder Anna Brown Grill about the latest and greatest updates concerning the YOPN. Also, we speak with board members and fellow Parkinson's fighters Jeremy Likeness and Mark Kohus, they tell their PD story and address why they joined the YOPN board. About today's guests: Anna Grill is the Founder of Young Onset Parkinson's Network (YOPN). She was on the fast track as a sales executive at a Fortune 200 company, and the youngest and only woman on the executive team when she was diagnosed with Young Onset Parkinson's Disease (YOPD) in 2007 at the age of 38. Jeremy Likness has been a professional technology and software developer for over three decades. Currently, Jeremy is the Senior Program Manager for .NET Data at Microsoft where his personal mission is to empower developers to be their best. Prior to his current position, Jeremy helped kickstart the technology and software development efforts for several startups that ultimately grew into multi-million and multi-billion-dollar corporations. YOPN board member, Mark C. Kohus, is a Senior Vice President and Group Manager with Fidelity Investments. With more than 24 years of experience working in the financial services field, Mark has held a variety of leadership roles including project management, relationship management and supporting operations.

Azure DevOps Podcast
Arthur Vickers on Entity Framework in .NET 6 - Episode 170

Azure DevOps Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 6, 2021 38:18


This week, Jeffrey is joined by Arthur Vickers, an Engineering Manager on the Entity Framework team at Microsoft.   With Microsoft only just recently releasing .NET 6 and Entity Framework Core 6.0, it is no exaggeration to say that the last few weeks have been very busy for Arthur. With lots of feedback coming in from new users and over 100,000 downloads in just the first week on NuGet, Arthur has a ton to share about EF Core 6.0 with listeners today.   Arthur shares the origin story of how Entity Framework came to be, where it currently fits into the picture, what's new with this newest installment, what he recommends new users check out first, his personal favorite new feature, and even what's in store for EF Core 7.0.   Topics of Discussion: [:36] About The Azure DevOps Podcast, Clear Measure; the new video podcast Architect Tips; and Jeffrey's offer to speak at virtual user groups. [1:13] About today's episode with Arthur Vickers. [1:23] Jeffrey welcomes Arthur Vickers to the podcast! [1:51] Arthur shares his career background and how he became an Engineering Manager on the Entity Framework team at Microsoft. [4:21] The origin story of how Entity Framework came to be, where it currently fits into the picture, and the primary problem it addresses. [8:38] The difference between Entity Framework Core 6.0 and previous versions of EF. [12:21] Arthur highlights what's new with EF Core 6.0 and what he recommends new users should specifically take a look at! [14:42] Will there be backward compatibility possible with EF Core 6.0? [17:26] Arthur clarifies what temporal tables are and how they work with EF Core 6.0. [20:03] A word from Azure DevOps Podcast's sponsor: Clear Measure. [20:34] Prepping for data warehousing with EF Core 6.0. [22:19] Why isn't indexing being spoken about as much? And what do developers need to know with regards to it? [24:14] The current state of schema migrations and the latest in this space with .NET 6. [27:32] If there's a small handful of tables in the database that are not mapped to EF, does that include EF's migration approach from being used? [28:53] Jeffrey asks Arthur a hypothetical question using Blazor WebAssembly and EF together. [32:00] Arthur speaks about one of the really exciting things about SQL Lite in WebAssembly accessed by EF Core. [33:47] What's next for Arthur and his team? [36:02] How to give your feedback on EF Core 6.0. [36:25] How to get in touch with Arthur online and keep up with everything he's up to. [37:30] Jeffrey thanks Arthur Vickers for joining the podcast.   Mentioned in this Episode: Architect Tips — New video podcast! Azure DevOps Clear Measure (Sponsor) .NET DevOps for Azure: A Developer's Guide to DevOps Architecture the Right Way, by Jeffrey Palermo — Available on Amazon! bit.ly/dotnetdevopsebook — Click here to download the .NET DevOps for Azure ebook! Jeffrey Palermo's YouTube Jeffrey Palermo's Twitter — Follow to stay informed about future events! DEVintersection Conference — Dec. 7th‒9th in Las Vegas, Nevada (Use discount code: PALERMO) Arthur Vickers' LinkedIn What's New in Entity Framework Core 6.0 Announcing .NET 6 – The Fastest .NET Yet .NET Conf 2021 “What's New in EF Core 6.0,” hosted by Jeremy Likness and Arthur Vickers GitHub.com/dotNET/EFCore Arthur Vickers' Twitter @AjcVickers Arthur on GitHub Arthur's Personal Blog Visual Studio 2022 Launch Dapper SQLite Blazor   Want to Learn More? Visit AzureDevOps.Show for show notes and additional episodes.

The 6 Figure Developer Podcast
Episode 197 – .NET Data with Jeremy Likness

The 6 Figure Developer Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 24, 2021 39:43


  Jeremy is a Senior Program Manager for .NET Data at Microsoft. His personal mission is to empower developers to be their best. In this episode Jeremy shares all about .NET Data using EF Core, GraphQL, .NET for Spark, and much more. He also speaks about his recent diagnosis and starting a podcast to help others with Parkinson's Disease.   Links https://twitter.com/jeremylikness https://www.linkedin.com/in/jeremylikness/ https://blog.jeremylikness.com/ https://github.com/JeremyLikness   Resources https://youmeandpd.org/ https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/learn/ https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/ef/core/ https://docs.mongodb.com/realm/sdk/dotnet/ https://dotnet.microsoft.com/apps/data/spark https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/dotnet/spark/what-is-spark   "Tempting Time" by Animals As Leaders used with permissions - All Rights Reserved × Subscribe now! Never miss a post, subscribe to The 6 Figure Developer Podcast! Are you interested in being a guest on The 6 Figure Developer Podcast? Click here to check availability!  

Azure DevOps Podcast
Jeremy Likness on Working with Data on .NET - Episode 141

Azure DevOps Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 17, 2021 40:45


This week, Jeffrey Palermo is joined by return guest, Jeremy Likness! Jeremy is an internationally selling author, keynote speaker, and professional coder with a personal mission to empower developers to be their best! He has worked on commercial enterprise software for 25 years and specializes in web technology. Currently, he is also a Sr. Cloud Developer Advocate for Microsoft, but previously held roles at iVision, Wintellect, and AirWatch.   Last year when Jeremy was on the podcast last, they discussed DevOps automation. In this episode, they focus the discussion on working with data on .NET. Jeremy shares about the work that he had been doing on the .NET Data team for the last year, Entity Framework Core, Microsoft Dataverse, GraphQL, and more!   Topics of Discussion: [:38] Be sure to visit AzureDevOps.Show for past episodes and show notes. [:51] About The Azure DevOps Podcast, Clear Measure, the new podcast Architect Tips, and Jeffrey’s offer to speak at virtual user groups. [1:28] About today’s episode with Jeremy Likness. [1:53] Jeffrey welcomes Jeremy back to the podcast! [2:15] Jeremy gives an overview of his role as the Senior Program Manager working on .NET Data and the work that his team does. [5:37] About Microsoft Dataverse and Jeremy and his team have been working with the Azure Storage and Dataverse teams. [8:28] Of the different methods of working with data in C#, what’s the general distribution? Which methods have greater adoption? [11:17] Jeremy and Jeffrey discuss different .NET project types and whether Entity Framework 5.0 the latest stable release. [11:55] Jeremy shares what is most exciting to him with this upcoming .NET release. [13:25] What’s the go-to store on the client-side? [16:04] The new inheritance strategies in EFCore: are they fully implemented and ready? [19:21] Jeremy talks about the focus on speed for EFCore 6. [21:37] A word from Azure DevOps Podcast’s sponsor: Clear Measure. [22:08] Why developers are “forced” to learn object-oriented programming through EFCore’s features. [24:32] How Jeremy goes about testing code that uses Entity Framework. [27:30] Jeremy highlights where to access invaluable EFCore resources. [28:54] Jeremy touches on how the EF code team uses ReSharper. [29:15] What GraphQL is and why it might be useful if you have a .NET application. [32:40] Jeremy highlights another good QL platform: Hot Chocolate by ChilliCream. [34:06] The architecture of GraphQL and whether it is a database engine or a library. [35:33] If you have a .NET app running in App Service and you’ve already got Azure SQL, and you want to get some of your data and use Graph QL, is this a new Azure resource? Architecturally, what would you do to adopt this? [39:18] Jeffrey thanks for Jeremy for joining the podcast!   Mentioned in this Episode: Architect Tips — New video podcast! Azure DevOps Clear Measure (Sponsor) .NET DevOps for Azure: A Developer's Guide to DevOps Architecture the Right Way, by Jeffrey Palermo — Available on Amazon! bit.ly/dotnetdevopsebook — Click here to download the .NET DevOps for Azure ebook! Jeffrey Palermo’s Youtube Jeffrey Palermo’s Twitter — Follow to stay informed about future events! The Azure DevOps Podcast’s Twitter: @AzureDevOpsShow Azure DevOps Podcast Ep. 76: “Jeremy Likness on DevOps Automation” Jeremy Likness’ Blog Jeremy Likness’ Twitter Jeremy Likness’ LinkedIn Jeremy Likness’ GitHub Jeremy’s Email: Jeremy.Likness@Microsoft.com  GraphQL Microsoft Dataverse Microsoft Azure Storage Blazor OData Entity Framework Core .NET MAUI Uno Platform Docs.Microsoft.com/EF Azure Cosmos DB GitHub.com/DOTNET/EFCOREReSharper Hot Chocolate by ChilliCream   Want to Learn More? Visit AzureDevOps.Show for show notes and additional episodes.

Channel 9
EF Core | Visual Studio Toolbox

Channel 9

Play Episode Listen Later May 6, 2021 31:28


Jeremy Likness shows some of what's new in EF Core. He first shows off many-to-many relationships [07:30] and then reviews some of what's coming in EF Core 6 [26:30]. Jeremy will be speaking on EF Core at the upcoming DEVintersection conferences (June 6-11 in Orlando and Dec 5-10 in Las Vegas). To learn more and sign up, visit https://www.devintersection.com/#!/?track=dev and use discount code DEV21.

las vegas toolbox visual studio jeremy likness ef core devintersection
Visual Studio Toolbox (HD) - Channel 9

Jeremy Likness shows some of what's new in EF Core. He first shows off many-to-many relationships [07:30] and then reviews some of what's coming in EF Core 6 [26:30]. Jeremy will be speaking on EF Core at the upcoming DEVintersection conferences (June 6-11 in Orlando and Dec 5-10 in Las Vegas). To learn more and sign up, visit https://www.devintersection.com/#!/?track=dev and use discount code DEV21.

las vegas jeremy likness ef core devintersection
You, Me, and PD
A Time for Change

You, Me, and PD

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 15, 2021 35:29


After receiving his diagnosis of Young Onset Parkinson's Disease, Jeremy Likness and his wife and care partner Doreen had to make a few changes. In this episode, they share what the path forward felt like after the diagnosis and share their experiences that highlight the impact of Parkinson's Disease on everyday living.

Azure Friday (HD) - Channel 9
Using Entity Framework Core with Azure SQL DB and Azure Cosmos DB

Azure Friday (HD) - Channel 9

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 23, 2020


Jeremy Likness shows Scott Hanselman how to use Entity Framework (EF) Core with Azure SQL DB and Azure Cosmos DB. EF Core is a lightweight, extensible, open source, and cross-platform version of the popular Entity Framework data access technology.[0:00:00]– Overview[0:01:43]– Using Entity Framework Core with Azure SQL DB (existing)[0:10:23]– Sidebar: Resolving a demo hiccup[0:15:07]– Using Entity Framework Core with Azure Cosmos DB (new)[0:22:09]– Wrap-upEntity Framework Core overviewGetting Started with EF CoreEntity Framework documentationLearn: Persist and retrieve relational data with Entity Framework CoreCreate a free account (Azure)

Azure Friday (Audio) - Channel 9
Using Entity Framework Core with Azure SQL DB and Azure Cosmos DB

Azure Friday (Audio) - Channel 9

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 23, 2020


Jeremy Likness shows Scott Hanselman how to use Entity Framework (EF) Core with Azure SQL DB and Azure Cosmos DB. EF Core is a lightweight, extensible, open source, and cross-platform version of the popular Entity Framework data access technology.[0:00:00]– Overview[0:01:43]– Using Entity Framework Core with Azure SQL DB (existing)[0:10:23]– Sidebar: Resolving a demo hiccup[0:15:07]– Using Entity Framework Core with Azure Cosmos DB (new)[0:22:09]– Wrap-upEntity Framework Core overviewGetting Started with EF CoreEntity Framework documentationLearn: Persist and retrieve relational data with Entity Framework CoreCreate a free account (Azure)

Azure Friday (Audio) - Channel 9
Using Entity Framework Core with Azure SQL DB and Azure Cosmos DB

Azure Friday (Audio) - Channel 9

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 23, 2020 23:57


Jeremy Likness shows Scott Hanselman how to use Entity Framework (EF) Core with Azure SQL DB and Azure Cosmos DB. EF Core is a lightweight, extensible, open source, and cross-platform version of the popular Entity Framework data access technology.[0:00:00]– Overview[0:01:43]– Using Entity Framework Core with Azure SQL DB (existing)[0:10:23]– Sidebar: Resolving a demo hiccup[0:15:07]– Using Entity Framework Core with Azure Cosmos DB (new)[0:22:09]– Wrap-upEntity Framework Core overviewGetting Started with EF CoreEntity Framework documentationLearn: Persist and retrieve relational data with Entity Framework CoreCreate a free account (Azure)

Azure Friday (HD) - Channel 9
Using Entity Framework Core with Azure SQL DB and Azure Cosmos DB

Azure Friday (HD) - Channel 9

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 23, 2020 23:57


Jeremy Likness shows Scott Hanselman how to use Entity Framework (EF) Core with Azure SQL DB and Azure Cosmos DB. EF Core is a lightweight, extensible, open source, and cross-platform version of the popular Entity Framework data access technology.[0:00:00]– Overview[0:01:43]– Using Entity Framework Core with Azure SQL DB (existing)[0:10:23]– Sidebar: Resolving a demo hiccup[0:15:07]– Using Entity Framework Core with Azure Cosmos DB (new)[0:22:09]– Wrap-upEntity Framework Core overviewGetting Started with EF CoreEntity Framework documentationLearn: Persist and retrieve relational data with Entity Framework CoreCreate a free account (Azure)

Azure Friday (HD) - Channel 9
Using Azure Container Registry for building and deploying .NET Core Apps

Azure Friday (HD) - Channel 9

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 9, 2020


You probably know that Azure Container Registry enables you to store and manage container images securely, but did you know it can also be used as a part of your DevOps pipelines? Jeremy Likness shows Scott Hanselman how ACR can manage your images and even build them for you in the cloud. [0:00:00]– Overview[0:01:57]– Generating a Dockerfile in Visual Studio and building a container[0:06:24]– Running the container with Azure Container Instances[0:10:17]– Using container images in ACR as part of a build pipeline[0:13:05]– Wrap-upTutorial: Build and deploy container images in the cloud with Azure Container Registry TasksAutomate container image builds and maintenance with ACR TasksAzure Container RegistryCreate a free account (Azure)

Azure Friday (Audio) - Channel 9
Using Azure Container Registry for building and deploying .NET Core Apps

Azure Friday (Audio) - Channel 9

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 9, 2020


You probably know that Azure Container Registry enables you to store and manage container images securely, but did you know it can also be used as a part of your DevOps pipelines? Jeremy Likness shows Scott Hanselman how ACR can manage your images and even build them for you in the cloud. [0:00:00]– Overview[0:01:57]– Generating a Dockerfile in Visual Studio and building a container[0:06:24]– Running the container with Azure Container Instances[0:10:17]– Using container images in ACR as part of a build pipeline[0:13:05]– Wrap-upTutorial: Build and deploy container images in the cloud with Azure Container Registry TasksAutomate container image builds and maintenance with ACR TasksAzure Container RegistryCreate a free account (Azure)

Azure Friday (Audio) - Channel 9
Using Azure Container Registry for building and deploying .NET Core Apps

Azure Friday (Audio) - Channel 9

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 9, 2020 14:49


You probably know that Azure Container Registry enables you to store and manage container images securely, but did you know it can also be used as a part of your DevOps pipelines? Jeremy Likness shows Scott Hanselman how ACR can manage your images and even build them for you in the cloud. [0:00:00]– Overview[0:01:57]– Generating a Dockerfile in Visual Studio and building a container[0:06:24]– Running the container with Azure Container Instances[0:10:17]– Using container images in ACR as part of a build pipeline[0:13:05]– Wrap-upTutorial: Build and deploy container images in the cloud with Azure Container Registry TasksAutomate container image builds and maintenance with ACR TasksAzure Container RegistryCreate a free account (Azure)

Channel 9
Using Azure Container Registry for building and deploying .NET Core Apps | Azure Friday

Channel 9

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 9, 2020 14:49


You probably know that Azure Container Registry enables you to store and manage container images securely, but did you know it can also be used as a part of your DevOps pipelines? Jeremy Likness shows Scott Hanselman how ACR can manage your images and even build them for you in the cloud. [0:00:00]– Overview[0:01:57]– Generating a Dockerfile in Visual Studio and building a container[0:06:24]– Running the container with Azure Container Instances[0:10:17]– Using container images in ACR as part of a build pipeline[0:13:05]– Wrap-upTutorial: Build and deploy container images in the cloud with Azure Container Registry TasksAutomate container image builds and maintenance with ACR TasksAzure Container RegistryCreate a free account (Azure)

Azure Friday (HD) - Channel 9
Using Azure Container Registry for building and deploying .NET Core Apps

Azure Friday (HD) - Channel 9

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 9, 2020 14:49


You probably know that Azure Container Registry enables you to store and manage container images securely, but did you know it can also be used as a part of your DevOps pipelines? Jeremy Likness shows Scott Hanselman how ACR can manage your images and even build them for you in the cloud. [0:00:00]– Overview[0:01:57]– Generating a Dockerfile in Visual Studio and building a container[0:06:24]– Running the container with Azure Container Instances[0:10:17]– Using container images in ACR as part of a build pipeline[0:13:05]– Wrap-upTutorial: Build and deploy container images in the cloud with Azure Container Registry TasksAutomate container image builds and maintenance with ACR TasksAzure Container RegistryCreate a free account (Azure)

Adventures in .NET
.NET 038: EFCore 5 and Blazor with Jeremy Likness

Adventures in .NET

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 15, 2020 51:40


In this episode of Adventures in .NET, we dig deep into Microsoft’s progression from EF6 to EFCore 5 and how EFCore integrates with Azure Cosmos DB. Jeremy also discusses how he has worked with Blazor and EFCore in Azure and the benefits of his approach. Sponsors PVS-Studio | Try PVS-Studio for free using the promo code: #advdotnet CodeRush for Visual Studio | FREE 30-DAY TRIAL Audible.com CacheFly Panel Shawn Clabough Caleb Wells Wai Liu Special Guest Jeremy Likness Links https://blog.jeremylikness.com/series/blazor-and-ef-core/ EFCore 5 Preview 6 .NET Docs Taxonomy updates EF Core Community Standups Picks Shawn Clabough Cursed | Netflix Caleb Umbrella Academy 2 Wai Appetize.io Jeremy Likness Oculus Quest Strength In Weakness: My life with Parkinson’s Disease Follow Jeremy on Twitter > @JeremyLikness Follow us on Twitter > @dotNET_Podcast

Devchat.tv Master Feed
.NET 038: EFCore 5 and Blazor with Jeremy Likness

Devchat.tv Master Feed

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 15, 2020 51:40


In this episode of Adventures in .NET, we dig deep into Microsoft’s progression from EF6 to EFCore 5 and how EFCore integrates with Azure Cosmos DB. Jeremy also discusses how he has worked with Blazor and EFCore in Azure and the benefits of his approach. Sponsors PVS-Studio | Try PVS-Studio for free using the promo code: #advdotnet CodeRush for Visual Studio | FREE 30-DAY TRIAL Audible.com CacheFly Panel Shawn Clabough Caleb Wells Wai Liu Special Guest Jeremy Likness Links https://blog.jeremylikness.com/series/blazor-and-ef-core/ EFCore 5 Preview 6 .NET Docs Taxonomy updates EF Core Community Standups Picks Shawn Clabough Cursed | Netflix Caleb Umbrella Academy 2 Wai Appetize.io Jeremy Likness Oculus Quest Strength In Weakness: My life with Parkinson’s Disease Follow Jeremy on Twitter > @JeremyLikness Follow us on Twitter > @dotNET_Podcast

Microsoft 365 Developer Podcast
Blazor and Web Assembly with Jeremy Likness

Microsoft 365 Developer Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 1, 2020 53:11


Paul talks with Jeremy Likness about the new .Net-based Blazor technology combined with Web Assembly (WASM) to run code in the browser instead of the server. Links from the show: EF Core and Cosmos DB with Blazor WebAssembly Azure AD Secured Serverless Cosmos DB from Blazor WebAssembly Microsoft News Build ASP.NET Core MVC apps with Microsoft Graph Community Links Announcing the Application Insights Annotation Github Action Setup WSL2 for SPFx development

webassembly blazor cosmos db spfx jeremy likness ef core
Azure Friday (HD) - Channel 9
Go serverless: Enterprise integration with Azure Logic Apps

Azure Friday (HD) - Channel 9

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 27, 2020


Jeremy Likness joins Scott Hanselman to show how to build workflows and integrations from the cloud across third-party services and on-premises servers using Azure Logic Apps.[0:01:10] - DemoOverview - What is Azure Logic Apps?Azure Logic AppsDEV50: Investing in Serverless: Less Servers, More Code.Create a free account (Azure)

Azure Friday (Audio) - Channel 9
Go serverless: Enterprise integration with Azure Logic Apps

Azure Friday (Audio) - Channel 9

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 27, 2020


Jeremy Likness joins Scott Hanselman to show how to build workflows and integrations from the cloud across third-party services and on-premises servers using Azure Logic Apps.[0:01:10] - DemoOverview - What is Azure Logic Apps?Azure Logic AppsDEV50: Investing in Serverless: Less Servers, More Code.Create a free account (Azure)

Azure Friday (HD) - Channel 9
Go serverless: Enterprise integration with Azure Logic Apps

Azure Friday (HD) - Channel 9

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 27, 2020 12:58


Jeremy Likness joins Scott Hanselman to show how to build workflows and integrations from the cloud across third-party services and on-premises servers using Azure Logic Apps.[0:01:10] - DemoOverview - What is Azure Logic Apps?Azure Logic AppsDEV50: Investing in Serverless: Less Servers, More Code.Create a free account (Azure)

Azure Friday (Audio) - Channel 9
Go serverless: Enterprise integration with Azure Logic Apps

Azure Friday (Audio) - Channel 9

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 27, 2020 12:58


Jeremy Likness joins Scott Hanselman to show how to build workflows and integrations from the cloud across third-party services and on-premises servers using Azure Logic Apps.[0:01:10] - DemoOverview - What is Azure Logic Apps?Azure Logic AppsDEV50: Investing in Serverless: Less Servers, More Code.Create a free account (Azure)

Azure Friday (HD) - Channel 9
Go serverless: Enterprise integration with Azure Logic Apps

Azure Friday (HD) - Channel 9

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 27, 2020 12:58


Jeremy Likness joins Scott Hanselman to show how to build workflows and integrations from the cloud across third-party services and on-premises servers using Azure Logic Apps.[0:01:10] - DemoOverview - What is Azure Logic Apps?Azure Logic AppsDEV50: Investing in Serverless: Less Servers, More Code.Create a free account (Azure)

Azure DevOps Podcast
Jeremy Likness on DevOps Automation - Episode 76

Azure DevOps Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 17, 2020 39:02


Today’s guest is Jeremy Likness — an internationally selling author, keynote speaker, and professional coder with a personal mission to empower developers to be their best! Jeremy has worked on commercial enterprise software for 25 years and specializes in web technology. Currently, he is also a Sr. Cloud Developer Advocate for Microsoft, but previously held roles at iVision, Wintellect, and AirWatch. In his free time however, he enjoys running, hiking, and shooting nine-ball and one-pocket.   In today’s episode, Jeffrey and Jeremy discuss DevOps Automation. Jeremy shares his philosophy on starting a new project, provides key insights about Azure DevOps Services, speaks about what is new with Azure DevOps in general, gives his thoughts on GitHub Actions, explains how he’s utilizing Azure ARM templates, and shares some of his best practices and go-to resources.   Topics of Discussion: [:39] Be sure to visit AzureDevOps.Show for past episodes and show notes. [1:08] About today’s guest, Jeremy Likness. [1:49] Jeffrey welcomes Jeremy to the podcast. [1:40] Jeremy describes two of his favorite hobbies: nine-ball and one-pocket. [3:15] Jeremy speaks about his career and how it has progressed over the years. [8:11] Jeremy speaks about his current role at Microsoft and what Cloud Advocate really means. [9:51] Jeremy shares his philosophy on starting a project. [13:58] Jeremy provides some key insights when bringing Azure DevOps Services into the mix. [15:41] What’s new in Azure DevOps in general? [20:38] A word from Azure DevOps Podcast’s sponsor: Clear Measure. [21:03] Jeffrey gives some quick announcements. [22:52] Jeremy gives his thoughts on GitHub Actions. [25:48] Jeremy speaks about what the experience is like with GitHub Actions when you have a release candidate that you’re deploying to your environments (environment 1, environment 2, etc.), all the way up to production. He also provides some examples. [28:14] When deploying, is Jeremy still using Azure ARM templates? Or does he use a mix of things to provision his infrastructure? [34:55] Jeremy gives a quick piece of random nostalgia from his past. [35:47] Jeremy’s go-to resources to learn more about the topics discussed on today’s show. [37:45] Where to get in touch with Jeremy! [38:15] Jeffrey thanks Jeremy for joining him in this episode.   Mentioned in this Episode: Azure DevOps Clear Measure (Sponsor) .NET DevOps for Azure: A Developer's Guide to DevOps Architecture the Right Way, by Jeffrey Palermo — Available on Amazon! bit.ly/dotnetdevopsebook — Click here to download the .NET DevOps for Azure ebook! bit.ly/dotnetdevopsbookforcommunity — Visit to get your hands on two free books to give away at conferences or events! Jeffrey Palermo’s Youtube Jeffrey Palermo’s Twitter — Follow to stay informed about future events! Jeffrey@Clear-Measure.com — Email Jeffrey for a free 30-point DevOps inspection (regularly priced at $5000!) — Spaces are limited! Jeremy Likness’ Blog Jeremy Likness’ Twitter Jeremy Likness’ LinkedIn Jeremy Likness’ GitHub Jeremy’s Email: Jeremy.Likness@Microsoft.com Azure DevOps Services Abel Wang The Azure DevOps Podcast: “Abel Wang on DevOps Infrastructure - Episode 73” Hugo GitHub Actions Azure Resource Manager (ARM) Microsoft Ignite Blazor Docs.Microsoft.com/en-us/Learn   Want to Learn More? Visit AzureDevOps.Show for show notes and additional episodes.

amazon microsoft sr automation spaces right way devops azure github actions azure devops airwatch cloud developer advocate jeremy likness wintellect
Azure Friday (HD) - Channel 9
Blazor in the cloud: Hosting a C# SPA app as a static website in Azure Storage

Azure Friday (HD) - Channel 9

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 7, 2019


Jeremy Likness joins Donovan Brown to show how Blazor enables C# and .NET SPA (single page application) apps to run in all modern browsers, even mobile browsers without plugins. Learn how you can host it using inexpensive Azure Storage, static websites, and an optional CDN.Jump To: [02:10] Demo Start Introduction to BlazorFrom Angular to Blazor: The Health AppHosting a Blazor App in Azure Storage Static WebsitesStatic website hosting in Azure Storage (docs)Create a free account (Azure)

Azure Friday (Audio) - Channel 9
Blazor in the cloud: Hosting a C# SPA app as a static website in Azure Storage

Azure Friday (Audio) - Channel 9

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 7, 2019


Jeremy Likness joins Donovan Brown to show how Blazor enables C# and .NET SPA (single page application) apps to run in all modern browsers, even mobile browsers without plugins. Learn how you can host it using inexpensive Azure Storage, static websites, and an optional CDN.Jump To: [02:10] Demo Start Introduction to BlazorFrom Angular to Blazor: The Health AppHosting a Blazor App in Azure Storage Static WebsitesStatic website hosting in Azure Storage (docs)Create a free account (Azure)

MS Dev Show
Careers with Jeremy Likness

MS Dev Show

Play Episode Listen Later May 6, 2019 81:41


We talk with Jeremy Likness about career tips. VS Code Remote extensions. Phishing with inception. And use this one simple trick to put iPhone 4's in your ears. News Dev environments for node, python, go, java, dotnetcore, php, rust, cpp Class 1 Bluetooth 5. H1 die size is ~12mm2. Parts: H1 Cypress SoC Maxim audio codec Bosch BMA280 accelerometer STM 3 axis accelerometer STM regulator TI data converter Goertek MEMs microphones  

Software Developer's Journey
#44 Jeremy Likness became a developer through the backdoor and loved it

Software Developer's Journey

Play Episode Play 30 sec Highlight Listen Later Mar 25, 2019 43:12


Jeremy Likness is a Cloud Developer Advocate for Azure at Microsoft. Jeremy has spent two decades building enterprise software with a focus on line of business web applications. He is the author of several highly acclaimed technical books including Designing Silverlight Business Applications and Programming the Windows Runtime by Example. He has given hundreds of technical presentations during his career as a professional developer. In his free time Jeremy likes to run, hike, and maintain a 100% plant-based diet.Jeremy first explained how he felt in love with computers at the age of 7... and ended up droping out of college and abandoning the idea of a career in software. He told us about the detours he took and how he got back in IT through the back door. We touched on his learning patterns and how he got into public speaking and conferences. We devised on how each step of his career prepared him for his current job as a developer advocate. Finally, we spoke about hiring and mentoring younger developers.Here are the links of the show:@jeremylikness on Twitter: http://twitter.com/@jeremyliknessBlog: https://blog.jeremylikness.comUpcoming talks: https://blog.jeremylikness.com/upcoming-talks-eaf27ff8a3a7CreditsMusic Aye by Yung Kartz is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 License.Your hostSoftware Developer‘s Journey is hosted and produced by Timothée (Tim) Bourguignon, a crazy frenchman living in Germany who dedicated his life to helping others learn & grow. More about him at timbourguignon.fr.Want to be next?Do you know anyone who should be on the podcast? Do you want to be next? Drop me a line: info@devjourney.info or via Twitter @timothep.Gift the podcast a ratingPlease do me and your fellow listeners a favor by spreading the good word about this podcast. And please leave a rating (excellent of course) on the major podcasting platforms, this is the best way to increase the visibility of the podcast:Apple PodcastsStitcherGoogle PlayThanks!Support the show (http://bit.ly/2yBfySB)

Eat Sleep Code Podcast
Serverless Blazor talking Next Gen with Jeremy Likness

Eat Sleep Code Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 3, 2019 51:22


On this episode of Eat Sleep Code, Jeremy Likness talks about creating next gen web applications using Blazor & Serverless with Azure. Jeremy shares his interest in Blazor. How to implement serverless using the Azure serverless platform that includes Azure Functions, Logic Apps, and Event Grid is discussed.

Angular Air
ngAir 180 - Angular in the .NET World with Jeremy Likness

Angular Air

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 17, 2018 59:38


--- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/angularair/support

angular jeremy likness
IT Career Energizer
Learn How To Sell Yourself With Jeremy Likness

IT Career Energizer

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 3, 2018 20:48


Today’s episode should be very interesting not only for I.T. enthusiasts but also for everyone else who wants to upscale their game in their career. Our guest today is Jeremy Likness, a cloud developer advocate for Microsoft and he has one great piece of advice for you – be comfortable selling yourself! Jeremy’s career has spanned over 20 years which he says has mostly focused on communicating with clients and customers. And, he proves that it really made a difference in his career when he started changing how he packaged himself to relay his knowledge and skills easily. These ups and downs made him brave enough to take risks, learn on his own and be determined about his goals. He made connections along the way and his goal is to empower other developers to be their best. Start listening to learn more about Jeremy’s career advice! To find out more about this episode visit the show notes page at www.itcareerenergizer.com/e60  

career microsoft jeremy likness
AskTHAT by THAT Conference
#AskTHAT Live with Jeremy Likness - Getting $h!T Done!

AskTHAT by THAT Conference

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 29, 2018 29:55


Jeremy Likness is a Cloud Developer Advocate for Azure at Microsoft. Jeremy has spent two decades building enterprise software with a focus on line of business web applications. He is the author of several highly acclaimed technical books including Designing Silverlight Business Applications and Programming the Windows Runtime by Example. He has given hundreds of technical presentations during his career. In his free time Jeremy likes to run, hike, and maintain a 100% plant-based diet.

tech microsoft conference productivity programming azure cloud developer advocate jeremy likness windows runtime
My JavaScript Story
MJS 052: Jeremy Likness

My JavaScript Story

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 14, 2018 39:42


Panel: Charles Max Wood Guest: Jeremy Likness This week on My JavaScript Story, Charles speaks with Jeremy Likness. Jeremy works for Microsoft currently and first got into programming when he was kept home while having a sunburn and taught himself how to type in a program into his family’s TI-99 4A computer and then later moved on to the Commodore 64. They stress the fact that you can be a successful programmer, no matter your background and they talk about the pros and cons of being a cloud developer advocate. In particular, we dive pretty deep on: How did you first get into programming? How much Microsoft is in the different programming aspects Cloud developer advocates Azure TI-99 4A and Commodore 64 C and C+ You don’t have to go the traditional route to be a programmer Having a CS major is not the only way How did you get into JavaScript? Discovered the internet in college Career focused on Web apps jQuery Backbone.js Hands-on career with the code He did consulting for 10 years Linux How has your earning changed? His biggest fear was getting out of touch with the realities of day-to-day programming Pros and cons of being a cloud developer advocate Community, Content, and Connection with engineering And much, much more! Links: Microsoft Cloud developer advocates Azure JavaScript jQuery Backbone.js Linux @JeremyLikness Jeremy’s Blog Picks Charles BusyCal Jeremy Dwitter.net Hello World: The Film Node.js documentation on Azure

Devchat.tv Master Feed
MJS 052: Jeremy Likness

Devchat.tv Master Feed

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 14, 2018 39:42


Panel: Charles Max Wood Guest: Jeremy Likness This week on My JavaScript Story, Charles speaks with Jeremy Likness. Jeremy works for Microsoft currently and first got into programming when he was kept home while having a sunburn and taught himself how to type in a program into his family’s TI-99 4A computer and then later moved on to the Commodore 64. They stress the fact that you can be a successful programmer, no matter your background and they talk about the pros and cons of being a cloud developer advocate. In particular, we dive pretty deep on: How did you first get into programming? How much Microsoft is in the different programming aspects Cloud developer advocates Azure TI-99 4A and Commodore 64 C and C+ You don’t have to go the traditional route to be a programmer Having a CS major is not the only way How did you get into JavaScript? Discovered the internet in college Career focused on Web apps jQuery Backbone.js Hands-on career with the code He did consulting for 10 years Linux How has your earning changed? His biggest fear was getting out of touch with the realities of day-to-day programming Pros and cons of being a cloud developer advocate Community, Content, and Connection with engineering And much, much more! Links: Microsoft Cloud developer advocates Azure JavaScript jQuery Backbone.js Linux @JeremyLikness Jeremy’s Blog Picks Charles BusyCal Jeremy Dwitter.net Hello World: The Film Node.js documentation on Azure

All JavaScript Podcasts by Devchat.tv
MJS 052: Jeremy Likness

All JavaScript Podcasts by Devchat.tv

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 14, 2018 39:42


Panel: Charles Max Wood Guest: Jeremy Likness This week on My JavaScript Story, Charles speaks with Jeremy Likness. Jeremy works for Microsoft currently and first got into programming when he was kept home while having a sunburn and taught himself how to type in a program into his family’s TI-99 4A computer and then later moved on to the Commodore 64. They stress the fact that you can be a successful programmer, no matter your background and they talk about the pros and cons of being a cloud developer advocate. In particular, we dive pretty deep on: How did you first get into programming? How much Microsoft is in the different programming aspects Cloud developer advocates Azure TI-99 4A and Commodore 64 C and C+ You don’t have to go the traditional route to be a programmer Having a CS major is not the only way How did you get into JavaScript? Discovered the internet in college Career focused on Web apps jQuery Backbone.js Hands-on career with the code He did consulting for 10 years Linux How has your earning changed? His biggest fear was getting out of touch with the realities of day-to-day programming Pros and cons of being a cloud developer advocate Community, Content, and Connection with engineering And much, much more! Links: Microsoft Cloud developer advocates Azure JavaScript jQuery Backbone.js Linux @JeremyLikness Jeremy’s Blog Picks Charles BusyCal Jeremy Dwitter.net Hello World: The Film Node.js documentation on Azure

Women Tech Talk
Jeremy Likness at Connect Tech Conference 2017

Women Tech Talk

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 10, 2017 1813:00


Jeremy Likness is an experienced entrepreneur and technology executive who has successfully helped ship commercial enterprise software for 20 years. He specializes in catalyzing growth, developing ideas and creating value through delivering software in technical enterprises. His roles as business owner, technology executive and hands-on developer provided unique opportunities to directly impact the bottom line of multiple businesses by helping them grow and increase their organizational capacity while improving operational efficiency.

tech conferences jeremy likness connect tech
.NET Rocks!
Migrating to .NET Core 2 with Jeremy Likness

.NET Rocks!

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 19, 2017 51:50


.NET Core 2 is out - are you ready to migrate? Carl and Richard talk to Jeremy Likness about his experiences migrating his own projects over to Core 2 from .NET Framework. The latest version of Core has the vast majority of the base class libraries from the original framework implemented. Jeremy talks about his open source project called Sterling that hails back from the Silverlight days as a NoSQL data store. And it migrated fine! The conversation dives into other aspects beyond being cross platform, including performance benefits and what new technologies are on the horizon that may be Core-only. It's a great time to kick the tires on Core!Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/net-rocks/donations

.NET Rocks!
Migrating to .NET Core 2 with Jeremy Likness

.NET Rocks!

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 19, 2017 51:49


.NET Core 2 is out - are you ready to migrate? Carl and Richard talk to Jeremy Likness about his experiences migrating his own projects over to Core 2 from .NET Framework. The latest version of Core has the vast majority of the base class libraries from the original framework implemented. Jeremy talks about his open source project called Sterling that hails back from the Silverlight days as a NoSQL data store. And it migrated fine! The conversation dives into other aspects beyond being cross platform, including performance benefits and what new technologies are on the horizon that may be Core-only. It's a great time to kick the tires on Core!Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/net-rocks/donations

All JavaScript Podcasts by Devchat.tv
JSJ BONUS: Web Apps on Linux with Jeremy Likness and Michael Crump

All JavaScript Podcasts by Devchat.tv

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 12, 2017 59:19


Tweet this episode JSJ BONUS: Web Apps on Linux with Jeremy Likness and Michael Crump In this episode Aimee Knight and Charles Max Wood discuss Microsoft's Web Apps on Linux offering with Jeremy Likness and Michael Crump. [00:37] Michael Crump Introduction Michael is on the developer experience team for Azure. [00:52] Jeremy Likness Introduction Jeremy is on the cloud developer advocacy team. Their mission is to remove friction and support developers and work with teams to build a positive experience. The NodeJS team is headed up by John Papa. They have teams around the world and involved in many open source communities. They're focused on building documentation and creating great experiences [02:54] What is it about Azure that people should be getting excited about? Azure is a huge platform. It can be overwhelming. They're trying to help you start with your problem and then see the solution as it exists on Azure. Azure is growing to embrace the needs of developers as they solve these problems. The experience is intended to be open and easy to use for any developer in any language on any platform. It allows you to work in whatever environment you want. Standing up applications in production is tough. Azure provides services and facilities (and interfaces) that make it easy to manage infrastructure. You don't have to be an operations expert. Chuck mentions this messaging as he heard it at Microsoft Connect() last year. It's not about bringing you to .NET. It's about making it easy where you're at. Aimee adds that as a new-ish person in the community and Azure excites her because the portal and tutorials are easy to follow for many new programmers. A lot of these features are available across command lines, tools, and much more. The documentation is great. See our interview with Dan Fernandez on the Microsoft Docs. [12:04] Web Apps on Linux Web application as a service offering from Microsoft. I don't need to worry about the platform, just what's different about my application. Web Apps has traditionally been on Windows. Web Apps on Linux is in preview. You can choose the size of your infrastructure. You only get billed for what you use and can scale up. Setting up multiple servers, managing synchronization and load balancing is a pain. Web Apps gives you a clean interface that makes this management easy. You can also scale across multiple datacenters around the world. [15:06] Why Linux? What's hard about Windows? Node was originally created on Linux and many tools run nicely on Linux. It was later ported to Windows. The toolchains and IDE's and build processes is in an ecosystem that is targeted more toward Linux than Windows. This allows people to work in an environment that operates how they expect instead of trying to map to an underlying Windows kernel. Aimee gives the example of trying to set up ImageMagick on Windows. Web Apps on Linux also allows you to build integrations with your tools that let you build, test, and deploy your application automatically. [19:12] Supported Runtimes Web Apps on Linux supports Node, PHP, Ruby, and .NET Core. You can run a docker container with Node up to 6.x. If you want Node 7.x and 8.x you can create your own Docker container. Web Apps on Linux is build on Docker. The containers also have SSH, so developers can log into the docker container and troubleshoot problems on the container. If you can build a container, you can also run it on this service. At certain levels, there's automatic scaling. [22:06] Consistency between containers? Shared ownership of state or assets It depends on how you build your app. The Docker containers have a shared storage where all the containers have access to the same data and state. There's a system called kudu that makes this really simple. You can also pull logs across all systems. You can also use SSH in the browser [25:23] What's painful about Linux and containers? How is the application built and how does it manage state so that you can isolate issues. If you have 20 containers, can you connect to the right one. It's up to you to manage correlation between containers so you can find the information you need. Knowing your traffic and understanding what to do to prepare for it with scaling and automation is sometimes more art than science. [28:28] How should you manage state? A lot of these systems lend themselves to running stateless, but you don't want to run mongodb on each container versus running one mongodb instance that everything attaches. You want a common place to store data for the entire app for shared state. [30:34] CosmosDB (was DocumentDB) It's an API equivalent to MongoDB. It's a database as a service and you can connect your containers to the CosmosDB in Azure using your portal to make it super easy. You may need to open up some firewall rules, but it should be pretty straightforward. [34:14] Third Party Logging Management Apps Azure has a service that provides metrics (Application Insights) and a logging service. Many other companies use elasticsearch based solutions that solve some of these problems as well. [36:06] How do people use Web Apps on Linux? Companies building new applications many times want to run without managing any infrastructure. So, they use Azure Functions, and other services on Azure. Lift and shift: Take a virtual machine and change it into a web app container that they can run in the cloud. They also move from SQL Server on a server to SQL Server on the cloud. Moving from hosted MongoDB to CosmosDB. You can also use any images on DockerHub. [40:06] Continuous Integration and Continuous Deployment Whether you're using a private registry or cloud registry. When you publish a new image, it'll use a webhook to pull the custom image and deploy it. Or to run it through Continuous Integration and then deploy it without any human interaction. Chuck mentions the case when you haven't logged into a server for a while, there's a huge backlog of system updates. Updating your container definitions makes upkeep automatic. [42:02] Process files and workers with PM2 format You can set up instances to run across cores with the PM2 definitions. You can also make it run various types of workers on different containers. Why did you use PM2? What other uses are there for this kind of setup? You can tell it which processes to start up on boot. You can also have it restart processes when a file is changed, for example, with a config file you can have it restart the processes that run off that config file. [45:38] How to get started Getting started with Node docs.microsoft.com Trial account with a few hundred dollars in Azure credit. Michael's Links michaelcrump.net @mbcrump github.com/mbcrump Jeremy's Links bit.ly/coderblog @jeremylikness github/jeremylikness Picks Aimee Having a little bit of mindfulness while waiting on code and tests to run. Joe Ozark on Netflix Star Wars: Rogue One Chuck Travelers on Netflix Jeremy Ozark filming in Woodstock, GA Autonomous Smart Desk LED light strips Michael Conference Call Bingo Life (Movie) Get Out (Movie)

JavaScript Jabber
JSJ BONUS: Web Apps on Linux with Jeremy Likness and Michael Crump

JavaScript Jabber

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 12, 2017 59:19


Tweet this episode JSJ BONUS: Web Apps on Linux with Jeremy Likness and Michael Crump In this episode Aimee Knight and Charles Max Wood discuss Microsoft's Web Apps on Linux offering with Jeremy Likness and Michael Crump. [00:37] Michael Crump Introduction Michael is on the developer experience team for Azure. [00:52] Jeremy Likness Introduction Jeremy is on the cloud developer advocacy team. Their mission is to remove friction and support developers and work with teams to build a positive experience. The NodeJS team is headed up by John Papa. They have teams around the world and involved in many open source communities. They're focused on building documentation and creating great experiences [02:54] What is it about Azure that people should be getting excited about? Azure is a huge platform. It can be overwhelming. They're trying to help you start with your problem and then see the solution as it exists on Azure. Azure is growing to embrace the needs of developers as they solve these problems. The experience is intended to be open and easy to use for any developer in any language on any platform. It allows you to work in whatever environment you want. Standing up applications in production is tough. Azure provides services and facilities (and interfaces) that make it easy to manage infrastructure. You don't have to be an operations expert. Chuck mentions this messaging as he heard it at Microsoft Connect() last year. It's not about bringing you to .NET. It's about making it easy where you're at. Aimee adds that as a new-ish person in the community and Azure excites her because the portal and tutorials are easy to follow for many new programmers. A lot of these features are available across command lines, tools, and much more. The documentation is great. See our interview with Dan Fernandez on the Microsoft Docs. [12:04] Web Apps on Linux Web application as a service offering from Microsoft. I don't need to worry about the platform, just what's different about my application. Web Apps has traditionally been on Windows. Web Apps on Linux is in preview. You can choose the size of your infrastructure. You only get billed for what you use and can scale up. Setting up multiple servers, managing synchronization and load balancing is a pain. Web Apps gives you a clean interface that makes this management easy. You can also scale across multiple datacenters around the world. [15:06] Why Linux? What's hard about Windows? Node was originally created on Linux and many tools run nicely on Linux. It was later ported to Windows. The toolchains and IDE's and build processes is in an ecosystem that is targeted more toward Linux than Windows. This allows people to work in an environment that operates how they expect instead of trying to map to an underlying Windows kernel. Aimee gives the example of trying to set up ImageMagick on Windows. Web Apps on Linux also allows you to build integrations with your tools that let you build, test, and deploy your application automatically. [19:12] Supported Runtimes Web Apps on Linux supports Node, PHP, Ruby, and .NET Core. You can run a docker container with Node up to 6.x. If you want Node 7.x and 8.x you can create your own Docker container. Web Apps on Linux is build on Docker. The containers also have SSH, so developers can log into the docker container and troubleshoot problems on the container. If you can build a container, you can also run it on this service. At certain levels, there's automatic scaling. [22:06] Consistency between containers? Shared ownership of state or assets It depends on how you build your app. The Docker containers have a shared storage where all the containers have access to the same data and state. There's a system called kudu that makes this really simple. You can also pull logs across all systems. You can also use SSH in the browser [25:23] What's painful about Linux and containers? How is the application built and how does it manage state so that you can isolate issues. If you have 20 containers, can you connect to the right one. It's up to you to manage correlation between containers so you can find the information you need. Knowing your traffic and understanding what to do to prepare for it with scaling and automation is sometimes more art than science. [28:28] How should you manage state? A lot of these systems lend themselves to running stateless, but you don't want to run mongodb on each container versus running one mongodb instance that everything attaches. You want a common place to store data for the entire app for shared state. [30:34] CosmosDB (was DocumentDB) It's an API equivalent to MongoDB. It's a database as a service and you can connect your containers to the CosmosDB in Azure using your portal to make it super easy. You may need to open up some firewall rules, but it should be pretty straightforward. [34:14] Third Party Logging Management Apps Azure has a service that provides metrics (Application Insights) and a logging service. Many other companies use elasticsearch based solutions that solve some of these problems as well. [36:06] How do people use Web Apps on Linux? Companies building new applications many times want to run without managing any infrastructure. So, they use Azure Functions, and other services on Azure. Lift and shift: Take a virtual machine and change it into a web app container that they can run in the cloud. They also move from SQL Server on a server to SQL Server on the cloud. Moving from hosted MongoDB to CosmosDB. You can also use any images on DockerHub. [40:06] Continuous Integration and Continuous Deployment Whether you're using a private registry or cloud registry. When you publish a new image, it'll use a webhook to pull the custom image and deploy it. Or to run it through Continuous Integration and then deploy it without any human interaction. Chuck mentions the case when you haven't logged into a server for a while, there's a huge backlog of system updates. Updating your container definitions makes upkeep automatic. [42:02] Process files and workers with PM2 format You can set up instances to run across cores with the PM2 definitions. You can also make it run various types of workers on different containers. Why did you use PM2? What other uses are there for this kind of setup? You can tell it which processes to start up on boot. You can also have it restart processes when a file is changed, for example, with a config file you can have it restart the processes that run off that config file. [45:38] How to get started Getting started with Node docs.microsoft.com Trial account with a few hundred dollars in Azure credit. Michael's Links michaelcrump.net @mbcrump github.com/mbcrump Jeremy's Links bit.ly/coderblog @jeremylikness github/jeremylikness Picks Aimee Having a little bit of mindfulness while waiting on code and tests to run. Joe Ozark on Netflix Star Wars: Rogue One Chuck Travelers on Netflix Jeremy Ozark filming in Woodstock, GA Autonomous Smart Desk LED light strips Michael Conference Call Bingo Life (Movie) Get Out (Movie)

Devchat.tv Master Feed
JSJ BONUS: Web Apps on Linux with Jeremy Likness and Michael Crump

Devchat.tv Master Feed

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 12, 2017 59:19


Tweet this episode JSJ BONUS: Web Apps on Linux with Jeremy Likness and Michael Crump In this episode Aimee Knight and Charles Max Wood discuss Microsoft's Web Apps on Linux offering with Jeremy Likness and Michael Crump. [00:37] Michael Crump Introduction Michael is on the developer experience team for Azure. [00:52] Jeremy Likness Introduction Jeremy is on the cloud developer advocacy team. Their mission is to remove friction and support developers and work with teams to build a positive experience. The NodeJS team is headed up by John Papa. They have teams around the world and involved in many open source communities. They're focused on building documentation and creating great experiences [02:54] What is it about Azure that people should be getting excited about? Azure is a huge platform. It can be overwhelming. They're trying to help you start with your problem and then see the solution as it exists on Azure. Azure is growing to embrace the needs of developers as they solve these problems. The experience is intended to be open and easy to use for any developer in any language on any platform. It allows you to work in whatever environment you want. Standing up applications in production is tough. Azure provides services and facilities (and interfaces) that make it easy to manage infrastructure. You don't have to be an operations expert. Chuck mentions this messaging as he heard it at Microsoft Connect() last year. It's not about bringing you to .NET. It's about making it easy where you're at. Aimee adds that as a new-ish person in the community and Azure excites her because the portal and tutorials are easy to follow for many new programmers. A lot of these features are available across command lines, tools, and much more. The documentation is great. See our interview with Dan Fernandez on the Microsoft Docs. [12:04] Web Apps on Linux Web application as a service offering from Microsoft. I don't need to worry about the platform, just what's different about my application. Web Apps has traditionally been on Windows. Web Apps on Linux is in preview. You can choose the size of your infrastructure. You only get billed for what you use and can scale up. Setting up multiple servers, managing synchronization and load balancing is a pain. Web Apps gives you a clean interface that makes this management easy. You can also scale across multiple datacenters around the world. [15:06] Why Linux? What's hard about Windows? Node was originally created on Linux and many tools run nicely on Linux. It was later ported to Windows. The toolchains and IDE's and build processes is in an ecosystem that is targeted more toward Linux than Windows. This allows people to work in an environment that operates how they expect instead of trying to map to an underlying Windows kernel. Aimee gives the example of trying to set up ImageMagick on Windows. Web Apps on Linux also allows you to build integrations with your tools that let you build, test, and deploy your application automatically. [19:12] Supported Runtimes Web Apps on Linux supports Node, PHP, Ruby, and .NET Core. You can run a docker container with Node up to 6.x. If you want Node 7.x and 8.x you can create your own Docker container. Web Apps on Linux is build on Docker. The containers also have SSH, so developers can log into the docker container and troubleshoot problems on the container. If you can build a container, you can also run it on this service. At certain levels, there's automatic scaling. [22:06] Consistency between containers? Shared ownership of state or assets It depends on how you build your app. The Docker containers have a shared storage where all the containers have access to the same data and state. There's a system called kudu that makes this really simple. You can also pull logs across all systems. You can also use SSH in the browser [25:23] What's painful about Linux and containers? How is the application built and how does it manage state so that you can isolate issues. If you have 20 containers, can you connect to the right one. It's up to you to manage correlation between containers so you can find the information you need. Knowing your traffic and understanding what to do to prepare for it with scaling and automation is sometimes more art than science. [28:28] How should you manage state? A lot of these systems lend themselves to running stateless, but you don't want to run mongodb on each container versus running one mongodb instance that everything attaches. You want a common place to store data for the entire app for shared state. [30:34] CosmosDB (was DocumentDB) It's an API equivalent to MongoDB. It's a database as a service and you can connect your containers to the CosmosDB in Azure using your portal to make it super easy. You may need to open up some firewall rules, but it should be pretty straightforward. [34:14] Third Party Logging Management Apps Azure has a service that provides metrics (Application Insights) and a logging service. Many other companies use elasticsearch based solutions that solve some of these problems as well. [36:06] How do people use Web Apps on Linux? Companies building new applications many times want to run without managing any infrastructure. So, they use Azure Functions, and other services on Azure. Lift and shift: Take a virtual machine and change it into a web app container that they can run in the cloud. They also move from SQL Server on a server to SQL Server on the cloud. Moving from hosted MongoDB to CosmosDB. You can also use any images on DockerHub. [40:06] Continuous Integration and Continuous Deployment Whether you're using a private registry or cloud registry. When you publish a new image, it'll use a webhook to pull the custom image and deploy it. Or to run it through Continuous Integration and then deploy it without any human interaction. Chuck mentions the case when you haven't logged into a server for a while, there's a huge backlog of system updates. Updating your container definitions makes upkeep automatic. [42:02] Process files and workers with PM2 format You can set up instances to run across cores with the PM2 definitions. You can also make it run various types of workers on different containers. Why did you use PM2? What other uses are there for this kind of setup? You can tell it which processes to start up on boot. You can also have it restart processes when a file is changed, for example, with a config file you can have it restart the processes that run off that config file. [45:38] How to get started Getting started with Node docs.microsoft.com Trial account with a few hundred dollars in Azure credit. Michael's Links michaelcrump.net @mbcrump github.com/mbcrump Jeremy's Links bit.ly/coderblog @jeremylikness github/jeremylikness Picks Aimee Having a little bit of mindfulness while waiting on code and tests to run. Joe Ozark on Netflix Star Wars: Rogue One Chuck Travelers on Netflix Jeremy Ozark filming in Woodstock, GA Autonomous Smart Desk LED light strips Michael Conference Call Bingo Life (Movie) Get Out (Movie)

Eat Sleep Code Podcast
All About AngularJS

Eat Sleep Code Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 26, 2015 30:33


On this episode of Eat Sleep Code, guests Jeremy Likness talks about why he uses AngularJS. We clear the air about Angular 2 and discuss using directives for a clean separation of concerns.

The Hello World Podcast
Episode 1: Jeremy Likness

The Hello World Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 17, 2013 29:55


Jeremy Likness joins the Hello World Podcast to talk about how he got started!  Jeremy Likness is a principal consultant at Wintellect. He has 20 years of experience building enterprise applications and specializes in delivering web-based solutions using the Microsoft stack with client technologies like TypeScript and AngularJS. A 4-time Microsoft MVP, Jeremy is the author of several books that cover XAML technologies like Silverlight and Windows 8.1 and speaks frequently at user group events and conferences. Jeremy lives in Woodstock, GA with his wife, daughter, three dogs and an Ecclectus parrot. He loves hiking, running, skiing, shooting guns and shooting pool (9-ball is his favorite game).  Twitter: http://twitter.com/jeremylikness Blog: http://csharperimage.jeremylikness.com/ Book: http://bit.ly/winrtexample

.NET Rocks!
Jeremy Likness is all Silverlight 5

.NET Rocks!

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 1, 1970 55:03


Carl and Richard talk to Jeremy Likness about Silverlight 5. Is Silverlight dead? Not by a long shot. Jeremy talks about the great work going on the Silverlight today and how it still is the most efficient way to build applications that run on both Windows and OSX. The conversation drills into the new features of Silverlight 5 and dispels a lot of the myths around the future of Silverlight. Jeremy also talks about Jounce, his MVVM+MEF framework on Codeplex and the relationship between Silverlight and WinRT.Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/net-rocks/donations

windows os x silverlight jeremy likness codeplex jounce winrt