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Marketing can be done so much more efficiently and easily with the right tech... But how do you know what tech is the right tech!?Well today we have someone who specialises in this space joining us to chat about what tech might be right for your business - note: he is from High Level so there could be a llliittttllleee bit of bias towards that platform, however still great to learn about it! Kel shares insights on the platform's extensive functionalities, including CRM, email marketing, calendaring, and even cryptocurrency payments. He addresses common concerns about security and data management, and offers practical advice for transitioning to an all-in-one system.Kelvin Holliday is the Founder and CEO of the Transformational Group of companies, they are creators of time and freedom by sharing our Thinking to develop yours, Technology selection that's easy and cost-effective, and building remote Teams (Some call VA teams) by providing Internationally Recognised "Transformational Leadership" systems. Having been recognised in the top 10 professionals for leadership and Team systems internationally by Fox, ABS NBC and CBS, and as a 3 times #1 best selling author, he is passionate and motivated to share these experiences and systems with you. Connect with Kevlin on LinkedIn.DOWNLOAD MY CONTENT PLANNER - https://becchappell.com.au/content-planner/Instagram @bec_chappellLinkedIn – Bec Chappell If you're ready to work together, I'm ready to work with you and your team.How to work with me:1. Marketing foundations and strategy consultation 2. Marketing Coaching/ Whispering for you a marketing leader or your team who you want to develop into marketing leaders3. Book me as a speaker or advisor for your organisation4. Get me on your podcastThis podcast has been produced and edited by Snappystreet Creative
Today, we're speaking to Kevlin Henney, who, if you scroll back far enough, you'll see was one of our earliest guests on the podcast. We're thrilled to have Kevlin back for a discussion on microservices, agile development and how developers can avoid the “factory line” work style. Kevlin talks to us about how there isn't one service or language that has “the answer”, and the approach to tools should be broad and open to change. When developing a system, you're creating something new - it's not manufacturing, there is always an element of novelty to what you're making, and that should be understood and accounted for. We also get into the subject of legacy code and systems, and how to interact with and manage them. The accommodations required to run such a system can often result in it making more decisions than the developers working on it. A code base that's a decade old with multiple component systems fighting each other can present problems, but if everyone's too afraid to change things up, then the maintenance costs will continue to rack up. It was a pleasure to have Kevlin back and we can't wait to see what he's up to, 200 more episodes down the line! Reach out to Kevlin here: https://www.linkedin.com/in/kevlin/ Check out his website: https://about.me/kevlin Find out more and listen to previous podcasts here: https://www.voxgig.com/podcast Subscribe to our newsletter for weekly updates and information about upcoming meetups: https://voxgig.substack.com/ Join the Dublin DevRel Meetup group here: www.devrelmeetup.com
Love God Love People | Cross Timbers Church | Lissie Kevlin
In this episode of “The Engineering Room” Dave Farley chats with renowned author, speaker and expert software developer Kevlin Henney. In fact "The one and only Kevlin Henney" - literally! He has a google-unique name: try it! Kevlin is a member of the ACCU and IEEE Software Advisory Board. Famous for works on Pattern-Oriented Software Architecture and Big Public Software Failures. He has published several ‘anthology' books, including: "97 Things Every Programmer Should Know - Collective Wisdom from the Experts”xx
“In a world that runs on software, when we develop and deploy software, we are part of a larger system where our failures are no longer about us, they are also about other people." Today's clip is from Tech Lead Journal episode 122 with Kevlin Henney, a consultant, writer, and speaker on software development and has written and edited several popular books. In this clip, Kevlin brought up some timeless software development concepts developers should learn from the past on cohesion, coupling, and code quality. He also explained why he becomes associated with public software failures widely known as KevlinHenney screens and how the trend started in the beginning. Listen out for: Learning From the Past - [00:00:26] KevlinHenney Screens - [00:13:18] _____ Kevlin Henney's BioKevlin Henney is an independent consultant, trainer, writer and speaker. His interests cover what happens on both sides of the keyboard, and everything from the detail of code to the bigger picture of software architecture. Kevlin is co–author of two volumes in the Pattern–Oriented Software Architecture series, editor of 97 Things Every Programmer Should Know and co-editor of 97 Things Every Java Programmer Should Know. Follow Kevlin: Twitter – @KevlinHenney Mastodon – @kevlin@mastodon.social LinkedIn – linkedin.com/in/kevlin Medium – kevlinhenney.medium.com Instagram – instagram.com/kevlin.henney _____ Our Sponsors Are you looking for a new cool swag? Tech Lead Journal now offers you some swags that you can purchase online. These swags are printed on-demand based on your preference, and will be delivered safely to you all over the world where shipping is available. Check out all the cool swags available by visiting techleadjournal.dev/shop. And don't forget to brag yourself once you receive any of those swags. Like this episode? Show notes & transcript: techleadjournal.dev/episodes/122. Follow @techleadjournal on LinkedIn, Twitter, and Instagram. Buy me a coffee or become a patron.
“In a world that runs on software, when we develop and deploy software, we are part of a larger system where our failures are no longer about us, they are also about other people." Kevlin Henney is a consultant, writer, and speaker on software development and has written and edited several popular books. In this episode, Kevlin shared his 3 favorite things every software engineer should know based on the two books he edited: “97 Things Every Programmer Should Know” and “97 Things Every Java Programmer Should Know”. He explained the importance for developers of taking an occasional break when working on deep work, putting code comments wisely, and using testing not just for checks but also for communication tool. Kevlin also brought up some timeless software development concepts developers should learn from the past on cohesion, coupling, and code quality. He also explained why he becomes associated with public software failures widely known as KevlinHenney screens and how the trend started in the beginning. Towards the end, Kevlin shared his views on why it is important for developers to improve public speaking, writing, and having more compassion towards each other. Listen out for: Career Journey - [00:04:54] Things Every Programmer Should Know - [00:10:13] Learning From the Past - [00:25:35] KevlinHenney Screens - [00:38:28] Public Speaking, Writing, and Compassion - [00:42:49] 3 Tech Lead Wisdom - [00:53:46] _____ Kevlin Henney's Bio Kevlin Henney is an independent consultant, trainer, writer and speaker. His interests cover what happens on both sides of the keyboard, and everything from the detail of code to the bigger picture of software architecture. Kevlin is co–author of two volumes in the Pattern–Oriented Software Architecture series, editor of 97 Things Every Programmer Should Know and co-editor of 97 Things Every Java Programmer Should Know. Follow Kevlin: Twitter – @KevlinHenney Mastodon – @kevlin@mastodon.social LinkedIn – linkedin.com/in/kevlin Medium – kevlinhenney.medium.com Instagram – instagram.com/kevlin.henney _____ Our Sponsors Skills Matter is the global community and events platform for software professionals. You get on-demand access to their latest content, thought leadership insights as well as the exciting schedule of tech events running across all time zones. Head on over to skillsmatter.com to become part of the tech community that matters most to you - it's free to join and easy to keep up with the latest tech trends. Are you looking for a new cool swag? Tech Lead Journal now offers you some swags that you can purchase online. These swags are printed on-demand based on your preference, and will be delivered safely to you all over the world where shipping is available. Check out all the cool swags available by visiting techleadjournal.dev/shop. And don't forget to brag yourself once you receive any of those swags. Like this episode? Follow @techleadjournal on LinkedIn, Twitter, and Instagram. Pledge your support by becoming a patron. For episode show notes, visit techleadjournal.dev/episodes/122.
Max gets a hostile welcoming on Typhius, Atticus and Kevlin try to flee the planet, and Jade comes around and attempts to free Anna.
Pasco Kevlin returns! by truestorieslive
No releases this week; but lots of interesting tidbits nonetheless. If you read just one article this week, check out “The Myth of the Treasure Fox”. Link below, of course.Get the Drop on Sorting. Kevlin Henney does a deep dive on the drop-sort, a sorting algorithm that sorts by dropping elements in the collection. This is not as useless as it immediately appears, and Kevlin explains why. It's engaging and informative.In a screenshot that is strangely alluring Maarten shows off what VB looks like in the brave new world of .NET 6, with a pattern based XML Literal. If I were to rate VB on this screenshot alone, I'd give it a 12/10. Having worked in VB, I give it a 4/10. It's slightly ahead of the readability of JavaScript 5, and slightly behind Python. These ratings are final.Chat Wars! How microsoft tried (and failed) to keep MSN compatibility with AIM. If AIM and MSN were still alive, they'd have graduated college by now and be grumbling about the state of the job market. I mean, they unemployed, strictly speaking, with AIM having been retired in 2017, and MSN Messenger having been retired in 2014..NET 5 Support of Azure Functions OpenAPI Extension Yes, now Azure Functions support .NET 5 for OpenAPI Extensions. If you, like me, have no idea what that is, then this blog post isn't for you! (It's becoming increasingly clear that these blog-posts with keyword laden titles are there to help hit some sort of internal Microsoft KPI related to pushing Azure). “George, you're being unfair!”, I can hear you say. If I'm being unfair, then why aren't these blog post titles telling you the outcomes they can help you acheive, instead of keywords of processes related to their own products?No, NVidia Didn't Fool Everyone with a Computer-Generated CEO In case you missed this, NVidia used a Computer Generated capture of its CEO for a short scene in its presentation, but their initial blog post on the subject made it seem like they used the CG'd CEO throughout. It's still impressive, bu tnot nearly as impressive as initially made out to be.Microsoft revamps Visual Studio JavaScript projects in forthcoming version. Visual Studio will now rely on whatever the ‘system' has installed for JavaScript frameworks when creating a new JavaScript-ish project in Visual Studio 2022. I assume it will work seamlessly with things like nodeenv and other virtual environments, and if it doesn't that would be a bit embarassing, wouldn't it?.NET Optional SDK Workloads This came about because I saw the word ‘workload' in reference to .NET, and had no idea what it meant. It means a way to extend the SDK to do other things than it's meant to. I can't figure out if this is a public thing (you too can write extensions for the SDK) or if this is a Microsoft Only addition, or who this is even for.A Decade Later, .NET Developers Still Fear being ‘Silverlighted' by Microsoft. Killing Silverlight was the closest thing .NET Developers had to experiencing the Red Wedding. An entire developer stack killed overnight. I don't claim there's any sort of ‘guest right' when it comes to Technology Stacks, but there's a certain amount of creative destruction taking place that Microsoft was not known for previously. They have several hundred projects to kill to even get close to Google's bloodthirstiness. There are, of course, differing views, as is the norm on Twitter.Async code has signficantly less overhead using .NET 5 compared to .NET Core 3.1. Screenshots of the benchmarks in the link if you like that sort of thing.The myth of the treasure fox in Skyrim. This is why I love twitter. You learn things you'd otherwise never hear about. I won't spoil the story for you, but it's worth your time to read.Introducing DevOps-Friendly EF Core Migration Bundles. DevOps here means “Deploying your code easily” and has nothing to do with Azure DevOps (either Azure DevOps On-Prem, or Azure DevOps on Azure — and no, I'm never letting Microsoft live that atrocious naming down). Anyway, The EF Core team has made it easier to run database migrations in a CI environment.Highlights from Git 2.33. The news here is that git now has a new rewritten and faster merge strategy called merge-ort. To try it out (it's not the default yet), you can use the command git merge -s ort when merging two branches in git. The -s ort is some sort of a cruel joke, I think. Or at least proof that no one talks their way through commands any more. Can you imagine telling someone with your mouth-words how to do it? “Type g i t space dash s space o r t”.Performance Improvements in .NET 6. If you like performance blog posts and you tolerate IL, this blog post is for you. As deep a dive as you'll get on just what performance improvements have been made in .NET 6, and what it looks like under the covers.Visual Studio 2022 Preview 3 offers a new breakpoint context menu to set advanced breakpoints more easily. If you don't use advanced breakpoints, they're quite magical to improving productivity when debugging — like setting a breakpoint after a specific number of times, or setting conditional breakpoints.In the “We can't help being evil” department, It's harder to switch default browsers in Windows 11. Besides the tweet, there's an in-depth article about it on the verge, and what that means for us. Since 90s clothing is come back in style, I suppose 90s monopoly practices should too? You can now have global using static .. This is a great idea. I mean, globals are already a time-honored programmer tradition, and of course seeing methods being called that you have to have an IDE to trace is a wonderful idea.And that's it for what happened last week in .NET. It was a light week; but as we get closer to November (and .NET 6), we should see more releases.
This interview was recorded for the GOTO Book Club.http://gotopia.tech/bookclubTrisha Gee - Co-Author of "97 Things Every Java Programmer Should Know"Kevlin Henney - Co-Author of "97 Things Every Java Programmer Should Know"DESCRIPTIONDiscover the voices behind the “97 Things Every Java Developer Should Know” in this GOTO Book Club episode with Trisha Gee, Java Champion and leader of the Java Developer Advocacy team at JetBrains, and Kevlin Henley, thought provoker at Curbralan. They highlight how to make the most out of the book, and why it's not intended as an exhaustive list or only targeted at Java developers.The interview is based on Trisha's and Kevlin's book "97 Things Every Java Programmer Should Know":https://amzn.to/3kiTwJJRead the full transcription of the interview here:https://gotopia.tech/bookclub/episodes/97-things-every-programmer-should-knowRECOMMENDED BOOKSKevlin Henney & Trisha Gee • 97 Things Every Java Programmer Should Know • https://amzn.to/3kiTwJJhttps://twitter.com/GOTOconhttps://www.linkedin.com/company/goto-https://www.facebook.com/GOTOConferencesLooking for a unique learning experience?Attend the next GOTO conference near you! Get your ticket at http://gotopia.techSUBSCRIBE TO OUR YOUTUBE CHANNEL - new videos posted almost daily.https://www.youtube.com/user/GotoConferences/?sub_confirmation=1
Coby and Evan give hot takes around the world of sports with special guest Kevlin
The heroes confront Sephek Kaltro in Termalaine and mount a rescue of Garret Verlyn's lost expedition to Kevlin's Cairn. Watch live episodes on twitch.tv/tablehops every Wednesday at 7pm EST! --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/tablehopspodcast/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/tablehopspodcast/support
Kelvin Harris Former University of Miami Football Player
Kevlin Henney is a professional public speaker and the highly regarded author of 97 Things Every Programmer Should Know. He also runs his own software consultancy firm. In this episode, Kevlin tells Richard how he started his career as a software developer and quickly made the transition into public speaking. He explains the struggles he went through trying to figure out his unique speaking style, which he did without any guidance. He also stresses how important it is to learn from every talk you give. Kevlin describes the evolution of speaking to tech audiences, including how technological advances like PowerPoint have made public speaking much more accessible to the general public and have allowed individuals to have more on-the-spot creativity. Learn more about Kevlin here. To get a weekly dose of public speaking tips, information, videos of great talks, conference news, book reviews and more, sign up to the Voxgig newsletter. View all show notes, links, and more brilliant public speaking resources at voxgig.com. If you like what you hear on Fireside with Voxgig, don't be shy―tell everyone! Use #firesidewithvoxgig on your social media.
Kevlin Henney is a professional public speaker and the highly regarded author of 97 Things Every Programmer Should Know. He also runs his own software consultancy firm. In this episode, Kevlin tells Richard how he started his career as a software developer and quickly made the transition into public speaking. He explains the struggles he went through trying to figure out his unique speaking style, which he did without any guidance. He also stresses how important it is to learn from every talk you give. Kevlin describes the evolution of speaking to tech audiences, including how technological advances like PowerPoint have made public speaking much more accessible to the general public and have allowed individuals to have more on-the-spot creativity. Learn more about Kevlin here. To get a weekly dose of public speaking tips, information, videos of great talks, conference news, book reviews and more, sign up to the Voxgig newsletter. View all show notes, links, and more brilliant public speaking resources at voxgig.com. If you like what you hear on Fireside with Voxgig, don’t be shy―tell everyone! Use #firesidewithvoxgig on your social media.
This week we manage to align with the calendars of Kevlin Henney and Martin Hořeňovský to talk about testing and beyond - with a particular focus on Catch2 - past, present and future. We discuss how some of Kevlin's ideas influenced Catch originally, and how Martin later joined as a co-maintainer (who does most of the work).
Kevlin has caught his baby mama Daniella cheating several times, but for some reason still wants to propose live on the radio! Listen to hear what happened when we got his shameless cheating baby mama on the phone for Crush on You on the Sana G Morning Show!
Kevlin has caught his baby mama Daniella cheating several times, but for some reason still wants to propose live on the radio! Listen to hear what happened when we got his shameless cheating baby mama on the phone for Crush on You on the Sana G Morning Show!
Kevlin Henney is a published author and is editor of the book “97 Things Every Programmer Should Know”. He is also a presenter and consultant on software development and has been a keynote speaker at a number of conferences. In this episode Kevlin talks about how technology connects everything together, the organisation of information and why there is always something useful to take from every experience. Kevlin also discusses why he believes I.T. is where all the exciting things are happening. To find out more about this episode, visit the show notes page at www.itcareerenergizer.com/e15
From the 15th July Roger Eno and Norwich Arts Centre are running the St Swithuns Project - 40 musical events over 40 days, the theme of the 40 days will be determined by the weather on St Swithuns Day – I caught up with Bafta nominated composer and multi-instrumentalist Roger Eno and Pasco Kevlin Director of NAC to find out more http://norwichartscentre.co.uk/events/roger-eno-st-swithuns-project/Platform
In this episode we talk with Kevlin Henney, an independent software development consultant and trainer from the United Kingdom, well-known from one of his books '97 Things Every Programmer Should Know'. In the interview we discuss a wide variety of subjects in software development, like the agile community, patterns, learning and languages. Kevlin shares his thoughts on the software craftmanship movement and states his opinion on the discussion whether our profession is a form of engineering or not. In some parts of this discussion we refer to the Hot-or-Not presentation that Kevlin gave the night before the interview at Sioux, the Netherlands. You can find the slides of this presentation here. The interview was recorded at the hotel 'la Sonnerie' in Son & Breugel. We would like to thank the hotel for their hospitality by providing the chapel as a recording room for the podcast. Interview by @freekl en @arnetimAudio post-production by @mendelt Links for this podcast: Kevlin (co) authored two books of the Pattern-Oriented Software Architecture serie: volume 4 is a worked example of patterns for distributed computing and the 5th volume is a book on the concepts of patterns. In the podcast Kevlin refers to a famous quote of Jason Gorman: 'Software craftsmanship's not the "next big thing". It's an attempt to articulate what the "thing" always was'. Scrum can be seen as a 'Nomic' game, which is a game in which changing the rules is one of the rules. In a presentation called 'With Economy and Elegance - Software Engineering reclaimed' (slides here) Kevlin explains that Software Engineering is a form of engineering and a craft - following his claim there are no contradictions. Glenn Vandenburg explains what is wrong with the way Software Engineering is taught at universities in the presentation called 'Real Software Engineering' (video here). Software development is all about passion and fun. An example of passion is the Tenet of Professionalism from Uncle Bob: 'Work 40 hours for your employer and another 20 hours improving yourself'. A great example of fun and playfulness in our industry is 'the Globe', a piece of Ruby software which rotates itself. Another way to look at your code is with a tag cloud of all words used in a piece of software. This idea was proposed by Phillip Calçado.