Podcasts about Maintainability

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Best podcasts about Maintainability

Latest podcast episodes about Maintainability

Rust in Production
Zoo with Jessie Frazelle

Rust in Production

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 12, 2024 64:02 Transcription Available


Think about this: software engineers have modern code editors, parallel processing, continuous integration, and countless tools that make their work efficient. But hardware engineers? They're often working with single-threaded tools, limited automation, and workflows that haven't fundamentally changed in decades. Zoo is building the infrastructure to change that, creating a modern set of tools and APIs that will allow companies and engineers to build better hardware design tools and accelerate the development of physical products.Today we're joined by Jessie Frazelle, CEO of Zoo (formerly KittyCAD), to talk about migrating core parts of Zoo's infrastructure to Rust, boring infrastructure, how Rust can help bridge the gap between software and hardware development, and how Zoo is building the foundation for the next generation of hardware development tools.

The .NET Core Podcast
CQRS, System Maintainability, and Pragmatic Tech Choices with Dejan Miličić

The .NET Core Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 27, 2024 64:59


Metalama This episode of The Modern .NET Show is supported, in part, by Metalama, reduce your boilerplate code by up to 15% with Metalama's C#-to-C# template engine and reduce your code complexity today! Show Notes "Essentially, when you look at it, what we are doing, we are not building software. We are changing it, we are maintaining it. Because when you look at the typical lifecycle of the application, enterprise one I would say, or any big system where you invest lots of time lots of money building it, you want to exploit this for 5-10-15 years hopefully. So when you look at the percentages, you're building something for one year and then you are using it for nine more years, let's say. It's a 10 year life cycle. So when you think about it, you spend 10 times... er, 10 percent of your time building something and 90 percent of the lifecycle of the application or the system responding to change requests, building new things, changing, adapting, and maintaining. So essentially, our job is not to build out. Our job is to sustain all these request changes. I think that's the first point we need to clear."— Dejan Miličić Welcome friends to The Modern .NET Show; the premier .NET podcast, focussing 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 your host: Jamie "GaProgMan" Taylor. In this episode, Dejan Miličić joined us to talk about the CQRS pattern, how it came from CQS, what CQS is and how it's related to Alan Kay's original ideas for object-oriented programming, being pragmatic as developers and engineers, the importance of system design and system's thinking, and how we all need to realise that our software lives on for years after we've pushed our changes to the repo. "So I, indeed, agree with you that people should pay more attention to system design. Start looking at the whole picture. And the extreme of this thinking would be: okay you will go into job interview, they will ask you about, I don't know, quick sort you, will implement it on the whiteboard, and then six months later on you will go and purchase or maybe download a NuGet package with with a quick sort implementation, because you know it makes sense; you don't want to implement something that have been implemented this many times before."— Dejan Miličić Whilst this episode doesn't focus on .NET per se, I think that the subjects that Dejan and I covered are incredibly important for anyone who wants to seriously level up their game. In fact, Dejan proved this point when he said: "We [are] all, like, containerised into our own small silos and working on our own without being aware of the whole system. When you look at what people go through when they prepare for job interviews at, I don't you know, Google, Facebook, nowadays Meta, Microsoft, you have all these books on the system design. And then they go, instead of, you know, going to the job interview after 20 years of experience and talking about what you do and what you know, people with 20 years of experience still sit down and learn and prepare for the system design interview. I'm not saying they shouldn't be preparing, but some of my colleagues told me that that was the first time in their careers that they started looking at the system design as a discipline."— Dejan Miličić 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/cqrs-system-maintainability-and-pragmatic-tech-choices-with-dejan-milicic/ Useful Links Dejan on Twitter: x.com/dejanmilicic Dejjan on LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/dejanmilicic Music created by Mono Memory Music, licensed to RJJ Software for use in The Modern .NET Show Editing and post-production services for this episode were provided (in part) by MB Podcast Services Supporting the show: Leave a rating or review Buy the show a coffee Become a patron 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.

All JavaScript Podcasts by Devchat.tv
Adapting to Effect Cluster: JavaScript Developers' Guide to Enhancing Code Maintainability - JSJ 639

All JavaScript Podcasts by Devchat.tv

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 9, 2024 95:01


In today's episode, they dive deep into the world of JavaScript and TypeScript. They explore the innovative message-passing style between components using Effect Cluster, a game-changing alpha product that integrates seamlessly with solutions like Remix and React Server Components.Join them as Michael sheds light on the ease of transitioning TypeScript developers familiar with frameworks like React and Svelte to Effect, thanks to JavaScript's component-based mindset and features similar to async/await. They also talk about the role of TypeScript and Effect in ensuring code maintainability and correctness amidst legacy JavaScript at Sisense.As they navigate through topics like performance optimization, multithreading in JavaScript, and backend development,  discover how the Effect framework simplifies testing, enhances type inference, and boosts code stability. Plus, they touch on coding challenges, error handling, and the importance of proper monitoring with tools like OpenTelemetry.But it's not all code! They share fun anecdotes from personal experiences with go karting, discuss the NBA draft, and even delve into some light-hearted humor with dad jokes and comedic analogies. This episode is packed with insights, laughter, and invaluable advice for developers and tech enthusiasts alike.Tune in now for a comprehensive discussion filled with expert knowledge, practical tips, and community insights, exclusively on Top End Devs!SocialsLinkedIn: Michael Arnaldi Twitter: @MichaelArnaldiPicksAJ - MSF Basic Rider CourseAJ - Alpine MotoSafe Wind Noise Ear PlugsDan - Pillar of Fire | Episode 1Dan - Pillar of Fire | Episode 2Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/javascript-jabber--6102064/support.

The CleanTechies Podcast
#185 Green Hydrogen, Landing Customers, Electrolyzers, Building in Wisconsin, & More w/ Chad Mason (Advanced Ionics)

The CleanTechies Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 17, 2024 55:50 Transcription Available


Chad Mason is the CEO and Founder of Advanced Ionics, a company that has designed a revolutionary electrolyzer. They did this by designing their technology from scratch.They are currently scaling up this innovative technology and plan to sell these units, known as stacks, either directly or through licensing agreements.Today, Chad shares his  journey:Early Inspiration: How he first learned about electrolysis at age 5 on a farm in North Dakota.Career Path: The various steps in his career that led him to start Advanced Ionics.Strategic Location: Why he chose Milwaukee, Wisconsin, as the base for his company.Corporate Partnerships: How they partner with corporates for capital, pilots, and demand.Chad also offers his insights on the future of the electrolyzer space, discussing both the tailwinds that are driving growth and the headwinds that present challenges.Enjoy today's conversation! ---

Rust in Production
Rust in Production Ep 7 - Season Finale

Rust in Production

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 7, 2024 36:21 Transcription Available


In this episode of Rust in Production, we reflect on the inaugural season, sharing insights from companies pioneering with Rust to shape the future of infrastructure. Starting with Rust's early days before the stable compiler, we chart the language's evolution and its growing adoption in production by leading companies. The episode explores why companies choose Rust, highlighting its unparalleled safety features, concurrency management, and performance that not only drives down costs but significantly enhances user experience. The narrative then shifts to the practicalities of adopting Rust, including learning resources, the importance of community support, and integrating Rust into existing codebases. We discuss the surprisingly positive experience of hiring Rust developers, thanks to the language's appealing prospects. Moreover, the episode delves into Rust's explicit approach to handling complexity, offering a steeper yet rewarding learning curve. We also address the misconception of Rust's limited adoption, revealing its widespread use across various industries and the consensus around certain Rust patterns and libraries. Despite the challenges in showcasing Rust's adoption due to the reticence of some companies to share their stories, the positive feedback from the podcast's audience underscores a keen interest in Rust's real-world applications. Concluding the season, we extend a heartfelt thanks to all guests and listeners, emphasizing the value of sharing Rust experiences and the potential for further growth in the Rust ecosystem. We share a wishlist for the Rust community, including expanded learning resources, improved tooling for production environments, and more public discussions of Rust's benefits. As the show gears up (see what we did there?) for its second season, listeners are encouraged to engage and suggest topics or guests, which could broaden our common understanding of Rust in production.

Real Talk JavaScript
Episode 251: RedwoodJS with Tom Preston-Werner

Real Talk JavaScript

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 14, 2023 47:52


Recording date: Aug 31, 2023Host:John Papa @John_PapaGuest:Tom Preston-Werner @MojomboBrought to you byAG GridNarwhal Visit nx.dev to get the preeminent open-source toolkit for monorepo development, today. Resources:RedwoodJS on Web Rush with Anthony Campolo episode 119RedwoodJSTypeScriptNext.jsReact.jsAuth0Netlify and RedwoodJSVercel and RedwoodJSPrisma and RedwoodJSGraphQL and RedwoodJSWhat is a meta-frameworkTailwind with RedwoodJSJest with RedwoodJSStorybook with RedwoodJSRedwoodJS and ViteNext Gen tooling with RedwoodJS with Vite and VitestReact server componentsRedwoodJS and react server componentsPublic roadmap for RedwoodJS Bighorn EpochWhy would I choose RedwoodJS over Next.jsPino loggingRedwoodJS startup fundChatterbugRedwoodJS tutorialRedwoodJS on YouTubeRedwoodJS Conference in September 2023Timejumps00:29 Welcome00:43 Who is Tom Preston-Werner?02:14 What is RedwoodJS?09:21 Sponsor: Narwhal Nx10:00 How do you evaluate new technology and integrate it into Redwood?19:36 How does RedwoodJS go further than NextJS?27:56 What is startups at scale?37:00 Sponsor: Ag Grid38:11 Maintainability of software43:53 Final thoughtsPodcast editing on this episode done by Chris Enns of Lemon Productions.

Software Engineering Radio - The Podcast for Professional Software Developers
SE Radio 577: Casey Muratori on Clean Code, Horrible Performance?

Software Engineering Radio - The Podcast for Professional Software Developers

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 18, 2023 70:41


Casey Muratori caused some strong reactions with a blog post and an associated video in which he went through an example from the “Clean Code” book by Robert Martin to demonstrate the negative impact that clean code practices can have on performance. In this episode, he joins SE Radio's Giovanni Asproni to talk about the potential trade-offs between performance and the qualities that make for maintainable code, these qualities being the main focus of Clean Code. Brought to you by IEEE Computer Society and IEEE Software magazine.

Oddly Influenced
E36: BONUS: One circle-style history of Context-Driven Testing

Oddly Influenced

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 3, 2023 47:52


I was a core member of what Farrell would call a collaborative circle: the four people who codified Context-Driven Testing. That makes me think I can supplement Farrell's account with what it feels like to be inside a circle. I try to be "actionable", not just some guy writing a memoir.My topics are: what the context-driven circle was reacting against; the nature of the reaction and the resulting shared vision; how geographically-distributed circles work (including the first-wave feminist Ultras and the Freud/Fleiss collaboration); two meeting formats you may want to copy; why I value shared techniques over shared vision; how circles develop a shared tone and stereotyped reactions, not just a shared vision; and, the nature of “going public” with the vision. MentionedMichael P. Farrell, Collaborative Circles: Friendship Dynamics and Creative Work, 2001.Cem Kaner, Jack Falk, and Hung Quoc Nguyen, Testing Computer Software, 1993.Édouard Manet, Le Déjeuner sur l'herbe (The Luncheon on the Grass), 1863.context-driven-testing.com (including the principles of context-driven testing), 2001?Cem Kaner, James Bach, Bret Pettichord, Lessons Learned in Software Testing: a Context-Driven Approach, 2002.Association for Software Testing.Elisabeth Hendrickson, Explore It! Reduce Risk and Increase Confidence with Exploratory Testing, 2012.Jonathan Bach, "Session-Based Test Management", 2000.Patrick O'Brian, Post Captain, 1972. (It's the second in a series that begins with Master and Commander.)Four articles that demonstrate personal style:James Bach, “Enough About Process, What We Need Are Heroes”, IEEE Software, March 1995.Brian Marick, "New Models for Test Development", 1999.Bret Pettichord, "Testers and Developers Think Differently", 2000.James Bach, "Explaining Testing to THEM", 2001.Los Altos Workshop on Software Testing and related:Cem Kaner, "Improving the Maintainability of Automated Test Suites", 1997. (This contains the conclusions of LAWST 1 as an appendix.)The LAWST Handbook (1999) and LAWST Format (1997?) describe the meeting format.The "Pattern Writers' Workshop" style is most fully explained in Richard P. Gabriel, Writers' Workshops & the Work of Making Things: Patterns, Poetry... (2002). James Coplien, "A Pattern Language for Writer's Workshops" (1997), describes writers' workshops in the "Alexandrian style" of pattern description (the one used in the seminal A Pattern Language). "Writers Workshop Guidelines" is a terse description.Image creditThe image is the painting Le Déjeuner sur l'herbe.

The 'X' Zone Radio Show
Rob McConnell Interviews - NICHOLAS GINEX - Future of God Amen

The 'X' Zone Radio Show

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 4, 2023 44:47


Nicholas Ginex is a retired Electrical Engineer with an MBA in Finance. He worked in design and distinguished himself in the support disciplines of Maintainability and Configuration Management (CM). As CM Manager of software and hardware products at top aerospace and commercial companies, his planning and organizational skills were applied for the successful operation of entire engineering projects. During his retirement, Nicholas sang and played his guitar at senior care centers and nursing homes for their enjoyment. The smiles on their faces and joy in their eyes have been his greatest reward. His love for his children and desire to inform them about the god Amen and his influence on the Judaic, Christian, and Islamic religions - have motivated him to write Future of God Amen. He is presently publishing his 4th book, Amen to share personal views that provide a deeper understanding of religious dogma and the need for religious leaders to unify their belief in God. Nicholas' objective is to reveal to people around the world that Judaic, Christian, and Islamic religious leaders must acknowledge that they all pray to the same god. It is highly necessary that they all teach the Word of God and unify their beliefs in god by revising their outdated scriptures. For religious leaders to remain passive and ignore the looming threat of a Third World War due to the bigotry, hatred, violence, and killing of innocent people that they are responsible for will result in the religions themselves to gradually crumble and die. These religions may eventually face ridicule and dissolution for not performing their mission to elevate mankind to the next level of spiritual and moral development. www.futureofgodamen.com

Smart Software with SmartLogic
José Valim on the Future of the Elixir Ecosystem

Smart Software with SmartLogic

Play Episode Listen Later May 11, 2023 43:57


Today on Elixir Wizards, José Valim, creator of the Elixir programming language, joins hosts Sundi Myint and Owen Bickford to discuss the future of Elixir, upcoming features, changes to the language and ecosystem, and the potential for a type system. José discusses how Elixir's extensibility allows the ecosystem to grow with new tools and libraries, all while requiring few languages to the core language. Key Takeaways: The origin of the famous rainbow heart combo José's hands-off approach to planning the ecosystem which allows community contribution without reliance on the core team The success and growth of the Elixir community Lessons learned in the first ten years of the language The evolution of Elixir's documentation and the role of Livebook in creating more interactive and engaging learning experiences The potential for Elixir Nx to make numerical computation, machine learning, and data science more accessible to Elixir developers Potential implementation of a gradual type system and the importance of backwards compatibility The role of the Elixir community in shaping the language's development and ecosystem, including the importance of open-source contributions Whether we'll see Elixir 2.0 in the next decade Links mentioned in this episode: Josė Valim Keynote ElixirConf EU Bringing Elixir to Life (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xItzdrzY1Dc) Dashbit - https://dashbit.co/ Elixir programming language: https://elixir-lang.org/ ElixirConf: https://elixirconf.com/ ElixirForum: https://elixirforum.com/ Elixir's Logger library: https://hexdocs.pm/logger/Logger.html José's Twitter: https://twitter.com/josevalim ElixirLS (Elixir Language Server) https://github.com/elixir-lsp/elixir-ls Mermaid Charts in Livebook - https://news.livebook.dev/date/2022/1 IEx - https://hexdocs.pm/iex/1.14/IEx.html Numerical Elixir - Nx: https://hexdocs.pm/nx/getting-started.html Nerves: https://hexdocs.pm/nerves/getting-started.html Membrane: https://hexdocs.pm/membrane/getting-started.html Dialyxir: https://hexdocs.pm/dialyxir/readme.html LiveBook: https://hexdocs.pm/livebook/getting-started.html Bumblebee: https://github.com/elixir-nx/bumblebee Special Guest: José Valim.

GOTO - Today, Tomorrow and the Future
Expert Talk: Five Lines of Code • Christian Clausen & Julian Wood

GOTO - Today, Tomorrow and the Future

Play Episode Listen Later May 5, 2023 20:35 Transcription Available


This interview was recorded for GOTO Unscripted at GOTO Copenhagen.gotopia.techRead the full transcription of this interview hereChristian Clausen - Author of "Five Lines of Code", Founder of mist-cloud & Technical Agile CoachJulian Wood - Developer Advocate at AWSDESCRIPTIONRevamp your code with refactoring! In an insightful interview with Julian Wood, Christian Clausen, author of Five Lines of Code, shares practical tips for improving your code without relying on “code smells”. Simplifying your code is the key to running your business smoothly. Clausen highlights what matters most in terms of simplifying your code and how it can aid in choosing the right architectural paradigm. Streamline your code today and focus on what really matters!RECOMMENDED BOOKSChristian Clausen • Five Lines of CodeMartin Fowler • RefactoringMaude Lemaire • Refactoring at ScaleUncle Bob • Clean CodeAdam Tornhill • Software Design X-RaysAdam Tornhill • Your Code as a Crime SceneTwitterLinkedInFacebookLooking for a unique learning experience?Attend the next GOTO conference near you! Get your ticket: gotopia.techSUBSCRIBE TO OUR YOUTUBE CHANNEL - new videos posted almost daily

Smart Software with SmartLogic
Saša Jurić on The Future of Training & Education in Elixir

Smart Software with SmartLogic

Play Episode Listen Later May 4, 2023 46:27


Today on Elixir Wizards, Sundi Myint and Owen Bickford are joined by Saša Jurić, distinguished developer, mentor, and author of Elixir in Action. They discuss the future of training and education in Elixir, challenges faced by new Elixir developers, Phoenix generators, peer mentorship, the emergence of types, and when it's time to close the umbrella. Key Takeaways: The functional programming paradigm, the actor model, and concurrency Adapting to the Elixir syntax and tooling The role of community, mentorship, and continuous learning in Elixir education The pros and cons of Phoenix generators for Elixir development Customizing templates in the Phoenix priv directory to better suit individual needs The importance of understanding and adapting generated code for maintainability and proper abstractions Importance of having a clear separation between core and interface Adapting to different opinions and preferences within a development team Refactoring and restructuring code to improve quality and reduce complexity Static typing for better documentation and the limitations of dynamic code Umbrella apps vs. mix configuration and how to avoid complexity Links Mentioned in this Episode: Enter to win a copy of Elixir in Action: https://smr.tl/2023bookgiveaway Elixir in Action by Saša Jurić https://www.manning.com/books/elixir-in-action 35% discount code for book on manning.com: podexwizards20 Saša's Website/Blog TheErlangelist.com (https://www.theerlangelist.com/) Towards Maintainable Elixir - Saša Jurić's Medium Blog Article Series (https://medium.com/very-big-things/towards-maintainable-elixir-the-core-and-the-interface-c267f0da43) Boundary (https://hex.pm/packages/boundary): Managing cross-module dependencies in Elixir projects Site Encrypt (https://hex.pm/packages/site_encrypt): Integrated Certification via Let's Encrypt for Elixir-powered sites Authentication Generator in Phoenix: https://hexdocs.pm/phoenix/mixphxgen_auth.html Ecto query generator for Elixir https://hexdocs.pm/ecto/Ecto.html GraphQL: Query language for APIs https://graphql.org/ Dialyxir: https://hexdocs.pm/dialyxir/readme.html Nx (Numerical Elixir) GitHub Repository: https://github.com/elixir-nx/nx ElixirLS (Elixir Language Server) GitHub Repository: https://github.com/elixir-lsp/elixir-ls Special Guest: Saša Jurić.

LINUX Unplugged
492: A New Challenge Approaches

LINUX Unplugged

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 9, 2023 73:32


Join us on a journey to true software freedom. We embark on our 30-day challenge and discover a whole new philosophy that will change the way you think about technology. Special Guest: Alex Kretzschmar.

Building Cities, Shaping Lives
Building Cities that Last: Designing for Maintainability

Building Cities, Shaping Lives

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 9, 2022 20:46


How do we lower the lifecycle emissions of our cities? We know that lowering operational carbon is one way, and designing buildings to last longer is another. What most people don't know, though, is that buildings that are operated and maintained easily in fact lowers lifecycle emissions and keeps operational costs manageable. Find out more about designing for maintainability with Praveen Chandrashekar, Head of SJ's Sustainability and Resilience Office.Maintainable Design Appraisal System (MiDAS) - https://www1.bca.gov.sg/buildsg/facilities-management-fm/design-for-maintainability/maintainable-design-appraisal-system-midasThis podcast is brought to you by the Surbana Jurong Group.

Foojay.io, the Friends Of OpenJDK!
OpenJDK 19 Discussion Panel (#5)

Foojay.io, the Friends Of OpenJDK!

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 20, 2022 46:12


On September 20th, OpenJDK version 19 gets released. In this podcast, we are looking forward to the new features and changes this release brings.Guests:Miroslav Wengner (OpenValue)Mary Grygleski (CJUG, DataStax)Deepu K Sasidharan (Okta, JHipster)Podcast host:Erik Costlow (Azul)0'00 Short intro and music0'15 Introduction about the shift of Java releases to a 6-month release cycle and version 190'55 Introduction Speakers and Host3'30 Review of articles published on Foojay regarding the new JDK 19 features4'00 What is project Loom and virtual threads? 4'55 What can we expect in OpenJDK 19?6'10 Project Amber, pattern matching, switch cases7'10 Massive throughput with virtual threads8'45 About preview and incubator features12'50 Platform versus virtual threads17'05 Java is becoming much stronger, reducing the need for extra frameworks18'15 Java versus other languages21'40 How trading companies can profit from virtual threads22'50 Project Panama, shared memory use28'05 About jextract29'35 About Java versions, LTS, and how they are used33'35 Record patterns35'40 Maintainability and developer productivity37'40 The importance of keeping up with other languages to keep Java "cool" for developers43'30 About Java modules45'45 Outro

The Real Python Podcast
Measuring Python Code Quality, Simplicity, and Maintainability

The Real Python Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 15, 2022 66:32


How maintainable is your Python code? Is it possible to hold the code for your functions in your head? When is it appropriate to use measurements in a code review? This week on the show, Reka Horvath and Ben Martineau from Sourcery are here to discuss their recent PyCon talk, "Actionable insights vs ranking: How to use and how NOT to use code quality metrics."

China Manufacturing Decoded
'Design for X' Overview: 12 Optimizations for New Products (Feat. Andrew Amirnovin)

China Manufacturing Decoded

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 25, 2022 55:00


In this episode... Sofeast's CEO Renaud Anjoran is joined once again by our head of New Product Development, Andrew Amirnovin, and this time they're giving an overview of 12 things that a company can optimize for when designing and developing a new product. These include 'Design for Manufacturing,' Design for Assembly,' and many more. So, what are the DfX principles, what are their benefits if adopted by designers, and which could be right for you to focus on? Keep listening...   Show Sections 00:00 - Greetings and introducing the topic of DfX. 02:30 - 1. Design for Short Development & Time to Market. 05:16 - 2. Design for Crowdfunding. 08:13 - 3. Design for Manufacturing (DFM). 10:29 - 4. Design for Assembly (DFA). 13:35 - DFM & DFA tips for product designers to keep in mind. 19:19 - The rise of modularization. 25:04 - 5. Design for Quality & 6. Design for Testing 32:37 - 7. Design for Packaging. 35:45 - 8. Design for Reliability  45:12 - 9. Design for Maintainability. 49:15 - 10. Design for Ease of use/Ergonomics. 49:35 - 11. Design for Fewer SKUs. 50:20 - 12. Design for Sustainability. 51:02 - Which DfX principles are crucial? 51:55 - How to implement DfX? 53:58 - Wrapping up.   Related content... The Design for X Approach: 12 Common Examples Design for Distribution (DFD) Design to Cost (DTC) Design for Manufacturing (DFM) Design for Quality (DFQ) Design For Sustainability Design For Crowdfunding (Kickstarter & Indiegogo) Design For Assembly (DFA) Design for Distribution: What Hardware Startups Need To Know   Get in touch with us Connect with us on LinkedIn Send us a tweet @sofeast Prefer Facebook? Check us out on FB Contact us via Sofeast's contact page Subscribe to our YouTube channel   Subscribe to the podcast  There are more episodes to come, so remember to subscribe! You can do so in your favorite podcast apps here and don't forget to give us a 5-star rating, please: Apple Podcasts Spotify Stitcher Google Podcasts TuneIn Amazon Podcasts Deezer iHeartRADIO PlayerFM Listen Notes Podcast Addict

5amMesterScrum
Show 802 UI vs. Maintainability w/ #Scrum Master y #Agile Coach Greg Mester

5amMesterScrum

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 28, 2022 12:35


#5amMesterScrum Show 802 Live -  UI vs. Maintainability , a story of pixel perfect vs. saving time to maintain in the future - Today's topic: (1)I built a dashboard for OKRs in Confluence the other day that automated everything vs. manual updating. And they did not want to budge. Please like and subscribe and share 5amMesterScrum.  Please send me your topics.   You are are doing Great Please Keep on Sharing. 5am Mester Scrum 5am Mester Scrum Show 802 went live on Youtube Friday 1/28/2022 from Philadelphia, PA  Happy Scrumming, Social Media: - search 5amMesterScrum or #5amMesterScrum  and you should find us and if not please let us know LinkedIn, Youtube, Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, TikTok     Podcasts: (search 5amMesterScrum)  #5amMesterScrum #agile #scrum #coaching #philadelphia #philly #ui #ux #cx #pixelperfect #customer #automation #okr

Manufacturing Hub
Ep. 44 - [Tim Wilborne] Building tools and control systems for maintainability / Educating the youth

Manufacturing Hub

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 20, 2022 73:30


Guest BioTim Wilborne is involved in multiple industrial automation projects. He has experience in panel design, panel assembly, control systems development, programming, education, and more. He joins us to discuss the changes in control systems, their impact on the manufacturing operations, and the importance of keeping those who maintain these systems in mind.Main Discussion PointsTim's Current Projects & Involvements in Manufacturing / Automation- PLC, HMI, VFD & Control systems trainers.- Control panel design, assembly, and commissioning.- Technical tutorials focused on maintaining and troubleshooting plant control systems.- Field tools [Loop Simulator & IP Explorer] that simplify the day-to-day tasks of troubleshooting, maintaining, and commissioning automation systems.- In-person courses on control system programming, maintenance, and troubleshooting.Transformation of Control Systems- Systems are changing, but aren't necessarily focused on providing longevity.- There's a lack of concern for the people that are required to operate and maintain machinery once it is deployed on the manufacturing floor.- Training should be an upfront cost for most automation projects.- Companies should disclose the training they have in place and that the buyer must go through them before deploying their machinery onto the production floor.- The people are your most valuable asset.Support provided by OEMs- There's always a cost to receiving support; it's priced in one way or another into a platform.- “Free support” should not equate to “bad support”.Automation Education at the High School Level- We underestimate what the youth can learn in a short amount of time.- Exposure at the high-school level is a long-term investment that we need to make today.- The curriculum Tim has created will be shared with others to be implemented in local high schools.- Better written programs are key to long-term success in manufacturing. Their scope should incorporate thoughts around those who will maintain the systems and access the software over the lifetime of machinery.- Stay a step behind the “cutting edge” of innovation. Figure out what's going to work for your business and what makes sense to implement.Recommended Books- Duct Tape Marketing | https://amzn.to/33R9o3s- Burnout to Engagement | https://amzn.to/3GMSdim- Great Demo | https://amzn.to/3fDl8cEConnect with UsVlad Romanov | https://www.linkedin.com/in/vladromanov/Dave Griffith | https://www.linkedin.com/in/davegriffith23/Manufacturing Hub | https://www.linkedin.com/company/manufacturing-hub-podcast/Let Us Know What You ThinkIf you enjoyed the show, it would mean the world to us if you could leave us a review: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/manufacturing-hub/id1546805573#manufacturing #automation #industry40

ByteTalk
#016 The dark side of open source maintainability with Jonathan Neal

ByteTalk

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 17, 2021 50:50


Videohttps://youtu.be/J4bf2iEylTo

The 'X' Zone Radio Show
XZRS: Nicholas Ginex - The Future of God Amen

The 'X' Zone Radio Show

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 29, 2021 41:23


Nicholas Ginex is a retired Electrical Engineer with an MBA in Finance. He worked in design and distinguished himself in the support disciplines of Maintainability and Configuration Management (CM). As CM Manager of software and hardware products at top aerospace and commercial companies, his planning and organizational skills were applied for the successful operation of entire engineering projects. During his retirement, Nicholas sang and played his guitar at senior care centers and nursing homes for their enjoyment. The smiles on their faces and joy in their eyes have been his greatest reward. His love for his children and desire to inform them about the god Amen and his influence on the Judaic, Christian, and Islamic religions - have motivated him to write Future of God Amen. He is presently publishing his 4th book, Amen to share personal views that provide a deeper understanding of religious dogma and the need for religious leaders to unify their belief in God. Nicholas' objective is to reveal to people around the world that Judaic, Christian, and Islamic religious leaders must acknowledge that they all pray to the same god. It is highly necessary that they all teach the Word of God and unify their beliefs in god by revising their outdated scriptures. For religious leaders to remain passive and ignore the looming threat of a Third World War due to the bigotry, hatred, violence, and killing of innocent people that they are responsible for will result in the religions themselves to gradually crumble and die. These religions may eventually face ridicule and dissolution for not performing their mission to elevate mankind to the next level of spiritual and moral development. www.futureofgodamen.comFor Your Listening Pleasure for these Lockdown / Stay-At-Home COVID and Variants Times - For all the radio shows available on The 'X' Zone Broadcast Network visit - https://www.spreaker.com/user/xzoneradiotv.Our radio shows archives and programming include: A Different Perspective with Kevin Randle; Alien Cosmic Expo Lecture Series; Alien Worlds Radio Show; America's Soul Doctor with Ken Unger; Back in Control Radio Show with Dr. David Hanscom, MD; Connecting with Coincidence with Dr. Bernard Beitman, MD; Dick Tracy; Dimension X; Exploring Tomorrow Radio Show; Flash Gordon; Imagine More Success Radio Show with Syndee Hendricks and Thomas Hydes; Jet Jungle Radio Show; Journey Into Space; Know the Name with Sharon Lynn Wyeth; Lux Radio Theatre - Classic Old Time Radio; Mission Evolution with Gwilda Wiyaka; Paranormal StakeOut with Larry Lawson; Ray Bradbury - Tales Of The Bizarre; Sci Fi Radio Show; Seek Reality with Roberta Grimes; Space Patrol; Stairway to Heaven with Gwilda Wiyaka; The 'X' Zone Radio Show with Rob McConnell; Two Good To Be True with Justina Marsh and Peter Marsh; and many other!That's The ‘X' Zone Broadcast Network Shows and Archives - https://www.spreaker.com/user/xzoneradiotv

america god ghosts future finance connecting mba conspiracies md ufos amen paranormal islamic archives occult coincidence mcconnell world war iii flash gordon stairway different perspective dick tracy electrical engineers judaic dimension x space patrol david hanscom kevin randle roberta grimes soul doctor robmcconnell sharon lynn wyeth journey into space maintainability xzbn rel-mar simultv seek reality peter marsh gwilda wiyaka syndee hendricks larry lawson sci fi radio show alien cosmic expo lecture series alien worlds radio show exploring tomorrow radio show jet jungle radio show ray bradbury tales of the bizarre 'x' zone radio show control radio show imagine more success radio show two good to be true lockdown stay at home covid variants times for america's soul doctor cbrtv
The Quantitative Supply Chain
Maintainability of Supply Chain Software

The Quantitative Supply Chain

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 27, 2021 25:06


When investing in a piece of supply chain software, there is the expectation that it will last a company decades, rather than just a few years. However, with a rapidly changing tech landscape, this becomes a complicated endeavour. For this episode of LokadTV, we discuss this challenge of maintainability and how it can be impacted by good design.

Better Building Systems
Constructability vs Maintainability When Designing Building Systems

Better Building Systems

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 18, 2021 52:32


Welcome to the Better Building Systems podcast! There are many things to consider when engineering systems for a facility. Two major considerations are the constructability of the system and the maintainability of the system. Our team of building hotrodders break down all things that factor in the decision making of constructability and maintainability of building systems. We cover equipment layout, selection, budget, nd much much more. You might be surprised in all of the things that can factor into this conversation.....we know we were. For more information on us check out our webpages: https://www.vsenergy.us/ https://www.appliedfacilityscience.com/ https://dipasquale-eng.com/

Legal Talks by Desikanoon
Supreme Court of India on Arbitrability of Fraud

Legal Talks by Desikanoon

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 16, 2021 12:51


Validity of an Unstamped Arbitration Agreement There are many agreements wherein the Stamp Act of a particular state requires payment of stamp duty. The Court discussed the jurisprudence behind an Arbitration Agreement and analysed the various judicial precedents in this regard. After doing so, the Court held that: - a. The Court held that “an arbitration agreement is distinct and independent from the underlying substantive commercial contract. Once the arbitration agreement is held to have an independent existence, it can be acted upon, irrespective of the alleged invalidity of the commercial contract.” b. It was further held that in cases of Applications under S.8 (Power of the Court to refer the parties to Arbitration), S. 9 (grant of interim relief before or during the Arbitral Proceedings) and S.11 (Appointment of Arbitrator), of the Arbitration & Conciliation Act, 1996, the Court can proceed with the Applications to safeguard the subject-matter of the arbitration; however, then the substantive/original contract would have to be impounded and the concerned party is to be directed for payment of the requisite stamp duty in accordance with the relevant local laws. The bottom-line is that deficiency in payment of stamp duty is a curable defect and a chance ought to be provided to the concerned party to cure such defect. The assessment of the stamp duty is generally made by the Collector under the local laws and as such, the findings relating to same could be challenged in separate proceedings as per law.  c. In case where the Arbitrator has already been appointed consensually, the Arbitrator would be obligated to impound the contract/instrument and direct the concerned party to pay the requisite stamp duty. d. SMS Tea Estates Pvt. Ltd. v. Chandmari Tea Co. Pvt. Ltd., (2011) 14 SCC 66, was overruled and the findings of Garware Wall Ropes Limited v. Coastal Marine Constructions and Engineering Limited, (2019) 9 SCC 209, as also, Vidya Drolia v. Durga Trading Corporation, C.A. No. 2402/2019, were found to be erroneous in relation to existence of an Arbitration Agreement.  Is ‘Fraud' an Arbitrable Dispute? The Court discussed various case laws and made a distinction between cases where there are allegations of serious fraud and fraud simplicitor. It held that mere allegations of fraud simplicitor are not a sufficient ground to decline reference to arbitration and there is no express bar in the Arbitration Act with respect to arbitrability of disputes involving allegations of fraud. Therefore, discarding the archaic view that fraud is non-arbitrable and holding it to be obsolete, the Court observed that the civil aspect of fraud can be adjudicated by an arbitral tribunal; “however, the criminal aspect of fraud, forgery, or fabrication, which would be visited with penal consequences and criminal sanctions can be adjudicated only by a court of law, since it may result in a conviction, which is in the realm of public law.” Maintainability of Writ Petitions under Articles 226 and 227 of Constitution of India in relation to Section 8 of the Arbitration Act The Court cited Section 37 (1) (a) of the Arbitration Act and Section 13(1A) of the Commercial Courts Act, 2015, which read as under: -  “Section 37 of the Arbitration ActAppealable orders.— (1) An appeal shall lie from the following orders (and from no others) to the Court authorised by law to hear appeals from original decrees of the Court passing the order, namely:—(a) Refusing to refer the parties to arbitration under section 8; …” “Section 13 (1A) of the Commercial Courts Act13. Appeals from decrees of Commercial Courts and Commercial Divisions.-(1) Any person aggrieved by the judgment or order of a Commercial Court below the level of a District Judge may appeal to the Commercial Appellate Court within a period of 60 days from the date of judgment or order.(1A) Any person aggrieved by the judgment or order of a Commercial Court at the level of District Judge exercising original civil jurisdiction or, as the case may be, Commercial Division of a High Court may appeal to the Commercial Appellate Division of that High Court within a period of sixty days from the date of the judgment or order:Provided that an appeal shall lie from such orders passed by a Commercial Division or a Commercial Court that are specifically enumerated under Order XLIII of the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908 (5 of 1908) as amended by this Act and Section 37 of the Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996 (26 of 1996).” Thus, the Court held that where is there is availability of a statutory remedy, the Writ Petitions under Articles 226 and 227 would be non-maintainable and liable to set aside. Concluding Remarks Though I have summarized the findings of the Court in this case, yet the Court drew a lengthy judgment and made painstaking efforts to explain the entire jurisprudence behind the existence of arbitration act and arbitrability of dispute. I find it to be a path-breaking case-law that provides much needed respite to the parties who wish to get their disputes arbitrated. Fraud is a touchy issue and countless number of judicial pronouncements had only complicated the matter to understand its arbitrability. The present judgment by the Court is unequivocal in its approach and succinctly puts across the point that the disputes relating to fraud are indeed arbitrable as long as the aspects of penal consequences are not involved. With respect to unstamped arbitration agreements too, the Court observed that deficiency in payment of stamp duty is a separate issue and must be dealt as such and as long as the deficiency in payment of stamp duty is cured by the parties within time, it would not invalidate the arbitration agreement itself. Lastly, the unscrupulous habit of the litigants to approach the High Courts under Articles 226 and 227 would also receive a blow by way of this judgment. There is one small caveat that I wish to add. Though fraud in civil domain has been held to be arbitrable yet parties may try to cleverly bypass the same by invoking frivolous criminal proceedings to oust the arbitrability of fraud. But I guess nothing much could be done about such people except initiate proceedings for malicious prosecution. All in all, it is a ground-breaking judgment and I hope that it would encourage the arbitration scenario in India.

iteration
The SPA Episode (Single Page Apps)

iteration

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 16, 2020 62:03


John: Welcome to Iteration, a podcast about programming, development, and design.John Intro — My name is John and I am a software developer for a home services startup.JP Intro — Hi, I'm JP and I am a software developer at a small analytics startuphttps://macwright.com/2020/05/10/spa-fatigue.htmlTopics / Guiding QuestionsWhat's a SPA?From the articleThe main UI is built & updated in JavaScript using React or something similar.The backend is an API that that application makes requests against.The more techincal one:https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Glossary/SPAAn SPA (Single-page application) is a web app implementation that loads only a single web document, and then updates the body content of that single document via JavaScript APIs such as [XMLHttpRequest]() and Fetch when different content is to be shown.This therefore allows users to use websites without loading whole new pages from the server, which can result in performance gains and a more dynamic experience, with some tradeoff disadvantages such as SEO, more effort required to maintain state, implement navigation, and do meaningful performance monitoring.Why do developers choose SPAs? Do end-users care about SPAs?What SPAs have you worked on / maintained?0 —When should you reach for a SPA?That's the right use case: Desktop app to the web.Spotify, Figma, photopea.comBreaks REST might be a good time to considerCommunityWhat's wrong with this SPA's?Increased complexity — Development and deploymentOften times: 2 repositories, 2 languages or frameworks(Rails + Vue)(Node + Angular)(Rails + React)SEO + Speed — Have to do "Server Side Rendering"This reminds me of the light switches for "Smart" light bulbs. You've increased the complexity by a factor of 10 to get the exact same results.Maintainability? Stability?If not a SPA then what? (Is this a different Episode?)What's good about server rendered?How much you get for freeAsync fetchingState managementURL's just workStrong ConventionsStable minimal maintenanceWhat's bad about Server Rendered?Page ReloadCan feel clunkyLess ReactiveMobile App — Now what? SPA lays a stronger groundworkWhat's good about SPA'sBenefits are for the userDeveloper Ego'sData foundationsBreaks CRUDCommunityPushing technology forward is a good thing.What's bad about SPA'sHow much of a pain in the ass it is to Manage URL'sComplexity — Front end + Back endAuthenticationImage UploadMultiple API endpoints for a single pageState is way harder in a SPADebuggingClosing ThoughtsSPA's are great when you are breaking "REST / CRUD"SPA's are great when you need multiple consumers of the same dataThis is highly personal, you gotta go with what you love.WiFiPicksJohn — Distraction Free Phone from the book Make TimeMobile: Uninstall all "Infinity Pools" put "Parental controls" on for the rest. 3.5 hours down to 1 hour screen time. So much time back. Switched out twitter for Kindle.Other tip: Instagram Threads — only the shit you care about with no adsDesktop: https://selfcontrolapp.com/ —JP - https://railsnew.io/

Building Management Systems
Maintainability vs Constructability in Systems Design

Building Management Systems

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 15, 2020 51:46


In this episode Mark, Clay, Jim, and Nick discuss the balance between maintainability and constructability in systems design related to HVAC and process equipment. This is a really interesting conversation and allowed us as individuals to re think some of our conventional thoughts on systems design when related to maintainability and constructability. Are the two inherently connected? Or can you focus on one more than the other in a design? Tune into the episode to hear our thoughts, they just might challenge yours!

Developer Tea
Maintainability w/ Robby Russell (part 2)

Developer Tea

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 18, 2020 58:10


 Robby is the co-founder and CEO of Planet Argon and the original creator of OH-MY-ZSH. In this part 2 of the two part interview with Robby, we focus on goals of a team and how to identify areas that need some maintainability focus. 

ceo 100gb maintainability oh my zsh planet argon
Developer Tea
Maintainability w/ Robby Russell (part 1)

Developer Tea

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 16, 2020 57:20


Serverless Chats
Episode #73: Optimizing for Maintainability with Joe Emison

Serverless Chats

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 2, 2020 60:55


On this episode, Jeremy chats with Joe Emison about why you should think buying before building, how choosing for organization-wide maintainability makes those decisions easier, why developing trust with stakeholders is so important, and the process that Branch Insurance uses to build and deliver software.

Biz Bytes
Ep 17. When the cost of doing nothing is too great

Biz Bytes

Play Episode Play 57 sec Highlight Listen Later Jul 15, 2020 57:32


That system your business has been using for 20 years... how good is it?Sure, it might be working, but is it working well? And does it allow you to run your business in the most effective, efficient, and economic manner?Technology has evolved to the point we can do what we want from anywhere in the world, but many still don't invest to enable thatJust like how we change our cars to suit our lifestyle, or our cell phones to get the better model, businesses should be upgrading their tech to ensure it is fit for purpose - it is no longer possible just to make do,. The technology is there, how businesses choose to use it will differentiate them from their competitors.We've seen the evidence of this through recent events- those companies which had moved to modern systems were able to recover faster.Those that are still on legacy systems didn't. My guest today is Sam Mitchell, and together we talk about upgrading and maintenance of technology and the impact it has on your business.

Software Engineering Radio - The Podcast for Professional Software Developers
Episode 409: Joe Kutner on the Twelve Factor App

Software Engineering Radio - The Podcast for Professional Software Developers

Play Episode Listen Later May 14, 2020 55:42


Joe Kutner, Software Architect for Heroku at Salesforce.com, spoke with host Kanchan Shringi about the 12-Factor App methodology, which aids development of modern apps that are portable, scalable, easy to test, and continuously deployable.

airhacks.fm podcast with adam bien
Maintainability or Deletion over Upgrade

airhacks.fm podcast with adam bien

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 6, 2020 69:05


An airhacks.fm conversation with Robert Brem (@bremrobert) about: Windows 95 with 15 for gaming, Nascar watching Korean StarCraft streams, writing the first Hello World in Visual Basic for Excel, in programming you can retrying without breaking anything, in ABAP everything had four letters, automating Excel merges with visual mode "on", hiding ABAP skills, ABAP could strike back with: Abular.js, Java 5 was released in September 2004, Generics were introduced with Java SE 6, annotations with Java SE 5, Sun Certified Programmer Certification was really hard, connecting WII controller to ActionScript 3, developing games in ActionScript 3, J2EE was too much, sustainable economics game as master thesis, saving the state of the game by serializing the board, the HSR in Rapperswil the beatiful place for lazy students, Peter Sommerlad was a demanding teacher but introduced Jenkins and automation, getting the color of the surface from satellites, the hosted GWT was slow, Spring Implementation of EJB container - project Pitchfork (now https://oss.oracle.com/projects/pitchfork/), deleting over upgrade, dependencies are fun for green field projects, the sequence of joy: GWT, ABAP and Eclipse RCP, the mensa club, the most sophisticated loading screen ever, the multi-dimensional Map (MapMap) solves all problems, automating infrastructure with Vagrant, Ansible and Packer, www.confirm.ch, all nails in the food has to be published in Switzerland, lit-html is the only dependency in the frontend and only Jakarta EE in the backend, sub MB ThinWARs and a few seconds deployment, building an entire application on one day, Robert Brem on twitter: @bremrobert

Coding Blocks
Designing Data-Intensive Applications – Maintainability

Coding Blocks

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 23, 2019 126:42


We dig into what it takes to make a maintainable application as we continue to learn from Designing Data-Intensive Applications, as Allen is a big fan of baby Yoda, Michael's index isn't corrupt, and Joe has some latency issues.

Coding Blocks
Designing Data-Intensive Applications – Maintainability

Coding Blocks

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 22, 2019 126:42


We dig into what it takes to make a maintainable application as we continue to learn from Designing Data-Intensive Applications, as Allen is a big fan of baby Yoda, Michael's index isn't corrupt, and Joe has some latency issues.

Speaking Of Reliability: Friends Discussing Reliability Engineering Topics | Warranty | Plant Maintenance

We often define maintainability primarily in terms of how long it takes to do maintenance. But what if you need a Formula 1 pit crew to do the maintenance? ... or each technician needs years of training? ... or 129 separate tools are required for a single product? ... and so on. Focusing on duration means that we miss opportunities to improve maintainability in a way that improves business (and make more revenue). Listen to this podcast if you would like to learn more. The post SOR 457 Is Maintainability Only About Repair Time? appeared first on Accendo Reliability.

ProfitLayer
EP22: Maximum Achievability and Maximum Maintainability

ProfitLayer

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 19, 2019 3:59


On this episode, Nic Peterson shares a simple but profound and often overlooked concept that should absolutely be applied to your life and business. "The number one thing that all repeat achievers and high impact business owners understand: Your maximum achievability is not your maximum maintainability. The greats optimize for the latter." - Nic Peterson   Work with ProfitLayer: To learn more about working with ProfitLayer or Timothy Dick as a private client, visit ProfitLayer.com. If you enjoy the ProfitLayer podcast or got value from this episode, please take time to leave a review on iTunes or your listening platform of choice.   It would mean the world to us! Resources: MasteryMode:  https://masterymode.com Velocity Method Course:  https://unicorncourse.com/ ProfitLayer Group:  https://www.profitlayer.com/group  

Rooted in Reliability: The Plant Performance Podcast

Level Of Repair Analysis with Lucas Marino Most of the organizations in the maintenance and reliability industry have limited resources and they want to make the best use of what they have got. If the maintenance requirements of an organizations don t match its resources, it is always going to result into an increased cost and […] The post 158 LORA with Lucas Marino appeared first on Accendo Reliability.

All Angular Podcasts by Devchat.tv
MAS 077: Shawn Clabough

All Angular Podcasts by Devchat.tv

Play Episode Listen Later May 14, 2019 55:01


Sponsors Sentry use the code “devchat” for 2 months free on Sentry small plan Triplebyte offers a $1000 signing bonus CacheFly Host: Charles Max Wood Special Guest:  Shawn Clabough Episode Summary In this episode of My Angular Story, Charles hosts Shawn Clabough, Information Systems Manager and Senior Developer at Washington State University. Listen to Shawn on the podcast JavaScript Jabber on this episode. Shawn got interested in computers in high school. His first computer was a TRS-80. Upon graduating from Washington State University, he worked as an assistant buyer at a computer chain store before going back to university to receive further education as a programmer. He then got a job at the University of Idaho where he worked in web application development for 17 years before switching to Washington State University. Currently he is a senior developer and a developer manager at Washington State University. Shawn also works as a custom .NET application development consultant. Links JavaScript Jabber 258: Development in a Public Institution with Shawn Clabough Shawn's GitHub Shawn’s Twitter Shawn's LinkedIn Pathfinder Roleplaying Game https://www.facebook.com/DevChattv Picks Shawn Clabough: UtahJS Slack Group Utah .Net Slack Group Boise Code Camp Visual Studio 2019 Launch Event – Visual Studio Time Bandits The  Movie (1981) Charles Max Wood: if you want to be a host on a podcast on devchat.tv on any of the below topics, contact Charles Max Wood  Open Source Sustainability and Maintainability AI & Machine Learning Data Science Augmented Reality & Virtual Reality & Mixed Reality Internet of Things (IoT) Python .Net If you are interested in becoming a sponsor for any of the above topics or the existing podcasts on devchat.tv, contact Charles Max Wood  If you are interested in being represented by Charles Max Wood for a sponsorship contract for a podcast in any of the above topics, contact Charles Max Wood If you were listening to a podcast in any of the above topics or any other programming related subject that ended abruptly within the last 6 months and would like it continued please contact Charles Max Wood. We would like to host these shows on devchat.tv. Most of time time podcasts stop being recorded due to lack of time or lack of money. Become a Podwrench Beta User! If you would like to host a podcast but do not want to do it on devchat.tv then Podwrench is for you! Podwrench is a complete podcasting system that allows you to manage your podcast and sponsorship contracts all in one place! Please contact Charles Max Wood for more info.

Devchat.tv Master Feed
MAS 077: Shawn Clabough

Devchat.tv Master Feed

Play Episode Listen Later May 14, 2019 55:01


Sponsors Sentry use the code “devchat” for 2 months free on Sentry small plan Triplebyte offers a $1000 signing bonus CacheFly Host: Charles Max Wood Special Guest:  Shawn Clabough Episode Summary In this episode of My Angular Story, Charles hosts Shawn Clabough, Information Systems Manager and Senior Developer at Washington State University. Listen to Shawn on the podcast JavaScript Jabber on this episode. Shawn got interested in computers in high school. His first computer was a TRS-80. Upon graduating from Washington State University, he worked as an assistant buyer at a computer chain store before going back to university to receive further education as a programmer. He then got a job at the University of Idaho where he worked in web application development for 17 years before switching to Washington State University. Currently he is a senior developer and a developer manager at Washington State University. Shawn also works as a custom .NET application development consultant. Links JavaScript Jabber 258: Development in a Public Institution with Shawn Clabough Shawn's GitHub Shawn’s Twitter Shawn's LinkedIn Pathfinder Roleplaying Game https://www.facebook.com/DevChattv Picks Shawn Clabough: UtahJS Slack Group Utah .Net Slack Group Boise Code Camp Visual Studio 2019 Launch Event – Visual Studio Time Bandits The  Movie (1981) Charles Max Wood: if you want to be a host on a podcast on devchat.tv on any of the below topics, contact Charles Max Wood  Open Source Sustainability and Maintainability AI & Machine Learning Data Science Augmented Reality & Virtual Reality & Mixed Reality Internet of Things (IoT) Python .Net If you are interested in becoming a sponsor for any of the above topics or the existing podcasts on devchat.tv, contact Charles Max Wood  If you are interested in being represented by Charles Max Wood for a sponsorship contract for a podcast in any of the above topics, contact Charles Max Wood If you were listening to a podcast in any of the above topics or any other programming related subject that ended abruptly within the last 6 months and would like it continued please contact Charles Max Wood. We would like to host these shows on devchat.tv. Most of time time podcasts stop being recorded due to lack of time or lack of money. Become a Podwrench Beta User! If you would like to host a podcast but do not want to do it on devchat.tv then Podwrench is for you! Podwrench is a complete podcasting system that allows you to manage your podcast and sponsorship contracts all in one place! Please contact Charles Max Wood for more info.

My Angular Story
MAS 077: Shawn Clabough

My Angular Story

Play Episode Listen Later May 14, 2019 55:01


Sponsors Sentry use the code “devchat” for 2 months free on Sentry small plan Triplebyte offers a $1000 signing bonus CacheFly Host: Charles Max Wood Special Guest:  Shawn Clabough Episode Summary In this episode of My Angular Story, Charles hosts Shawn Clabough, Information Systems Manager and Senior Developer at Washington State University. Listen to Shawn on the podcast JavaScript Jabber on this episode. Shawn got interested in computers in high school. His first computer was a TRS-80. Upon graduating from Washington State University, he worked as an assistant buyer at a computer chain store before going back to university to receive further education as a programmer. He then got a job at the University of Idaho where he worked in web application development for 17 years before switching to Washington State University. Currently he is a senior developer and a developer manager at Washington State University. Shawn also works as a custom .NET application development consultant. Links JavaScript Jabber 258: Development in a Public Institution with Shawn Clabough Shawn's GitHub Shawn’s Twitter Shawn's LinkedIn Pathfinder Roleplaying Game https://www.facebook.com/DevChattv Picks Shawn Clabough: UtahJS Slack Group Utah .Net Slack Group Boise Code Camp Visual Studio 2019 Launch Event – Visual Studio Time Bandits The  Movie (1981) Charles Max Wood: if you want to be a host on a podcast on devchat.tv on any of the below topics, contact Charles Max Wood  Open Source Sustainability and Maintainability AI & Machine Learning Data Science Augmented Reality & Virtual Reality & Mixed Reality Internet of Things (IoT) Python .Net If you are interested in becoming a sponsor for any of the above topics or the existing podcasts on devchat.tv, contact Charles Max Wood  If you are interested in being represented by Charles Max Wood for a sponsorship contract for a podcast in any of the above topics, contact Charles Max Wood If you were listening to a podcast in any of the above topics or any other programming related subject that ended abruptly within the last 6 months and would like it continued please contact Charles Max Wood. We would like to host these shows on devchat.tv. Most of time time podcasts stop being recorded due to lack of time or lack of money. Become a Podwrench Beta User! If you would like to host a podcast but do not want to do it on devchat.tv then Podwrench is for you! Podwrench is a complete podcasting system that allows you to manage your podcast and sponsorship contracts all in one place! Please contact Charles Max Wood for more info.

Devchat.tv Master Feed
MJS 106: Shawn Clabough

Devchat.tv Master Feed

Play Episode Listen Later May 7, 2019 54:12


Sponsors Sentry use the code “devchat” for 2 months free on Sentry small plan CacheFly Host: Charles Max Wood Special Guest:  Shawn Clabough Episode Summary In this episode of My JavaScript Story, Charles hosts Shawn Clabough, Information Systems Manager and Senior Developer at Washington State University. Listen to Shawn on the podcast JavaScript Jabber on this episode. Shawn got interested in computers in high school. His first computer was a TRS-80. Upon graduating from Washington State University, he worked as an assistant buyer at a computer chain store before going back to university to receive further education as a programmer. He then got a job at the University of Idaho where he worked in web application development for 17 years before switching to Washington State University. Currently he is a senior developer and a developer manager at Washington State University. Shawn also works as a custom .NET application development consultant. Links JavaScript Jabber 258: Development in a Public Institution with Shawn Clabough Shawn's GitHub Shawn’s Twitter Shawn's LinkedIn Pathfinder Roleplaying Game https://devchat.tv/my-javascript-story/ https://www.facebook.com/DevChattv Picks Shawn Clabough: UtahJS Slack Group Utah .Net Slack Group Boise Code Camp Visual Studio 2019 Launch Event - Visual Studio Time Bandits The  Movie (1981) Charles Max Wood: if you want to be a host on a podcast on tv on any of the below topics, contact Charles Max Wood  Open Source Sustainability and Maintainability AI & Machine Learning Data Science Augmented Reality & Virtual Reality & Mixed Reality Internet of Things (IoT) Python .Net If you are interested in becoming a sponsor for any of the above topics or the existing podcasts on devchat.tv, contact Charles Max Wood    If you are interested in being represented by Charles Max Wood for a sponsorship contract for a podcast in any of the above topics, contact Charles Max Wood   If you were listening to a podcast in any of the above topics or any other programming related subject that ended abruptly within the last 6 months and would like it continued please contact Charles Max Wood. We would like to host these shows on devchat.tv. Most of time time podcasts stop being recorded due to lack of time or lack of money.   Become a Podwrench Beta User! If you would like to host a podcast but do not want to do it on tv then Podwrench is for you! Podwrench is a complete podcasting system that allows you to manage your podcast and sponsorship contracts all in one place! Please contact Charles Max Wood for more info.  

My JavaScript Story
MJS 106: Shawn Clabough

My JavaScript Story

Play Episode Listen Later May 7, 2019 54:12


Sponsors Sentry use the code “devchat” for 2 months free on Sentry small plan CacheFly Host: Charles Max Wood Special Guest:  Shawn Clabough Episode Summary In this episode of My JavaScript Story, Charles hosts Shawn Clabough, Information Systems Manager and Senior Developer at Washington State University. Listen to Shawn on the podcast JavaScript Jabber on this episode. Shawn got interested in computers in high school. His first computer was a TRS-80. Upon graduating from Washington State University, he worked as an assistant buyer at a computer chain store before going back to university to receive further education as a programmer. He then got a job at the University of Idaho where he worked in web application development for 17 years before switching to Washington State University. Currently he is a senior developer and a developer manager at Washington State University. Shawn also works as a custom .NET application development consultant. Links JavaScript Jabber 258: Development in a Public Institution with Shawn Clabough Shawn's GitHub Shawn’s Twitter Shawn's LinkedIn Pathfinder Roleplaying Game https://devchat.tv/my-javascript-story/ https://www.facebook.com/DevChattv Picks Shawn Clabough: UtahJS Slack Group Utah .Net Slack Group Boise Code Camp Visual Studio 2019 Launch Event - Visual Studio Time Bandits The  Movie (1981) Charles Max Wood: if you want to be a host on a podcast on tv on any of the below topics, contact Charles Max Wood  Open Source Sustainability and Maintainability AI & Machine Learning Data Science Augmented Reality & Virtual Reality & Mixed Reality Internet of Things (IoT) Python .Net If you are interested in becoming a sponsor for any of the above topics or the existing podcasts on devchat.tv, contact Charles Max Wood    If you are interested in being represented by Charles Max Wood for a sponsorship contract for a podcast in any of the above topics, contact Charles Max Wood   If you were listening to a podcast in any of the above topics or any other programming related subject that ended abruptly within the last 6 months and would like it continued please contact Charles Max Wood. We would like to host these shows on devchat.tv. Most of time time podcasts stop being recorded due to lack of time or lack of money.   Become a Podwrench Beta User! If you would like to host a podcast but do not want to do it on tv then Podwrench is for you! Podwrench is a complete podcasting system that allows you to manage your podcast and sponsorship contracts all in one place! Please contact Charles Max Wood for more info.  

All JavaScript Podcasts by Devchat.tv
MJS 106: Shawn Clabough

All JavaScript Podcasts by Devchat.tv

Play Episode Listen Later May 7, 2019 54:12


Sponsors Sentry use the code “devchat” for 2 months free on Sentry small plan CacheFly Host: Charles Max Wood Special Guest:  Shawn Clabough Episode Summary In this episode of My JavaScript Story, Charles hosts Shawn Clabough, Information Systems Manager and Senior Developer at Washington State University. Listen to Shawn on the podcast JavaScript Jabber on this episode. Shawn got interested in computers in high school. His first computer was a TRS-80. Upon graduating from Washington State University, he worked as an assistant buyer at a computer chain store before going back to university to receive further education as a programmer. He then got a job at the University of Idaho where he worked in web application development for 17 years before switching to Washington State University. Currently he is a senior developer and a developer manager at Washington State University. Shawn also works as a custom .NET application development consultant. Links JavaScript Jabber 258: Development in a Public Institution with Shawn Clabough Shawn's GitHub Shawn’s Twitter Shawn's LinkedIn Pathfinder Roleplaying Game https://devchat.tv/my-javascript-story/ https://www.facebook.com/DevChattv Picks Shawn Clabough: UtahJS Slack Group Utah .Net Slack Group Boise Code Camp Visual Studio 2019 Launch Event - Visual Studio Time Bandits The  Movie (1981) Charles Max Wood: if you want to be a host on a podcast on tv on any of the below topics, contact Charles Max Wood  Open Source Sustainability and Maintainability AI & Machine Learning Data Science Augmented Reality & Virtual Reality & Mixed Reality Internet of Things (IoT) Python .Net If you are interested in becoming a sponsor for any of the above topics or the existing podcasts on devchat.tv, contact Charles Max Wood    If you are interested in being represented by Charles Max Wood for a sponsorship contract for a podcast in any of the above topics, contact Charles Max Wood   If you were listening to a podcast in any of the above topics or any other programming related subject that ended abruptly within the last 6 months and would like it continued please contact Charles Max Wood. We would like to host these shows on devchat.tv. Most of time time podcasts stop being recorded due to lack of time or lack of money.   Become a Podwrench Beta User! If you would like to host a podcast but do not want to do it on tv then Podwrench is for you! Podwrench is a complete podcasting system that allows you to manage your podcast and sponsorship contracts all in one place! Please contact Charles Max Wood for more info.  

My Ruby Story
MRS 086: Tung Nguyen

My Ruby Story

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 30, 2019 38:42


Sponsors Sentry use the code “devchat” for 2 months free on Sentry small plan .TECH– tech/MRS and use the coupon code “MRS.TECH” and get a 1 year .TECH Domain at $9.99 and 5 Year Domain at $49.99. Hurry! CacheFly Host: Charles Max Wood Special Guest: Tung Nguyen Episode Summary In this episode of My Ruby Story, Charles hosts Tung Nguyen, President and Founder of BoltOps AWS Cloud Infrastructure Consultancy, a Bay Area based DevOps infrastructure consultancy. Tung is also the creator of Ruby on Jets. Listen to Tung on the podcast Ruby Rogues here. Tung majored in Electrical Engineering in college but didn’t really enjoy working as an electrical engineer so decided to teach himself programming. He started with Perl language and eventually switched to Ruby. Currently Tung is working full time for BoltOps consultancy and develops and maintains Ruby on Jets along with other open source projects. When he is not working, Tung takes care of his 3 children. Listen to the show to find out more about Tung’s journey as a developer and what he thinks the pros and cons of working from home are. Links How to Pronounce Nguyen - YouTube Ruby Rogues 399: Jets Ruby Serverless Framework with Tung Nguyen Tung's LinkedIn Tung's GitHub Tung's Twitter Tung's YouTube Channel BoltOps BoltOps Nuts and Bolts Blog https://devchat.tv/my-ruby-story/ https://www.facebook.com/DevChattv Picks Tung Nguyen: The Children Learning Reading Opal: Ruby to JavaScript Compiler Charles Max Wood: Podwrench – Podcast Management System Podcast Booth Looking for hosts for podcasts on topics below Open Source Sustainability and Maintainability AI & Machine Learning Data Science Augmented Reality & Virtual Reality & Mixed Reality Internet of Things (IoT) Python .Net Buzzsprout.com  

Devchat.tv Master Feed
MRS 086: Tung Nguyen

Devchat.tv Master Feed

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 30, 2019 38:42


Sponsors Sentry use the code “devchat” for 2 months free on Sentry small plan .TECH– tech/MRS and use the coupon code “MRS.TECH” and get a 1 year .TECH Domain at $9.99 and 5 Year Domain at $49.99. Hurry! CacheFly Host: Charles Max Wood Special Guest: Tung Nguyen Episode Summary In this episode of My Ruby Story, Charles hosts Tung Nguyen, President and Founder of BoltOps AWS Cloud Infrastructure Consultancy, a Bay Area based DevOps infrastructure consultancy. Tung is also the creator of Ruby on Jets. Listen to Tung on the podcast Ruby Rogues here. Tung majored in Electrical Engineering in college but didn’t really enjoy working as an electrical engineer so decided to teach himself programming. He started with Perl language and eventually switched to Ruby. Currently Tung is working full time for BoltOps consultancy and develops and maintains Ruby on Jets along with other open source projects. When he is not working, Tung takes care of his 3 children. Listen to the show to find out more about Tung’s journey as a developer and what he thinks the pros and cons of working from home are. Links How to Pronounce Nguyen - YouTube Ruby Rogues 399: Jets Ruby Serverless Framework with Tung Nguyen Tung's LinkedIn Tung's GitHub Tung's Twitter Tung's YouTube Channel BoltOps BoltOps Nuts and Bolts Blog https://devchat.tv/my-ruby-story/ https://www.facebook.com/DevChattv Picks Tung Nguyen: The Children Learning Reading Opal: Ruby to JavaScript Compiler Charles Max Wood: Podwrench – Podcast Management System Podcast Booth Looking for hosts for podcasts on topics below Open Source Sustainability and Maintainability AI & Machine Learning Data Science Augmented Reality & Virtual Reality & Mixed Reality Internet of Things (IoT) Python .Net Buzzsprout.com  

All Ruby Podcasts by Devchat.tv
MRS 086: Tung Nguyen

All Ruby Podcasts by Devchat.tv

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 30, 2019 38:42


Sponsors Sentry use the code “devchat” for 2 months free on Sentry small plan .TECH– tech/MRS and use the coupon code “MRS.TECH” and get a 1 year .TECH Domain at $9.99 and 5 Year Domain at $49.99. Hurry! CacheFly Host: Charles Max Wood Special Guest: Tung Nguyen Episode Summary In this episode of My Ruby Story, Charles hosts Tung Nguyen, President and Founder of BoltOps AWS Cloud Infrastructure Consultancy, a Bay Area based DevOps infrastructure consultancy. Tung is also the creator of Ruby on Jets. Listen to Tung on the podcast Ruby Rogues here. Tung majored in Electrical Engineering in college but didn’t really enjoy working as an electrical engineer so decided to teach himself programming. He started with Perl language and eventually switched to Ruby. Currently Tung is working full time for BoltOps consultancy and develops and maintains Ruby on Jets along with other open source projects. When he is not working, Tung takes care of his 3 children. Listen to the show to find out more about Tung’s journey as a developer and what he thinks the pros and cons of working from home are. Links How to Pronounce Nguyen - YouTube Ruby Rogues 399: Jets Ruby Serverless Framework with Tung Nguyen Tung's LinkedIn Tung's GitHub Tung's Twitter Tung's YouTube Channel BoltOps BoltOps Nuts and Bolts Blog https://devchat.tv/my-ruby-story/ https://www.facebook.com/DevChattv Picks Tung Nguyen: The Children Learning Reading Opal: Ruby to JavaScript Compiler Charles Max Wood: Podwrench – Podcast Management System Podcast Booth Looking for hosts for podcasts on topics below Open Source Sustainability and Maintainability AI & Machine Learning Data Science Augmented Reality & Virtual Reality & Mixed Reality Internet of Things (IoT) Python .Net Buzzsprout.com  

CTO Think
Crossover Episode - The World vs React (Nuff Said)

CTO Think

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 19, 2018 30:33


The previous two episodes of our sister podcast, This Old App, discussed the rapid development of React and its possible side effects on the development community. For this CTO Think episode, we run our first "crossover" and discuss how tech leaders and management-level folks might view the JavaScript frontend debate regarding the growth of React use, its backwards compatibility issues, and whether a tech leader can afford to "keep up with the Joneses" in the dev world.

Rooted in Reliability: The Plant Performance Podcast
28 - Designing for Maintainability with Fred Schenkelberg

Rooted in Reliability: The Plant Performance Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 22, 2016 30:44


Designing for Maintainability with Fred Schenkelberg This episode of the weekly podcast covers the need of designing for maintainability. It is one of the biggest processes involved in the area of reliability and helps in improving the availability of the equipment in time. So first of all, we need to understand what this term is […] The post 28 – Designing for Maintainability with Fred Schenkelberg appeared first on Accendo Reliability.

designing maintainability fred schenkelberg accendo reliability
Devchat.tv Master Feed
253 RR Phoenix and Rails with Chris McCord

Devchat.tv Master Feed

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 30, 2016 69:56


01:57 - Chris McCord Introduction Twitter GitHub Blog DockYard Programming Phoenix: Productive |> Reliable |> Fast by Chris McCord, Bruce Tate, and Jose Valim Metaprogramming Elixir: Write Less Code, Get More Done (and Have Fun!) by Chris McCord 02:09 - The Phoenix Framework The Elixir Programming Language The Erlang Programming Language 02:46 - Ruby vs Elixir José Valim “Programming should be enjoyable.” sync WhatsApp Metaprogramming 12:12 - Phoenix as a Framework; Similarity to Rails 15:38 - ecto 16:45 - Performance 18:06 - Generating a Phoenix Project Mix 20:44 - Getting Started with Phoenix; Creating and Maintaining 25:29 - Guidance and Decision Making Development and Documentation 30:22 - Phoenix and JavaScript; Build Tools Brunch 37:22 - Phoenix and Elm Chris McCord and Evan Czaplicki: Phoenix and Elm: Making the Web Functional @ Erlang Factory SF 2016 38:45 - Maintainability OTP Framework 41:52 - Hosting Phoenix Heroku 42:48 - Object-Oriented vs Functional The Actor Model Smalltalk 50:29 - Debugging; Tooling UberAuth 01:01:08 - Phoenix Presence Picks Radical Candor — The Surprising Secret to Being a Good Boss | First Round Review (Jessica) Flex ('Mancer) by Ferrett Steinmetz (Jessica) The Teaching Company: How to Listen to and Understand Great Music (Jessica) Programming Phoenix: Productive |> Reliable |> Fast by Chris McCord, Bruce Tate, and José Valim (Chris) Jose Valim: Phoenix a web framework for the new web @ Lambda Days 2016 (Chris) The 4-Hour Workweek: Escape 9-5, Live Anywhere, and Join the New Rich by Timothy Ferriss (Avdi) Efficient State-based CRDTs by Delta-Mutation (Chris)

All Ruby Podcasts by Devchat.tv
253 RR Phoenix and Rails with Chris McCord

All Ruby Podcasts by Devchat.tv

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 30, 2016 69:56


01:57 - Chris McCord Introduction Twitter GitHub Blog DockYard Programming Phoenix: Productive |> Reliable |> Fast by Chris McCord, Bruce Tate, and Jose Valim Metaprogramming Elixir: Write Less Code, Get More Done (and Have Fun!) by Chris McCord 02:09 - The Phoenix Framework The Elixir Programming Language The Erlang Programming Language 02:46 - Ruby vs Elixir José Valim “Programming should be enjoyable.” sync WhatsApp Metaprogramming 12:12 - Phoenix as a Framework; Similarity to Rails 15:38 - ecto 16:45 - Performance 18:06 - Generating a Phoenix Project Mix 20:44 - Getting Started with Phoenix; Creating and Maintaining 25:29 - Guidance and Decision Making Development and Documentation 30:22 - Phoenix and JavaScript; Build Tools Brunch 37:22 - Phoenix and Elm Chris McCord and Evan Czaplicki: Phoenix and Elm: Making the Web Functional @ Erlang Factory SF 2016 38:45 - Maintainability OTP Framework 41:52 - Hosting Phoenix Heroku 42:48 - Object-Oriented vs Functional The Actor Model Smalltalk 50:29 - Debugging; Tooling UberAuth 01:01:08 - Phoenix Presence Picks Radical Candor — The Surprising Secret to Being a Good Boss | First Round Review (Jessica) Flex ('Mancer) by Ferrett Steinmetz (Jessica) The Teaching Company: How to Listen to and Understand Great Music (Jessica) Programming Phoenix: Productive |> Reliable |> Fast by Chris McCord, Bruce Tate, and José Valim (Chris) Jose Valim: Phoenix a web framework for the new web @ Lambda Days 2016 (Chris) The 4-Hour Workweek: Escape 9-5, Live Anywhere, and Join the New Rich by Timothy Ferriss (Avdi) Efficient State-based CRDTs by Delta-Mutation (Chris)

Ruby Rogues
253 RR Phoenix and Rails with Chris McCord

Ruby Rogues

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 30, 2016 69:56


01:57 - Chris McCord Introduction Twitter GitHub Blog DockYard Programming Phoenix: Productive |> Reliable |> Fast by Chris McCord, Bruce Tate, and Jose Valim Metaprogramming Elixir: Write Less Code, Get More Done (and Have Fun!) by Chris McCord 02:09 - The Phoenix Framework The Elixir Programming Language The Erlang Programming Language 02:46 - Ruby vs Elixir José Valim “Programming should be enjoyable.” sync WhatsApp Metaprogramming 12:12 - Phoenix as a Framework; Similarity to Rails 15:38 - ecto 16:45 - Performance 18:06 - Generating a Phoenix Project Mix 20:44 - Getting Started with Phoenix; Creating and Maintaining 25:29 - Guidance and Decision Making Development and Documentation 30:22 - Phoenix and JavaScript; Build Tools Brunch 37:22 - Phoenix and Elm Chris McCord and Evan Czaplicki: Phoenix and Elm: Making the Web Functional @ Erlang Factory SF 2016 38:45 - Maintainability OTP Framework 41:52 - Hosting Phoenix Heroku 42:48 - Object-Oriented vs Functional The Actor Model Smalltalk 50:29 - Debugging; Tooling UberAuth 01:01:08 - Phoenix Presence Picks Radical Candor — The Surprising Secret to Being a Good Boss | First Round Review (Jessica) Flex ('Mancer) by Ferrett Steinmetz (Jessica) The Teaching Company: How to Listen to and Understand Great Music (Jessica) Programming Phoenix: Productive |> Reliable |> Fast by Chris McCord, Bruce Tate, and José Valim (Chris) Jose Valim: Phoenix a web framework for the new web @ Lambda Days 2016 (Chris) The 4-Hour Workweek: Escape 9-5, Live Anywhere, and Join the New Rich by Timothy Ferriss (Avdi) Efficient State-based CRDTs by Delta-Mutation (Chris)

Devchat.tv Master Feed
241 RR What Makes a Great Developer with Phil Spitler

Devchat.tv Master Feed

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 6, 2016 58:19


Check out Ruby Remote Conf: coming to you live in March! Buy a ticket or submit a CFP!   02:17 - Phil Spitler Introduction Twitter GitHub Blog 03:20 - Panel opinions: What makes a good developer? 07:26 - “Successful” vs “Great” Developers Growth Mindset 12:45 - Mentors: What to they epitomize? Maintainability 14:37 - How do newbies find/identify mentors? 17:45 - When Becoming Great Starts to Matter 27:51 - How People “Arrive”; Necessary Skillsets Code Archaeology 30:51 - Bloc.io 36:44 - As a mentor, where do you draw the line? Ruby Rogues Episode #240: What Makes a Good Manager with Marcus Blankenship 40:57 - As an educator: How important is it to do hands-on work of your own? The Freelancers’ Show Episode #184: Goals and Productivity (unreleased at time of publication) Picks Rat-a-Tat Cat (Jessica) Sorry Not Sorry IPA (Jessica) Amazon Fire Kids Edition (Avdi) The Now Habit: A Strategic Program for Overcoming Procrastination and Enjoying Guilt-Free by Neil Fiore (Avdi) Intercom Central® 246 - Four Channels HOME Power-line Intercom System (Chuck) Fathead (Chuck) spitfire (Phil) Bloc's Software Engineering Track (SET Program) (Phil) Kyle Cease (Phil) Phil’s coworker’s Ariel's man crush on Avdi (Phil) Carol Dweck: The Power of Believing That You Can Improve (Phil) Wile Kratts (Children's Science Show) (Phil) MindSet by Carol Dweck (Chuck)

Ruby Rogues
241 RR What Makes a Great Developer with Phil Spitler

Ruby Rogues

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 6, 2016 58:19


Check out Ruby Remote Conf: coming to you live in March! Buy a ticket or submit a CFP!   02:17 - Phil Spitler Introduction Twitter GitHub Blog 03:20 - Panel opinions: What makes a good developer? 07:26 - “Successful” vs “Great” Developers Growth Mindset 12:45 - Mentors: What to they epitomize? Maintainability 14:37 - How do newbies find/identify mentors? 17:45 - When Becoming Great Starts to Matter 27:51 - How People “Arrive”; Necessary Skillsets Code Archaeology 30:51 - Bloc.io 36:44 - As a mentor, where do you draw the line? Ruby Rogues Episode #240: What Makes a Good Manager with Marcus Blankenship 40:57 - As an educator: How important is it to do hands-on work of your own? The Freelancers’ Show Episode #184: Goals and Productivity (unreleased at time of publication) Picks Rat-a-Tat Cat (Jessica) Sorry Not Sorry IPA (Jessica) Amazon Fire Kids Edition (Avdi) The Now Habit: A Strategic Program for Overcoming Procrastination and Enjoying Guilt-Free by Neil Fiore (Avdi) Intercom Central® 246 - Four Channels HOME Power-line Intercom System (Chuck) Fathead (Chuck) spitfire (Phil) Bloc's Software Engineering Track (SET Program) (Phil) Kyle Cease (Phil) Phil’s coworker’s Ariel's man crush on Avdi (Phil) Carol Dweck: The Power of Believing That You Can Improve (Phil) Wile Kratts (Children's Science Show) (Phil) MindSet by Carol Dweck (Chuck)

All Ruby Podcasts by Devchat.tv
241 RR What Makes a Great Developer with Phil Spitler

All Ruby Podcasts by Devchat.tv

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 6, 2016 58:19


Check out Ruby Remote Conf: coming to you live in March! Buy a ticket or submit a CFP!   02:17 - Phil Spitler Introduction Twitter GitHub Blog 03:20 - Panel opinions: What makes a good developer? 07:26 - “Successful” vs “Great” Developers Growth Mindset 12:45 - Mentors: What to they epitomize? Maintainability 14:37 - How do newbies find/identify mentors? 17:45 - When Becoming Great Starts to Matter 27:51 - How People “Arrive”; Necessary Skillsets Code Archaeology 30:51 - Bloc.io 36:44 - As a mentor, where do you draw the line? Ruby Rogues Episode #240: What Makes a Good Manager with Marcus Blankenship 40:57 - As an educator: How important is it to do hands-on work of your own? The Freelancers’ Show Episode #184: Goals and Productivity (unreleased at time of publication) Picks Rat-a-Tat Cat (Jessica) Sorry Not Sorry IPA (Jessica) Amazon Fire Kids Edition (Avdi) The Now Habit: A Strategic Program for Overcoming Procrastination and Enjoying Guilt-Free by Neil Fiore (Avdi) Intercom Central® 246 - Four Channels HOME Power-line Intercom System (Chuck) Fathead (Chuck) spitfire (Phil) Bloc's Software Engineering Track (SET Program) (Phil) Kyle Cease (Phil) Phil’s coworker’s Ariel's man crush on Avdi (Phil) Carol Dweck: The Power of Believing That You Can Improve (Phil) Wile Kratts (Children's Science Show) (Phil) MindSet by Carol Dweck (Chuck)

Devchat.tv Master Feed
228 The Lotus Framework with Luca Guidi

Devchat.tv Master Feed

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 7, 2015 54:12


02:00 - Luca Guidi Introduction Twitter GitHub Blog 02:35 - The Lotus Framework @lotus_rb Lotus Mailing List A Rails Criticism by Luca Guidi 03:56 - Working Full-time on Open Source 04:55 - Flat MVC 06:26 - Maintainability 07:42 - Entities and Repositories 10:42 - Controllers, Views, Conventions, and Templates (Structure) 16:41 - Helpers 17:56 - The Controller Layer 20:12 - Validations 23:26 - Testing capybara BDD (Behavior-Driven Design) 29:23 - The API 32:37 - Contributing to Lotus Contributor Code of Conduct discuss.lotusrb.org lotus/chat - Gitter Lotus Hack Day 2015 34:50 - Using Fewer Gems 39:09 - Lessons Learning Building Lotus 41:42 - Philosophy 42:56 - Upcoming Features Picks Threes (Jessica) 15 Minute Podcast Listener chat with Charles Wood (Chuck) Rails Remote Conf (Chuck) Pebble Time (Chuck) micro.rb (Luca) Duy Huynh (Luca)

Ruby Rogues
228 The Lotus Framework with Luca Guidi

Ruby Rogues

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 7, 2015 54:12


02:00 - Luca Guidi Introduction Twitter GitHub Blog 02:35 - The Lotus Framework @lotus_rb Lotus Mailing List A Rails Criticism by Luca Guidi 03:56 - Working Full-time on Open Source 04:55 - Flat MVC 06:26 - Maintainability 07:42 - Entities and Repositories 10:42 - Controllers, Views, Conventions, and Templates (Structure) 16:41 - Helpers 17:56 - The Controller Layer 20:12 - Validations 23:26 - Testing capybara BDD (Behavior-Driven Design) 29:23 - The API 32:37 - Contributing to Lotus Contributor Code of Conduct discuss.lotusrb.org lotus/chat - Gitter Lotus Hack Day 2015 34:50 - Using Fewer Gems 39:09 - Lessons Learning Building Lotus 41:42 - Philosophy 42:56 - Upcoming Features Picks Threes (Jessica) 15 Minute Podcast Listener chat with Charles Wood (Chuck) Rails Remote Conf (Chuck) Pebble Time (Chuck) micro.rb (Luca) Duy Huynh (Luca)

All Ruby Podcasts by Devchat.tv
228 The Lotus Framework with Luca Guidi

All Ruby Podcasts by Devchat.tv

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 7, 2015 54:12


02:00 - Luca Guidi Introduction Twitter GitHub Blog 02:35 - The Lotus Framework @lotus_rb Lotus Mailing List A Rails Criticism by Luca Guidi 03:56 - Working Full-time on Open Source 04:55 - Flat MVC 06:26 - Maintainability 07:42 - Entities and Repositories 10:42 - Controllers, Views, Conventions, and Templates (Structure) 16:41 - Helpers 17:56 - The Controller Layer 20:12 - Validations 23:26 - Testing capybara BDD (Behavior-Driven Design) 29:23 - The API 32:37 - Contributing to Lotus Contributor Code of Conduct discuss.lotusrb.org lotus/chat - Gitter Lotus Hack Day 2015 34:50 - Using Fewer Gems 39:09 - Lessons Learning Building Lotus 41:42 - Philosophy 42:56 - Upcoming Features Picks Threes (Jessica) 15 Minute Podcast Listener chat with Charles Wood (Chuck) Rails Remote Conf (Chuck) Pebble Time (Chuck) micro.rb (Luca) Duy Huynh (Luca)

HPE Helion Podcast
EPISODE69 - Harry Sutton on Maintainability

HPE Helion Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 21, 2015


Harry Sutton, HP Distinguished Technologist talks about his work in the OpenStack project on maintainability in the cloud.

The MRO Guy Podcast
MRO Guy Podcast 013 – Strategies fror 2015 Maintenance & Spare Parts Budget Setting and an Introduction to Dr. Klaus Blache

The MRO Guy Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 1, 2014 34:28


This week we discuss strategy tactics for 2015 Maintenance & MRO Budgeting and host an introduction to Dr. Klaus Blache of the University of Tennessee's Maintainability of Reliability Center with some great insights to improve your programs. You can learn more… See more ›

The Hangardeck Podcast
Episode 4. Avionics Technology Today compared to Legacy Aircraft.

The Hangardeck Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 11, 2014 37:38


In this Episode, we discuss innovative Avionic Technologies from the maintainer point of iew.  Ou Guest, Chapper Mike is an expert in the industry and has supported the Commercial, Corprate and Military industries regarding engineering, maintaining, operating and training state of the art Avionics systems.  We call him Chopper Mike but he has a diverse background with fixed wing and rotary wing aircraft. Notably, Chopper Mike was first on scene to support Hurricane Katrina Operations as a Technical and Engineer Expert for Rotary wing aircraft.  His Expert Knowledge assited many government agencies with Reliability and Maintainability concerns with the Sikorsky line of government products.  It's a great discussion.

(종영) 성공예감 김방희입니다

RMA : 신뢰도(Reliability) 가용도(Availability) 정비도(Maintainability) = 오정석 교수(서울대 경영학과)

Devchat.tv Master Feed
TMTC 34 – Writing Code is the Easy Part

Devchat.tv Master Feed

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 29, 2010


Writing Code is the Easy Part is the new slogan for the website. It basically boils down to the fact that putting up syntacticly correct code is the simplest part of coding. More difficult is solving problems and all of the other things that come with having a job or working for clients. Here are some of the things that I listed as the harder parts of coding: Legacy Code Readability Testability Best Practices Writing Tests Team Dynamics Customer Communication Translating Behavior into Code Data Integrity Security Maintainability Systems Integration Server Technologies Databases Finding a Job Hiring and Firing Working on Boring stuff Job Fulfillment Here are affiliate links to some of the books that I mentioned: Refactoring: Improving the Design of Existing Code Design Patterns: Elements of Reusable Object-Oriented Software Code Complete: A Practical Handbook of Software Construction The Pragmatic Programmer: From Journeyman to Master The Passionate Programmer: Creating a Remarkable Career in Software Development (Pragmatic Life) Here are the links to the podcast episodes by: Chad Fowler (Part 1, Part 2) Dave Thomas (Part 1, Part 2) Finally, I would really appreciate a $5 donation to help me get to RubyConf. Download this Episode

Devchat.tv Master Feed
Code Metrics with Metric Fu

Devchat.tv Master Feed

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 20, 2010


Maintainability of your code can be measured in many different ways. Jake Scruggs has combined several of the tools that measure you code into one Ruby Gem: metric_fu. Here's a demonstration. Go check it out! Download 116.1 MB Download (iphone & ipod) 55.8 MB

Teach Me To Code » Screencasts (iPhone/iPod)

Maintainability of your code can be measured in many different ways. Jake Scruggs has combined several of the tools that measure you code into one Ruby Gem: metric_fu. Here's a demonstration. Go check it out! Download 116.1 MB Download (iphone & ipod) 55.8 MB

Adventures in DevOps
Open-Source Software & Its Maintainability With Warren Parad - DevOps 147

Adventures in DevOps

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 1, 1970 72:03


Warren Parad is the CTO at Authress. It is a User authorization API for software makers. He joins the show to talk about Open-source Software. He explains how open-source software is used in enterprise organizations, what functions it serves, and what trade-offs and difficulties come with it.About This EpisodeDifference between open-source and SaaSPros and cons of Open-sourceOpen-source libraries  SponsorsChuck's Resume TemplateDeveloper Book Club starting with Clean Architecture by Robert C. MartinBecome a Top 1% Dev with a Top End Devs MembershipLinksAuthressLinkedIn: Warren Parad Twitter: @WparadWarren Parad - MediumPicksJillian - Dabble of DevOpsJillian - Wings of Fire Jonathan - A Seat at the Table: IT Leadership in the Age of AgilityJonathan - #0063 - Jonathan Hall - implementing continuous deliveryWarren - Dark MatterWarren - The FormulaWill - A Christmas Horror Story (2015) - IMDbAdvertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy