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Rev. Mark Bates from Mission to the World (MTW) joined us tonight to preach on God's heart for and call to world missions. You can learn more about RUF+MTW summer missions opportunities here.
Rev. Mark Bates preaches on Romans 10:10-17 in his sermon “How Will They Know?”.
On this episode of Gifts and Graces, we get to hear a panel discuss between Reverend Mark Bates, Jerry Gibson, Reverend Greg Hills, Reverend Dale Hollenbeck, and Reverend Leonard Liu as they discuss how to cultivate a culture of missions in your church. Mark Bates is the Senior Director of US Operations for Mission to the World (MTW). Jerry Gibson is the MTW Western Hub Director and Greg Hills in a similar role as Director of MTW's Northeast and Mid-Atlantic Hub. Dale Hollenbeck is Director of the MTW Mid-America Hub and finally, Leonard Liu is the Director of Mobilization for MTW's Southeast Hub. This episode was originally recorded as a seminar delivered at the 2023 General Assembly. Let's listen as these leaders consider how to cultivate a culture of missions in your church.
Finding activities in colder months, plus Mark Bates outlines the essentials of Christianity, and is playing lots of video games a sin? Featured musical artist: Zach Williams Roundtable: Don't Wish Winter Away Now that the holidays are over and the hustle and bustle has died down, the temptation to hibernate is strong. The days are short and cold, activities are limited, and creativity and motivation easily give way to Netflix and napping. Can you make the most of the winter months, both inside and outdoors? Our guests offer their best ideas. Leave Us a Voicemail Culture: Marks of a True Christian Lots of people call themselves Christians. But even the Bible says that not everyone who claims Christ belongs to Him. So how can you know if you're truly saved? What are the essentials we must believe and do? Pastor Mark Bates breaks down the necessary things for true Christians to agree on. True Community The Focused Pastor Inbox: How Much Time Playing Video Games Is Sinful? If you enjoy playing video games, how do you gauge if the amount of time you play them is too much? Can it even become sinful? And are certain games just flat-out wrong to play? Counselor Jeff Brown weighs in. Link to Counseling Services Link to Plugged In Website
Finding activities in colder months, plus Mark Bates outlines the essentials of Christianity, and is playing lots of video games a sin? Featured musical artist: Zach Williams Roundtable: Don't Wish Winter Away Now that the holidays are over and the hustle and bustle has died down, the temptation to hibernate is strong. The days are short and cold, activities are limited, and creativity and motivation easily give way to Netflix and napping. Can you make the most of the winter months, both inside and outdoors? Our guests offer their best ideas. Leave Us a Voicemail Culture: Marks of a True Christian Lots of people call themselves Christians. But even the Bible says that not everyone who claims Christ belongs to Him. So how can you know if you're truly saved? What are the essentials we must believe and do? Pastor Mark Bates breaks down the necessary things for true Christians to agree on. True Community The Focused Pastor Inbox: How Much Time Playing Video Games Is Sinful? If you enjoy playing video games, how do you gauge if the amount of time you play them is too much? Can it even become sinful? And are certain games just flat-out wrong to play? Counselor Jeff Brown weighs in. Link to Counseling Services Link to Plugged In Website To support this ministry financially, visit: https://www.oneplace.com/donate/1058/29
Go 1.20.4 & 1.19.9 coming tomorrowConf42: Golang talks available onlineText marshaling & unmarshaling added to regexp package for 1.21Jonathan's video about the proposal, acceptance, and change processBlog post: WebSockets: Scale at Fractional Footprint in GoReddit question: Which books should I read as an experienced Go developer?Shay's recommendation: Designing Data-Intensive Applications by Martin Kleppman & Benjamin LangeJonathan's recommendation: Go Fundamentals by Mark Bates & Cory Lanou (Jonathan's review)Blog post: FireScroll - A Highly available multi-region KV database with massive read scalability
1 Timothy 6:17-19
In a world where most documentation sucks, large language models write better than humans, and people won't be bothered to type full sentences with actual punctuation. Two men… against all odds… join an award-worthy podcast… hosted by a coin-operated, singing code monkey (?)… to convince the developer world they're doing it ALL wrong. Grab your code-generator and heat up that cold cup of coffee on your desk. Because this episode of Go Time is about to blow your docs off!
In a world where most documentation sucks, large language models write better than humans, and people won't be bothered to type full sentences with actual punctuation. Two men… against all odds… join an award-worthy podcast… hosted by a coin-operated, singing code monkey (?)… to convince the developer world they're doing it ALL wrong. Grab your code-generator and heat up that cold cup of coffee on your desk. Because this episode of Go Time is about to blow your docs off!
Mark Bates joins us from EB Motorsport, we find out how his hobby of racing an early 911 has turned into an industry renowned business designing and manufacturing parts for acclaimed historic Porsches. If you have watched any historic racing, you will have no doubt witnessed some EB Motorsport 'mojo' doing its thing on a racing 911.You can find Mark @eb33racing EB Racing @eb_motorsport and www.eb-motorsport.com‘9WERKS Radio' @9werks.radio is your dedicated Porsche and car podcast, taking you closer than ever to the world's finest sports cars and the culture and history behind them. The show is brought to you by 9werks.co.uk, the innovative online platform for Porsche enthusiasts. Hosted by Porsche Journalist Lee Sibley @9werks_lee and 993 owner and engineer Andy Brookes @993andy, with special input from friends and experts around the industry, including you, our valued listeners.If you enjoy the podcast and would like to support us you can do so by hitting the link below, your support would be greatly appreciated.Support the show
Mark has been an assistant coach for the past 13 years in Medford. His experience, knowledge of the game and love for the program has made him a player favorite over the past decade plus. Mark is our 4th assistant that is coming on this month and he brings a wealth of knowledge for those young listeners out there.
Message from Rev. Mark Bates on February 20, 2022
Here's a little bonus episode before we get back to your regularly scheduled Go Time. We're calling it the funny bits. It's a compilation of times we cracked up making the show for y'all. If you dig it, holler at Jerod. If you don't, email Mat Ryer.
Here's a little bonus episode before we get back to your regularly scheduled Go Time. We're calling it the funny bits. It's a compilation of times we cracked up making the show for y'all. If you dig it, holler at Jerod. If you don't, email Mat Ryer.
Mark Bates is the co-founder at Gopher Guides, papercall.io, and gobuffalo.io. Many of us know Mark for his programming expertise but much of this episode is focused around his passion for music. Music has always been an integral part of his life and even was a catalyst for his journey into programming. Tune in for advice on following your passions, stories of early internet, and the value of sharing knowledge with others.Connect with Mark:https://twitter.com/markbateshttps://github.com/markbatesMentioned in today's episode:Gopher GuidesDistributed Programming with Ruby (Book by Mark Bates) Ruby Conf 2008 - Building Distributed Applications Berklee College of MusicThe Liverpool Institute for Performing ArtsWant more from Ardan Labs?You can learn Go, Kubernetes, Docker & more through our video training, live events, or through our blog!
Speaker: Rev. Mark Bates, MTW Scripture: Psalms 117 Date: October 17, 2021
We're celebrating our 200th episode with a crazy game of Gophers Say! Mat Ryer hosts two epic teams including Go Time OGs Carlisia, Erik, and Brian!
We're celebrating our 200th episode with a crazy game of Gophers Say! Mat Ryer hosts two epic teams including Go Time OGs Carlisia, Erik, and Brian!
Mat Ryer and Jerod Santo sit down to review and discuss the MOST and LEAST unpopular “unpopular opinions” since we started keeping track of such things. Also Generics.
Mat Ryer and Jerod Santo sit down to review and discuss the MOST and LEAST unpopular “unpopular opinions” since we started keeping track of such things. Also Generics.
The panel are joined by Teiva Harsanyi, author of 100 Go Mistakes, to talk about how best to make mistakes when writing Go.
The panel are joined by Teiva Harsanyi, author of 100 Go Mistakes, to talk about how best to make mistakes when writing Go.
The panel are joined by Teiva Harsanyi, author of 100 Go Mistakes, to talk about how best to make mistakes when writing Go.
Carl (Director of Technology for Spotlight PA) and Wayne (Principal Engineer at GoDaddy) join Mat and Mark to talk about the new go:embed feature in Go 1.16. They discuss how and when to use it, common gotchas to watch out for, and some rather meaty unpopular opinions thrown in for good measure.
Carl (Director of Technology for Spotlight PA) and Wayne (Principal Engineer at GoDaddy) join Mat and Mark to talk about the new go:embed feature in Go 1.16. They discuss how and when to use it, common gotchas to watch out for, and some rather meaty unpopular opinions thrown in for good measure.
Carl (Director of Technology for Spotlight PA) and Wayne (Principal Engineer at GoDaddy) join Mat and Mark to talk about the new go:embed feature in Go 1.16. They discuss how and when to use it, common gotchas to watch out for, and some rather meaty unpopular opinions thrown in for good measure.
Mat Ryer hosts our don’t-call-it-jeopardy game show live at GopherCon! Kat Zień, Mark Bates, and L Körbes put their Go knowledge to the test! Can you outwit our intrepid contestants?
Mat Ryer hosts our don’t-call-it-jeopardy game show live at GopherCon! Kat Zień, Mark Bates, and L Körbes put their Go knowledge to the test! Can you outwit our intrepid contestants?
Mat Ryer hosts our don’t-call-it-jeopardy game show live at GopherCon! Kat Zień, Mark Bates, and L Körbes put their Go knowledge to the test! Can you outwit our intrepid contestants?
In the latest LaoisToday Talking Sport podcast, Alan chats to Laois minor football manager Mark Bates ahead of his side's Leinster championship semi-final against Meath this weekend. We also discuss Monday's Laois GAA annual convention, the contest for chairman and vice-chairman and how things may play out in 2021. As well as that we discuss Laois's heavy loss to Galway in the Leinster U-20 championship last weekend.
Go Developer, mentor, rocker, and Community Advocate Mark Bates joins PJ for the latest episode of What Matters to talk about Golang, Open Source, and why it's important to work towards your passion in order to make things happen! Some links mentioned in the show: Papercall.io Gopher Guides GopherCon 2020 Gopherize.me
Rev. Mark Bates preaches at the the Installation of the Elders and the Pastor service on April 30th, 1995. Enjoy!
• Fear is often the greatest enemy of faithful witness. Daniel didn't let any fear keep him from speaking the truth to the king.• Nebuchadnezzar had the 5 P's: The palace, power, pleasure, peace and prosperity. But the fact that he had those things wasn't the problem. The problem was, the king believed he achieved all that on his own. He gave himself all the credit and failed to see that it is God who sets up kings and removes kings! His main problem was PRIDE.• “In everything man does without God, he must either fail miserably or succeed more miserably. The cruelest thing God can do to you is let you succeed and think you did it on your own because you'll live your life independent of him—and that's the worst thing that could possibly happen to you.” Mark Bates• Not only does Daniel speak truth in love to the king, but he offers him a way out. He encourages him to repent (vs. 27).• “If my people, who are called by my name, will humble themselves and pray and seek my face and turn from their wicked ways, then I will hear from heaven, and I will forgive their sin and will heal their land.” 2 Chronicles 7:14• Reflection question: How might Daniel's witness to the king shape the way you approach witnessing to others?• Reflection question: Where in your life has pride prevented you from giving God the credit for what He alone has done?
• Fear is often the greatest enemy of faithful witness. Daniel didn't let any fear keep him from speaking the truth to the king.• Nebuchadnezzar had the 5 P's: The palace, power, pleasure, peace and prosperity. But the fact that he had those things wasn't the problem. The problem was, the king believed he achieved all that on his own. He gave himself all the credit and failed to see that it is God who sets up kings and removes kings! His main problem was PRIDE.• “In everything man does without God, he must either fail miserably or succeed more miserably. The cruelest thing God can do to you is let you succeed and think you did it on your own because you'll live your life independent of him—and that's the worst thing that could possibly happen to you.” Mark Bates• Not only does Daniel speak truth in love to the king, but he offers him a way out. He encourages him to repent (vs. 27).• “If my people, who are called by my name, will humble themselves and pray and seek my face and turn from their wicked ways, then I will hear from heaven, and I will forgive their sin and will heal their land.” 2 Chronicles 7: 14• Reflection question: How might Daniel's witness to the king shape the way you approach witnessing to others?• Reflection question: Where in your life has pride prevented you from giving God the credit for what he alone has done?
The panel discuss testing frameworks in Go. After a brief overview of the concepts involved, we discuss how testing frameworks can make our lives easier, and why some people still choose to avoid them. Mat Ryer and Mark Bates chat with Boyan Soubachov about the future of the Testify project.
The panel discuss testing frameworks in Go. After a brief overview of the concepts involved, we discuss how testing frameworks can make our lives easier, and why some people still choose to avoid them. Mat Ryer and Mark Bates chat with Boyan Soubachov about the future of the Testify project.
The panel discuss testing frameworks in Go. After a brief overview of the concepts involved, we discuss how testing frameworks can make our lives easier, and why some people still choose to avoid them. Mat Ryer and Mark Bates chat with Boyan Soubachov about the future of the Testify project.
Thorsten Ball and Tim Raymond join Mat Ryer and Mark Bates to talk about compilers and interpreters. What are the roles of compilers and interpreters? What do they do? The how and why of writing a compiler in Go. We also talk about Thorsten’s books “Writing an Interpreter in Go” and “Writing a Compiler in Go.”
Thorsten Ball and Tim Raymond join Mat Ryer and Mark Bates to talk about compilers and interpreters. What are the roles of compilers and interpreters? What do they do? The how and why of writing a compiler in Go. We also talk about Thorsten’s books “Writing an Interpreter in Go” and “Writing a Compiler in Go.”
Thorsten Ball and Tim Raymond join Mat Ryer and Mark Bates to talk about compilers and interpreters. What are the roles of compilers and interpreters? What do they do? The how and why of writing a compiler in Go. We also talk about Thorsten’s books “Writing an Interpreter in Go” and “Writing a Compiler in Go.”
Not every innovative, fast-growing technology company in insurance is a start-up. RDT was founded in 1991, but Mark Bates has the energy, enthusiasm and tech driven vision more commonly founded in early-stage companies. He's grown RDT to be one of the leaders in the UK providing the core underwriting platforms to 19 insurance companies and MGAs around the world. RDT is exploring new technologies such as voice, as well as creating its own consumer app. Matthew finds out how (and why) Mark founded the company, what they are working on today and exactly why one of their clients is responsible for 50 million calls on the RDT server each day. RDT is one of the many InsTech London corporate members. Find out more about what we are up to at www.instech.london We're delighted to be bringing you this podcast with support from the Insurance Insider. For a free copy follow this link - http://campaigns.insuranceinsider.com/instechlondon/
More Love More Power (Ephesians 3:14-21)Mark Bates 11/3/2019 by Deer Creek Church
LIVE from LondonGophers as part of GopherCon UK! Mat Ryer, and Mark Bates were joined by Liz Rice, Kat Zień, Gautam Rege to talk about the magic in Go’s standard library. Huge thanks to the organizers of LondonGophers and GopherCon UK for making this possible.
LIVE from LondonGophers as part of GopherCon UK! Mat Ryer, and Mark Bates were joined by Liz Rice, Kat Zień, Gautam Rege to talk about the magic in Go’s standard library. Huge thanks to the organizers of LondonGophers and GopherCon UK for making this possible.
LIVE from LondonGophers as part of GopherCon UK! Mat Ryer, and Mark Bates were joined by Liz Rice, Kat Zień, Gautam Rege to talk about the magic in Go’s standard library. Huge thanks to the organizers of LondonGophers and GopherCon UK for making this possible.
Mat Ryer, Mark Bates, Johnny Boursiquot, and Aaron Schlesinger discuss web development in Go. Go is great at writing server technology, but how good is it for web development? We’ll talk about HTTP, templating, the front-end, Wasm, and we even discuss Buffalo with its creator, Mark Bates.
Mat Ryer, Mark Bates, Johnny Boursiquot, and Aaron Schlesinger discuss web development in Go. Go is great at writing server technology, but how good is it for web development? We’ll talk about HTTP, templating, the front-end, Wasm, and we even discuss Buffalo with its creator, Mark Bates.
Mat Ryer, Mark Bates, Johnny Boursiquot, and Aaron Schlesinger discuss web development in Go. Go is great at writing server technology, but how good is it for web development? We’ll talk about HTTP, templating, the front-end, Wasm, and we even discuss Buffalo with its creator, Mark Bates.
The Build Guild Podcast : A Professionally Unprofessional Podcast for Makers
In this episode of the Build Guild Podcast, Mark Bates, a local carpenter who has spent the last thirteen years operating his own business. Mark’s clientele comes from a mix of referrals from Lowe’s™ and word-of-mouth around the community. Mark began working in the contracting industry working as an installer for Lowe’s™, and then became an installer himself. New to social media, Mark is learning how to advertise his business by showcasing his projects for both his business and his own home. Similar to Coty’s family, Mark’s family is involved in the foster care system. Recognizing the juggernaut of emotions surrounding a foster child’s first day in his or her new home, Mark constructed a castle at the front of his house to make that difficult first day a little easier. The second floor of his home contains a hidden passage, spiral staircase and hidden room to add a whimsical touch to his children’s childhood. Mark’s perspective is completely unique from the other makers of the Build Guild podcast. Most notably, Mark’s tools differ from the fine woodworking tools the other Build Guild makers utilize in their daily business. As a general contractor, Mark’s tool investments occur often and are focused on transportation and durability, whereas Ben, Brian, and Coty all see their tools as lasting investments that can (hopefully) last for years before being passed on to novice makers. Mark is an incredible example of how making isn’t limited to fine woodworking but is an all-encompassing field with room for anyone with an idea or just a little bit of whimsy. His 9-5 work is impeccable, but after hours he’s created an environment where his children have a place to make their daydreams a reality. Episode 4 brings us up to speed with Coty’s journey in the Small Business Revolution™, Brian’s current (secret) projects he’s spending the summer on, and Ben’s hair-brained YouTube ideas for Mark’s house. Mark and Coty are both in need of employees for their businesses, and a resume with any relevant experience can be emailed to Markbatescontracting@gmail.com and Arganicwoodwork@gmail.com, respectively. Most Underrated Piece of Equipment in the Shop: Mark: Oscillating Tool from Dewalt https://amzn.to/2YZzWIq Ben: ⅜ Milwaukee Ratchet https://amzn.to/2KccSBL Coty: TiteBond Glue Brush https://amzn.to/2WjE3Cg (Ben’s Suggestion) : https://amzn.to/2EHvJkO Brian: Black and Decker Jig Saw Value Selection: https://amzn.to/2Z3lDTd Luxury Selection: https://amzn.to/2Md1S9R Skil Jig Saw: Value Selection: https://amzn.to/2MehZUM Luxury Selection: https://amzn.to/2HNBwaB Wen Jigsaw: https://amzn.to/2HJxIa4 Other Mentions: Wen Air Filtration Systems: Luxury Selection: https://amzn.to/2Mi0GlU Value Selection: https://amzn.to/2Wa6VwB Saw Blade Ben’s using in his Sawstop: https://amzn.to/2HK8XKZ Send us all your beef jerky: https://amzn.to/2MhGC2P https://amzn.to/2MiTNR9 What’s Coming Up Next: Mark’s Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/markbatescontracting/ For Episode 5, we will have Jo Ellis from Make.Do. in Searcy. Check out her Instagram at https://www.instagram.com/makedocreate/, and her website at http://makedocreate.org --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/thebuildguildpodcast/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/thebuildguildpodcast/support
Panelists Mat Ryer, Johnny Boursiquot, Jaana B. Dogan, and Mark Bates discuss how humans build machine to machine integrations via APIs — the good, the bad, and the ugly — and how to give yourself the best chance of success.
Panelists Mat Ryer, Johnny Boursiquot, Jaana B. Dogan, and Mark Bates discuss how humans build machine to machine integrations via APIs — the good, the bad, and the ugly — and how to give yourself the best chance of success.
Panelists Mat Ryer, Johnny Boursiquot, Jaana B. Dogan, and Mark Bates discuss how humans build machine to machine integrations via APIs — the good, the bad, and the ugly — and how to give yourself the best chance of success.
We’re back! Panelists Mat Ryer, Johnny Boursiquot, Jaana B. Dogan, and Mark Bates discuss Go 2, the future of Go, what they like and don’t like, and what they would add or remove.
We’re back! Panelists Mat Ryer, Johnny Boursiquot, Jaana B. Dogan, and Mark Bates discuss Go 2, the future of Go, what they like and don’t like, and what they would add or remove.
We’re back! Panelists Mat Ryer, Johnny Boursiquot, Jaana B. Dogan, and Mark Bates discuss Go 2, the future of Go, what they like and don’t like, and what they would add or remove.
Panel: Charles Max Wood Guest: Mark Bates This week on My Ruby Story, Chuck talks with Mark Bates who is a consultant, trainer, entrepreneur, co-founder of PaperCall, and an author! Chuck and Mark talk about PaperCall, GO, Ruby, JavaScript, and helping others within the community. Check out today’s episode to hear more! In particular, we dive pretty deep on: 0:00 – Get A Coder Job! 0:59 – Chuck: Hi! I saw we were on Episode 198! We talked about Ruby and different communities. 1:25 – Guest: Yes, we were talking about the conference we were trying to start, which never took-off! 1:50 – Chuck: You talked about how you are working with GO now. You are an author, too! 2:06 – Guest: That came out in 2009. My 2nd son was born the day before that went to print. 2:42 – Chuck: How many kids do you have? 2:47 – Guest: I have 2 kids. 3:00 – Chuck: Happy Birthday buddy! Let’s talk about your journey into and out of Ruby! 3:15 – Guest: I will be happy to. 3:23 – Chuck: 3:27 – Guest: I have a degree in music and studied guitar in England. I came back in 1999 and needed a job. If you could spell HTML then it was good – then if you could work with it then it was even better! The guest mentions Liverpool, England. 4:20 – Guest: I got a job and transitioned into other things. Fell in-love with Java at the time – and then moved into straight development. I needed money, I had skills into it, and then I fell in-love with 5:10 – Chuck: What aspect in music are you into? 5:14 – Guest: I am a singer/songwriter, and yes into guitar. 5:57 – Chuck: Yeah, they used to have jam sections at conferences. 6:37 – Chuck: I find in interesting how much crossover there is between music and programming/coding. I hear them say: I found I needed to build a site for the band and whatnot. 7:25 – Guest: Yeah, I can do view source and I can figure out that I am missing a tag. That put me ahead in 1997 and 1998! I had done some work that. 8:57 – Chuck: You don’t even have to generate a JavaScript project with that – can I find the template and can I go? 9:14 – Guest: Yes programming has come a long way. 9:22 – Chuck: It is interesting, though. When we talk about those things – it was a different time but I don’t know if it was easier/harder for people to come into the career field now. 9:52 – Guest: Yes, I am into the educational side of it, too. There was a lack of books on the subject back-in-the-day. There is almost too much material now. Guest: I do a Google search that will give me something that is most recent. There is no reason to have to dig through material that isn’t relevant anymore. Guest: I used NOTEPAD to write websites. 11:29 – Chuck: Yes, and then Notepad plus, plus! 11:39 – Guest: Those days are gone. If you want to build a website you go to a company that does that now. The guest refers to Kubernetes, Ruby, HTML, Sequel and much more! 12:55 – Guest: I see the new developers getting overwhelmed in the beginning they need to learn 10 languages at once. I am fortunate to have come into the industry when I did. I don’t envy them. 13:56 – Chuck: Talking about how complicated the Web is getting. What led you to Ruby on Rails? 14:12 – Guest: In 2004 – I just finished a Java project that had roughly 100,000 lines of configuration!! Everything in Java at that point was XML configuration. I didn’t like debugging XML – and it wasn’t fun. I was refiguring out my career. Everything at the time was XML and more XML! I didn’t want to be in that world. I quit developing completely for 2 years. I worked as an internship in a recording studio for a while. I got to work with a lot of great people, but there was a lack of money and lack of general employment. We wanted to have kids and at the end of 2005 a friend mentioned Ruby on Rails. He told me that it’s NOT Java and that I would love it. I installed it and found an old cookbook tutorial and immediately I said: THAT’s what I want programming to be. When did you pick up Ruby on Rails? 18:14 – Chuck: I picked it up when I worked for...and I was doing Q&A customer service. 19:05 – Guest: Yeah, he hooked me for sure – that jerk! I really got into this book! Check it out! It changed my career and web development entirely. For all the grief we give Rails it did change the world. 20:40 – Chuck: What have you done in Ruby that you are particularly proud of? 20:50 – Guest: Most proud running Boston RB. We had so many people show up! 22:49 – Chuck: You talk about those things and that’s why I ask the question in the first place. And it turns out that: I did THIS thing in the community! I like talking to people and helping people. 23:31 – Guest: Yes, I get to work and help people all around the world. Sweet! I get to go in and help people. It gives me the time to contribute to open source and go to Slack. I have a career based around: Helping People! I like the code that I created, but I like the community stuff I have done over the years. 24:31 – Chuck: Yep my career coach wanted me to create a vision/mission statement for DevChat T.V. We make a difference and people make career changes b/c they are getting help and information 25:23 – Guest: Making a living off of helping people is a great feeling! 25:44 – Guest: The contents of the book are wildly out-of-date, but the origin story is hysterical. I went to a conference in 2008 and was just laid-off in October 2008. I got into a hot tub in Orlando and someone started talking to me about my recent talk. By the way, never write a book – don’t do it! 28:18 – Chuck: Sounds like a movie plot to me! 28:25 – Guest: Oh no – that’s not a good movie idea! 28:50 – Chuck and Guest go back-and-forth with a pretend movie: who would play you? 29:15 – Chuck: Let’s talk about PaperCall? 29:23 – Guest: I hated that (for conferences) you had to enter in a lot of different forms (2-3 proposals) for one conference. This bothered me and was very time-consuming. 31:45 – Guest & Chuck talking about saving time. 32:37 – Chuck: What are you doing now? 32:42 – Guest: Yeah, I get to go around and help engineers and open source exclusively. 33:48 – Chuck: How did you get into GO? 33:53 – Guest: In about 2012 I started looking into GO. The guest talks about the benefits and why he likes GO! 36:28 – Guest: What you see is what you get in GO, which is what I like! 39:13 – Chuck: It is an interesting language, and I haven’t played around with it as much as I would like to. I love trying new things, and see how it solves problems. 40:30 – Guest. 42:00 – Chuck: Picks! 42:06 – Advertisement – Fresh Books! END – CacheFly Links: Ruby Elixir Rails Rust Python PHP Kubernetes React Native Ruby Motion Mark’s GitHub Mark’s Twitter PaperCall.io Sponsors: Get a Coder Job Cache Fly Fresh Books Picks: Chuck Book: Ultra Marathon Man Mark GO! GoBuffalo.io Boston RB Jim Weirich – In Memory of... Jim’s Bio
Panel: Charles Max Wood Guest: Mark Bates This week on My Ruby Story, Chuck talks with Mark Bates who is a consultant, trainer, entrepreneur, co-founder of PaperCall, and an author! Chuck and Mark talk about PaperCall, GO, Ruby, JavaScript, and helping others within the community. Check out today’s episode to hear more! In particular, we dive pretty deep on: 0:00 – Get A Coder Job! 0:59 – Chuck: Hi! I saw we were on Episode 198! We talked about Ruby and different communities. 1:25 – Guest: Yes, we were talking about the conference we were trying to start, which never took-off! 1:50 – Chuck: You talked about how you are working with GO now. You are an author, too! 2:06 – Guest: That came out in 2009. My 2nd son was born the day before that went to print. 2:42 – Chuck: How many kids do you have? 2:47 – Guest: I have 2 kids. 3:00 – Chuck: Happy Birthday buddy! Let’s talk about your journey into and out of Ruby! 3:15 – Guest: I will be happy to. 3:23 – Chuck: 3:27 – Guest: I have a degree in music and studied guitar in England. I came back in 1999 and needed a job. If you could spell HTML then it was good – then if you could work with it then it was even better! The guest mentions Liverpool, England. 4:20 – Guest: I got a job and transitioned into other things. Fell in-love with Java at the time – and then moved into straight development. I needed money, I had skills into it, and then I fell in-love with 5:10 – Chuck: What aspect in music are you into? 5:14 – Guest: I am a singer/songwriter, and yes into guitar. 5:57 – Chuck: Yeah, they used to have jam sections at conferences. 6:37 – Chuck: I find in interesting how much crossover there is between music and programming/coding. I hear them say: I found I needed to build a site for the band and whatnot. 7:25 – Guest: Yeah, I can do view source and I can figure out that I am missing a tag. That put me ahead in 1997 and 1998! I had done some work that. 8:57 – Chuck: You don’t even have to generate a JavaScript project with that – can I find the template and can I go? 9:14 – Guest: Yes programming has come a long way. 9:22 – Chuck: It is interesting, though. When we talk about those things – it was a different time but I don’t know if it was easier/harder for people to come into the career field now. 9:52 – Guest: Yes, I am into the educational side of it, too. There was a lack of books on the subject back-in-the-day. There is almost too much material now. Guest: I do a Google search that will give me something that is most recent. There is no reason to have to dig through material that isn’t relevant anymore. Guest: I used NOTEPAD to write websites. 11:29 – Chuck: Yes, and then Notepad plus, plus! 11:39 – Guest: Those days are gone. If you want to build a website you go to a company that does that now. The guest refers to Kubernetes, Ruby, HTML, Sequel and much more! 12:55 – Guest: I see the new developers getting overwhelmed in the beginning they need to learn 10 languages at once. I am fortunate to have come into the industry when I did. I don’t envy them. 13:56 – Chuck: Talking about how complicated the Web is getting. What led you to Ruby on Rails? 14:12 – Guest: In 2004 – I just finished a Java project that had roughly 100,000 lines of configuration!! Everything in Java at that point was XML configuration. I didn’t like debugging XML – and it wasn’t fun. I was refiguring out my career. Everything at the time was XML and more XML! I didn’t want to be in that world. I quit developing completely for 2 years. I worked as an internship in a recording studio for a while. I got to work with a lot of great people, but there was a lack of money and lack of general employment. We wanted to have kids and at the end of 2005 a friend mentioned Ruby on Rails. He told me that it’s NOT Java and that I would love it. I installed it and found an old cookbook tutorial and immediately I said: THAT’s what I want programming to be. When did you pick up Ruby on Rails? 18:14 – Chuck: I picked it up when I worked for...and I was doing Q&A customer service. 19:05 – Guest: Yeah, he hooked me for sure – that jerk! I really got into this book! Check it out! It changed my career and web development entirely. For all the grief we give Rails it did change the world. 20:40 – Chuck: What have you done in Ruby that you are particularly proud of? 20:50 – Guest: Most proud running Boston RB. We had so many people show up! 22:49 – Chuck: You talk about those things and that’s why I ask the question in the first place. And it turns out that: I did THIS thing in the community! I like talking to people and helping people. 23:31 – Guest: Yes, I get to work and help people all around the world. Sweet! I get to go in and help people. It gives me the time to contribute to open source and go to Slack. I have a career based around: Helping People! I like the code that I created, but I like the community stuff I have done over the years. 24:31 – Chuck: Yep my career coach wanted me to create a vision/mission statement for DevChat T.V. We make a difference and people make career changes b/c they are getting help and information 25:23 – Guest: Making a living off of helping people is a great feeling! 25:44 – Guest: The contents of the book are wildly out-of-date, but the origin story is hysterical. I went to a conference in 2008 and was just laid-off in October 2008. I got into a hot tub in Orlando and someone started talking to me about my recent talk. By the way, never write a book – don’t do it! 28:18 – Chuck: Sounds like a movie plot to me! 28:25 – Guest: Oh no – that’s not a good movie idea! 28:50 – Chuck and Guest go back-and-forth with a pretend movie: who would play you? 29:15 – Chuck: Let’s talk about PaperCall? 29:23 – Guest: I hated that (for conferences) you had to enter in a lot of different forms (2-3 proposals) for one conference. This bothered me and was very time-consuming. 31:45 – Guest & Chuck talking about saving time. 32:37 – Chuck: What are you doing now? 32:42 – Guest: Yeah, I get to go around and help engineers and open source exclusively. 33:48 – Chuck: How did you get into GO? 33:53 – Guest: In about 2012 I started looking into GO. The guest talks about the benefits and why he likes GO! 36:28 – Guest: What you see is what you get in GO, which is what I like! 39:13 – Chuck: It is an interesting language, and I haven’t played around with it as much as I would like to. I love trying new things, and see how it solves problems. 40:30 – Guest. 42:00 – Chuck: Picks! 42:06 – Advertisement – Fresh Books! END – CacheFly Links: Ruby Elixir Rails Rust Python PHP Kubernetes React Native Ruby Motion Mark’s GitHub Mark’s Twitter PaperCall.io Sponsors: Get a Coder Job Cache Fly Fresh Books Picks: Chuck Book: Ultra Marathon Man Mark GO! GoBuffalo.io Boston RB Jim Weirich – In Memory of... Jim’s Bio
Panel: Charles Max Wood Guest: Mark Bates This week on My Ruby Story, Chuck talks with Mark Bates who is a consultant, trainer, entrepreneur, co-founder of PaperCall, and an author! Chuck and Mark talk about PaperCall, GO, Ruby, JavaScript, and helping others within the community. Check out today’s episode to hear more! In particular, we dive pretty deep on: 0:00 – Get A Coder Job! 0:59 – Chuck: Hi! I saw we were on Episode 198! We talked about Ruby and different communities. 1:25 – Guest: Yes, we were talking about the conference we were trying to start, which never took-off! 1:50 – Chuck: You talked about how you are working with GO now. You are an author, too! 2:06 – Guest: That came out in 2009. My 2nd son was born the day before that went to print. 2:42 – Chuck: How many kids do you have? 2:47 – Guest: I have 2 kids. 3:00 – Chuck: Happy Birthday buddy! Let’s talk about your journey into and out of Ruby! 3:15 – Guest: I will be happy to. 3:23 – Chuck: 3:27 – Guest: I have a degree in music and studied guitar in England. I came back in 1999 and needed a job. If you could spell HTML then it was good – then if you could work with it then it was even better! The guest mentions Liverpool, England. 4:20 – Guest: I got a job and transitioned into other things. Fell in-love with Java at the time – and then moved into straight development. I needed money, I had skills into it, and then I fell in-love with 5:10 – Chuck: What aspect in music are you into? 5:14 – Guest: I am a singer/songwriter, and yes into guitar. 5:57 – Chuck: Yeah, they used to have jam sections at conferences. 6:37 – Chuck: I find in interesting how much crossover there is between music and programming/coding. I hear them say: I found I needed to build a site for the band and whatnot. 7:25 – Guest: Yeah, I can do view source and I can figure out that I am missing a tag. That put me ahead in 1997 and 1998! I had done some work that. 8:57 – Chuck: You don’t even have to generate a JavaScript project with that – can I find the template and can I go? 9:14 – Guest: Yes programming has come a long way. 9:22 – Chuck: It is interesting, though. When we talk about those things – it was a different time but I don’t know if it was easier/harder for people to come into the career field now. 9:52 – Guest: Yes, I am into the educational side of it, too. There was a lack of books on the subject back-in-the-day. There is almost too much material now. Guest: I do a Google search that will give me something that is most recent. There is no reason to have to dig through material that isn’t relevant anymore. Guest: I used NOTEPAD to write websites. 11:29 – Chuck: Yes, and then Notepad plus, plus! 11:39 – Guest: Those days are gone. If you want to build a website you go to a company that does that now. The guest refers to Kubernetes, Ruby, HTML, Sequel and much more! 12:55 – Guest: I see the new developers getting overwhelmed in the beginning they need to learn 10 languages at once. I am fortunate to have come into the industry when I did. I don’t envy them. 13:56 – Chuck: Talking about how complicated the Web is getting. What led you to Ruby on Rails? 14:12 – Guest: In 2004 – I just finished a Java project that had roughly 100,000 lines of configuration!! Everything in Java at that point was XML configuration. I didn’t like debugging XML – and it wasn’t fun. I was refiguring out my career. Everything at the time was XML and more XML! I didn’t want to be in that world. I quit developing completely for 2 years. I worked as an internship in a recording studio for a while. I got to work with a lot of great people, but there was a lack of money and lack of general employment. We wanted to have kids and at the end of 2005 a friend mentioned Ruby on Rails. He told me that it’s NOT Java and that I would love it. I installed it and found an old cookbook tutorial and immediately I said: THAT’s what I want programming to be. When did you pick up Ruby on Rails? 18:14 – Chuck: I picked it up when I worked for...and I was doing Q&A customer service. 19:05 – Guest: Yeah, he hooked me for sure – that jerk! I really got into this book! Check it out! It changed my career and web development entirely. For all the grief we give Rails it did change the world. 20:40 – Chuck: What have you done in Ruby that you are particularly proud of? 20:50 – Guest: Most proud running Boston RB. We had so many people show up! 22:49 – Chuck: You talk about those things and that’s why I ask the question in the first place. And it turns out that: I did THIS thing in the community! I like talking to people and helping people. 23:31 – Guest: Yes, I get to work and help people all around the world. Sweet! I get to go in and help people. It gives me the time to contribute to open source and go to Slack. I have a career based around: Helping People! I like the code that I created, but I like the community stuff I have done over the years. 24:31 – Chuck: Yep my career coach wanted me to create a vision/mission statement for DevChat T.V. We make a difference and people make career changes b/c they are getting help and information 25:23 – Guest: Making a living off of helping people is a great feeling! 25:44 – Guest: The contents of the book are wildly out-of-date, but the origin story is hysterical. I went to a conference in 2008 and was just laid-off in October 2008. I got into a hot tub in Orlando and someone started talking to me about my recent talk. By the way, never write a book – don’t do it! 28:18 – Chuck: Sounds like a movie plot to me! 28:25 – Guest: Oh no – that’s not a good movie idea! 28:50 – Chuck and Guest go back-and-forth with a pretend movie: who would play you? 29:15 – Chuck: Let’s talk about PaperCall? 29:23 – Guest: I hated that (for conferences) you had to enter in a lot of different forms (2-3 proposals) for one conference. This bothered me and was very time-consuming. 31:45 – Guest & Chuck talking about saving time. 32:37 – Chuck: What are you doing now? 32:42 – Guest: Yeah, I get to go around and help engineers and open source exclusively. 33:48 – Chuck: How did you get into GO? 33:53 – Guest: In about 2012 I started looking into GO. The guest talks about the benefits and why he likes GO! 36:28 – Guest: What you see is what you get in GO, which is what I like! 39:13 – Chuck: It is an interesting language, and I haven’t played around with it as much as I would like to. I love trying new things, and see how it solves problems. 40:30 – Guest. 42:00 – Chuck: Picks! 42:06 – Advertisement – Fresh Books! END – CacheFly Links: Ruby Elixir Rails Rust Python PHP Kubernetes React Native Ruby Motion Mark’s GitHub Mark’s Twitter PaperCall.io Sponsors: Get a Coder Job Cache Fly Fresh Books Picks: Chuck Book: Ultra Marathon Man Mark GO! GoBuffalo.io Boston RB Jim Weirich – In Memory of... Jim’s Bio
Mark Bates preaches on Daniel 4
Visiting Pastor Mark Bates
The O’Reilly Programming Podcast: Inside the development of a new Go ecosystem.In this episode of the O’Reilly Programming Podcast, I talk with Mark Bates, presenter of a number of videos and Learning Paths on Go (including Go Core Techniques and Tools and Go Web Framework and Techniques), a frequent speaker at Go conferences, and an organizer for events including GopherCon and Gotham Go. Bates is also the creator of the Go web ecosystem Buffalo.Discussion points: Bates describes Buffalo as an ecosystem rather than a framework. “Buffalo is more than just a framework,” he says. “It’s a seamless set of tools and experiences. Buffalo helps you through the entire process from creating a brand new app to deploying your app.” How Buffalo can make writing web applications in Go quicker and easier. “To be up and running and to see business logic so quickly is exciting,” he says. “Everything works together and you can get to the enjoyment of coding.” Why Bates considers Go to be a WYSIWYG (what you see is what you get) language. What’s happening in the Go community now, including the August release of Go 1.9 and discussions about what Go 2 should be and how it should work. Other links: The Learning Path Go Database Frameworks and Tools, presented by Mark Bates The video Mark Bates on CoffeScript Techniques, Frameworks, and Tools The video Mark Bates on Ruby Techniques, Frameworks, and Tools Bates’ presentation Butterfly in reverse: From SOA to monolith at OSCON 2016 -Russ Cox’s GopherCon 2017 keynote address on the future of Go
The O’Reilly Programming Podcast: Inside the development of a new Go ecosystem.In this episode of the O’Reilly Programming Podcast, I talk with Mark Bates, presenter of a number of videos and Learning Paths on Go (including Go Core Techniques and Tools and Go Web Framework and Techniques), a frequent speaker at Go conferences, and an organizer for events including GopherCon and Gotham Go. Bates is also the creator of the Go web ecosystem Buffalo.Discussion points: Bates describes Buffalo as an ecosystem rather than a framework. “Buffalo is more than just a framework,” he says. “It’s a seamless set of tools and experiences. Buffalo helps you through the entire process from creating a brand new app to deploying your app.” How Buffalo can make writing web applications in Go quicker and easier. “To be up and running and to see business logic so quickly is exciting,” he says. “Everything works together and you can get to the enjoyment of coding.” Why Bates considers Go to be a WYSIWYG (what you see is what you get) language. What’s happening in the Go community now, including the August release of Go 1.9 and discussions about what Go 2 should be and how it should work. Other links: The Learning Path Go Database Frameworks and Tools, presented by Mark Bates The video Mark Bates on CoffeScript Techniques, Frameworks, and Tools The video Mark Bates on Ruby Techniques, Frameworks, and Tools Bates’ presentation Butterfly in reverse: From SOA to monolith at OSCON 2016 -Russ Cox’s GopherCon 2017 keynote address on the future of Go
Mark Bates joined the show this week live from his local Dunkin’ Donuts to talk about Go and Buffalo — his Go web framework. Those who listened live said this was our best show yet. If you agree let us know in #gotimefm on Gopher Slack or say hi on Twitter.
Mark Bates joined the show this week live from his local Dunkin’ Donuts to talk about Go and Buffalo — his Go web framework. Those who listened live said this was our best show yet. If you agree let us know in #gotimefm on Gopher Slack or say hi on Twitter.
Mark Bates joined the show this week live from his local Dunkin’ Donuts to talk about Go and Buffalo — his Go web framework. Those who listened live said this was our best show yet. If you agree let us know in #gotimefm on Gopher Slack or say hi on Twitter.
Mark Bates discusses practical takeaways from leading a mission-critical change at his church.
Gustavo Ambrozio, from Pocket Gems, tells us about how they implemented and how they run War Dragons with the power of Google Cloud Platform. Learn how an incredibly popular mobile game can scale and provide social features, analytics, while keeping high throughput that enables low latency. About Gustavo Gustavo is a software engineer from Brazil with over 20 years experience, almost 8 years of iOS experience (basically since the first iOS SDK was released) and founder of CodeCrop Software. Gustavo has worked on everything from server software, corporate systems and now is having fun living in sunny California developing mobile games for Pocket Gems. Cool thing of the week How to get your ASP.NET app up on Google Cloud the easy way blog post Interviews War Dragons is a game by PocketGems Google App Engine docs Scaling mobile games to a global audience using App Engine and Cloud Datastore GCPNext video Google Cloud Datastore docs Google Cloud Memcache docs Splitting Traffic over App Engine versions docs Google Task Queue Overview docs Question of the week Everything You've Always Wanted to Know About Go Web Apps (But were afraid to ask) by Mark Bates video A Survey of 5 Go Web Frameworks blog post Where can you find us next? We are both be speaking at Google I/O next week! Mark will then be at Change the Game SF Francesc will speak at goto; Chicago next week and then will be riding the AIDS/Lifecycle and if you want you can donate.
Pastor Mark Bates shares a fantastic message on building a Godly heritage. 3 points, The promise of God, Devil is defeated, People come to there senses. Luk 12:13-15, 3 John 1:4, Gen 16:12, Acts 16:30-31, 2Cor 4:3-5, Luke 15:17
03:08 - What’s Up with Aaron Patterson? Twitter GitHub Blog Red Hat
03:08 - What’s Up with Aaron Patterson? Twitter GitHub Blog Red Hat
03:08 - What’s Up with Aaron Patterson? Twitter GitHub Blog Red Hat
02:08 - Noah Gibbs Introduction Twitter GitHub Blog 02:38 - Rebuilding Rails: Understand Rails by Building a Ruby Web Framework by Noah Gibbs [YouTube] Noah Gibbs: GoGaRuCo 2013 - The Littlest ORM 03:06 - Sinatra 03:47 - Rack Introduction to Rack middleware rackamole 07:32 - Deploying Apps Hosting Heroku Redis Vagrant Server Provisioning Chef Puppet Ansible Capistrano 12:22 - Support, Operations, and Monitoring DevOps Database Administrator (DBA) [Confreaks] Paul Hinze: Smoke & Mirrors: The Primitives of High Availability Reliability Enterprise Tools HashiCorp Ruby Rogues Episode #192: Vagrant with Mitchell Hashimoto Learning Curve and Lack of Documentation (“Wild West”) 20:36 - Social Differences Between Communities: Ruby vs Python Ruby Rogues Episode #198: Expanding the Ruby Community Values to Other Languages with Scott Feinberg and Mark Bates COBOL, Java, C The SaltStack Ryan D. Lane: Moving away from Puppet: SaltStack or Ansible? 27:18 - Deployment Tools Targeting Polyglot Architectures 28:39 - Ease of Deployment Go 32:26 - The Success of a Language = The Deployment Story 33:51 - Feedback Cycle 34:57 - Reproducibility Bash 35:44 - Docker and Configuration Management Tools "chroot" = change root 44:06 - Deployment Problems 46:45 - Ruby Mad Science madscience_gem Community Feedback The Learning Curve Roadmap Multiple VM Setups Picks TuneMyGC (Coraline) Bear Metal: Rails Garbage Collection: Tuning Approaches (Coraline) Rbkit (Coraline) Get out and jump in a mud puddle! (Jessica) Release It!: Design and Deploy Production-Ready Software by Michael T. Nygard (Noah) Ruby DSL Handbook by Jim Gay (Noah)
02:08 - Noah Gibbs Introduction Twitter GitHub Blog 02:38 - Rebuilding Rails: Understand Rails by Building a Ruby Web Framework by Noah Gibbs [YouTube] Noah Gibbs: GoGaRuCo 2013 - The Littlest ORM 03:06 - Sinatra 03:47 - Rack Introduction to Rack middleware rackamole 07:32 - Deploying Apps Hosting Heroku Redis Vagrant Server Provisioning Chef Puppet Ansible Capistrano 12:22 - Support, Operations, and Monitoring DevOps Database Administrator (DBA) [Confreaks] Paul Hinze: Smoke & Mirrors: The Primitives of High Availability Reliability Enterprise Tools HashiCorp Ruby Rogues Episode #192: Vagrant with Mitchell Hashimoto Learning Curve and Lack of Documentation (“Wild West”) 20:36 - Social Differences Between Communities: Ruby vs Python Ruby Rogues Episode #198: Expanding the Ruby Community Values to Other Languages with Scott Feinberg and Mark Bates COBOL, Java, C The SaltStack Ryan D. Lane: Moving away from Puppet: SaltStack or Ansible? 27:18 - Deployment Tools Targeting Polyglot Architectures 28:39 - Ease of Deployment Go 32:26 - The Success of a Language = The Deployment Story 33:51 - Feedback Cycle 34:57 - Reproducibility Bash 35:44 - Docker and Configuration Management Tools "chroot" = change root 44:06 - Deployment Problems 46:45 - Ruby Mad Science madscience_gem Community Feedback The Learning Curve Roadmap Multiple VM Setups Picks TuneMyGC (Coraline) Bear Metal: Rails Garbage Collection: Tuning Approaches (Coraline) Rbkit (Coraline) Get out and jump in a mud puddle! (Jessica) Release It!: Design and Deploy Production-Ready Software by Michael T. Nygard (Noah) Ruby DSL Handbook by Jim Gay (Noah)
02:08 - Noah Gibbs Introduction Twitter GitHub Blog 02:38 - Rebuilding Rails: Understand Rails by Building a Ruby Web Framework by Noah Gibbs [YouTube] Noah Gibbs: GoGaRuCo 2013 - The Littlest ORM 03:06 - Sinatra 03:47 - Rack Introduction to Rack middleware rackamole 07:32 - Deploying Apps Hosting Heroku Redis Vagrant Server Provisioning Chef Puppet Ansible Capistrano 12:22 - Support, Operations, and Monitoring DevOps Database Administrator (DBA) [Confreaks] Paul Hinze: Smoke & Mirrors: The Primitives of High Availability Reliability Enterprise Tools HashiCorp Ruby Rogues Episode #192: Vagrant with Mitchell Hashimoto Learning Curve and Lack of Documentation (“Wild West”) 20:36 - Social Differences Between Communities: Ruby vs Python Ruby Rogues Episode #198: Expanding the Ruby Community Values to Other Languages with Scott Feinberg and Mark Bates COBOL, Java, C The SaltStack Ryan D. Lane: Moving away from Puppet: SaltStack or Ansible? 27:18 - Deployment Tools Targeting Polyglot Architectures 28:39 - Ease of Deployment Go 32:26 - The Success of a Language = The Deployment Story 33:51 - Feedback Cycle 34:57 - Reproducibility Bash 35:44 - Docker and Configuration Management Tools "chroot" = change root 44:06 - Deployment Problems 46:45 - Ruby Mad Science madscience_gem Community Feedback The Learning Curve Roadmap Multiple VM Setups Picks TuneMyGC (Coraline) Bear Metal: Rails Garbage Collection: Tuning Approaches (Coraline) Rbkit (Coraline) Get out and jump in a mud puddle! (Jessica) Release It!: Design and Deploy Production-Ready Software by Michael T. Nygard (Noah) Ruby DSL Handbook by Jim Gay (Noah)
Pastor Mark shares on 1 Samuel 16:1-2 on how we need to hear Gods voice and follow the direction He leads us in even when we are doing what He previously has asked of us we need to be prepared to change direction when Called to.
02:32 - Mark Bates Introduction Twitter GitHub Blog Boston Ruby Users Group @bostonrb MetaCasts: HD Screencasts for GO Enthusiasts @metacasts 03:14 - Scott Feinberg Introduction Twitter GitHub Blog WePay @WePay @wepaystatus 03:46 - Community Values 2014 Videos - WindyCityRails Lightning Talks (Scott’s is first) Scott Feinberg: Where does Ruby go from here? (The Happiness Manifesto) [GitHub] the-happiness-manifesto 05:32 - Ruby Community Standards and Values Testing Programming Should Be Fun and Enjoyable Pairing Large Regional Conferences and Meetups 07:33 - User Groups Lambda Lounge @LambdaLounge Netflix Open Source Group 10:18 - Polyglot Conferences Midwest.io 2014 - MythBashers: Adventures in Overlooked Technologies - Avdi Grimm [GitHub] A web server written in Bash Great Wide Open @AllThingsOpen CodeMash @codemash 13:07 - Including and Getting Newbies Involved in Conference and Community Culture Generations Boot Camps Launch Academy @LaunchAcademy_ Hugs 20:41 - Diversity and Codes of Conduct PyLadies PyLadies Chapters (Twitter) RailsBridge @railsbridge Rails Girls @railsgirls 23:08 - AlterConf @AlterConf Ashe Dryden @ashedryden 24:22 - PyCon @pycon 25:31 - HappinessConf @Happiness_Conf Diversity Black Girls Code @blackgirlscode Women Who Code @WomenWhoCode 28:30 - Developer Happiness and Invoking Community Values Within Corporate Company Culture Ruby Rogues Episode #191: The Developer Happiness Team with Kerri Miller PluralSight PluralSight Author Summit Trust Roles of Influence Navigating Office Politics 38:03 - Agile Software Development and Productivity The 4 Disciplines of Execution: Achieving Your Wildly Important Goals [TED Talk] Bruce Feiler: Agile programming — for your family 40:41 - “The Ruby Diaspora” Mark Bates - Panel: The Future of Ruby - Burlington Ruby Conference 2014 Elixir Programming Elixir: Functional |> Concurrent |> Pragmatic |> Fun by Dave Thomas The Go Programming Language Gophercon @GopherCon 47:47 - Acceptance Accepting Acceptance / Tolerating Intolerance 50:55 - Mentoring Boston Ruby’s “Project Night” Mentor Someone Who Doesn’t Look Like You Picks Love Letter (Coraline) RescueTime (Coraline) Hacking Happy by Dusty Phillips (Jessica) Happiness Conf Coupon Code (Scott) HappinessConf Speakers Page (Scott) The Flight Deal (Scott) iStat Menus (Scott) HappinessConf (Mark) The Go Programming Language (Mark) Use the Coupon Code: ROGUES to get your first month free: MetaCasts.tv: HD Screencasts for GO Enthusiasts (Mark)
02:32 - Mark Bates Introduction Twitter GitHub Blog Boston Ruby Users Group @bostonrb MetaCasts: HD Screencasts for GO Enthusiasts @metacasts 03:14 - Scott Feinberg Introduction Twitter GitHub Blog WePay @WePay @wepaystatus 03:46 - Community Values 2014 Videos - WindyCityRails Lightning Talks (Scott’s is first) Scott Feinberg: Where does Ruby go from here? (The Happiness Manifesto) [GitHub] the-happiness-manifesto 05:32 - Ruby Community Standards and Values Testing Programming Should Be Fun and Enjoyable Pairing Large Regional Conferences and Meetups 07:33 - User Groups Lambda Lounge @LambdaLounge Netflix Open Source Group 10:18 - Polyglot Conferences Midwest.io 2014 - MythBashers: Adventures in Overlooked Technologies - Avdi Grimm [GitHub] A web server written in Bash Great Wide Open @AllThingsOpen CodeMash @codemash 13:07 - Including and Getting Newbies Involved in Conference and Community Culture Generations Boot Camps Launch Academy @LaunchAcademy_ Hugs 20:41 - Diversity and Codes of Conduct PyLadies PyLadies Chapters (Twitter) RailsBridge @railsbridge Rails Girls @railsgirls 23:08 - AlterConf @AlterConf Ashe Dryden @ashedryden 24:22 - PyCon @pycon 25:31 - HappinessConf @Happiness_Conf Diversity Black Girls Code @blackgirlscode Women Who Code @WomenWhoCode 28:30 - Developer Happiness and Invoking Community Values Within Corporate Company Culture Ruby Rogues Episode #191: The Developer Happiness Team with Kerri Miller PluralSight PluralSight Author Summit Trust Roles of Influence Navigating Office Politics 38:03 - Agile Software Development and Productivity The 4 Disciplines of Execution: Achieving Your Wildly Important Goals [TED Talk] Bruce Feiler: Agile programming — for your family 40:41 - “The Ruby Diaspora” Mark Bates - Panel: The Future of Ruby - Burlington Ruby Conference 2014 Elixir Programming Elixir: Functional |> Concurrent |> Pragmatic |> Fun by Dave Thomas The Go Programming Language Gophercon @GopherCon 47:47 - Acceptance Accepting Acceptance / Tolerating Intolerance 50:55 - Mentoring Boston Ruby’s “Project Night” Mentor Someone Who Doesn’t Look Like You Picks Love Letter (Coraline) RescueTime (Coraline) Hacking Happy by Dusty Phillips (Jessica) Happiness Conf Coupon Code (Scott) HappinessConf Speakers Page (Scott) The Flight Deal (Scott) iStat Menus (Scott) HappinessConf (Mark) The Go Programming Language (Mark) Use the Coupon Code: ROGUES to get your first month free: MetaCasts.tv: HD Screencasts for GO Enthusiasts (Mark)
02:32 - Mark Bates Introduction Twitter GitHub Blog Boston Ruby Users Group @bostonrb MetaCasts: HD Screencasts for GO Enthusiasts @metacasts 03:14 - Scott Feinberg Introduction Twitter GitHub Blog WePay @WePay @wepaystatus 03:46 - Community Values 2014 Videos - WindyCityRails Lightning Talks (Scott’s is first) Scott Feinberg: Where does Ruby go from here? (The Happiness Manifesto) [GitHub] the-happiness-manifesto 05:32 - Ruby Community Standards and Values Testing Programming Should Be Fun and Enjoyable Pairing Large Regional Conferences and Meetups 07:33 - User Groups Lambda Lounge @LambdaLounge Netflix Open Source Group 10:18 - Polyglot Conferences Midwest.io 2014 - MythBashers: Adventures in Overlooked Technologies - Avdi Grimm [GitHub] A web server written in Bash Great Wide Open @AllThingsOpen CodeMash @codemash 13:07 - Including and Getting Newbies Involved in Conference and Community Culture Generations Boot Camps Launch Academy @LaunchAcademy_ Hugs 20:41 - Diversity and Codes of Conduct PyLadies PyLadies Chapters (Twitter) RailsBridge @railsbridge Rails Girls @railsgirls 23:08 - AlterConf @AlterConf Ashe Dryden @ashedryden 24:22 - PyCon @pycon 25:31 - HappinessConf @Happiness_Conf Diversity Black Girls Code @blackgirlscode Women Who Code @WomenWhoCode 28:30 - Developer Happiness and Invoking Community Values Within Corporate Company Culture Ruby Rogues Episode #191: The Developer Happiness Team with Kerri Miller PluralSight PluralSight Author Summit Trust Roles of Influence Navigating Office Politics 38:03 - Agile Software Development and Productivity The 4 Disciplines of Execution: Achieving Your Wildly Important Goals [TED Talk] Bruce Feiler: Agile programming — for your family 40:41 - “The Ruby Diaspora” Mark Bates - Panel: The Future of Ruby - Burlington Ruby Conference 2014 Elixir Programming Elixir: Functional |> Concurrent |> Pragmatic |> Fun by Dave Thomas The Go Programming Language Gophercon @GopherCon 47:47 - Acceptance Accepting Acceptance / Tolerating Intolerance 50:55 - Mentoring Boston Ruby’s “Project Night” Mentor Someone Who Doesn’t Look Like You Picks Love Letter (Coraline) RescueTime (Coraline) Hacking Happy by Dusty Phillips (Jessica) Happiness Conf Coupon Code (Scott) HappinessConf Speakers Page (Scott) The Flight Deal (Scott) iStat Menus (Scott) HappinessConf (Mark) The Go Programming Language (Mark) Use the Coupon Code: ROGUES to get your first month free: MetaCasts.tv: HD Screencasts for GO Enthusiasts (Mark)
Over the Rhine, The Black Lillies, Vienna Teng, Brendan James, Mark Bates