POPULARITY
“Just because the network is unreliable doesn't mean a monolith is reliable either. It's a fallacy to assume that you can build an error free system. You deal with it by accepting that the system overall has a baseline error rate, and that's a business requirements issue." Richard Rodger is the author of “The Tao of Microservices”. In this episode, Richard shares a unique philosophical and practical approach to microservices, focusing on core concepts such as messages first, component-based, pattern matching, and transport independence. Our discussion also covers the choice between monoliths and microservices, discussing the challenges of network unreliability and data consistency. Listen out for: Career Journey - [00:01:55] The Tao of Microservices - [00:10:12] 3 Core Technical Principles - [00:18:22] Messages First - [00:27:55] Pattern Matching - [00:35:55] Monolith vs Microservices - [00:41:18] Network Fallacy - [00:45:17] Handling Data Consistency - [00:49:30] 2 Tech Lead Wisdom - [00:55:47] _____ Richard Rodger's BioRichard Rodger is the author of The Tao of Microservices, a book from Manning focused on the design and management of microservice architectures. His first book Mobile Application Development in the Cloud (Wiley, 2010) is one of the first major works on the intersection of Node.js, Cloud, and Mobile. Richard Rodger is the founder and CEO of voxgig.com, a professional network and tool suite for speakers and event organizers. Richard was previously a co-founder and COO of nearForm.com, the world's largest specialist Node.js consultancy delivering next-generation enterprise software, with a focus on Node.js and microservices. Before that, Richard was the CTO of FeedHenry, a mobile application platform provider that was acquired by RedHat in 2014. Richard holds degrees in Mathematics, Philosophy, and Computer Science. Follow Richard: LinkedIn – linkedin.com/in/richardrodger Twitter – @rjrodger Mastodon – @rjrodger@fosstodon.org Blog – richardrodger.com
Show Notes: Sam Blinde is an accomplished Engineering Manager and Senior Software Engineer at Nearform (formerly Formidable Labs), where she has been instrumental in leading and driving the development of cutting-edge projects for over two years. Sam brings extensive expertise in React, Redux, Node.js, Next.js, and ypeScript to her current role. Beyond her technical prowess, Sam has excelled in various leadership capacities, including mentoring peers, onboarding new hires, and even managing hiring processes, showcasing her commitment to fostering growth and collaboration within her teams. With a diverse background spanning technical innovation, leadership, and user-centric design, Sam brought a wealth of knowledge and expertise to this discussion. This interview taps into the following topics: Design To Front-End Career In Management Splitting Time Keeping Context Being Accountable Owning Your Career IC Recommendations Growing Responsibilities Skill Overlaps Mentoring People Wins For Managers Advocating For Others Reviews Feedback Delegating Effectively Building Trust Leading By Example Having Boundaries Protecting Focus Time Adjusting Plans Revisiting University AI Impacts AI & Learning Skills Links: Sam Blinde GitHub X LinkedIn Nearform Stellate
Questa settimana abbiamo parlato di carrer growth con Alfonso Graziano, verso la fine dell'episodio ci siamo anche fatti due chiacchiere su come e' possibile creare video con react.
Show Notes: Sam Blinde is an accomplished Engineering Manager and Senior Software Engineer at Nearform (formerly Formidable Labs), where she has been instrumental in leading and driving the development of cutting-edge projects for over two years. Sam brings extensive technical expertise in React, Redux, Node.js, Next.js, and TypeScript to her current role. Beyond her technical prowess, Sam has excelled in various leadership capacities, including mentoring peers, onboarding new hires, and even managing hiring processes, showcasing her commitment to fostering growth and collaboration within her teams. With a diverse background spanning technical innovation, leadership, and user-centric design, Sam brought a wealth of knowledge and expertise to this discussion. This interview taps into the following topics: Remote Work At Formidable Office vs. Remote vs. Hybrid Liberating Remote Culture Social Connections Scheduled Fun Fostering Connections Time Zone Challenges Games Managing Teams Developing Growth Space For Expressing Feelings Honesty & Transparency Community Channels Minecraft Team Server Trust Battery Culture Of Trust Using Timers Radical Candor Empathetic Feedback Work-Life Balance Protecting Your Time Importance Of Celebrations Company Podcast For Team Building Internal Tool Building Links: Sam Blinde GitHub X LinkedIn Nearform Stellate
In questa intervista ascolterai il percorso di Michele Riva che, partito da un background da sviluppatore, lo ha portato oggi a co-fondare il motore di ricerca open source Orama. Nato come esercizio per spiegare il funzionamento di un motore di ricerca full-text in un talk di Michele, Orama ha raccolto oltre 8000 stelle su GitHub: oggi è una startup con sede a San Francisco. In passato, Michele ha lavorato in grandi aziende di prodotto come Paramount e NearForm, e con diversi progetti open source di Meta, Google, Uber. Michele ci racconterà del suo incontro con Isaac Roth, dei primi investimenti e di quanto sia importante avere un team affiatato e preparato, sottolineando l'importanza di esecuzione, del tempismo, del processo e della consapevolezza delle dinamiche del mercato. Michele Riva è un Expert Learnn ⬇️ https://learnn.com/expert/rivamichele/
Allora, nell'ultimo episodio di GitBar, Alberto ha iniziato a raccontarmi come è finito a fare l'engineering manager, e te lo dico, sembra che l'esperienza sul campo e un bel po' di studio facciano davvero la differenza. Poi, siamo entrati nel vivo parlando di che cosa significa davvero gestire un team tech e come ci si deve un po' fare in quattro per aiutare la squadra senza finire per muovere tutti come marionette. Ha tirato fuori un po' di trucchi per far saltare gli ostacoli che si mettono tra il team e i suoi obiettivi e, seriamente, ha dato un sacco di dritte su come un engineering manager si costruisce quella credibilità che ti fa essere il capo che tutti rispettano. Nel bel mezzo della chiacchierata, ci siamo buttati anche sui temi caldi come il come gestire gli sbagli in modo da non perdere faccia con gli stakeholder, come prendere decisioni quando non vedi chiaro e come tenere a bada i battibecchi nel team. Alberto è stato super chiaro sull'importanza di dare potere al team e di tenere gli occhi aperti su un sacco di cose. Ha toccato anche il tasto delicato di come gestire le persone che vanno alla grande e quelle un po' più in difficoltà, e di come parlare con il team degli underperformers senza creare casini. Nell'ultima parte della serie, io e Alberto abbiamo spulciato tutto quello che c'è da sapere sulla gestione degli underperformer, come tenere il team affiatato, come capire se stiamo lavorando bene e se stiamo davvero facendo centro con i nostri obiettivi. E non si è tirato indietro nemmeno con i consigli su cosa leggere e le risorse top per chi sta gestendo un team. Insomma, è stata una chiacchierata da mille e una notte, piena di spunti da non perdere.## Supportaci suhttps://www.gitbar.it/support## Link amazon affiliatohttps://amzn.to/3XDznm1## Per favore ascoltaci usando una di queste app:https://podcastindex.org/apps## Contatti@brainrepo su twitter o via mail a https://gitbar.it.## CreditiLe sigle sono state prodotte da MondoComputazionaleLe musiche da Blan Kytt - RSPNSweet Lullaby by Agnese ValmaggiaMonkeys Spinning Monkeys by Kevin MacLeod
Show Notes: In this podcast episode, Andreas Heiberg hosts Brian Walters from Nearform (Formidable Labs) and Viktor Tortolero from Stellate. The discussion revolves around accessibility in web development. Brian, a seasoned software engineer with over 15 years of experience, emphasizes that accessibility isn't solely about making adjustments for specific disabilities; rather, it contributes to an enhanced experience for all users. Viktor, a front-end engineer based in Guadalajara, shares insights into the importance of inclusive design, highlighting the necessity to accommodate diverse use cases and cater to different ways people interact with websites. This conversation delves into Stellate's recent accessibility audit, a proactive measure taken during a recent redesign. Viktor provides key learnings from the process, emphasizing the ongoing effort required to maintain accessibility. Brian echoes these sentiments, underscoring the challenges posed when introducing JavaScript widgets and the importance of making content decisions collaboratively within the team. The discussion illuminates accessibility as a continuous commitment, enriching the development lifecycle for a more robust and inclusive user experience. Topics Discussed: Accessibility "Normal People" Better For Everyone Inclusive Design Accessibility Audit Success Criteria Content Decisions Semantically Understood Team Effort Accessibility By Default Focus Issues HTML Order Accessibility Libraries Infinite Scrolling Scrolljacking Progressive Enhancement JS Interactivity W3C Accessibility Standards Valuable Resources axe Accessibility DevTools Proactivity vs Reactivity Accessibility Advocacy Pagination Navigation Screen Readers Growing Importance MVP Accessibility Limiting Customers Hooks Pro Tips Blind Power Users Links: Nearform Brian Walters Andreas Heiberg Victor Tortolero Stellate
Questa settima e' venuto a trovarci il mio amico Matteo e abbiamo fatto una mega chiacchierata.Vengono esplorati i concetti di vertical split e horizontal split, e viene definito il concetto di Micro Frontend. Siamo anche su youtube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rYayuViGSoQ## Il nuovo store di gitbar- https://www.spreadshirt.it/shop/design/videoterminalista+metalmeccanico+maglietta+uomo-D60dd75d8a30ff14b5e9bfbe1?sellable=5aaY1v4we3SeYEOlVXmx-6-7## Supportaci suhttps://www.gitbar.it/support## Dobbiamo ringraziare- Francesco Napolitano
Questo episodio e' sponsorizzato da fiscozen, clicca qui per saperne di piu: https://www.fiscozen.it/invitoGITBAR50 Oggi siamo entusiasti di avere con noi Paolo Insogna, uno staff DX Engineer di NearForm, che ci guiderà attraverso un argomento affascinante: "Milo - La Riscrittura del Parser HTTP di Node.js". Node.js è uno dei framework JavaScript più utilizzati per lo sviluppo back-end, e il suo parser HTTP svolge un ruolo cruciale nell'elaborazione delle richieste e delle risposte HTTP. Paolo ci spiegherà come il progetto Milo, sviluppato da NearForm possa rendere piu' manibile parte dello stack http di nodejs.Siamo anche su youtube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g6q2h8gvSVw## Il nuovo store di gitbar- https://www.spreadshirt.it/shop/design/videoterminalista+metalmeccanico+maglietta+uomo-D60dd75d8a30ff14b5e9bfbe1?sellable=5aaY1v4we3SeYEOlVXmx-6-7## Supportaci suhttps://www.gitbar.it/support## Dobbiamo ringraziare - Luca montagnoli
Essere fan di un tecnologia non vuol dire inibire autamaticamente il senso critico. Con Luca abbiamo provato a guardare oltre il nostro amore per il piú chiacchierato superset di JS cercando di essere piú obbiettivi possibile## Il nuovo store di gitbar- https://www.spreadshirt.it/shop/design/videoterminalista+metalmeccanico+maglietta+uomo-D60dd75d8a30ff14b5e9bfbe1?sellable=5aaY1v4we3SeYEOlVXmx-6-7## Supportaci suhttps://www.gitbar.it/support## Dobbiamo ringraziare - Livio Francisconi
Questa settimana abbiamo fatto una chiacchierata con Manuel Spigolor riguardo le contraddizioni del ruolo del mantainer e del mondo dell'opensource.## Supportaci suhttps://www.gitbar.it/support## Paese dei balocchi- https://amzn.to/3F0gDpo- https://store.steampowered.com/app/2526380/Sword_of_Convallaria/- https://amzn.to/3LJwfBn- https://www.cosemoltoumane.it/- https://amzn.to/3PYtuhY- https://www.researchgate.net/publication/220580403_The_Effects_of_Extrinsic_Motivations_and_Satisfaction_in_Open_Source_Software_Development- ## Link amazon affiliatohttps://amzn.to/3XDznm1## Per favore ascoltaci usando una di queste app:https://podcastindex.org/apps## Contatti@brainrepo su twitter o via mail a https://gitbar.it.## CreditiLe sigle sono state prodotte da MondoComputazionaleLe musiche da Blan Kytt - RSPNSweet Lullaby by Agnese ValmaggiaMonkeys Spinning Monkeys by Kevin MacLeod
Recorded at the Øredev 2022 developer conference, Fredrik chats with Michele Riva about writing a full-text search engine, maintaining 8% of all Node modules, going to one conference per week, refactoring, the value of a good algorithm, and a lot more. Michele highly recommends writing a full-text search engine. He created Lyra- later renamed Orama, and encourages writing your own in order to demystify subjects. Since the podcast was recorded, Michele has left his then employer Nearform and founded Oramasearch to focus on the search engine full time. We also discuss working for product companies versus consulting, versus open source. It's more about differences between companies than anything else. Open source teaches you deal with more and more different people. Writing code is never just writing code. Should we worry about taking on too many dependencies? Michele is in favour of not fearing dependencies, but ensuring you understand how things important parts for your application work. Writing books is never convenient, but it can open many doors. When it comes to learning, there are areas where a whole level of tutorials are missing - where there is only really surface-level tutorial and perhaps deep papers, but nothing in between. Michele works quite a bit on bridging such gaps through his presentations. Thank you Cloudnet for sponsoring our VPS! Comments, questions or tips? We are @kodsnack, @tobiashieta, @oferlundand @bjoreman on Twitter, have a page on Facebook and can be emailed at info@kodsnack.se if you want to write longer. We read everything we receive. If you enjoy Kodsnack we would love a review in iTunes! You can also support the podcast by buying us a coffee (or two!) through Ko-fi. Links Michele Michele's Øredev 2023 presentations Nearform TC39 - the committee which evolves Javascript as a language Matteo Collina - worked at Nearform, works with the Node technical steering committee Lyra - the full-text search engine - has been renamed Orama Lucene Solr Elasticsearch Radix tree Prefix tree Inverted index Thoughtworks McKinsey Daniel Stenberg Curl Deno Express Fastify Turbopack Turborepo from Vercel Vercel Fast queue Refactoring Michele's refactoring talk Real-world Next.js - Michele's book Next.js Multitenancy Create React app Nuxt Vue Sveltekit TF-IDF - “term frequency–inverse document frequency” Cosine similarity Michele's talk on building Lyra Explaining distributed systems like I'm five Are all programming languages in English? 4th dimension Prolog Velato - programming language using MIDI files as source code Titles For foreign people, it's Mitch That kind of maintenance A very particular company A culture around open source software Now part of the 8% Nothing more than a radix tree One simple and common API Multiple ways of doing consultancy What you're doing is hidden You can't expect to change people A problem we definitely created ourselves Math or magic Writing books is never convenient Good for 90% of the use cases (When I can choose,) I choose computer science
Recorded at the Øredev 2022 developer conference, Fredrik chats with Michele Riva about writing a full-text search engine, maintaining 8% of all Node modules, going to one conference per week, refactoring, the value of a good algorithm, and a lot more. Michele highly recommends writing a full-text search engine. He created Lyra - later renamed Orama, and encourages writing your own in order to demystify subjects. Since the podcast was recorded, Michele has left his then employer Nearform and founded Oramasearch to focus on the search engine full time. We also discuss working for product companies versus consulting, versus open source. It’s more about differences between companies than anything else. Open source teaches you deal with more and more different people. Writing code is never just writing code. Should we worry about taking on too many dependencies? Michele is in favour of not fearing dependencies, but ensuring you understand how things important parts for your application work. Writing books is never convenient, but it can open many doors. When it comes to learning, there are areas where a whole level of tutorials are missing - where there is only really surface-level tutorial and perhaps deep papers, but nothing in between. Michele works quite a bit on bridging such gaps through his presentations. Thank you Cloudnet for sponsoring our VPS! Comments, questions or tips? We are @kodsnack, @tobiashieta, @oferlund and @bjoreman on Twitter, have a page on Facebook and can be emailed at info@kodsnack.se if you want to write longer. We read everything we receive. If you enjoy Kodsnack we would love a review in iTunes! You can also support the podcast by buying us a coffee (or two!) through Ko-fi. Links Michele Michele’s Øredev 2023 presentations Nearform TC39 - the committee which evolves Javascript as a language Matteo Collina - worked at Nearform, works with the Node technical steering committee Lyra - the full-text search engine - has been renamed Orama Lucene Solr Elasticsearch Radix tree Prefix tree Inverted index Thoughtworks McKinsey Daniel Stenberg Curl Deno Express Fastify Turbopack Turborepo from Vercel Vercel Fast queue Refactoring Michele’s refactoring talk Real-world Next.js - Michele’s book Next.js Multitenancy Create React app Nuxt Vue Sveltekit TF-IDF - “term frequency–inverse document frequency” Cosine similarity Michele’s talk on building Lyra Explaining distributed systems like I’m five Are all programming languages in English? 4th dimension Prolog Velato - programming language using MIDI files as source code Titles For foreign people, it’s Mitch That kind of maintenance A very particular company A culture around open source software Now part of the 8% Nothing more than a radix tree One simple and common API Multiple ways of doing consultancy What you’re doing is hidden You can’t expect to change people A problem we definitely created ourselves Math or magic Writing books is never convenient Good for 90% of the use cases (When I can choose,) I choose computer science
Come si diventa Node core collaborator?Ne abbiamo parlato con Paolo Insogna e Marco Ippolito, da loro ci siamo fatti raccontare il percorso di Marco fatto per raggiungere questo obbiettivo.## Supportaci suhttps://www.gitbar.it/supportRingraziamo- Gilberto Maccacaro per averci supportato con 2 birre- Alberto Bini per averci supportato con 5 birre## Paese dei balocchi- https://amzn.to/3ZMxNOU- https://amzn.to/435E6QR- https://tailscale.com/- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-RNLBDZ9QxE## Link amazon affiliatohttps://amzn.to/3XDznm1## Per favore ascoltaci usando una di queste app:https://podcastindex.org/apps## Contatti@brainrepo su twitter o via mail a https://gitbar.it.## CreditiLe sigle sono state prodotte da MondoComputazionaleLe musiche da Blan Kytt - RSPNSweet Lullaby by Agnese ValmaggiaMonkeys Spinning Monkeys by Kevin MacLeod
Guest Clare Dillon Panelists Richard Littauer | Leslie Hawthorn | Justin Dorfman Show Notes Hello and welcome to Sustain! The podcast where we talk about sustaining open source for the long haul. Today, we are excited to have joining us Clare Dillon, who's the Executive Director of InnerSource Commons and works with the OSPO++ Network to support the establishment of University and Government Open Source Program Offices globally. In 2021, she Co-founded Open Ireland Network, which is a community of people talking about open source in Ireland. Our discussions today take us through how Clare got into open source and involved with InnerSource Commons, their relationship with the TODO Group, and the importance of the Japanese community in the InnerSource Commons. Also, since Clare Co-founded the Open Ireland Network, she fills us in on what it is, and gives an overview of the research and her findings from a report that was produced with the Irish government on, “Open Source and InnerSource Skills in Ireland: A Call for Action.” There is much more, so download this episode now! [00:02:07] Clare shares her background story of how she got into open source, how she joined an Irish company called Nearform, and meeting Danese Cooper, who introduced her to open source and the concept of InnerSource. [00:04:48] We hear how Clare got involved with InnerSource Commons with Danese Cooper. [00:06:47] When talking about InnerSource Commons, Clare goes in depth on how many people are active members, separate members, and since it's a 501(c)(3), how big the budget is. She also explains how InnerSource is more about the methods and practices. [00:11:31] Leslie wonders if Clare has found in her experience that organizations that come to InnerSource who may not have any experience with open source are more disposed to community engagement or doing co-development outside of the firewall after they get that experience with InnerSource. [00:16:11] Clare tells us her thoughts about the long-term implications for the health of the open source ecosystem. [00:19:11] On the InnerSource Commons website there is English and Japanese, and we find out how active it is for the people who speak Japanese into InnerSource. [00:21:01] We hear about the InnerSource Commons relationship to the TODO Group and Anna Jiménez, who's a community participant at InnerSource Commons as well. [00:22:34] Since Clare is the Co-founder of Open Ireland Network, she tells us what it is and gives an overview of the research and her findings from a skills report that was just produced with the Irish government. [00:28:07] We learn is there's any intent to support the skills agenda in Ireland with more open source work, and if the Irish government plans for economic development in Ireland if that's something that the Open Ireland Network is encouraging. [00:31:47] Clare shares some thoughts on the long-term implications of nationalistic approaches towards open source markets. [00:36:31] Find out where you can read the report and follow Clare on the web. Quotes [00:09:54] “Many of the original founders of InnerSource Commons were motivated by the idea of creating a whole new set of people who were able and willing to collaborate in the open source community so that they had that experience within their jobs, and therefore would be more likely and able to contribute either within their jobs or in their own private time to the open source community.” [00:26:54] “What was really fascinating to me was there was almost equal emphasis in the folks that responded to the survey about the non-technical skills. So where are the people in sales and marketing who understand this ecosystem? Where are the people in legal professions who understand the legal agreements necessary?” [00:29:33] “One of the most interesting areas that folks are now beginning to be aware of is that it's not just the technology that gives you a leapfrog in, but also market access.” [00:29:54] “When I was talking to some of the industry development agencies in Ireland, the idea that there are industry vertical foundations focusing on innovation in particular areas were a huge interest to them.” [00:34:32] “If you're enabling people to do open source in any nation, it enables collaboration across nations.” Spotlight [00:37:43] Justin's spotlight is Ghost. [00:37:57] Leslie's spotlight is to go check out the Digital Public Goods Charter that's been published. [00:38:38] Richard's spotlight is the National Portrait Gallery in Dublin. [00:39:06] Clare's spotlight is Sue Borchardt, who's a research artist and her amazing animation series she created on Cultural Evolution. Links SustainOSS (https://sustainoss.org/) SustainOSS Twitter (https://twitter.com/SustainOSS?ref_src=twsrc%5Egoogle%7Ctwcamp%5Eserp%7Ctwgr%5Eauthor) SustainOSS Discourse (https://discourse.sustainoss.org/) Richard Littauer Twitter (https://twitter.com/richlitt?ref_src=twsrc%5Egoogle%7Ctwcamp%5Eserp%7Ctwgr%5Eauthor) Leslie Hawthorn Twitter (https://twitter.com/lhawthorn?lang=en) Justin Dorfman Twitter (https://twitter.com/jdorfman?ref_src=twsrc%5Egoogle%7Ctwcamp%5Eserp%7Ctwgr%5Eauthor) Clare Dillon LinkedIn (https://ie.linkedin.com/in/claredillon) InnerSource Commons (https://innersourcecommons.org/) NearForm (https://www.nearform.com/) Sustain podcast-Episode 54: Danese Cooper on the History of Open Source, InnerSource, and What's Next (https://podcast.sustainoss.org/guests/danese) Sustain Podcast-Episode 132: Ana Jiménez Santamaria on OSPOs and the TODO Group (https://podcast.sustainoss.org/guests/santamaria) Open Ireland Network (https://www.openirelandnetwork.com/) Ghost (https://ghost.org/) Digital Public Goods Charter (https://www.dpgcharter.org/) National Gallery of Ireland (https://www.nationalgallery.ie/art-and-artists/national-portrait-collection) Sue Borchardt-Cultural Evolution Series (Vimeo) (https://vimeo.com/researchartist) Sue Borchardt Website (https://www.sueborchardt.com/sueBlog/) Credits Produced by Richard Littauer (https://www.burntfen.com/) Edited by Paul M. Bahr at Peachtree Sound (https://www.peachtreesound.com/) Show notes by DeAnn Bahr Peachtree Sound (https://www.peachtreesound.com/) Special Guest: Clare Dillon.
Si reinizia un nuovo anno alla grande. In questa prima puntata del 2023 parliamo di graphQL con Davide Fiorello uno degli Staff engineer di Nearform. Quando adottare graphql al posto di rest o qualche forma di rcp, quali sono i pain point, cosa è la federazione. Di questo e di tanto altro abbiamo parlato in un ora e mezza di super episodio.## Ricordati di iscriverti al gruppo telegramhttps://t.me/gitbar## Supportaci suhttps://www.gitbar.it/supportDobbiamo ringraziare chi ci supporta:- Andrea Quintino 3x
Questa settimana andiamo un po offtopic, dopo una settimana ricca di emozioni ci siamo trovati con Michele Riva e Luca Rainone a parlare di felicità. Cosa è la felicità? Come la misuriamo? Quali sono gli elementi ostativi? Ne abbiamo parlato a lungo senza necessariamente dare risposte ma con l'obiettivo di stimolarci ancora più domande per attivare il ricco processo di riflessione individuale. ## Ricordati di iscriverti al gruppo telegramhttps://t.me/gitbar## Supportaci suhttps://www.gitbar.it/support## Paese dei balocchi - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wtWY5uV14hg- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iE0-p9lG0Io- https://www.libreriauniversitaria.it/101-cose-fare-prima-diventare/libro/9788874308415- https://www.amazon.it/Potenze-dieci-dimensioni-nelluniverso-Ovvero/dp/8808061787- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cUMf9nu-NiM- https://www.amazon.it/Cosa-racconteremo-questi-cazzo-anni-ebook/dp/B079LJSZBB## Contatti@brainrepo su twitter o via mail a info@gitbar.it.## CreditiLe sigle sono state prodotte da MondoComputazionaleLe musiche da Blan Kytt - RSPNSweet Lullaby by Agnese ValmaggiaMonkeys Spinning Monkeys by Kevin MacLeod
Michele Riva said about he as software architect, Microsoft MVP, Google Developer Expert, International Speaker and answered some of my questions. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
Spesso si parla di decentralizzazione, lo si fa riferendosi alla finanza, alle informazioni e pure ai file. Questa settimana abbiamo parlato di IPFS con Paolo Insogna, Node core contributor e Senior Eng. a Nearform.## Ricordati di iscriverti al gruppo telegramhttps://t.me/gitbar## Supportaci su## Paese dei balocchi - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XV-u_Ow47s0- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yRyfr1Qcf34- https://www.soft-land.org/storie/- https://riffle.systems/essays/prelude/?utm_campaign=gitbar.it&utm_medium=podcast&utm_source=gitbar-episode## Contatti@brainrepo su twitter o via mail a info@gitbar.it.## CreditiLe sigle sono state prodotte da MondoComputazionaleLe musiche da Blan Kytt - RSPNSweet Lullaby by Agnese ValmaggiaMonkeys Spinning Monkeys by Kevin MacLeod
We talk to Michele Riva, Senior Software Architect for Nearform, about his recent BeJS conference talk, "Compiling and bundling JavaScript," including why it's difficult and how to make it painless. Links https://www.bejs.io/conf https://twitter.com/MicheleRivaCode https://www.nearform.com https://webpack.js.org/concepts/module-federation https://esbuild.github.io Follow us. Get free stickers. Follow us on Apple Podcasts, fill out this form here (https://podrocket.logrocket.com/get-podrocket-stickers), and we'll send you free PodRocket stickers! What does LogRocket do? LogRocket combines frontend monitoring, product analytics, and session replay to help software teams deliver the ideal product experience. Try LogRocket for free today. (https://logrocket.com/signup/?pdr) Special Guest: Michele Riva.
Find out more on our website: https://bit.ly/3wd65y8 It is said that the only two certainties in life are death and taxes. The rapid change in the information technology landscape is underpinned by two other near certainties; the growth in compute power and commoditization. Understanding these forces can help us to get a handle on the future arc of technological change. In this talk, using real world examples, we will explore how commoditization is affecting the systems that we build and try to make some predictions on how it will continue to impact financial services technology. Speakers: Peter Elger is a co-founder and CEO of fourTheorem, a company that specializes in cloud architectures and software transformation. Peter started his career at the Joint-Jet Undertaking in the UK where he spent 7 years building acquisition, control and data analytics systems for nuclear fusion research. He has held technical leadership roles across a broad base of the industry in both the research and commercial sectors including, software disaster recovery, telecommunications and social media. Prior to founding fourTheorem, Peter was co-founder and CTO of two companies; Stitcher Ads, a social advertising platform and nearForm, a Node.js consultancy specializing in digital transformation initiatives. An author and contributor to several books and academic papers, Peter's latest book ‘AI as a Service' is available from Manning Publications. Peter holds degrees in Physics and Computer Science. Colum Thorne started his career as a consultant working for BearingPoint before moving to his current position at RenaissanceRe. Colum has worked in various roles at the company, starting out as a software engineer and progressing on to become VP Platform Architecture. An AWS Certified Systems Architect, Colum has years of experience working in serverless computing. He has spoken at many events, including AWS Summit London, on the implementation of serverless architecture. Colum has a MSc in computing at the Dundalk Institute of Technology and did his undergraduate studies at the Technological University Dublin.
Questa settimana, con noi un collega :) Ci parla di nextjs, linguaggi e frameworks, in una puntata ricca di bold opinions. Non vi svelo altro! Il libro di Michele: https://www.packtpub.com/product/real-world-next-js/9781801073493## Ricordati di iscriverti al gruppo telegram:https://t.me/gitbar## Supportaci suhttps://www.gitbar.it/support## Paese dei balocchi -https://www.remotion.dev/-https://github.com/micheleriva/gauguin-https://www.amazon.it/Logitech-Ergonomica-Digitazione-Antimacchia-Bluetooth/dp/B07W6JJSV7-https://www.amazon.com/Codeless-Data-Structures-Algorithms-Without/dp/1484257243-https://www.amazon.it/TOYESS-Speed-Puzzle-Speedcube-velocit%C3%A0/dp/B082W43D1N-https://www.amazon.it/Logitech-Vertical-ergonomico-avanzato-muscolare/dp/B07FNHV4MW/-https://www.amazon.it/Racket-Programming-Fun-Way-English-ebook/dp/B085BW4J16/ref=sr_1_1## Contatti@brainrepo su twitter o via mail a info@gitbar.it.## CreditiLe sigle sono state prodotte da MondoComputazionaleLe musiche da Blan Kytt - RSPNSweet Lullaby by Agnese ValmaggiaMonkeys Spinning Monkeys by Kevin MacLeod
One in three tech professionals globally have said they would refuse to work for a Big Tech company as they're perceived to offer less autonomy, collaboration and flexibility, new research has found. Recognising a tech talent crunch, 81% of the technical professionals working for enterprise companies (500+ employees) polled even believe that their employer will struggle to find and retain talent over the next 12 months. By contrast, the survey of global tech professionals conducted by NearForm, a leading remote-first software development company, found that only 43% of people working for smaller companies foresee the same difficulties when it comes to retaining and recruiting those in technical roles. Employees are also finding that bigger is not always better when it comes to keeping pace with transformed ways of working and recalibrated employee priorities. Over three quarters (78%) of professionals now value the learning and lifestyle components of their overall working experience – learning, culture, remote working, and flexible hours – over more tangible factors such as benefits and office location which have typically been packages offered by larger tech firms, businesses are being asked to offer a much more agile and holistic employee experience. Sonya Hogan, Technical Director, NearForm commented: “With businesses of different sizes offering a unique experience, choosing where to work is largely down to personal preference, which may change over time. “For instance, if a tech professional is looking to learn from others and build up their expertise, a large corporation is likely to be more appealing. “84% of those surveyed said learning opportunities are a must so there is likely to be a pull towards large corporations that can offer robust training and development. “Whereas if they are at a point in their career where they want the space to try new things, a small or medium-sized company is likely to be the best fit.” “Larger tech players can follow suit here and make themselves more attractive, replicating some of the most appealing aspects of smaller businesses, such as offering more autonomy, opening up wider awareness into other areas of the business and being able to influence these where possible will give individuals the best of both worlds, putting them in a stronger position to attract and retain talent.” Helene Haughney, VP of Delivery & Engineering at NearForm, added: “As we can see, bigger is not always better. “While larger companies often have the allure of a big paycheque or company rewards, their smaller counterparts are now differentiating themselves in more meaningful ways, through company culture, greater access to clients and the C-suite, and less bureaucracy. “Consequently, creating a culture that captures the best of both environments and moves away from the “grow or go” attitude that is often part of life in Big Tech companies will help them to attract and retain top talent. “For individuals, experiencing Big Tech environments can be an extremely valuable learning experience that is full of opportunities and shouldn't be dismissed out of hand, so ensuring the culture, which is a priority when taking a new role for 80% of those surveyed, and work-life offerings is more appealing to professionals will work in everyone's favour.”
Matteo Collina is Chief Software Architect at NearForm, a member of the Node.js Technical Steering Committee, and the creator of Fastify and Pino. In this episode, we talk about making Node applications faster, Fastify v4, ORMs, npm downloads, and much more. Links https://twitter.com/matteocollina https://www.fastify.io https://www.fastify.dev https://getpino.io https://www.nearform.com Review us Reviews are what help us grow and tailor our content to what you want to hear. Give us a review here (https://ratethispodcast.com/podrocket). Contact us https://podrocket.logrocket.com/contact-us @PodRocketpod (https://twitter.com/PodRocketpod) What does LogRocket do? LogRocket combines frontend monitoring, product analytics, and session replay to help software teams deliver the ideal product experience. Try LogRocket for free today (https://logrocket.com/signup/?pdr). Special Guest: Matteo Collina.
In this episode we bring you a conversation with James Snell.We will be discussing and variety of topics including Node.js. LF Public Health, COVID Green, NodeConfRemote as well as exploring James's career journey through IBM, NearForm and now Cloudflare.James Snell, One who writes code, @jasnellJoe Sepi, Open Source Engineer & Advocate, @joe_sepiLuke Schantz, Quantum Ambassador, @IBMDeveloper, @lukeschantzLinks mentioned in this episode:https://www.jasnell.meLinux Foundation Public Health:lfph.io/2021/05/25/momentumHerald, proximity detection, distance estimation & data sharing:heraldprox.ioNode.js Next 10:github.com/nodejs/next-10Open Hive JS Podcast:nearform.com/openhive-js-the-podcast-for-all-things-javascript/
In this episode with Michael Dawson, Node.js Community Lead for Red Hat + IBM, we will discuss the work happening in the open-source Node.js space, including the upcoming Node.js v16 release, work on the “Next 10 Years” initiative, how the Node.js governance model has influenced many other open-source projects and whatever else comes to mind.Links:- Node.js v16 release next Tuesday: 2021-04-20github.com/nodejs/release- Next 10 - github.com/nodejs/next-10- Collaboration Spaces (Package Maintenance team is kicking off one) - https://openjsf.org/blog/2020/11/12/introducing-the-openjs-collaboration-network/- Node-API/node-addon-apiReference Architecture - github.com/nodeshift/nodejs-reference-architectureBlog posts intro to Ref arch - https://developers.redhat.com/blog/2021/03/08/introduction-to-the-node-js-reference-architecture-part-1-overview/Logging one is coming next Joe just published a great article on OpenShift resources - developer.ibm.com/blogs/node-developers-red-hat-openshift/- Success Stories - developer.ibm.com/languages/node-js/articles/nodejs-weather-company-success-story/- New developers.redhat.com/topics/nodejs landing pageContent, we work together - Diagnostics/Observabilitypublished updated blog post on prometheus - developers.redhat.com/blog/2021/03/22/monitor-node-js-applications-on-red-hat-openshift-with-prometheus/diagnostic report - nodejs.org/api/report.html- Events- OpenJS World - openjsworld.com/- Quarterly Node event with NearForm - nearform.com/events/What you are about to hear is a new podcast and live stream show entitled, “In the Open with Luke and Joe”. In this series my cohost Joe Sepi and I bring you conversations with community and technical leaders from the world of open source and enterprise tech. We do this live twice a month on Fridays at 12 noon eastern time. You can catch us on a variety of streaming platforms or here as replay on your favorite podcast app. To find out all the details go to ibm.biz/intheopen. There you will find our show schedule, an embedded the live streaming video player as well as embeds of past video episodes. Or you can link directly to the podcast page with ibm.biz/intheopenpodcast
Matteo is a JavaScript expert, having created and maintained multiple open source frameworks including Pino and Fastify. Matteo is also a Technical Director at NearForm, a leading application development consultancy that focuses on JavaScript and Node.js in particular. In this episode Matteo talks about the popularity of JavaScript, speaking at conferences, and building open source frameworks. Matteo also talks about his popular newsletter, Adventures in Nodeland. LinkedIn Twitter
Damien Beresford, Chief Technology Officer at Nearform joins us on this episode of TELUS International Studios. Nearform has been in the spotlight over the last year for their COVID-19 contact tracing developments. Damien deep dives into the process of what it was like tackling the task of a lifetime - from the discovery phase, to working with government leaders, to ultimately designing user-friendly contact tracing services.
In questo episodio abbiamo parlato di Nodejs, deno, fastify e opensouce, paragonando il codice che scriviamo ad un opera d'arte e alla c***a. Un episodio densissimo di idee e di bold opinion con Matteo Collina, uno dei personaggi di spicco della community javascript... Per il resto, beh sta tutto nell'episodio.## Ricordati di iscriverti al gruppo telegram:https://t.me/gitbar## Supportaci suhttps://www.buymeacoffee.com/gitbarsaverio.menini ci ha offerto
In this special joint episode of OpenHive.JS and Decoded, the roundtable tech series from NearForm, Matteo welcomes Conor O'Neill, Anna Henningsen and Eric Lewis to celebrate the 25-year anniversary of JavaScript by discussing what we can expect and hope for in the next 25 years. In this special joint episode, you'll hear about: How the language has evolved so far and what we anticipate in the years ahead Key developments in recent years that are steering JS into the future Considerations around emerging applications and developer tools in a JavaScripted world And more.
(**ATTENZIONE: EPISODIO FORTEMENTE OPINIONATO**) In questo episodio con Leonardo Rossi abbiamo dedicato un oretta a condividere i nostri punti di vista sulla nuova versione del famosissimo framework php pensato e realizzato da Taylor Otwell.Dalla produttività all'effetto lock-in, dalla prototipazione al debito tecnico. Laravel si mostra come uno degli strumenti fullstack più discussi degli ultimi mesi.Vi invitiamo, se vi va, a continuare la discussione sul nostro gruppo che potete trovare cercando "gitbar" sul vostro client telegram.NB:
For the ninth episode of OpenHive.JS, we sit down for a detailed, insightful and entertaining conversation with Mikeal Rogers, IPLD Lead at Protocol Labs, creator of NodeConf and longtime friend of NearForm. Mikeal has been a key figure in the JavaScript community for many years and comes ready to discuss it all, from decentralised databases and encryption to open source ideals and more. With this much to talk about, we need two episodes. This is part one. Welcome back to OpenHive.JS.
Il tuo software non esiste se non puoi rilasciarlo da nessuna parte, per lo sviluppatore oggi il rilascio è ruolo complementare insieme alla programmazione. Quando si parla di rilascio si parla anche di setup di infrastruttura. Da programmatori la pigrizia è una delle nostre caratteristiche principali percui l'automatizzare il processo di provisioning e configurazione è un elemento importante. Se poi tutto può essere fatto scrivendo del codice beh tutto di guadagnato. In questa puntata, con Leonardo Rossi (senior software eng. a Nearform ) abbiamo parlato di infrastructure as a code...Ricordati di iscriverti al gruppo telegram:https://t.me/gitbar## LinksTwitter: @leorossiLinkedin: https://linkedin.com/in/leorossi82Github: leorossiWebsite: https://leorossi.it- https://aws.amazon.com/it/cdk/- https://cdkworkshop.com/30-python/20-create-project/500-deploy.html- https://www.terraform.io/- https://www.pagemarker.io/- https://www.peacockcode.dev/- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zWw2wuiKd5o- https://www.oreilly.com/library/view/infrastructure-as-code/9781491924334/- https://www.oreilly.com/library/view/infrastructure-as-code/9781098114664/## Contatti@brainrepo su twitter o via mail a info@gitbar.it.## CreditiLe sigle sono state prodotte da MondoComputazionaleLe musiche da Blan Kytt - RSPN e Broke For Free - Something Elated
The COVIDTracker app, developed by NearForm in Tramore Co. Waterford has become the basis for exposure notification apps across the globe. In this episode, Rob O'Connor speaks with Conor O'Neill,... Faculty and students from Waterford Institute of Technology explore a wide range of topics related to computing and technology. Hosted by Rob O'Connor. All opinions are personal and do not represent Institutional views.
TechTalk@Newstalk.com
Season 2, 3rd edition of the FINOS Open Source in Fintech Podcast, FINOS Director of Community James McLeod interviews Conor O'Neill & Ger O'Shaughnessy of Nearform after their FINOS Virtual Meetup presentation on Aug 26, 2020. Head to the FINOS.org site to see the video of the presentation, along with the team's slides. It’s pretty hard to avoid using code that was written by people in NearForm. From the Fastify web framework to Node.js Worker Threads to parts of React.js Native, NearForm has become a worldwide center of excellence for JavaScript. In this webinar the presenters will give a short introduction to what NearForm does and then they will dive into some of NearForm's valuable OSS work, leading up to their most recent project, Polaris; as well as the launch of the world’s most successful Covid-19 Contact Tracing App. The NearForm team would love to hear from FINOS members about what they find interesting and valuable in all of NearForm's activities within and outside of FINOS. FINOS VIRTUAL "MEETUPS" The FINOS Open Source in Fintech Podcast celebrates open source projects and interesting topics at the cross section of financial services and open source. So far, our industry experts have discussed practical applications of and their real-world experiences with a range of open source projects including desktop interoperability, low code platforms, synthetic data, and data modeling. They’ve also discussed best practices for inner source, common myths about open source and why commercial companies choose to introduce open source offerings. Tune in to hear what comes next. Visit here for more FINOS Meetups Visit the FINOS website - and Get Involved Join us for the FINOS & Linux Foundation Open Source Strategy Forum (OSSF).
Why contact tracing technology has been slow to make an impact. Ed Butler speaks to Jenny Wanger from the Linux Foundation Public Health in the US where many states are only now rolling out contact tracing apps, months after many countries around the world. We hear from Colm Harte, technical director at NearForm, the company behind Ireland's app, which has been downloaded by about a quarter of the population. Chan Cheow Hoe, the chief digital technology officer for the Singapore government, talks about the success of digital contact tracing in his country. And the BBC's technology correspondent Rory Cellan-Jones explains why contact tracing apps are no longer being seen as the silver bullet in the fight against Covid-19. (Photo: The National Health Service contact tracing app rolled out in England and Wales. Credit: Getty Images)
Expleo managing director in Ireland Phil Codd talks with John Kennedy about the collaboration with NearForm that saw Ireland produce a world-leading contact tracing app for Covid-19, the creation of a €100,000 fund for SMEs and why Covid-19 has been the perfect storm for businesses to embrace digital transformation.
Panelists Pia Mancini | Richard Littauer Guest Danese Cooper Show Notes Hello and welcome to Sustain! On today’s episode, we have special guest, Danese Cooper, from her home in West Counties of Ireland. She currently works for NearForm, as VP of Special Initiatives. We will learn all about how the InnerSource Commons and Open Source are related. We find out about Danese’s last tech job at PayPal, where she started talking about InnerSource and why she moved to a remote part of Ireland with her new job. We find out about the concept of “trusted committer” and two companies that are practicing InnerSource. Also, find out why Danese said, “Open Source has won.” Download this episode now! [00:01:45] Danese gives us a bio about herself and fills us in on her job at NearForm and InnerSource Commons. [00:05:40] Richard is curious to know when Danese talked about InnerSource and Open Source being related, how do they both work together to actually sustain open source. [00:10:50] Danese talks about the “sustainability quotient” and how there are not enough practitioners of open source. [00:13:02] We hear the twenty-year old “fake stories” about why people are afraid when we talk about InnerSource and Danese tells us about the concept of “trusted committer” and what they do. [00:18:38] Danese tells us two stories about two companies that are practicing InnerSource that have been talked about publicly. [00:24:34] Pia asks Danese if she’s seen a lot of InnerSource or projects that were born in InnerSource and then they were released to the wild as successfully and she shares some stories. [00:31:49] Danese explains what she means when she said says, “Open source has won.” [00:34:54] Danese fills us in on what she’s doing now, what’s next, what’s exciting, and where to find her on the internet. Spotlight Richard’s spotlight is kalm.js.org (https://kalm.js.org/). Danese’s spotlight is have a look at Mozilla and try to lend them some support and COVID Green App. Quotes [00:11:17] “I feel like this area of endeavor has been so generous to me, giving me a means to make a living and an interesting means to make a living for this last 35 years. I kind of owe a give back of something to make the campground better than I found it and I think that is InnerSource.” [00:11:35] “Getting those poor 85% out of the salt mines and helping companies modernize now, because in another ten years they won’t be able to hire people that don’t expect transparency. So, they are going to have to figure it out, but if they figure it out now for the right reasons, they have a better chance of being in a good position to accept those new workers when that’s all you can hire.” [00:32:23] “There would be no Google if there was not Linux, period, full stop. It would not exist because their cost of acquisition for that kernel and their ability to modify it to their needs meant that they could optimize better than AltaVista, which was the search engine of choice before there was Google.” Links Danese Cooper Twitter (https://twitter.com/DivaDanese?ref_src=twsrc%5Egoogle%7Ctwcamp%5Eserp%7Ctwgr%5Eauthor) InnerSource Commons (https://innersourcecommons.org/) kalm (http://kalm.js.org/) Mozilla (https://www.mozilla.org/en-US/) Ford Foundation-2020 Digital Infrastructure Research RFP (https://fordfoundation.forms.fm/2020-digital-infrastructure-research-rfp/forms/8103) COVID Green App-GitHub (https://github.com/covidgreen/covid-green-app) Credits Produced by Richard Littauer (https://www.burntfen.com/) Edited by Paul M. Bahr at Peachtree Sound (https://www.peachtreesound.com/) Show notes by DeAnn Bahr at Peachtree Sound (https://www.peachtreesound.com/) Ad Sales by Eric Berry Special Guest: Danese Cooper.
In this special all-NearForm episode, we welcome our colleagues Colm Harte, Kevin Devine and Shaun Baker, who have spent the past several weeks designing, building and deploying Covid-19 contact tracing apps, including the highly successful COVID Tracker Ireland app. Here, they talk to us about the specific technology used, the challenges of creating an app with such high stakes and much more. Welcome back to OpenHive.JS.
NearForm is the developer behind Ireland's Covid Tracker app, one of the first launched using the Google Apple Exposure Notification (GAEN) APIs, and is the first developer to launch apps in multiple countries. Head of Product Conor O'Neill discusses the privacy protections of this app approach, the challenge of getting a huge portion of a population to adopt the apps, and what's coming next in the effort to turn smartphones into a warning system for COVID-19 exposure.
How has technology helped Northern Ireland cope with COVID-19? Ronan talks to Big Motive design directors Rebecca Walsh and Stephen Shaw. Big Motive helped to design a COVID-19 response service app for the Department of Health in Northern Ireland and their COVID-19 track and trace app with Nearform who developed our track and trace app. Rebecca and Stephen talk about what Big Motive do, the COVID-19 response service app they helped design, and the challenges they had to overcome. Rebecca and Stephen also talk about our contact tracing app and their partnership with Nearform to design and develop Northern Ireland's contact tracing app for the Department of Health in Northern Ireland.
In this ninth edition of the FINOS Open Source in Fintech Podcast, FINOS Director of Community James McLeod interviews Nearform's VP of Strategic Initiatives, Danese Cooper after their FINOS Virtual Meetup presentation on July 1, 2020. Head to the FINOS.org site to see the video of the presentation, along with Danese's slides. How can a regulated-industry business get ready for Open Source? That’s really a multi-layered question because of special requirements created by those regulations. The process of developing Open Source readiness through an internal InnerSource practice has been a focus in FinTech for most of the past decade, thanks to success stories from the likes of Lloyd’s Bank. How does the fact that FinTech companies are subject to strict regulation play into undertaking such a transformation? FINOS’s James McLeod was tweeting with Danese Cooper about a podcast they’d recorded when a follower asked that seemingly simple question, and out of the resulting conversation comes this webinar! We’ll be looking at issues such as PCI-compliance, GDPR-compliance, distributed-ledger systems such as Blockchain, and new regulations surrounding Transfer Pricing and exploring strategies to mitigate risk and what lessons can be learned from innovative new companies. Danese will be speaking at the FINOS & Linux Foundation Open Source Strategy Forum (OSSF). FINOS VIRTUAL "MEETUPS" The FINOS Open Source in Fintech Podcast celebrates open source projects and interesting topics at the cross section of financial services and open source. So far, our industry experts have discussed practical applications of and their real-world experiences with a range of open source projects including desktop interoperability, low code platforms, synthetic data, and data modeling. They’ve also discussed best practices for inner source, common myths about open source and why commercial companies choose to introduce open source offerings. Tune in to hear what comes next. Visit here for more FINOS Meetups Visit the FINOS website - and Get Involved Join us for the FINOS & Linux Foundation Open Source Strategy Forum (OSSF).
The government continues to urge New Zealanders to make use of its CovidTracer App - despite very few dowloading it and criticism that the app is difficult and unwieldy to use. But other government-sponsored apps have been more eagerly taken up. In Ireland, which has a population of nearly identical size to New Zealand's, the Covid Tracker app was downloaded by 1.3 million people in the first week it was available. So why has it proved so popular? Colm Harte is the technical director of NearForm, the director of the Covid Tracker app.
Cllr Eamon Quinlan and Janie Kavanagh, artistic director of the Rogue Gallery on the council's plans for an arts hub housing the gallery in the O'Connell street area; Dungarvan resident Tony Wall on disabled parking bays; NearForm's Technical Director Colm Harte on the Covid-19 tracing app and Damien visits the Lafcadio Hearne Gardens
This app has been developed by Tramore based tech company Nearform, and it's hoped it will be primarily used for contact tracing. Wayne explains how it works in his tech slot on The Big Breakfast Blaa.
We talk to Ger O'Shaughnessy, Head of Propositions at NearForm, about the good and bad of Front End design. We remember the genius of Ennio Morricone Sponsored by www.nettzer.com - Digital Onboarding
For this episode of OpenHive.JS from NearForm, we welcome Liran Tal, Developer Advocate at Snyk and a member of the Node.JS Security working group. Liran shares tips for engaging contributors in the open source community, why it's important for organisations using OSS to give back and much more. Welcome back to OpenHive.JS.
For our introductory episode of OpenHive.JS, the podcast for all things JavaScript from NearForm, we welcome Philipp Dunkel to tell us about the Temporal proposal for date and time handling. Philipp gets into the persistent challenges in how we currently manage date and time, and explains how Temporal aims to solve them. Welcome to OpenHive.JS.
In this episode, Cian Ó’Maidín, CEO of NearForm, one of the most active companies in the Node.js community, talks with us about how NearForm was born a remote-first company, how they have been tapped by various governments to help with Covid-19 tracing as well as how Node.js has become the place to go if you need performance and scale.
Contact tracing App developed by Nearform, the roadmap to re-opening the country, a new government campaign to improve our mental health during lockdown and a representative of the defence forces wives.
This week we chat with Matteo Collina, Technical Director at NearForm and member of the Node.js Technical Steering Committee, about his upcoming Node+JS Interactive talk on Node Streams. We talk about their creation before any standards and how they are one of the bedrock APIs used throughout the Node ecosystem. We also talk about WHATWG streams and some of their key differences, and how streams have gotten easier to work with thanks to the addition of async iterators and generators to the language.
This week we chat with Matteo Collina, Technical Director at NearForm and member of the Node.js Technical Steering Committee, about his upcoming Node+JS Interactive talk on Node Streams. We talk about their creation before any standards and how they are one of the bedrock APIs used throughout the Node ecosystem. We also talk about WHATWG streams and some of their key differences, and how streams have gotten easier to work with thanks to the addition of async iterators and generators to the language.
For our first ever BONUS episode, we're bringing you James Snell's recent talk from NodeJS OC. James discusses his involvement with http/3 and QUIC and fields some questions from the audience. It was a great talk about complex topics, presented in a way that was easily digestible and interesting. Even John understood it (well, most of it)! Follow James on Twitter: @jasnell James is Head of Research at NearForm: https://www.nearform.com/ Check out NodeJS OC: https://www.nodejsoc.com/
This week, Adrian looks at some of the nuts and bolts of starting a company with a couple of entrepreneurs who have succeeded and failed several times. From choosing a place to work to asking for money from friends and family, Adrian gets the insights from Voxgig and Nearform founder Richard Rodger and serial startup activist Dave Cunningham. For more from the Big Tech show you can visit the show page at: www.independent.ie/podcasts/the-big-tech-show/ The Big Tech show is in association with Magnet Networks.
Danese Cooper of NearForm talks to James McLeod, Director of Community at FINOS, about his journey to InnerSource at Lloyds. Learn how he overcame the challenges in establishing cross-functional collaboration and how InnerSource is more than an engineering methodology. Find out how to dispel common misconceptions, discover your diamonds and learn to adapt by starting small.
Sponsors Infinite Red The Freelancers Show G2i CacheFly Panel Charles Max Wood Josh Justice Joined by Special Guest: Eric Lewis Summary Eric Lewis, from NearForm, starts by sharing his development journey and becoming a core contributor to React Native. Eric tells the panel about Fabric, Turbo Modules, and Code Gen. He explains how Facebook uses these three tools. Eric explains how he got into SwiftUI by trying to build the perfect egg time. He shares compliment sandwich about SwiftUI and what he is using it for now. The panel considers why a React Native developer might want to cross-platform with SwiftUI. Eric shares what it’s like testing with SwiftUI. The show ends with some great resources for learning more about working with SwiftUI. Links https://quidd.co/ SwiftUI https://www.hackingwithswift.com/ https://nshipster.com/ https://www.swiftbysundell.com/ https://github.com/ericlewis https://twitter.com/ericlewis?lang=en https://www.facebook.com/ReactNativeRadio/ https://twitter.com/R_N_Radio Picks Charles Max Wood: Atomic Habits: An Easy & Proven Way to Build Good Habits & Break Bad Ones Superfans: The Easy Way to Stand Out, Grow Your Tribe, and Build a Successful Business Smart Passive Income 75HARD The Adventure Zone Sacred Marriage: What If God Designed Marriage to Make Us Holy More Than to Make Us Happy? Josh Justice: React Native Community Chain React 2019 - Lorenzo Sciandra - All Hands on Deck - The React Native Community Experience renderAtl Eric Lewis: Remembrance of Earth's Past: The Three-Body Trilogy (The Three-Body Problem, The Dark Forest, Death's End) SwiftPM Library Wild Animal Safari
Sponsors Infinite Red The Freelancers Show G2i CacheFly Panel Charles Max Wood Josh Justice Joined by Special Guest: Eric Lewis Summary Eric Lewis, from NearForm, starts by sharing his development journey and becoming a core contributor to React Native. Eric tells the panel about Fabric, Turbo Modules, and Code Gen. He explains how Facebook uses these three tools. Eric explains how he got into SwiftUI by trying to build the perfect egg time. He shares compliment sandwich about SwiftUI and what he is using it for now. The panel considers why a React Native developer might want to cross-platform with SwiftUI. Eric shares what it’s like testing with SwiftUI. The show ends with some great resources for learning more about working with SwiftUI. Links https://quidd.co/ SwiftUI https://www.hackingwithswift.com/ https://nshipster.com/ https://www.swiftbysundell.com/ https://github.com/ericlewis https://twitter.com/ericlewis?lang=en https://www.facebook.com/ReactNativeRadio/ https://twitter.com/R_N_Radio Picks Charles Max Wood: Atomic Habits: An Easy & Proven Way to Build Good Habits & Break Bad Ones Superfans: The Easy Way to Stand Out, Grow Your Tribe, and Build a Successful Business Smart Passive Income 75HARD The Adventure Zone Sacred Marriage: What If God Designed Marriage to Make Us Holy More Than to Make Us Happy? Josh Justice: React Native Community Chain React 2019 - Lorenzo Sciandra - All Hands on Deck - The React Native Community Experience renderAtl Eric Lewis: Remembrance of Earth's Past: The Three-Body Trilogy (The Three-Body Problem, The Dark Forest, Death's End) SwiftPM Library Wild Animal Safari
Cian Ó'Maidin shares the founding principles of NearForm, the critical factors to the future success of OpenSource in the enterprise and how Node.js has evolved in its 10 years.
Richard Rodger was co-founder and CEO of his previous company, nearForm, where he helped take the company from scratch to an annual turnover of €17 million. Previously, he was CTO of FeedHenry, a mobile application platform provider that was acquired by RedHat for €63.5m in 2014. For several years, Richard has been an active member and influencer of the open source software (OSS) community. He is the creator and maintainer of senecajs.org, a microservices framework for Node.js. Richard is also the host of the monthly Dublin Microservices meetup in Ireland. Richard writes a weekly column in the Irish Independent newspaper. His latest book, The Tao of Microservices, was published by Manning in 2018.Together, we talked about how detours sometimes do lead you exactly where you need to be. We touched on learning software engineering with Python before jumping onto the crazy Javascript Bandwaggon. And we finally discussed a different way of looking at microservices.Here are the links of the show:http://twitter.com/rjrodgerhttps://www.voxgig.comhttps://www.manning.com/books/the-tao-of-microserviceshttp://senecajs.orghttp://lightbot.comCreditsMusic Something Elated by Broke For Free (CC BY 3.0)Your hostSoftware Developer‘s Journey is hosted and produced by Timothée (Tim) Bourguignon, a crazy frenchman living in Germany who dedicated his life to helping others learn & grow. More about him at timbourguignon.fr.Want to be next?Do you know anyone who should be on the podcast? Do you want to be next? Drop me a line: info@devjourney.info or via Twitter @timothep.Gift the podcast a ratingPlease do me and your fellow listeners a favor by spreading the good word about this podcast. And please leave a rating (excellent of course) on the major podcasting platforms, this is the best way to increase the visibility of the podcast:Itunes - https://apple.co/2DWk5CWStitcher - http://bit.ly/2U7G931GoogleMusic - http://bit.ly/2ALx8E0Spotify - https://spoti.fi/2BLtV9pThanks!Support the show (http://bit.ly/2yBfySB)
Matteo is a code pirate and mad scientist. He spends most of his days programming in Node.js, but in the past he worked with Ruby, Java and Objective-C. In 2014, he defended his Ph.D. thesis titled “Application Platforms for the Internet of Things”. Now he is a Principal Architect at nearForm, where he consults for the top brands of the world. Matteo is also the author of the Node.js MQTT Broker, Mosca, the fast logger Pino and of the Fastify web framework. Matteo is a member of the Node.js Technical Steering Committee. Matteo spoke at several international conferences: Node.js Interactive, NodeConf.eu, NodeSummit, JSConf.Asia, WebRebels, and JsDay to name a few. He is also co-author of the book “Node.js Cookbook, Third Edition” edited by Packt. In the summer he loves sailing the Sirocco.
On this podcast, Conor O'Neil, Chief Product Officer at NearForm discusses their work around developing complex solutions for global organizations since 2011 and working with Red Hat to certify Node.js as a container.