POPULARITY
What is it that is stopping you from stepping into your big vision? Is it the fear of failure? Is it the fear of rejection? Is it the fear of losing it all? Ultimately, these are the fears that are keeping you from getting what you want even though it might feel like you're just avoiding failure itself. In this episode, learn how you can quickly identify and get past your biggest fears so you can move faster toward your dream business (and life). To learn how to grow your business to 10K months by using the fastest path to clients, apply to 10K Content Collective: http://www.kinseymachos.com/10k (www.kinseymachos.com/10k) Past Episode: https://kinseymachos.com/captivate-podcast/30k-in-30-days (Episode 50: 30K In 30 Days) Do not miss these highlights: 02:08 The concept of failing ahead of time challenge. 03:33 Do you still have a lack of belief in the 30K 30-days challenge program? 03:54 The core intention is to start helping you see where you're getting stuck in your own thoughts. 04:11 Doing 30K in 30-days is never about the strategy. 05:00 Entrepreneurs don't understand how to think differently to create different results. 05:24 We want to help you see how powerful it is in the simple shifts that you can create bigger results. 05:40 The method of 10K Content Collective is getting clients online through your organic content, simply the fastest path to clients. 06:10 Big element in the concept of failing ahead of time, to take a step back and think about what are the things that are keeping you stuck. 07:04 The scenarios are very big and broad in variety. Your responsibility is to define it to yourself. 07:26 This message truly is for you. If you're going for those big milestones, whether it's in your business or your life, you are stretching for extraordinary. 08:08 The challenge is to create a space for ourselves to really think about, what is it that I am afraid of? 08:40 You'll be able to unpack a lot of those unique and specific subconscious beliefs that you've been living under. 09:28 Big or small, fear shows up in the body the same way. 10:30 The first step to the exercise of thinking of failing ahead of time, you first have to understand in detail what you're most afraid of. 11:22 We think that the attachment to the circumstances versus the results is tied to the fear you're experiencing. But that is not the case. 13:25 Try to close your eyes and sit in those specific fears. What is coming up for you? 14:04 But could you trust yourself enough to figure it out? 14:56 You will learn how to trust yourself, you will learn how to have your own back. That is ultimately what entrepreneurship is about. 15:36 Now we get to see it head on, we get to address the worst case scenario and decide, it's not that bad. 15:50 In the 30K 30-days challenge, you go to work, you get to bring your full power, you are all in on that, because now that feeling of failure has left your body. 16:05 This is not about suppressing your feelings, and definitely is not about ignoring. 16:25 It is how to maintain that potency in your power so you can deliver to your audience and step into your best, most powerful self. 17:41 Protect your level of thinking and you're showing up in your full power, you would be amazed at how fast you can create results for yourself. 18:03 We have several weekly coaching opportunities every week to get coached. We have plug-and-play copywriting formulas that you can use to convert clients directly from your organic content. About the Host Kinsey Machos, Marketing Strategist, is also a recovering people pleaser, self-sabotager, and corporate hustler. She helps entrepreneurs create and execute magnetic marketing and build expert brands so that they can get known,
If you try to replicate success without understanding the sequence behind success, you will burn out. Join Kinsey, Jenny, and Ayelet as they bring their collective genius to the table and walk you through the 3 stages of growth, how to go from zero to a 7-figure business, and what mistakes to avoid in the process. To get more info on how to work with us inside Female Founders Board where you learn how to grow from 6 to 7-figures, email hello@kinseymachos.com To learn how to grow your business to 100K by using the fastest path to clients, apply to 10K Content Collective: http://www.kinseymachos.com/10k (www.kinseymachos.com/10k) Past Episode: https://kinseymachos.com/captivate-podcast/how-hard-work-will-not-make-you-successful/ (Episode 48: How Hard Work Will Not Make You Successful) https://kinseymachos.com/captivate-podcast/how-to-become-a-proficient-coach-private-vs-group-coaching/ (Episode 22: How To Become A Proficient Coach: Private vs. Group Coaching) Do not miss these highlights: 08:06 The belief has to be in alignment with what you want to create, otherwise, the strategy doesn't matter. 09:14 Everything comes in sequence. You cannot replicate success if you don't understand the sequence to success. 09:58 The First Phase within the sequence is what we call, The Expert Coach. 10:01 Again, you're just focusing on mastering the foundations we say all the time, “one message, one offer, one platform.” 10:36 The fastest path to claim is, that you should only be focused on serving clients so that you can build your proficiency as a coach. This goes with really learning how to market and sell. 11:45 At the end of the day, it's all about connection, and building that trust and safety with people that are ultimately going to hire you. 13:23 False attribution such as automation, instapot theory of success, tail chasing, and spaghetti throwing strategies. 14:46 Skills that you have to build to be successful online or be a business owner. 15:33 If you're not coaching, you're not learning about your clients, your marketing is not going to work, and your selling is not going to work. 16:03 You have to build that identity as an expert coach and coach people. 16:07 Phase One, is focusing on creating clients. You cannot grow beyond this phase without mastering the foundations of marketing and selling. 16:27 It's not about being the loudest person in the room anymore. A old way of doing business way. 17:01 It is being transparent and honest. Having incredibly good content that converts. It comes down to that simplicity. 17:52 Being a woman expert coach should take an understanding that it is a natural thing. 18:10 Not having testimonials as an excuse not to step into their greatness. 18:30 How you're translating your transformations, for other people you're already an expert. 19:46 When your beliefs are that strong, that's when you move forward. 20:50 What are some indicators that people are ready to start progressing or preparing for Phase Two? 21:01 Mindset shift, there's a difference between saying you're ready and being ready. 21:14 When you have concrete evidence that you could put a money mark on it. 22:18 How am I going to expand my reach and impact more people? That's going to be the biggest step into Phase Two. It is what we call the Thought Leader or CEO. 22:54 Next level and start to impact, you have to look at your entrepreneurial gig as a company. 23:39 There's a lot of testing in this transition in your identity. This is where Female Founders Board comes in. 23:57 Then follows, what does the secondary offer look like? You're kind of reaching a capacity with time. 24:22 Develop a Thought Leadership about yourself, which then translates into your marketing and your messaging....
Welcome to this, the 45th Episode of Touchdowns All Day w/ Jon Barber. Warm Wekcome to a HUGE guest star on the WW-BABAG Network - THE Karina Rykman!!!We have two Karina Rykman & BarberShreds Interviews one Recorded on May 11th, 2022 (E045) & one bonus conversation recorded way back in May of 2020. Two interviews for the price one! Karina is a badass bassist and guitarist from Manhattan, NY.She is best known for In 2016, Karina joined Marco Benevento's band on bass, replacing Dave Dreiwitz (Ween /Joe Russo's Almost Dead). We know know her as an incredible person and true friend of the podcast. As you will hear from our 2 interviews she has a lot more up her sleeves then touring with Marco & Co.. Listen as the two talk about urban living vs. rural living, rehearsal, touring gigs, half-stepping all over sit-ins, her new album (Featuring Aron Magner on a track), Jam Band diss tracks, NY cab TV Shows, and more.So, here you have it Karina Rykman 1.0 & 2.0. Karina & BarberShreds X2, a doubleheader deep from the TDAD Vault. Enjoy!A “Relix of the Past” Episode recorded in Quarantine AND a fresh new update episode into the life of a great friend, incredible person, and amazing musician/artist, Karina Fuckin' Rykman Ladies & Gents. It is very interesting to listen back and hear Jon & Karina getting to know each other in the 2020 interview, hearing what they are up to now in 2022, & the contrast between the 2 years. We are going to have more guests like this on soon & we are thrilled to have her. Thank you, Karina!Immaculate Seeds Sponsoring these 2 episodes of TDAD!! We got a ticket giveaway with them. 2 pairs of VIP tickets!!!Contest Rules:1.) Walk, Run, Bike, Drive, Fly over to Grow Active Solutions on Hartford Street in St. Louie and grab urself a pack of Immaculate Seeds,mention “Touchdowns” (Get a FREE pack of immaculate seeds) & You're in 2 WIN the in-store giveaway.Winner picked EOD Wednesday 8/17 Go buy some seeds now & support.2.) Hit them up on IG > @immaculate_seeds and order a pack, mention “Touchdowns” (Get a FREE pack of immaculate seeds) & You're in 2 to WIN the online giveaway.Immaculate Seeds - @immaculate_seedsImmaculate Spores - @immaculate_spores Immaculate Cuts - @immaculate_cuts_directSOLD @ Grow Active Solutions in STL & on IGImmaculate Seeds is a cannabis genetic & spore bank. Offering cannabis & hemp seeds, clones, & spores. Immaculate Seeds works with some of the best cannabis breeders in the country to offer a curated menu that growers & farmers can trust. Built on relationships from 1,000 ++ years in the cannabis community. Immaculate Seeds services: Home Grows, Farms, and Medical & Recreational Facilities, w/ a selection of auto flower, feminized, traditional seeds, and clones. Offers DNA testing kits, which confirms the gender of cannabis plants. Immaculate Seeds ships Coast2Coast & offers international shipping to approved countries. 20-50% off everything on the menu. Mention TDAD when ordering & get a free pack of seeds with your order & get entered to win tickets.Cannabis Legalization is changing rapidly in states. The founders of Immaculate Seeds have been helping people grow better cannabis across the country, with 50+ years of combined experience. Genetics is one of the most important parts of any successful grow. So, if you are just starting to grow, or you're a Cannabis OG, Immaculate Seeds has the genetics you can TRUST! Support this show http://supporter.acast.com/touchdownsallday. Our GDPR privacy policy was updated on August 8, 2022. Visit acast.com/privacy for more information.
Welcome to this, the 46th Episode of Touchdowns All Day w/ Jon Barber. A big guest star on the WW-BABAG Network - THE Karina Rykman!!!We have two Karina Rykman & BarberShreds Interviews one Recorded on May 11th, 2022 (E045) & one bonus conversation recorded way back in May of 2020. Two interviews for the price one! Karina is a badass bassist and guitarist from Manhattan, NY.She is best known for In 2016, Karina joined Marco Benevento's band on bass, replacing Dave Dreiwitz (Ween /Joe Russo's Almost Dead). We know know her as an incredible person and true friend of the podcast. As you will hear from our 2 interviews she has a lot more up her sleeves then touring with Marco & Co.. Listen as the two talk about urban living vs. rural living, rehearsal, touring gigs, half-stepping all over sit-ins, bathtubs, her new album (Featuring Aron Magner on a track), Jam Band diss tracks, NY cab TV Shows, and more.So, here you have it Karina Rykman 1.0 & 2.0. Karina & BarberShreds X2, a doubleheader deep from the TDAD Vault. Enjoy!A “Relix of the Past” Episode recorded in Quarantine AND a fresh new update episode into the life of a great friend, incredible person, and amazing musician/artist, Karina Fuckin' Rykman Ladies & Gents. It is very interesting to listen back and hear Jon & Karina getting to know each other in the 2020 interview, hearing what they are up to now in 2022, & the contrast between the 2 years. We are going to have more guests like this on soon & we are thrilled to have her. Thank you, Karina!Immaculate Seeds Sponsoring these 2 episodes of TDAD!! We got a ticket giveaway with them. 2 pairs of VIP tickets!!!Contest Rules:1.) Walk, Run, Bike, Drive, Fly over to Grow Active Solutions on Hartford Street in St. Louie and grab urself a pack of Immaculate Seeds,mention “Touchdowns” (Get a FREE pack of immaculate seeds) & You're in 2 WIN the in-store giveaway.Winner picked EOD Wednesday 8/17 Go buy some seeds now & support.2.) Hit them up on IG > @immaculate_seeds and order a pack, mention “Touchdowns” (Get a FREE pack of immaculate seeds) & You're in 2 to WIN the online giveaway.Immaculate Seeds - @immaculate_seedsImmaculate Spores - @immaculate_spores Immaculate Cuts - @immaculate_cuts_directSOLD @ Grow Active Solutions in STL & on IGImmaculate Seeds is a cannabis genetic & spore bank. Offering cannabis & hemp seeds, clones, & spores. Immaculate Seeds works with some of the best cannabis breeders in the country to offer a curated menu that growers and farmers can trust. Built on relationships from 1,000 ++ years in the cannabis community. Immaculate Seeds services: Home Grows, Farms, and Medical & Recreational Facilities, w/ a selection of auto flower, feminized, traditional seeds, and clones. Offers DNA testing kits, which confirms the gender of cannabis plants. Immaculate Seeds ships Coast to Coast and offers international shipping to approved countries. 20-50% off everything on the menu. Mention TDAD when ordering & get a free pack of seeds with your order & get entered to win tickets.Cannabis Legalization is changing rapidly in states. The founders of Immaculate Seeds have been helping people grow better cannabis across the country, with 50+ years of combined experience. Genetics is one of the most important parts of any successful grow. So, if you are just starting to grow, or you're a Cannabis OG, Immaculate Seeds has the genetics you can TRUST! Support this show http://supporter.acast.com/touchdownsallday. Our GDPR privacy policy was updated on August 8, 2022. Visit acast.com/privacy for more information.
Newlyweds, Oldie-weds, Engaged or Enraged - Pastors Zac and Ashley have some incredibly practical and easy ways to strengthen your most precious covenant, tips that may even make you say: "Huh... Why didn't I think of that?" Past Episode on Finance: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/our-house-a-to-z/id1512891048?i=1000484013383 Topic Ideas & Questions: info@hpc.church
Past Episode - https://keynutrition.com/knp368/ Podcast Q&A Submissions – https://keynutrition.com/podcast-qa-submission/ Cured Nutrition Discount code: Brad Order from Cured Nutrition -> https://www.curednutrition.com/?rfsn=6540600.334d76 Discount code: keynutrition for 20% off your first Legion order. Order Legion Supplements -> https://bit.ly/3mHRqYV Connect with us on Instagram Host Brad Jensen – @thesoberbodybuilder Joseph Sheehey – @josephsheehey Key Nutrition – @keynutrition
Today Jason and I will be covering the sustainable stories from the month of May. These stories will include the new sustainable aviation fuel deal between Neste and United, Stanford developing solar panels that generate energy at night, the DOE starting a carbon capture project, and Colgate's recycling toothpaste tubes. Follow us on social media @sustainabiliME.pod Sources: https://www.neste.com/releases-and-news/renewable-solutions/neste-and-united-sign-sustainable-aviation-fuel-purchase-agreement-flights-out-amsterdam-airport https://www.npr.org/2022/04/07/1091320428/solar-panels-that-can-generate-electricity-at-night-have-been-developed-at-stanf https://www.cnn.com/2022/05/19/politics/doe-carbon-capture-investment-climate/index.html https://www.colgate.com/en-us/power-of-optimism/faq Past Episode about Neste: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/neste-renewable-diesel-fuel/id1458896156?i=1000497712882
The topic of sweeteners is complicated. Sugar has its share of drawbacks, including a link to increased risk of cancer – not to mention the drama of a recently discovered decades-old cover-up by the sugar industry. Artificial sweeteners are often explored as a better alternative, but their safety has long been a topic of debate, with science serving up mixed results. This week on FUELED, we take a look at the health impact of added sugars and artificial sweeteners, along with a rundown of plant-based sweeteners to consider. LINKS JAMA: Sugar Industry and Coronary Heart Disease Research: A Historical Analysis of Internal Industry Documents: https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jamainternalmedicine/article-abstract/2548255?redirect=trueTheFoodIndustry Past Podcast Episode, Keto + Cancer: https://www.stitcher.com/show/fueled-wellness-nutrition-with-molly-kimball/episode/keto-cancer-64501817 Molly's article: Keto + Cancer: https://blog.ochsner.org/articles/keto-diet-and-cancer-whats-the-latest-research Past Episode, A Sweet Shift: The Food Industry's Move Away From Added Sugar: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/a-sweet-shift-the-food-industrys-move-away-from-added-sugar/id1459883591?i=1000513559753 Past Episode, The Art & Science of Gluten Free Flours and Plant-Based Sweetenershttps://podcasts.apple.com/ca/podcast/the-art-science-of-plant-based-sweeteners-gluten/id1459883591?i=1000528984806
On episode 300 of the BSP I talk about some advice I wish I could give myself before I started podcasting even though this is all pretty basic knowledge at this point. I'm just trying to share what I've learned after doing this podcast for 6 years. Then i talk about the Shure SM7b, the youtube podcast news, how to sound more enthusiastic while recording voice over and more. Subscribe to the full audio podcast at http://www.bandrewsays.com Gear Used This Episode (Affiliate Links): Shure SM7b: https://geni.us/shuresm7b Yellowtek M!ka: https://www.yellowtec.com/mika.html Universal Audio x8: https://imp.i114863.net/zMg2r Sennheiser HD650: https://geni.us/sennhd650 As an affiliate I earn from qualifying purchases. Ask Questions: https://www.askbandrew.com Merch; https://teespring.com/stores/podcastage-store Discord: http://www.podcastage.com/discord 00:00 - Intro 01:06 - Most Podcasts Don't Make it Past Episode 7 04:30 - What I Learned from 300 Podcast Episodes 13: 00 - Shure SM7b 16:10 - WYHTS: The CAD U1 is Good Enough 18:45 - WYHTS: UA Sucks, CAD U1 is Incredible 22:15 - WYHTS: YouTube & Spotify Podcast Battle 28:15 - WYHTS: Real Reason for Audio Gear Price Increase 31:15 - Ask Bandrew 32:15 - Voice Submission 1 36:07 - $100 Mic With Good Background Noise Rejection 39:45 - Voice Submission 2 40:26 - Advice on How to Sound More Enthusiastic During Voice Overs? 48:10 - Voice Submission 3 50:08 - How Do I Reject More C0mputer Fan Noise? 53:00 - Movie of the Week 58:15 - Conclusion
Welcome to the Ayurveda! Session #4 Today's workshop we conclude the sessions with life's teachings using this 5000 year old holistic wellness system. Some final principles are shared. New to Ayurveda? Listen to this past episode: Ayurveda a Proactive Ancient Medicine https://www.lovebreezybreeyoga.com/podcast/episode/23a984de/ayurveda-a-proactive-ancient-medicine AYURVEDA WORKSHOP LESSON #1 DOSHAS & CHAKRAS https://www.lovebreezybreeyoga.com/podcast/episode/fa645366/ayurveda-workshop-doshas-and-chakras AYURVEDA WORKSHOP LESSON #2 DIGESTION & THE ENERGY OF FOOD WITH GUNAS https://www.lovebreezybreeyoga.com/podcast/episode/fa645366/ayurveda-workshop-doshas-and-chakras AYURVEDA WORKSHOP LESSON #3 SIGNIFICANCE OF TIME OF DAY & SEASONS https://www.lovebreezybreeyoga.com/podcast/episode/1a7c776a/ayurveda-workshop-significance-of-time-of-day-and-seasons AYURVEDA WORKSHIP LESSON #4 HOW AGE, ENVIRONMENT & LIFESTYLE EFFECT YOUR DOSHA https://www.lovebreezybreeyoga.com/podcast/episode/bf2c8309/ayurveda-workshop-how-age-environment-and-lifestyle-effect-your-dosha Past Episode: 3 Gunas of Ayurveda: Sattva, Rajas, Tamas https://www.lovebreezybreeyoga.com/podcast/episode/20fc87fb/3-gunas-of-ayurveda-sattva-rajas-tamas BONUS: AYURVEDIC YOGA CLASS: VATA DOSHA FLOW 50 MIN ALL-LEVELS https://www.lovebreezybreeyoga.com/podcast/episode/1a5a495d/ayurvedic-yoga-class-vata-dosha-flow-50-min-all-levels Thank you for listening! Namaste
The Hive Podcast's first returning guests, Tom & Heather! Enjoy this episode as we talk about how Tom & Heather manage both being creatives, how they have impacted each other's creative process, and how they are building an online community. NEW HIVE PODCAST MERCH: https://geni.us/PodMerch Support the Podcast on Buy Me A Coffee: https://www.buymeacoffee.com/thehivepodcast Check Out The Video Podcast: https://youtu.be/YTTA9zdJPz8 Subscribe and follow The Hive Podcast on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/thehive_podcast/ Visit our website: https://www.hivepodcast.org Use Ecamm for all your Live Streaming and Podcasting needs: https://geni.us/AYzu2H Best Music For Videos & Podcasts: https://geni.us/R7Cp (get 2 extra months on your subscription) Tom & Heather's Info: Just Create More Community: https://www.justcreatemore.com/share/CG9xEP0ZZLYbFPtl Tom's Past Episode: https://anchor.fm/thehive-podcast/episodes/Tom-Buck-The-Enthusiasm-Project-ef5989 Heathers Past Episode: https://anchor.fm/thehive-podcast/episodes/Heather-Ramirez-YouTube-Coach-eh9gef Tom's Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/sodarntom/ Heather's Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/heatherjustcreate/ Tom's YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/tombuck Heather's YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/heatherjustcreate
Ursula Martin has spent the last two years walking alone from Kiev, Ukraine across Europe, over the Alps, to start on the Camino which would take her all the way to Santiago de Compostela, before heading on to the most westerly point of Spain, Finisterre and reaching the Atlantic Ocean. It was then time to turn around and head home, just 1,000 miles to get back to Wales. Ursula finished her epic solo journey on June 6th 2021 in Llanidloes, where she was joined by friends and family for the final 10 miles. Throughout her walk, Ursula had to deal with the covid pandemic, and having to decide whether or not to carry on and how to carry on safely. Ursula handled lockdowns in France, loneliness on the Camino St James and being on a tight budget. Ursula didn't get sponsorship and funded the trip through savings, and supporters via Patreon. Now back at home, Ursula can rest her feet, stretch her body and take the time needed to recover, while reconnect with her family. Ursula is already planning another walk, this time starting from Land's End and heading 874 miles to John O'Groats. Ursula plan to start her walk in January 2022, which will also mark the 10th anniversary of her ovarian cancer diagnosis. New episodes of the Tough Girl Podcast go live every Tuesday and Thursday at 7am UK time - Make sure you hit the subscribe button so you don't miss out. The Tough Girl Podcast is sponsorship and ad free thanks to the monthly financial support of patrons. To find out more about supporting your favourite podcast and becoming a patron please check out www.patreon.com/toughgirlpodcast. Show notes Who is Ursula? Being based back in mid wales with her brother Spending time with family and meeting her new nephew Being ready to stop walking Missing the feeling of open outdoor space First speaking with Ursula in May 2020 Making the decision to continue on with her journey Thinking short time and focusing on where to stay Going through lockdowns in France and Spain Walking the HRP - Pyrenean Haute Route Not being able to access indoor space due to restrictions Having to make the decision between going into France or Spain Making the decision to enter Spain to continue her journey to Santiago The egotism of adventuring Spending Christmas in Pamplona with 2 takeaway pizzas and movies Being accepted and welcomed while walking on the camino Only seeing a few other walkers Making connections and friends on the Camino Reaching Santiago and feeling sad 2021 - A Holy Year on the Camino Processing her feeling of the journey Reaching Finisterre and seeing the sea Going bed for 9 day rest and feeling broken Losing all her energy and needing time to recover Climbing a spiritual/holy mountain Knowing it was time to get back walking Not allowing herself to relax Why it is about the journey Making the transition from walker to writer Getting organised and the first step with writing Getting home and what the final section of the journey was like Deciding to do a mini challenge in January 2022 Final words of advice and key lessons from this challenge/experience. Social Media Website onewomanwalks.com Support Ursula via Patreon Instagram @onewomanwalks Facebook @OneWomanWalks. Twitter @WomanWalksWales. Past Episode - 26th May 2020 - Ursula Martin - Survived Ovarian Cancer - Walked 3,700 miles in Wales. Wrote a book.
Past Episode on perfectionism: https://podcasts.apple.com/ca/podcast/mindset-enthusiast/id1521163985?i=1000481840289 Check out my Instagram for more behind the scenes @lydiamrandi https://www.instagram.com/lydiamrandi/?hl=fr-ca Business inquiries: lydiamrandi@yahoo.fr
Episode 64: Simple Habits for Great Nutrition--On a Budget! We all want to feed our families well, but we need to stay within our budgets! Today, we’re having a fun and illuminating chat with Dr. Kerrie Berends, who will help us to build Simple Habits for Great Nutrition—on a Budget! Dr. Berends: Dr_berends@msn.com Her courses at Homeschool Connections: https://homeschoolconnectionsonline.com/people/kerrie-berrends-phd Harvard Eating Plate: https://www.hsph.harvard.edu/nutritionsource/healthy-eating-plate/ Mayo Clinic Food Substitution Guide (for recipe hacks!) https://www.mayoclinic.org/healthy-lifestyle/nutrition-and-healthy-eating/in-depth/healthy-recipes/art-20047195 Past Episode with Dr. Berends: Episode 51: Why Phys-Ed is Important, Even if You and Your Kids Are NOT Athletic! https://homeschoolingsaints.podbean.com/e/why-phys-ed-is-important-even-if-you-and-your-kids-are-not-athletic/ Recipe Generator sites: https://hip2save.com/tips/best-recipe-generators/ No short feature, today. Thank you to the following contributors who made this podcast possible: Our Sponsor HomeschoolConnections.com Homeschooling Saints Theme Music Composed by Taylor Kirkwood Intro voice Dave Palmer radio personality and author of St. Thomas Aquinas for Everyone Our host Lisa Mladinich
Two history graduates discuss the life of Annie Oakley.Annie Oakley, the famous sharpshooter, had a difficult childhood. Despite this, she was very successful in her later life, becoming one of the most notable members of Buffalo Bill's Wild West show. She travelled across America and Europe, performing for royalty and political leaders and awing them with her incredible shooting skills that she had developed as a child to provide for her family after the death of her father. Annie strongly believed in women being able to practice self-defence, and advocated for equal pay throughout her life. This episode discusses the legend that is Annie Oakley, and all that she achieved in her life as one of the iconic figures of American history. Presented by: Bridget Lindh and Samira NicholsonIntro music: stantough - www.youtube.com/watch?v=YNm3Ggv01NsIG: @coldteahotgossURL: www.coldteahotgoss.comemail: coldteahotgoss@gmail.comSources: - Laughs From the Past: Episode 89 Wild West | Annie Oakley - Do Go On: Episode 147 Annie Oakley, Little Miss Sure Shot - The History Chicks: Episode 92 Annie Oakley - Can't Get a Man With a Gun from Annie Get Your Gun, sung by Betty Huttonhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hGB7yTZEZE4&ab_channel=AW720
From some of the most difficult to the most intimate moments, Josh Kluge & Libby Lewis share stories about how the Lord has used different worship songs to get them through the highs and lows of their lives. We also hear about some of their favorite songs from their youth band days, early worship leading experiences, & amazing moments of encountering the Lord. We had such a great time reliving these moments in this crazy fun episode as we officially welcome Josh to the Worship Online Family! Josh Kluge currently serves as the Worship Director at City Church in Tulsa, Oklahoma. Before working as the Worship Director at City Church Tulsa he was one of the Worship Directors at Oral Roberts University for 3.5 years. He also served as the youth pastor at City Church Tulsa for 5 years, has toured and session recorded with countless artists, & has been a keynote speaker at conferences and events all around the world for many years! We cannot express enough how incredibly blessed we are to have Josh join the team here at Worship Online. Follow the links to find Josh on Instagram & Twitter! We would love to know worship songs God has used through your highs & lows! Drops us a message or leave a comment below or on our social media pages. Mentions in the Podcast Josh’s Past Episode - worshiponline.com/podcast/episode-95-bringing-heaven-to-earth-through-worship-with-josh-kluge/ Jordan Lewis Missions - jordanlewismissions.org --- If you like what you hear, please leave us a review! Also, feel free to shoot us an e-mail at podcast@worshiponline.com & tell us how we can better serve you and your church through this podcast. Don’t forget to sign up for your FREE 2-week subscription to Worship Online at worshiponline.com/podcast! The Worship Online Podcast is produced by Worship Online in Nashville, TN.
For this episode of our Voices of 100% series, host John Farrell speaks with Rev. Rodrick Burton and Andy Knott. The three discuss how St. Louis created an inclusive clean energy plan and how the city can get to 100% clean energy, despite coal’s dominance.… Read More
Competing not Complaining Topics discussed: Past Episode but still relevant from 5 years ago In this episode i discuss how football players and athletes should develop their competing skills not their complaining skills. it is key for athletes to develop the mental fortitude that will allow them to focus on what they can do to get better and not the negative things that may happen. It is imperative that athletes learn how to master the skill of focusing on their next important task on getting better instead of what they view as what people think about them. In football you cannot control what the coaches think of you, you can only focus on performing at your very best level and then approving upon that. This podcast uniquely focuses on how athletes can do that and why its important. Links mentioned in this episode: *http://www.nucsports.com @coachschuman on twitter, tik tok, instagram @nuc_football on instagram @nucfootball on tik tok This podcast is powered by ZenCast.fm
Building Up Courage to Set New Boundaries? Take self-care to a whole new level with these Affirmations When You've Been Setting Boundaries. Music by Kevin MacLeod Sponsor Spotlight CLEAR makes your life safer, simpler and more secure. With CLEAR, your eyes and fingertips get your through security faster at airports, stadiums and other venues. Get your first TWO MONTHS FREE with CLEAR promo code AFFIRMATION at ClearMe.com/Affirmation Want More Episodes Like this One? Episode 235 When You've Set a Boundary Episode 167 Staying Positive During Hard Times Episode 159 Motivation for a New Beginning Episode 151 Setting Boundaries Episode 146 Not Who I Used to Be Episode 105 Managing Regret Mode Episode 22 I've Moved On Episode 8 The Past is The Past Episode 2 The "No More" Affirmations Bonus Episode I Liberate Myself Bonus Episode Keeping Boundaries Have You Listened On The App Yet? It's free on the Apple, Amazon and Google Play app stores. This episode is in the category "Relationships” The app is where you can easily mark your favorite affirmations, make your own playlist, download to listen offline and a whole lot more! It's also where you can sign up for premium access, which gives you all episodes with no ads and no announcements plus bonus content you won’t find on the podcast. Premium membership is just $5.99 USD per month, cancel anytime. Download the App at AffirmationPodApp.com! Alexa Skill: Affirmation Pod Amazon App: Affirmation Pod App: AffirmationPodAccess.com App FAQs: AffirmationPod.com/FAQs Current Sponsors: AffirmationPod.com/Sponsors Facebook Group: Affirmation Pod Facebook Page: @affirmationpod Google Play App: Affirmation Pod Instagram: @affirmationpod iOS App: Affirmation Pod Patreon: Affirmation Pod Pinterest: @affirmationpod Premium Access: AffirmationPodPremium.com Self-Care Worksheet: AffirmationPod.com/SelfCare Stress Management Worksheet: AffirmationPod.com/Stress Twitter: @affirmationpod YouTube: Affirmation Pod Web Version of App: AffirmationPod.Libsyn.com Website: AffirmationPod.com Leave a Rating on Apple Podcasts Now go be you, know you and love you!
You asked, we discussed! Listen in as we tackled your most pressing questions about gender roles in marriage, healing after betrayal, and more. Show Notes We mentioned a TON of resources in this episode, they're listed below. Misc. Resources Wild at Heart by John Eldredge Our devotional bundles for growing in your marriage: 40-Day Prayer Journey, 31-Day Pursuit Challenge Newlyweds Past Episode: Navigating the Early Years of Marriage (Jeremy and Audrey Roloff) Qapital App, for saving money intentionally (get $20 for signing up with our link, limited time only) A Mingling of Souls by Matt and Lauren Chandler Fierce Marriage by Ryan and Selena Frederick Priorities and Staying Connected Download Family Vision worksheet 5 Habits of a Healthy Marriage, FREE eBook Accountability Questions Get them here Gender Roles in Marriage A Beautiful Design, a sermon series of the Village Church Jesus, Justice, and Gender Roles by Kathy Keller “What Are Biblical Roles for Husbands and Wives?”, The Gospel Coalition, brief video Healing After Betrayal Dave and Ashley Willis Episode Out of the Dust (Chris and Stephanie Teague) RefineUs.org (Justin and Trisha Davis) Sex Addiction Recovery: Pure Desire MarriageHelp.org (Find a group near you) Thanks for listening! Please remember to subscribe, rate, and review. As always, we welcome feedback... simply go to FierceMarriage.com/Podcast to leave a comment or to ask a question! Become a Patron! Support for the Fierce Marriage Podcast comes from partners like you via Patreon. If our content has helped you, we'd be honored if you'd consider becoming a Patreon supporter! Just visit Patreon.com/FierceMarriage
Panel: Charles Max Wood Guest: Jia Li This week on My Angular Story, Charles speaks with Jia Li who is a passionate programmer, a Zone.js guy, and a full-stack developer at Sylabs.io. Chuck and Jia talk about Zone.js, Jia’s background, and the current projects that Jia is working on right now. Check out today’s episode! In particular, we dive pretty deep on: 0:00 – Advertisement: Get A Coder Job! 0:51 – Chuck: You were on the past AiA Episode 210. Why are you famous? 1:04 – Jia: I have been working on Angular JS for 4 years, and I am from China. I have been working on Zone.js for the past 2½ years. I basically handle everything with Zone.js. That kind of makes me famous in the community. 1:50 – Chuck: It’s the library that... 1:58 – Jia: Yes that is correct. 2:19 – Chuck: Let’s rollback a little bit and talk about your journey into programming? 2:32 – Jia: My major is not Computer Science it’s Communication. My first job, my classmate introduced me to a company that had 5 employees, which was a software company. About 15 years ago, back in China, they were using old software. The founder is using new technologies. So this is cool. That’s how I entered into the development world. 4:15 – Chuck asks a question. 4:22 – Jia: My focus, at the time, was the frontend. 5:10 – Chuck: How did you get into Angular? 5:12 – Angular, React, and jQuery are mentioned by Jia. 6:20 – Jia: We did a big project for 1½ years with a huge team of 500 people. We used...to build the applications. 6:51 – Chuck: How was the transition from Angular to Angular 2? 6:58 – Jia: At first the company had some reservations b/c everything is new. Jia talks about an architect of the company and the knowledge that he offered, at the time, to help. 8:17 – Chuck: You have contributed to Zone.js. People think that they have to be a genius in order to contribute. How did you start contributing to it? 8:44 – Jia: Between Angular 1 to Angular 2 was about a few months in-between. Jia continues to talk. 9:28 – Jia: We get a request from the client and get a certain zone. Each request is managed. Jia talks about his contributions to Zone.js and how he offered his insights, in the beginning, during his spare time. 12:12 – Chuck: This is a project that is used across thousands of Angular applications. And here we are talking about your journey to this open-source. You started off with a bug fix and this leads to helping with code, and finally you are one of the major contributors now! People think they cannot contribute to open-source b/c they aren’t a “genius.” They think that they “aren’t that good.” 13:16 – Jia: I never thought I could do it – meaning contributing to open-source work. I thought you had to have very strong coding skills, but it’s really just starting with the first step. True, you need to start with the code, but you don’t have to have a very strong background. I didn’t have (at the time) a strong JavaScript background, and look...I was able to do it! If you really love it – you can contribute to it. 15:11 – Chuck: You fixed a bug b/c you were using it. There is a difference between people writing it vs. people who are using it. You were fixing a bug b/c you were actually using it. “It should work this way under these circumstances.” If you are using the library then you will find those bugs. 16:35 – Jia: Yes, exactly. Some people are using Zone.js, but they don’t know what it does. 17:24 – Chuck: What are you currently working on now and/or what are you proud of? 17:29 – Jia: I am still working on the Zone.js project. I just changed my job a few months ago. I am starting a startup company to help with technological solutions. I am working (right now) on frontend. It’s very interesting to do some Cloud stuff. 18:50 – Chuck: Where can we find you? 18:55 – Jia. 20:50 – Chuck: What social media platforms do you use? 21:00 – Jia: Twitter! Blog! Jia talks about his current proposal that he is working on. 24:20 – Chuck: Let’s go to Picks! 24:26 – Fresh Books! 25:30 – Picks END – CacheFly Links: jQuery Angular JavaScript Vue React Slack Zone.js GitHub – Zone.js Chuck’s Twitter Chuck’s E-mail: chuck@devchat.tv AiA 210 – Past Episode with Jia Li Jia Li LinkedIn Jia Li Twitter Jia Li Blog Sponsors: Get A Coder Job Fresh Books Cache Fly Picks: Charles Podcast: MFCEO Audible: Extreme Ownership by Willink and Babin Audible: Traveler’s Gift by by Andy Andrews Jia Slack group – posts on Angular – check them out! Angular In-Depth
Panel: Charles Max Wood Guest: Jia Li This week on My Angular Story, Charles speaks with Jia Li who is a passionate programmer, a Zone.js guy, and a full-stack developer at Sylabs.io. Chuck and Jia talk about Zone.js, Jia’s background, and the current projects that Jia is working on right now. Check out today’s episode! In particular, we dive pretty deep on: 0:00 – Advertisement: Get A Coder Job! 0:51 – Chuck: You were on the past AiA Episode 210. Why are you famous? 1:04 – Jia: I have been working on Angular JS for 4 years, and I am from China. I have been working on Zone.js for the past 2½ years. I basically handle everything with Zone.js. That kind of makes me famous in the community. 1:50 – Chuck: It’s the library that... 1:58 – Jia: Yes that is correct. 2:19 – Chuck: Let’s rollback a little bit and talk about your journey into programming? 2:32 – Jia: My major is not Computer Science it’s Communication. My first job, my classmate introduced me to a company that had 5 employees, which was a software company. About 15 years ago, back in China, they were using old software. The founder is using new technologies. So this is cool. That’s how I entered into the development world. 4:15 – Chuck asks a question. 4:22 – Jia: My focus, at the time, was the frontend. 5:10 – Chuck: How did you get into Angular? 5:12 – Angular, React, and jQuery are mentioned by Jia. 6:20 – Jia: We did a big project for 1½ years with a huge team of 500 people. We used...to build the applications. 6:51 – Chuck: How was the transition from Angular to Angular 2? 6:58 – Jia: At first the company had some reservations b/c everything is new. Jia talks about an architect of the company and the knowledge that he offered, at the time, to help. 8:17 – Chuck: You have contributed to Zone.js. People think that they have to be a genius in order to contribute. How did you start contributing to it? 8:44 – Jia: Between Angular 1 to Angular 2 was about a few months in-between. Jia continues to talk. 9:28 – Jia: We get a request from the client and get a certain zone. Each request is managed. Jia talks about his contributions to Zone.js and how he offered his insights, in the beginning, during his spare time. 12:12 – Chuck: This is a project that is used across thousands of Angular applications. And here we are talking about your journey to this open-source. You started off with a bug fix and this leads to helping with code, and finally you are one of the major contributors now! People think they cannot contribute to open-source b/c they aren’t a “genius.” They think that they “aren’t that good.” 13:16 – Jia: I never thought I could do it – meaning contributing to open-source work. I thought you had to have very strong coding skills, but it’s really just starting with the first step. True, you need to start with the code, but you don’t have to have a very strong background. I didn’t have (at the time) a strong JavaScript background, and look...I was able to do it! If you really love it – you can contribute to it. 15:11 – Chuck: You fixed a bug b/c you were using it. There is a difference between people writing it vs. people who are using it. You were fixing a bug b/c you were actually using it. “It should work this way under these circumstances.” If you are using the library then you will find those bugs. 16:35 – Jia: Yes, exactly. Some people are using Zone.js, but they don’t know what it does. 17:24 – Chuck: What are you currently working on now and/or what are you proud of? 17:29 – Jia: I am still working on the Zone.js project. I just changed my job a few months ago. I am starting a startup company to help with technological solutions. I am working (right now) on frontend. It’s very interesting to do some Cloud stuff. 18:50 – Chuck: Where can we find you? 18:55 – Jia. 20:50 – Chuck: What social media platforms do you use? 21:00 – Jia: Twitter! Blog! Jia talks about his current proposal that he is working on. 24:20 – Chuck: Let’s go to Picks! 24:26 – Fresh Books! 25:30 – Picks END – CacheFly Links: jQuery Angular JavaScript Vue React Slack Zone.js GitHub – Zone.js Chuck’s Twitter Chuck’s E-mail: chuck@devchat.tv AiA 210 – Past Episode with Jia Li Jia Li LinkedIn Jia Li Twitter Jia Li Blog Sponsors: Get A Coder Job Fresh Books Cache Fly Picks: Charles Podcast: MFCEO Audible: Extreme Ownership by Willink and Babin Audible: Traveler’s Gift by by Andy Andrews Jia Slack group – posts on Angular – check them out! Angular In-Depth
Panel: Charles Max Wood Guest: Jia Li This week on My Angular Story, Charles speaks with Jia Li who is a passionate programmer, a Zone.js guy, and a full-stack developer at Sylabs.io. Chuck and Jia talk about Zone.js, Jia’s background, and the current projects that Jia is working on right now. Check out today’s episode! In particular, we dive pretty deep on: 0:00 – Advertisement: Get A Coder Job! 0:51 – Chuck: You were on the past AiA Episode 210. Why are you famous? 1:04 – Jia: I have been working on Angular JS for 4 years, and I am from China. I have been working on Zone.js for the past 2½ years. I basically handle everything with Zone.js. That kind of makes me famous in the community. 1:50 – Chuck: It’s the library that... 1:58 – Jia: Yes that is correct. 2:19 – Chuck: Let’s rollback a little bit and talk about your journey into programming? 2:32 – Jia: My major is not Computer Science it’s Communication. My first job, my classmate introduced me to a company that had 5 employees, which was a software company. About 15 years ago, back in China, they were using old software. The founder is using new technologies. So this is cool. That’s how I entered into the development world. 4:15 – Chuck asks a question. 4:22 – Jia: My focus, at the time, was the frontend. 5:10 – Chuck: How did you get into Angular? 5:12 – Angular, React, and jQuery are mentioned by Jia. 6:20 – Jia: We did a big project for 1½ years with a huge team of 500 people. We used...to build the applications. 6:51 – Chuck: How was the transition from Angular to Angular 2? 6:58 – Jia: At first the company had some reservations b/c everything is new. Jia talks about an architect of the company and the knowledge that he offered, at the time, to help. 8:17 – Chuck: You have contributed to Zone.js. People think that they have to be a genius in order to contribute. How did you start contributing to it? 8:44 – Jia: Between Angular 1 to Angular 2 was about a few months in-between. Jia continues to talk. 9:28 – Jia: We get a request from the client and get a certain zone. Each request is managed. Jia talks about his contributions to Zone.js and how he offered his insights, in the beginning, during his spare time. 12:12 – Chuck: This is a project that is used across thousands of Angular applications. And here we are talking about your journey to this open-source. You started off with a bug fix and this leads to helping with code, and finally you are one of the major contributors now! People think they cannot contribute to open-source b/c they aren’t a “genius.” They think that they “aren’t that good.” 13:16 – Jia: I never thought I could do it – meaning contributing to open-source work. I thought you had to have very strong coding skills, but it’s really just starting with the first step. True, you need to start with the code, but you don’t have to have a very strong background. I didn’t have (at the time) a strong JavaScript background, and look...I was able to do it! If you really love it – you can contribute to it. 15:11 – Chuck: You fixed a bug b/c you were using it. There is a difference between people writing it vs. people who are using it. You were fixing a bug b/c you were actually using it. “It should work this way under these circumstances.” If you are using the library then you will find those bugs. 16:35 – Jia: Yes, exactly. Some people are using Zone.js, but they don’t know what it does. 17:24 – Chuck: What are you currently working on now and/or what are you proud of? 17:29 – Jia: I am still working on the Zone.js project. I just changed my job a few months ago. I am starting a startup company to help with technological solutions. I am working (right now) on frontend. It’s very interesting to do some Cloud stuff. 18:50 – Chuck: Where can we find you? 18:55 – Jia. 20:50 – Chuck: What social media platforms do you use? 21:00 – Jia: Twitter! Blog! Jia talks about his current proposal that he is working on. 24:20 – Chuck: Let’s go to Picks! 24:26 – Fresh Books! 25:30 – Picks END – CacheFly Links: jQuery Angular JavaScript Vue React Slack Zone.js GitHub – Zone.js Chuck’s Twitter Chuck’s E-mail: chuck@devchat.tv AiA 210 – Past Episode with Jia Li Jia Li LinkedIn Jia Li Twitter Jia Li Blog Sponsors: Get A Coder Job Fresh Books Cache Fly Picks: Charles Podcast: MFCEO Audible: Extreme Ownership by Willink and Babin Audible: Traveler’s Gift by by Andy Andrews Jia Slack group – posts on Angular – check them out! Angular In-Depth
Panel: Charles Max Wood Guest: Daniel P. Clark This week on My Ruby Story, Chuck talks with Daniel Clark who is a Ruby and Rust enthusiast, blogger, and freelancer. Daniel and Chuck talk about Daniel’s background, and his past/current projects. Check out today’s episode! In particular, we dive pretty deep on: 0.00 – Advertisement – GET A CODER JOB! 0:58 – Guest: Hi! 1:01 – Chuck: Introduce yourself real quick, please, and what are you known for? 1:08 – Guest: My blog posts – I write about about Ruby. I have a few projects that are well known: Faster Path among others. 1:35 – Chuck: We had you on a past episode, 368 Ruby Rogues. Where do you write? 1:49 – Guest: I am a contractor and I write blog posts for them. 1:58 – Chuck: Let’s talk about you! How did you get into programming? 2:07 – Guest: My dad is a programmer and before 5th grade I got a computer and no Internet. I tried things to see how things worked. I wrote from the top down – recipe style. I really enjoyed programming back then. Later in life, Java was the next big thing and for me to get into it was harder. I got a book and figured out how to compile it. I stopped programming when I wrote HELLO WORLD! I came across Python at some time. At the same style I wrote my Q basic programs, things were more functional. That’s my entry into programming. 4:05 – Chuck: What got you into Python? 4:13 – Guest: The syntax in Java hurt in writing. With Python when I first started out it felt like it wasn’t asking me more than what I needed to do. It was very simple for me. 4:38 – Chuck: What did you build with Python? 4:43 – Guest: Connect 4 in Python and command line tools. Simple things. I wrote one time a sales website in Django with Python and use with Google Pay. I wrote it and it got to launch point and then I was done. 5:30 – Chuck: How Did you get into Ruby? 5:35 – Guest: A childhood friend who loved Pearl and at the time I loved Python. We would friendly argue about which one was better. He talked to companies for me, and he edified my abilities in their eyes. I’ve been with Ruby since and I have a passion with it. 7:02 – Chuck: Why Ruby? 7:06 – Guest: With Python I never learned object oriented design and I never got into a community with Python. I didn’t connect with a broader community. I was constantly learning new things with Ruby. I connected a lot with people and shared with them the things that I’ve learned. 8:11 – Chuck: What have you done in Ruby? 8:15 – Guest: Almost you name it – I haven’t done graphics with gaming. I have done tons with the web side of things. I’ve done command line game and flashcards for learning language characters. That specific project was one of my favorite projects. I designed an entire... 9:14 – Chuck: Model view graphics for command line - how does that work? 9:23 – Guest: Rails has model view controller I followed that same schema. 10:00 – Chuck: Is it open source somewhere? 10:05 – Guest: Yes. Language Cards through GitHub. There are 2 languages that you can start learning with. 10:28 – Chuck: Performance on Ruby – how did you get into that angle? 10:51 – Guest: I agreed to work with shares in a startup company and I worked a year on it. It was heavy on features. One thing I noticed was that the load time for the front page was unacceptable (loading time). I wanted to figure out where the bottlenecks were. I wrote my first bit of code and linked it up with Ruby and I got my website to run 30% faster. Seeing that – that was exciting. It seemed like I accomplished something and I wanted to share it with the community. It drew a lot of attention. I thought it was a cool novel idea and I became well known for it. I put more time into it b/c I wanted it to look better since it got so much attention. I’ve learned a lot and I’ve dove into the C code b/c I am improving the libraries. 13:39 – Chuck: Getting those C libraries up? 13:45 – Guest: That is the most recent thing I am working with. My project RU RU hasn’t been worked on in a while, so I created an official fork for it – you can call it: RUTIE. So much work has been put into it. I am very excited about this project. It’s very active right now. 14:56 – Chuck: How do people find you online? 15:05 – Guest: GitHub, my website, and Twitter! 15:27 – Chuck: What if people want to contract you? 15:34 – Guest: Check out my résumé, which will show my areas of expertise. They can find ways to reach me, and my contact information is mentioned there. I like working on full-stack Ruby and/or Rust and anything performance. 16:16 – Advertisement – Fresh Books! Links Ruby Elixir Rails Rust Past Episode 368 Daniel’s LinkedIn 6ftdan.com Daniel’s GitHub Daniel’s Twitter Sponsors Get a Coder Job Cache Fly Fresh Books Picks Daniel Running 3x a week, 45 minutes minimum is my recommendation Aerobics Improvement of your health and circulation! Chuck “Parked out by the Lake” – Song – Dean Summerwind Get a Coder Job! “How do I find a job or a find a better job?” DevChat.TV
Panel: Aimee Knight Charles Max Wood (DevChat TV) Christopher Ferdinandi (Boston) Joe Eames Special Guests: Justin Meyer In this episode, the panel talks with Justin Meyer who is a co-author of DoneJS, CanJS, jQueryPP, StealJS, and DocumentJS. Justin currently works for Bitovi and is their Director of R&D. He is also a fan of basketball and Michael Jackson. The panel and Justin talk about CanJS in-detail – check it out! Show Topics: 0:58 – We had you on Episode 202. 1:14 – Chuck: Can you tell everyone who you are? 1:20 – Justin tells us his background. 1:50 – Chuck. 1:58 – Justin. 2:06 – Chuck: Can you give us an introduction to what CanJS 4.0? 2:11 – Justin: It is a JavaScript framework and is similar to Vue. It adds a very model layer, and uses Real Time very well. 2:44 – Panelist. 2:49 – Justin. 2:55 – Panelist: What is the current... 3:09 – Justin: Compatibility is very important to us. A lot of the same tools are still available. It has over 80 different repositories. Justin continues to talk about the differences/similarities between the different versions. 4:55 – Panelist: Angular, React, and Vue are dominating, so I have 2 questions. 1.) Where is the core strength of JS and its user base? 2.) What is like to be the CanJS when everyone is talking about the other programs? 5:31 – Justin: We have dealt with this for the past 10 years. Emotionally it’s not great, I wished it was more popular, but our priority is keeping our user-based happy. We’ve had big companies use it. Justin answers the second question. 8:44 – Panelist: You mentioned two things. 9:22 – Aimee: I think everything has trade-offs. I would use something because it was the right tool for the job. I wouldn’t want to make something that was “cool.” I would want to make it super accessible in a network. 10:10 – Justin: That is a great marketing angle. We are trying to remove the worst parts of the program. 10:26 – Now I am intrigued. 10:32 – Justin: You have this mutable state and you aren’t sure. At least for CanJS I don’t see that occurring too often. 10:54 – Aimee. 10:58 – Justin: Deep inheritance is definitely a problem and it can create... 11:13 – Aimee. 11:19 – Justin: We have changed strategies a lot, and I think it’s helped CanJS grow; like 60% since January. We are doing a lot of user studies now. I run Meetups, etc. That being said inheritance schemes aren’t something that people will encounter. This is something that they won’t encounter months down the road. 13:00 – Aimee. 13:05 – Panelist: I would like to dig deeper into state-management. Everyone is doing Flux, talk about that with CanJS. 13:20 – Justin: Yeah. It depends on what kind of user you are talking to. When I talk to new users off the street (people who just graduated, etc.)... If you look at React’s statistics – more than 50% doesn’t use any state management. 16:15 – Panelist: I think it’s interesting that there are people that aren’t “oh my gosh...” 16:43 – Justin: The last coolest thing I’ve done is... 18:02 – Justin continues. 18:16 – Panelist: I kind of have this belief that we as a community turn to frameworks and tools too much. From your perspective when does it make sense to turn to a tool like this or better off working with native... 18:56 – It depends on how complex your app is and our ability to work through those problems. I think that’s a generic answer, but hopefully that helps. I don’t think you really can’t live without. 19:49 – Panelist: I think that’s fair. One thing that I found is that there are many things layered into state-management. Because you mentioned performance, which is something I care about, too. At what point does the extra tooling become too heavy for the user’s experience? Where do you draw the line? 21:11 – Justin: It depends. I don’t know what the parallel is – it’s like a richer developer problem. You have too many users where you can make those fine tuned adjustments. Do whatever is going to deliver the product first and then worry about performance later? I think our things are geared towards performance by default. 22:41 – Panelist: Playing devil’s advocate, though. But isn’t there some danger in kind of suggesting that you focus on performance WHEN it’s a business issue? Maybe there is there a lack of empathy among developers. I worry that advice is hurting us. 23:53 – Justin: No matter what you can build your homepage with Angular weird monstrosity, but then when you get to the point when people are using your product – you can just use native HTML, and native methods and build that one widget and as easy and fast as possible. 24:50 – Panelist: Dealing with complexity. Now we need to do things like bundlers, and such to deal with this issue. I feel like a crotchety old man yelling because it takes forever. 25:38 – Justin: I think it depends on where you are sitting. I think that comes down to the design. If your design has a lot of complex states, then... 26:37 – Panelist: Because you care about performance... 26:54 – Advertisement 27:53 – Justin: I don’t think that the run time of CanJS is going to be a critical performance path for anybody. Is there a responsibility? This is the oldest question. It’s like saying: where do you draw the line that you need to choose success/be elected to fight the battles if you really want to win. You need someone using your product or it doesn’t really matter. Start-ups use our product because they need to get something up and in. I am going to flip this back onto you guys. 30:48 – Panelist: I think that’s fair. 31:00 – Aimee: I have a question. You got into consultancy when do you recommend using CanJS or something else? 31:15 – Justin: I always suggest people using CanJS. 31:53 – Aimee: What do these people do when their contract is over? I have used an older version of Can, and... 32:20 – Justin: Are you on Gitter? Aimee: No, I am not. 32:25 – Justin: We do offer promote job posting to help them find somebody. We try our best to help people in any way we can. 33:05 – Aimee: That’s helpful. Another question. 33:28 – Justin: DoneJS is that. It uses the full kitchen sink. That’s what DoneJS is. 33:50 – Panelist: Let’s talk about CanJS in the mark-up. Do you think it’s better now or worse than 2012? Less space or more space? 34:13 – Justin: It’s probably worse. I think the methodology that we are using: focusing on our users. We get their feedback frequently. We are listening to our users, and I think we are being smarter. 35:16 – Panelist: Is the space getting more welcoming or less? 35:31 – It depends on what framework you are. It’s very hard to compete if you are the exact same thing as... The market is so dense and there are so many ideas, so it’s getting harder and harder. What helps people break-through? Is it the technology or the framework? 36:36 – Panelist: I appreciate the richness of the field, as it exists right now. There aren’t a few things SMELT and ELM 37:10 – Justin: Elm for sure. I don’t have a lot of experience with SMELT. 37:23 – Panelist continues the talk. 37:54 – Chuck. 38:00 – Justin: I think it spreads by word-of-mouth. I used to think it was “technology” or... all that really matters is “can you deliver” and the person have a good experience. Usability is the most important to me. We will see how this turns out. I will be either right or wrong. 39:18 – Panelist: Can we talk about the long-term future of Can JS? 39:28 – Justin: We are connecting to our user-base and making them happy. If I had it my way (which I don’t anymore) I think JSX is the best template language. We have been building integrations between JSX and... I am putting out proposals where most people don’t like them. Justin continues this conversation. 44:24 – Picks! 44:28 - Advertisement Links: JavaScript jQuery React Elixir Elm Vue Polyfill.io Dinero.js Vanilla JS Toolkit CanJS’ Website CanJS’ GitHub CanJS’ Twitter JSX JSX- NPM Justin Meyer’s GitHub Justin Meyer’s Twitter Past Episode with Justin Meyer Sponsors: Kendo UI Sentry Cache Fly Get a Coder Job Picks: Aimee Taking a walk for creativity https://ohshitgit.com Chris PolyFill.io Dinero.js https://vanillajstoolkit.com/ Joe Pitch Meeting Solo Charles Phoenix Framework The Queens Poisoner A View From The Top Justin The Killing of H2Push Browser Contributor Days JSJ Episode 326 with Tom Dale
Panel: Aimee Knight Charles Max Wood (DevChat TV) Christopher Ferdinandi (Boston) Joe Eames Special Guests: Justin Meyer In this episode, the panel talks with Justin Meyer who is a co-author of DoneJS, CanJS, jQueryPP, StealJS, and DocumentJS. Justin currently works for Bitovi and is their Director of R&D. He is also a fan of basketball and Michael Jackson. The panel and Justin talk about CanJS in-detail – check it out! Show Topics: 0:58 – We had you on Episode 202. 1:14 – Chuck: Can you tell everyone who you are? 1:20 – Justin tells us his background. 1:50 – Chuck. 1:58 – Justin. 2:06 – Chuck: Can you give us an introduction to what CanJS 4.0? 2:11 – Justin: It is a JavaScript framework and is similar to Vue. It adds a very model layer, and uses Real Time very well. 2:44 – Panelist. 2:49 – Justin. 2:55 – Panelist: What is the current... 3:09 – Justin: Compatibility is very important to us. A lot of the same tools are still available. It has over 80 different repositories. Justin continues to talk about the differences/similarities between the different versions. 4:55 – Panelist: Angular, React, and Vue are dominating, so I have 2 questions. 1.) Where is the core strength of JS and its user base? 2.) What is like to be the CanJS when everyone is talking about the other programs? 5:31 – Justin: We have dealt with this for the past 10 years. Emotionally it’s not great, I wished it was more popular, but our priority is keeping our user-based happy. We’ve had big companies use it. Justin answers the second question. 8:44 – Panelist: You mentioned two things. 9:22 – Aimee: I think everything has trade-offs. I would use something because it was the right tool for the job. I wouldn’t want to make something that was “cool.” I would want to make it super accessible in a network. 10:10 – Justin: That is a great marketing angle. We are trying to remove the worst parts of the program. 10:26 – Now I am intrigued. 10:32 – Justin: You have this mutable state and you aren’t sure. At least for CanJS I don’t see that occurring too often. 10:54 – Aimee. 10:58 – Justin: Deep inheritance is definitely a problem and it can create... 11:13 – Aimee. 11:19 – Justin: We have changed strategies a lot, and I think it’s helped CanJS grow; like 60% since January. We are doing a lot of user studies now. I run Meetups, etc. That being said inheritance schemes aren’t something that people will encounter. This is something that they won’t encounter months down the road. 13:00 – Aimee. 13:05 – Panelist: I would like to dig deeper into state-management. Everyone is doing Flux, talk about that with CanJS. 13:20 – Justin: Yeah. It depends on what kind of user you are talking to. When I talk to new users off the street (people who just graduated, etc.)... If you look at React’s statistics – more than 50% doesn’t use any state management. 16:15 – Panelist: I think it’s interesting that there are people that aren’t “oh my gosh...” 16:43 – Justin: The last coolest thing I’ve done is... 18:02 – Justin continues. 18:16 – Panelist: I kind of have this belief that we as a community turn to frameworks and tools too much. From your perspective when does it make sense to turn to a tool like this or better off working with native... 18:56 – It depends on how complex your app is and our ability to work through those problems. I think that’s a generic answer, but hopefully that helps. I don’t think you really can’t live without. 19:49 – Panelist: I think that’s fair. One thing that I found is that there are many things layered into state-management. Because you mentioned performance, which is something I care about, too. At what point does the extra tooling become too heavy for the user’s experience? Where do you draw the line? 21:11 – Justin: It depends. I don’t know what the parallel is – it’s like a richer developer problem. You have too many users where you can make those fine tuned adjustments. Do whatever is going to deliver the product first and then worry about performance later? I think our things are geared towards performance by default. 22:41 – Panelist: Playing devil’s advocate, though. But isn’t there some danger in kind of suggesting that you focus on performance WHEN it’s a business issue? Maybe there is there a lack of empathy among developers. I worry that advice is hurting us. 23:53 – Justin: No matter what you can build your homepage with Angular weird monstrosity, but then when you get to the point when people are using your product – you can just use native HTML, and native methods and build that one widget and as easy and fast as possible. 24:50 – Panelist: Dealing with complexity. Now we need to do things like bundlers, and such to deal with this issue. I feel like a crotchety old man yelling because it takes forever. 25:38 – Justin: I think it depends on where you are sitting. I think that comes down to the design. If your design has a lot of complex states, then... 26:37 – Panelist: Because you care about performance... 26:54 – Advertisement 27:53 – Justin: I don’t think that the run time of CanJS is going to be a critical performance path for anybody. Is there a responsibility? This is the oldest question. It’s like saying: where do you draw the line that you need to choose success/be elected to fight the battles if you really want to win. You need someone using your product or it doesn’t really matter. Start-ups use our product because they need to get something up and in. I am going to flip this back onto you guys. 30:48 – Panelist: I think that’s fair. 31:00 – Aimee: I have a question. You got into consultancy when do you recommend using CanJS or something else? 31:15 – Justin: I always suggest people using CanJS. 31:53 – Aimee: What do these people do when their contract is over? I have used an older version of Can, and... 32:20 – Justin: Are you on Gitter? Aimee: No, I am not. 32:25 – Justin: We do offer promote job posting to help them find somebody. We try our best to help people in any way we can. 33:05 – Aimee: That’s helpful. Another question. 33:28 – Justin: DoneJS is that. It uses the full kitchen sink. That’s what DoneJS is. 33:50 – Panelist: Let’s talk about CanJS in the mark-up. Do you think it’s better now or worse than 2012? Less space or more space? 34:13 – Justin: It’s probably worse. I think the methodology that we are using: focusing on our users. We get their feedback frequently. We are listening to our users, and I think we are being smarter. 35:16 – Panelist: Is the space getting more welcoming or less? 35:31 – It depends on what framework you are. It’s very hard to compete if you are the exact same thing as... The market is so dense and there are so many ideas, so it’s getting harder and harder. What helps people break-through? Is it the technology or the framework? 36:36 – Panelist: I appreciate the richness of the field, as it exists right now. There aren’t a few things SMELT and ELM 37:10 – Justin: Elm for sure. I don’t have a lot of experience with SMELT. 37:23 – Panelist continues the talk. 37:54 – Chuck. 38:00 – Justin: I think it spreads by word-of-mouth. I used to think it was “technology” or... all that really matters is “can you deliver” and the person have a good experience. Usability is the most important to me. We will see how this turns out. I will be either right or wrong. 39:18 – Panelist: Can we talk about the long-term future of Can JS? 39:28 – Justin: We are connecting to our user-base and making them happy. If I had it my way (which I don’t anymore) I think JSX is the best template language. We have been building integrations between JSX and... I am putting out proposals where most people don’t like them. Justin continues this conversation. 44:24 – Picks! 44:28 - Advertisement Links: JavaScript jQuery React Elixir Elm Vue Polyfill.io Dinero.js Vanilla JS Toolkit CanJS’ Website CanJS’ GitHub CanJS’ Twitter JSX JSX- NPM Justin Meyer’s GitHub Justin Meyer’s Twitter Past Episode with Justin Meyer Sponsors: Kendo UI Sentry Cache Fly Get a Coder Job Picks: Aimee Taking a walk for creativity https://ohshitgit.com Chris PolyFill.io Dinero.js https://vanillajstoolkit.com/ Joe Pitch Meeting Solo Charles Phoenix Framework The Queens Poisoner A View From The Top Justin The Killing of H2Push Browser Contributor Days JSJ Episode 326 with Tom Dale
Panel: Aimee Knight Charles Max Wood (DevChat TV) Christopher Ferdinandi (Boston) Joe Eames Special Guests: Justin Meyer In this episode, the panel talks with Justin Meyer who is a co-author of DoneJS, CanJS, jQueryPP, StealJS, and DocumentJS. Justin currently works for Bitovi and is their Director of R&D. He is also a fan of basketball and Michael Jackson. The panel and Justin talk about CanJS in-detail – check it out! Show Topics: 0:58 – We had you on Episode 202. 1:14 – Chuck: Can you tell everyone who you are? 1:20 – Justin tells us his background. 1:50 – Chuck. 1:58 – Justin. 2:06 – Chuck: Can you give us an introduction to what CanJS 4.0? 2:11 – Justin: It is a JavaScript framework and is similar to Vue. It adds a very model layer, and uses Real Time very well. 2:44 – Panelist. 2:49 – Justin. 2:55 – Panelist: What is the current... 3:09 – Justin: Compatibility is very important to us. A lot of the same tools are still available. It has over 80 different repositories. Justin continues to talk about the differences/similarities between the different versions. 4:55 – Panelist: Angular, React, and Vue are dominating, so I have 2 questions. 1.) Where is the core strength of JS and its user base? 2.) What is like to be the CanJS when everyone is talking about the other programs? 5:31 – Justin: We have dealt with this for the past 10 years. Emotionally it’s not great, I wished it was more popular, but our priority is keeping our user-based happy. We’ve had big companies use it. Justin answers the second question. 8:44 – Panelist: You mentioned two things. 9:22 – Aimee: I think everything has trade-offs. I would use something because it was the right tool for the job. I wouldn’t want to make something that was “cool.” I would want to make it super accessible in a network. 10:10 – Justin: That is a great marketing angle. We are trying to remove the worst parts of the program. 10:26 – Now I am intrigued. 10:32 – Justin: You have this mutable state and you aren’t sure. At least for CanJS I don’t see that occurring too often. 10:54 – Aimee. 10:58 – Justin: Deep inheritance is definitely a problem and it can create... 11:13 – Aimee. 11:19 – Justin: We have changed strategies a lot, and I think it’s helped CanJS grow; like 60% since January. We are doing a lot of user studies now. I run Meetups, etc. That being said inheritance schemes aren’t something that people will encounter. This is something that they won’t encounter months down the road. 13:00 – Aimee. 13:05 – Panelist: I would like to dig deeper into state-management. Everyone is doing Flux, talk about that with CanJS. 13:20 – Justin: Yeah. It depends on what kind of user you are talking to. When I talk to new users off the street (people who just graduated, etc.)... If you look at React’s statistics – more than 50% doesn’t use any state management. 16:15 – Panelist: I think it’s interesting that there are people that aren’t “oh my gosh...” 16:43 – Justin: The last coolest thing I’ve done is... 18:02 – Justin continues. 18:16 – Panelist: I kind of have this belief that we as a community turn to frameworks and tools too much. From your perspective when does it make sense to turn to a tool like this or better off working with native... 18:56 – It depends on how complex your app is and our ability to work through those problems. I think that’s a generic answer, but hopefully that helps. I don’t think you really can’t live without. 19:49 – Panelist: I think that’s fair. One thing that I found is that there are many things layered into state-management. Because you mentioned performance, which is something I care about, too. At what point does the extra tooling become too heavy for the user’s experience? Where do you draw the line? 21:11 – Justin: It depends. I don’t know what the parallel is – it’s like a richer developer problem. You have too many users where you can make those fine tuned adjustments. Do whatever is going to deliver the product first and then worry about performance later? I think our things are geared towards performance by default. 22:41 – Panelist: Playing devil’s advocate, though. But isn’t there some danger in kind of suggesting that you focus on performance WHEN it’s a business issue? Maybe there is there a lack of empathy among developers. I worry that advice is hurting us. 23:53 – Justin: No matter what you can build your homepage with Angular weird monstrosity, but then when you get to the point when people are using your product – you can just use native HTML, and native methods and build that one widget and as easy and fast as possible. 24:50 – Panelist: Dealing with complexity. Now we need to do things like bundlers, and such to deal with this issue. I feel like a crotchety old man yelling because it takes forever. 25:38 – Justin: I think it depends on where you are sitting. I think that comes down to the design. If your design has a lot of complex states, then... 26:37 – Panelist: Because you care about performance... 26:54 – Advertisement 27:53 – Justin: I don’t think that the run time of CanJS is going to be a critical performance path for anybody. Is there a responsibility? This is the oldest question. It’s like saying: where do you draw the line that you need to choose success/be elected to fight the battles if you really want to win. You need someone using your product or it doesn’t really matter. Start-ups use our product because they need to get something up and in. I am going to flip this back onto you guys. 30:48 – Panelist: I think that’s fair. 31:00 – Aimee: I have a question. You got into consultancy when do you recommend using CanJS or something else? 31:15 – Justin: I always suggest people using CanJS. 31:53 – Aimee: What do these people do when their contract is over? I have used an older version of Can, and... 32:20 – Justin: Are you on Gitter? Aimee: No, I am not. 32:25 – Justin: We do offer promote job posting to help them find somebody. We try our best to help people in any way we can. 33:05 – Aimee: That’s helpful. Another question. 33:28 – Justin: DoneJS is that. It uses the full kitchen sink. That’s what DoneJS is. 33:50 – Panelist: Let’s talk about CanJS in the mark-up. Do you think it’s better now or worse than 2012? Less space or more space? 34:13 – Justin: It’s probably worse. I think the methodology that we are using: focusing on our users. We get their feedback frequently. We are listening to our users, and I think we are being smarter. 35:16 – Panelist: Is the space getting more welcoming or less? 35:31 – It depends on what framework you are. It’s very hard to compete if you are the exact same thing as... The market is so dense and there are so many ideas, so it’s getting harder and harder. What helps people break-through? Is it the technology or the framework? 36:36 – Panelist: I appreciate the richness of the field, as it exists right now. There aren’t a few things SMELT and ELM 37:10 – Justin: Elm for sure. I don’t have a lot of experience with SMELT. 37:23 – Panelist continues the talk. 37:54 – Chuck. 38:00 – Justin: I think it spreads by word-of-mouth. I used to think it was “technology” or... all that really matters is “can you deliver” and the person have a good experience. Usability is the most important to me. We will see how this turns out. I will be either right or wrong. 39:18 – Panelist: Can we talk about the long-term future of Can JS? 39:28 – Justin: We are connecting to our user-base and making them happy. If I had it my way (which I don’t anymore) I think JSX is the best template language. We have been building integrations between JSX and... I am putting out proposals where most people don’t like them. Justin continues this conversation. 44:24 – Picks! 44:28 - Advertisement Links: JavaScript jQuery React Elixir Elm Vue Polyfill.io Dinero.js Vanilla JS Toolkit CanJS’ Website CanJS’ GitHub CanJS’ Twitter JSX JSX- NPM Justin Meyer’s GitHub Justin Meyer’s Twitter Past Episode with Justin Meyer Sponsors: Kendo UI Sentry Cache Fly Get a Coder Job Picks: Aimee Taking a walk for creativity https://ohshitgit.com Chris PolyFill.io Dinero.js https://vanillajstoolkit.com/ Joe Pitch Meeting Solo Charles Phoenix Framework The Queens Poisoner A View From The Top Justin The Killing of H2Push Browser Contributor Days JSJ Episode 326 with Tom Dale
Panel: Charles Max Wood Guest: David Bush This week on My Angular Story, Charles speaks with David Bush who is working with Bloomberg after twenty (plus!) years of being self-employed. Charles and David talk about his current projects he’s working on, plus his impressive background. Listen to them talk about JavaScript, C++, David’s books, and much more! In particular, we dive pretty deep on: 1:34 – Episode 203, which came out a few months ago. Check-out this past episode with David. “Where to Store Angular Configurations” with Dave Bush. 2:13 – Chuck: We are here to catch your story. Let people know who you are. 2:27 – David: I have been in programming for 30 years. Recently in the .NET space, and also in the Angular space for 4 years. 3:02 – Chuck: JavaScript has been around for 20 years. How did 3:12 – David: I need to back-up a little bit. It’s unique. I wasn’t raised around computers. 3:43 – Chuck: We are having a microphone issue. 3:55 – David: I didn’t have access to a computer back in the day. By the time I got to college I knew summer camps and maintenance. Senior year the PC started making a break-through. I had friends who made computers in their dorm room. That looked really interesting. I mean build by soldering, and pretty hardcore. I went to engineering school. Senior year, but I went to school on a large portion of grants. It was too late to change my major. I worked for Radio Shack in Chicago. They encouraged us to bring things home. I brought these computers home and played with them. I got into Pascal among other things. I couldn’t get Pascal to work in my brain. Next, I learned C. If I cannot make C work then I will give up and do something else with my life. C was mathematical and that’s my brain. My wife encouraged me to go back to school – I went to DePaul through their Career Change Path. 7:14 – Chuck. 7:18 – David: It was similar to a boot camp. 7:43 – David and Chuck. 7:52 – Chuck: When did you settle on JavaScript? 7:55 – David: Settle. When the Internet became publically available and wrote my website through Notepad. David continues this conversation. 9:30 – Chuck: Are you primarily a Dot Net developer? 9:43 – David: Primarily; also, C++. 10:55 – Chuck: How did you get into being self-employed? 11:07 – David: That was the plan all along. When you are self-employed you have multiple bosses! I got fired from my last job and working with agencies. So I count that time as being self-employed then, too. In 2000, I switched to LLC and more direct contracts. 12:45 – Chuck: How do you find contracts? 12:51 – David: Started working for Bloomberg and then later they converted me to being an employer. It was attractive, so I am not an employee. 13:24 – Chuck: What things are you proud of and what contributions have you made within the community? 13:29 – David: The writing in my blogs. 14:20 – Chuck: How do you get into blogging – and how is it successful? 14:44 – David: Keep writing. Sometimes I think: this article will be awesome and it will fall flat. But then the times I don’t think it’s good those are the articles that blowup. You can’t tell. The other thing is you need to have a thick skin. 15:29 – Chuck: True with podcasting as well. 15:36 – David: You will never make anyone happy. You learn to read the comment for the content and not the attitude behind it. Take the value out of the content that you can. The blog is just for me. I write so I have some place to point my colleagues to. It’s for me to retrieve information. The blog really is for me. 16:56 – Chuck: What are you working on now? 17:00 – David answers this question. 19:07 – David continues the talk. David: I posted my book through GitHub and took it off of Amazon. A long-term goal of mine is... I am interested in functional programming, too. 20:41 – Chuck: That’s cool. I am a huge fan of making things accessible of where they are at. The Vue portion of Angular why couldn’t we switch that out. 21:08 – David: Dependency injection doesn’t mix well l with React. For all of my code, I put all my logic in... 21:45 – Chuck: How can people find you? 21:53 – David: LinkedIn is my best one. Twitter, GitHub, etc. 23:09 – Chuck: LinkedIn. Facebook I am more discerning because I post pictures of my children there. 23:41 – Chuck: Awesome – if people want to get your book? 23:50 – David: I will send you those links. See links below. 24:07 – Chuck: Picks! Links: jQuery Angular JavaScript Vue Dave’s Notebook Dave’s Stack Overflow Dave’s Twitter Dave’s GitHub Dave’s YouTube Videos Get Started with Angular Past Episode with David Bush – DevChat TV C++ Sponsors: Get A Coder Job Code Badges Cache Fly Picks: David How you do anything is how you do everything – for example: dress a little better. Don’t beat yourself up when you mess up. Encrypt.me Charles Mojave Public Beta High Sierra If upgrading: Listen to Chuck’s tips to make the transition easier! GitHub: Home_Brew Developer Express VPN
Panel: Charles Max Wood Guest: Nathan Kontny This week on My Ruby Story, the panel talks with Nathan Kontny who has been in the Ruby community since 2005. He once was a chemical engineer, and then got into programming after a broken ankle incident; after that...the rest is history! Today, Nathan and Chuck talk about Ruby, how to begin a startup company, Rockstar Coders, balancing life, and much more! In particular, we dive pretty deep on: 1:05 – Chuck: E365 is the past episode you’ve been featured on. 1:14 – Nathan comments. 1:20 – Chuck. 1:56 – Nathan: Been in the community since 2005. I am a developer and entrepreneur. I do a lot of YouTube and videos nowadays. 2:50 – Chuck: How did you get into this field? 2:55 – Guest: It’s weird. I was a chemical engineer in the past. Back in the day 1996 I was learning... My love for it started through an internship. It was kind of a scary place dealing with harmful materials. Make sure you aren’t carrying uranium with you, and wear multiple gas masks at all times. There was an acid leak through someone’s shoulder. I didn’t love it, but something fortunate happened. I broke my ankle in one summer, and when I showed-up they made me go to this trail where I couldn’t be near the chemicals. Well, the director had computer problems and asked him to help with him. I put in code and out came results. In the chemical industry it was/is: “Maybe the chemicals will react to this chemical in this way...?” It was this dopamine rush for me. After that summer, I wanted to do programming. 7:16 – Chuck: Same thing for me. This will manifest and then boom. I had a friend change to computer major – and this led me to the field. 8:45 – Guest: Yeah, I had a different career shown to me and then I had a choice. 9:02 – Chuck: How did you find Ruby? 9:05 – Guest: I got a job but they wouldn’t let me program because I didn’t have enough experience. I had to teach myself. I taught myself Java – 9 CDs back in the day. I stayed up late, and did anything I could to teach myself. I taught myself Java. I got promoted in the business and became a Java developer. After 5 years of that I started doing freelance work. I love Ruby’s language and how simple it was to me. I have flirted with other languages, but I keep coming back to Ruby. 13:00 – Chuck: The same for me, too. Oh, and this makes this so much easier, and it extends so much easier. I have questions about being an entrepreneur. Anyways, you get into Ruby and Rails, you’ve done a bunch of things. What are you proud of and/or interested in with Rails? How do you feel like Rails helps with building things? 14:00 – Guest shares his past projects. I was proud of just hosting Rails, because there were so many changes back in the day. I have helped with open source contributions back in 2009. There was a security problem and I discovered this. Nothing happened and I just went in and fixed the bug; an infamous contribution. I am proud of my performance work. I made a plug-in for that, etc. Also, work with Highrise. 17:23 – Chuck: Yep, Highrise people will know. I’ve used Highrise in the past. 17:38 – Nathan: Yeah. 17:50 – Chuck and Nathan go back and forth. 17:58 – Chuck: You’ve done all these different things. So for a start-up what advice would you give? People are doing their own thing – what’s your advice on an incubator, or doing it alone or raising capitol? 18:41 – Nathan: I take a middle road approach. You do what makes sense with your business. What works for you? I would do that. It’s hard to pick-on what incubators could be. Ownership is everything – once you don’t own it – you loose that control. Don’t loose your equity. I wanted more control over my box. I would be careful raising money – do that as a last effort. Keep your ownership as far as you can. But if you are up against the wall – then go there. 22:29 – Chuck: Now I have 2 jobs: podcasting and developing this course. I guess my issue is how do you find the balance there between your fulltime job and your new fulltime job? 23:01 – Nathan: Yeah it’s tough. I do, too, now I am building something and trying to balance between that and Rockstar Coders. Clients have meetings and there are fires. There is no magic to it. I thought bunching your days into clusters would help me with focus, but it’s not good for the business. I don’t think the batch thing isn’t working for me. A little bit on, a little bit off. I think MT on Rockstar. Wednesday I take a half-day. Thursday all start-up, etc. It’s just balance. It can’t be lopsided one way or the other. Just living with my girlfriend and now wife was easy, but having a kid in the evening is tricky. I create nice walls that don’t interfere. I don’t know that’s it. 25:55 – Chuck: It sounds like they are completely separate. What I am building affects my people at work. I find the balance hard, too. 26:21 – Nathan: It’s also good to have partners who support you. 27:19 – Chuck: Do you start looking for help with marketing, or...? 27:27 – Nathan: Yeah that’s hard, too. Maybe? Some people aren’t in the US and they might be more affordable. My friend found someone in Europe who is awesome and their fees are cheaper. Their cost of living is cheaper than the U.S. There are talented folks out there. 28:50 – Chuck: Yeah, I had help with a guy from Argentina. I am in Utah and he was an hour ahead. So scheduling was easy. 29:27 – Nathan: I have a hard time giving that up, too. It’s hard to hire someone through startup work. Startup work needs to be done quickly, etc. BUT when things solidify then get help. 30:28 – Chuck: They see it as risky proposition. It seems like the cost is getting better so the risk is there. 30:48 – Nathan: There is tons of stops and goes if I look back into my career. In the moment they feel like failures, but really it was just a stepping-stone. It was just a source for good ideas, and writings, and things to talk at podcasters about, etc. I just feel like short-term they feel risky but in the long-term you can really squeeze out value from it. I am having trouble, right now, finding customers, it could be risky, and there might not be a market for this. But I am learning about x, y, and z. Everything is a stepping-stone for me now. I don’t feel like it’s a failure anymore to me. 32:50 – Chuck: What are you doing now? 32:55 – Guest: Rockstar. 3 / 4 teenagers want to be YouTubers! That’s just crazy and that will keep going. I want to be apart of that. I am making programs so people can make their own videos. That’s what I am fooling around with now. 35:06 – Chuck: Yeah we will have a channel. There is album art. I’m working on it. I will start recording this week. 35:43 – Nathan: It is hard to get traction there. I don’t know why? Maybe video watchers need quicker transitions to keep interested. 36:12 – Chuck: I could supply some theories but I don’t know. I think with YouTube you actually have to watch it. Podcasts are gaining traction because you can go wherever with it. 36:51 – Nathan: Right now commuting can only be an auditory experience. When we get self-driving cars then videos will take off. 37:14 – Chuck: Picks! 37:19 – Advertisement! Links: Ruby Elixir Rails Highrise Rockstar Coders Nathan’s Medium Nathan’s Twitter Nathan’s LinkedIn Nathan’s YouTube Past Episode with Nathan – DevChat.TV Sponsors: Code Badges Get a Coder Job Cache Fly Picks: Charles Board Games: Bubble Talk Shadow Hunters Apples to Apples The Resistance Airbnb Zion National Park Nathan Writing is important. Masterclass! Book: Living with a Seal Book: Living with the Monks Sara Blakely – Spanx
Panel: Charles Max Wood Guest: David Bush This week on My Angular Story, Charles speaks with David Bush who is working with Bloomberg after twenty (plus!) years of being self-employed. Charles and David talk about his current projects he’s working on, plus his impressive background. Listen to them talk about JavaScript, C++, David’s books, and much more! In particular, we dive pretty deep on: 1:34 – Episode 203, which came out a few months ago. Check-out this past episode with David. “Where to Store Angular Configurations” with Dave Bush. 2:13 – Chuck: We are here to catch your story. Let people know who you are. 2:27 – David: I have been in programming for 30 years. Recently in the .NET space, and also in the Angular space for 4 years. 3:02 – Chuck: JavaScript has been around for 20 years. How did 3:12 – David: I need to back-up a little bit. It’s unique. I wasn’t raised around computers. 3:43 – Chuck: We are having a microphone issue. 3:55 – David: I didn’t have access to a computer back in the day. By the time I got to college I knew summer camps and maintenance. Senior year the PC started making a break-through. I had friends who made computers in their dorm room. That looked really interesting. I mean build by soldering, and pretty hardcore. I went to engineering school. Senior year, but I went to school on a large portion of grants. It was too late to change my major. I worked for Radio Shack in Chicago. They encouraged us to bring things home. I brought these computers home and played with them. I got into Pascal among other things. I couldn’t get Pascal to work in my brain. Next, I learned C. If I cannot make C work then I will give up and do something else with my life. C was mathematical and that’s my brain. My wife encouraged me to go back to school – I went to DePaul through their Career Change Path. 7:14 – Chuck. 7:18 – David: It was similar to a boot camp. 7:43 – David and Chuck. 7:52 – Chuck: When did you settle on JavaScript? 7:55 – David: Settle. When the Internet became publically available and wrote my website through Notepad. David continues this conversation. 9:30 – Chuck: Are you primarily a Dot Net developer? 9:43 – David: Primarily; also, C++. 10:55 – Chuck: How did you get into being self-employed? 11:07 – David: That was the plan all along. When you are self-employed you have multiple bosses! I got fired from my last job and working with agencies. So I count that time as being self-employed then, too. In 2000, I switched to LLC and more direct contracts. 12:45 – Chuck: How do you find contracts? 12:51 – David: Started working for Bloomberg and then later they converted me to being an employer. It was attractive, so I am not an employee. 13:24 – Chuck: What things are you proud of and what contributions have you made within the community? 13:29 – David: The writing in my blogs. 14:20 – Chuck: How do you get into blogging – and how is it successful? 14:44 – David: Keep writing. Sometimes I think: this article will be awesome and it will fall flat. But then the times I don’t think it’s good those are the articles that blowup. You can’t tell. The other thing is you need to have a thick skin. 15:29 – Chuck: True with podcasting as well. 15:36 – David: You will never make anyone happy. You learn to read the comment for the content and not the attitude behind it. Take the value out of the content that you can. The blog is just for me. I write so I have some place to point my colleagues to. It’s for me to retrieve information. The blog really is for me. 16:56 – Chuck: What are you working on now? 17:00 – David answers this question. 19:07 – David continues the talk. David: I posted my book through GitHub and took it off of Amazon. A long-term goal of mine is... I am interested in functional programming, too. 20:41 – Chuck: That’s cool. I am a huge fan of making things accessible of where they are at. The Vue portion of Angular why couldn’t we switch that out. 21:08 – David: Dependency injection doesn’t mix well l with React. For all of my code, I put all my logic in... 21:45 – Chuck: How can people find you? 21:53 – David: LinkedIn is my best one. Twitter, GitHub, etc. 23:09 – Chuck: LinkedIn. Facebook I am more discerning because I post pictures of my children there. 23:41 – Chuck: Awesome – if people want to get your book? 23:50 – David: I will send you those links. See links below. 24:07 – Chuck: Picks! Links: jQuery Angular JavaScript Vue Dave’s Notebook Dave’s Stack Overflow Dave’s Twitter Dave’s GitHub Dave’s YouTube Videos Get Started with Angular Past Episode with David Bush – DevChat TV C++ Sponsors: Get A Coder Job Code Badges Cache Fly Picks: David How you do anything is how you do everything – for example: dress a little better. Don’t beat yourself up when you mess up. Encrypt.me Charles Mojave Public Beta High Sierra If upgrading: Listen to Chuck’s tips to make the transition easier! GitHub: Home_Brew Developer Express VPN
Panel: Charles Max Wood Guest: Nathan Kontny This week on My Ruby Story, the panel talks with Nathan Kontny who has been in the Ruby community since 2005. He once was a chemical engineer, and then got into programming after a broken ankle incident; after that...the rest is history! Today, Nathan and Chuck talk about Ruby, how to begin a startup company, Rockstar Coders, balancing life, and much more! In particular, we dive pretty deep on: 1:05 – Chuck: E365 is the past episode you’ve been featured on. 1:14 – Nathan comments. 1:20 – Chuck. 1:56 – Nathan: Been in the community since 2005. I am a developer and entrepreneur. I do a lot of YouTube and videos nowadays. 2:50 – Chuck: How did you get into this field? 2:55 – Guest: It’s weird. I was a chemical engineer in the past. Back in the day 1996 I was learning... My love for it started through an internship. It was kind of a scary place dealing with harmful materials. Make sure you aren’t carrying uranium with you, and wear multiple gas masks at all times. There was an acid leak through someone’s shoulder. I didn’t love it, but something fortunate happened. I broke my ankle in one summer, and when I showed-up they made me go to this trail where I couldn’t be near the chemicals. Well, the director had computer problems and asked him to help with him. I put in code and out came results. In the chemical industry it was/is: “Maybe the chemicals will react to this chemical in this way...?” It was this dopamine rush for me. After that summer, I wanted to do programming. 7:16 – Chuck: Same thing for me. This will manifest and then boom. I had a friend change to computer major – and this led me to the field. 8:45 – Guest: Yeah, I had a different career shown to me and then I had a choice. 9:02 – Chuck: How did you find Ruby? 9:05 – Guest: I got a job but they wouldn’t let me program because I didn’t have enough experience. I had to teach myself. I taught myself Java – 9 CDs back in the day. I stayed up late, and did anything I could to teach myself. I taught myself Java. I got promoted in the business and became a Java developer. After 5 years of that I started doing freelance work. I love Ruby’s language and how simple it was to me. I have flirted with other languages, but I keep coming back to Ruby. 13:00 – Chuck: The same for me, too. Oh, and this makes this so much easier, and it extends so much easier. I have questions about being an entrepreneur. Anyways, you get into Ruby and Rails, you’ve done a bunch of things. What are you proud of and/or interested in with Rails? How do you feel like Rails helps with building things? 14:00 – Guest shares his past projects. I was proud of just hosting Rails, because there were so many changes back in the day. I have helped with open source contributions back in 2009. There was a security problem and I discovered this. Nothing happened and I just went in and fixed the bug; an infamous contribution. I am proud of my performance work. I made a plug-in for that, etc. Also, work with Highrise. 17:23 – Chuck: Yep, Highrise people will know. I’ve used Highrise in the past. 17:38 – Nathan: Yeah. 17:50 – Chuck and Nathan go back and forth. 17:58 – Chuck: You’ve done all these different things. So for a start-up what advice would you give? People are doing their own thing – what’s your advice on an incubator, or doing it alone or raising capitol? 18:41 – Nathan: I take a middle road approach. You do what makes sense with your business. What works for you? I would do that. It’s hard to pick-on what incubators could be. Ownership is everything – once you don’t own it – you loose that control. Don’t loose your equity. I wanted more control over my box. I would be careful raising money – do that as a last effort. Keep your ownership as far as you can. But if you are up against the wall – then go there. 22:29 – Chuck: Now I have 2 jobs: podcasting and developing this course. I guess my issue is how do you find the balance there between your fulltime job and your new fulltime job? 23:01 – Nathan: Yeah it’s tough. I do, too, now I am building something and trying to balance between that and Rockstar Coders. Clients have meetings and there are fires. There is no magic to it. I thought bunching your days into clusters would help me with focus, but it’s not good for the business. I don’t think the batch thing isn’t working for me. A little bit on, a little bit off. I think MT on Rockstar. Wednesday I take a half-day. Thursday all start-up, etc. It’s just balance. It can’t be lopsided one way or the other. Just living with my girlfriend and now wife was easy, but having a kid in the evening is tricky. I create nice walls that don’t interfere. I don’t know that’s it. 25:55 – Chuck: It sounds like they are completely separate. What I am building affects my people at work. I find the balance hard, too. 26:21 – Nathan: It’s also good to have partners who support you. 27:19 – Chuck: Do you start looking for help with marketing, or...? 27:27 – Nathan: Yeah that’s hard, too. Maybe? Some people aren’t in the US and they might be more affordable. My friend found someone in Europe who is awesome and their fees are cheaper. Their cost of living is cheaper than the U.S. There are talented folks out there. 28:50 – Chuck: Yeah, I had help with a guy from Argentina. I am in Utah and he was an hour ahead. So scheduling was easy. 29:27 – Nathan: I have a hard time giving that up, too. It’s hard to hire someone through startup work. Startup work needs to be done quickly, etc. BUT when things solidify then get help. 30:28 – Chuck: They see it as risky proposition. It seems like the cost is getting better so the risk is there. 30:48 – Nathan: There is tons of stops and goes if I look back into my career. In the moment they feel like failures, but really it was just a stepping-stone. It was just a source for good ideas, and writings, and things to talk at podcasters about, etc. I just feel like short-term they feel risky but in the long-term you can really squeeze out value from it. I am having trouble, right now, finding customers, it could be risky, and there might not be a market for this. But I am learning about x, y, and z. Everything is a stepping-stone for me now. I don’t feel like it’s a failure anymore to me. 32:50 – Chuck: What are you doing now? 32:55 – Guest: Rockstar. 3 / 4 teenagers want to be YouTubers! That’s just crazy and that will keep going. I want to be apart of that. I am making programs so people can make their own videos. That’s what I am fooling around with now. 35:06 – Chuck: Yeah we will have a channel. There is album art. I’m working on it. I will start recording this week. 35:43 – Nathan: It is hard to get traction there. I don’t know why? Maybe video watchers need quicker transitions to keep interested. 36:12 – Chuck: I could supply some theories but I don’t know. I think with YouTube you actually have to watch it. Podcasts are gaining traction because you can go wherever with it. 36:51 – Nathan: Right now commuting can only be an auditory experience. When we get self-driving cars then videos will take off. 37:14 – Chuck: Picks! 37:19 – Advertisement! Links: Ruby Elixir Rails Highrise Rockstar Coders Nathan’s Medium Nathan’s Twitter Nathan’s LinkedIn Nathan’s YouTube Past Episode with Nathan – DevChat.TV Sponsors: Code Badges Get a Coder Job Cache Fly Picks: Charles Board Games: Bubble Talk Shadow Hunters Apples to Apples The Resistance Airbnb Zion National Park Nathan Writing is important. Masterclass! Book: Living with a Seal Book: Living with the Monks Sara Blakely – Spanx
Panel: Charles Max Wood Guest: Nathan Kontny This week on My Ruby Story, the panel talks with Nathan Kontny who has been in the Ruby community since 2005. He once was a chemical engineer, and then got into programming after a broken ankle incident; after that...the rest is history! Today, Nathan and Chuck talk about Ruby, how to begin a startup company, Rockstar Coders, balancing life, and much more! In particular, we dive pretty deep on: 1:05 – Chuck: E365 is the past episode you’ve been featured on. 1:14 – Nathan comments. 1:20 – Chuck. 1:56 – Nathan: Been in the community since 2005. I am a developer and entrepreneur. I do a lot of YouTube and videos nowadays. 2:50 – Chuck: How did you get into this field? 2:55 – Guest: It’s weird. I was a chemical engineer in the past. Back in the day 1996 I was learning... My love for it started through an internship. It was kind of a scary place dealing with harmful materials. Make sure you aren’t carrying uranium with you, and wear multiple gas masks at all times. There was an acid leak through someone’s shoulder. I didn’t love it, but something fortunate happened. I broke my ankle in one summer, and when I showed-up they made me go to this trail where I couldn’t be near the chemicals. Well, the director had computer problems and asked him to help with him. I put in code and out came results. In the chemical industry it was/is: “Maybe the chemicals will react to this chemical in this way...?” It was this dopamine rush for me. After that summer, I wanted to do programming. 7:16 – Chuck: Same thing for me. This will manifest and then boom. I had a friend change to computer major – and this led me to the field. 8:45 – Guest: Yeah, I had a different career shown to me and then I had a choice. 9:02 – Chuck: How did you find Ruby? 9:05 – Guest: I got a job but they wouldn’t let me program because I didn’t have enough experience. I had to teach myself. I taught myself Java – 9 CDs back in the day. I stayed up late, and did anything I could to teach myself. I taught myself Java. I got promoted in the business and became a Java developer. After 5 years of that I started doing freelance work. I love Ruby’s language and how simple it was to me. I have flirted with other languages, but I keep coming back to Ruby. 13:00 – Chuck: The same for me, too. Oh, and this makes this so much easier, and it extends so much easier. I have questions about being an entrepreneur. Anyways, you get into Ruby and Rails, you’ve done a bunch of things. What are you proud of and/or interested in with Rails? How do you feel like Rails helps with building things? 14:00 – Guest shares his past projects. I was proud of just hosting Rails, because there were so many changes back in the day. I have helped with open source contributions back in 2009. There was a security problem and I discovered this. Nothing happened and I just went in and fixed the bug; an infamous contribution. I am proud of my performance work. I made a plug-in for that, etc. Also, work with Highrise. 17:23 – Chuck: Yep, Highrise people will know. I’ve used Highrise in the past. 17:38 – Nathan: Yeah. 17:50 – Chuck and Nathan go back and forth. 17:58 – Chuck: You’ve done all these different things. So for a start-up what advice would you give? People are doing their own thing – what’s your advice on an incubator, or doing it alone or raising capitol? 18:41 – Nathan: I take a middle road approach. You do what makes sense with your business. What works for you? I would do that. It’s hard to pick-on what incubators could be. Ownership is everything – once you don’t own it – you loose that control. Don’t loose your equity. I wanted more control over my box. I would be careful raising money – do that as a last effort. Keep your ownership as far as you can. But if you are up against the wall – then go there. 22:29 – Chuck: Now I have 2 jobs: podcasting and developing this course. I guess my issue is how do you find the balance there between your fulltime job and your new fulltime job? 23:01 – Nathan: Yeah it’s tough. I do, too, now I am building something and trying to balance between that and Rockstar Coders. Clients have meetings and there are fires. There is no magic to it. I thought bunching your days into clusters would help me with focus, but it’s not good for the business. I don’t think the batch thing isn’t working for me. A little bit on, a little bit off. I think MT on Rockstar. Wednesday I take a half-day. Thursday all start-up, etc. It’s just balance. It can’t be lopsided one way or the other. Just living with my girlfriend and now wife was easy, but having a kid in the evening is tricky. I create nice walls that don’t interfere. I don’t know that’s it. 25:55 – Chuck: It sounds like they are completely separate. What I am building affects my people at work. I find the balance hard, too. 26:21 – Nathan: It’s also good to have partners who support you. 27:19 – Chuck: Do you start looking for help with marketing, or...? 27:27 – Nathan: Yeah that’s hard, too. Maybe? Some people aren’t in the US and they might be more affordable. My friend found someone in Europe who is awesome and their fees are cheaper. Their cost of living is cheaper than the U.S. There are talented folks out there. 28:50 – Chuck: Yeah, I had help with a guy from Argentina. I am in Utah and he was an hour ahead. So scheduling was easy. 29:27 – Nathan: I have a hard time giving that up, too. It’s hard to hire someone through startup work. Startup work needs to be done quickly, etc. BUT when things solidify then get help. 30:28 – Chuck: They see it as risky proposition. It seems like the cost is getting better so the risk is there. 30:48 – Nathan: There is tons of stops and goes if I look back into my career. In the moment they feel like failures, but really it was just a stepping-stone. It was just a source for good ideas, and writings, and things to talk at podcasters about, etc. I just feel like short-term they feel risky but in the long-term you can really squeeze out value from it. I am having trouble, right now, finding customers, it could be risky, and there might not be a market for this. But I am learning about x, y, and z. Everything is a stepping-stone for me now. I don’t feel like it’s a failure anymore to me. 32:50 – Chuck: What are you doing now? 32:55 – Guest: Rockstar. 3 / 4 teenagers want to be YouTubers! That’s just crazy and that will keep going. I want to be apart of that. I am making programs so people can make their own videos. That’s what I am fooling around with now. 35:06 – Chuck: Yeah we will have a channel. There is album art. I’m working on it. I will start recording this week. 35:43 – Nathan: It is hard to get traction there. I don’t know why? Maybe video watchers need quicker transitions to keep interested. 36:12 – Chuck: I could supply some theories but I don’t know. I think with YouTube you actually have to watch it. Podcasts are gaining traction because you can go wherever with it. 36:51 – Nathan: Right now commuting can only be an auditory experience. When we get self-driving cars then videos will take off. 37:14 – Chuck: Picks! 37:19 – Advertisement! Links: Ruby Elixir Rails Highrise Rockstar Coders Nathan’s Medium Nathan’s Twitter Nathan’s LinkedIn Nathan’s YouTube Past Episode with Nathan – DevChat.TV Sponsors: Code Badges Get a Coder Job Cache Fly Picks: Charles Board Games: Bubble Talk Shadow Hunters Apples to Apples The Resistance Airbnb Zion National Park Nathan Writing is important. Masterclass! Book: Living with a Seal Book: Living with the Monks Sara Blakely – Spanx
Panel: Charles Max Wood Guest: David Bush This week on My Angular Story, Charles speaks with David Bush who is working with Bloomberg after twenty (plus!) years of being self-employed. Charles and David talk about his current projects he’s working on, plus his impressive background. Listen to them talk about JavaScript, C++, David’s books, and much more! In particular, we dive pretty deep on: 1:34 – Episode 203, which came out a few months ago. Check-out this past episode with David. “Where to Store Angular Configurations” with Dave Bush. 2:13 – Chuck: We are here to catch your story. Let people know who you are. 2:27 – David: I have been in programming for 30 years. Recently in the .NET space, and also in the Angular space for 4 years. 3:02 – Chuck: JavaScript has been around for 20 years. How did 3:12 – David: I need to back-up a little bit. It’s unique. I wasn’t raised around computers. 3:43 – Chuck: We are having a microphone issue. 3:55 – David: I didn’t have access to a computer back in the day. By the time I got to college I knew summer camps and maintenance. Senior year the PC started making a break-through. I had friends who made computers in their dorm room. That looked really interesting. I mean build by soldering, and pretty hardcore. I went to engineering school. Senior year, but I went to school on a large portion of grants. It was too late to change my major. I worked for Radio Shack in Chicago. They encouraged us to bring things home. I brought these computers home and played with them. I got into Pascal among other things. I couldn’t get Pascal to work in my brain. Next, I learned C. If I cannot make C work then I will give up and do something else with my life. C was mathematical and that’s my brain. My wife encouraged me to go back to school – I went to DePaul through their Career Change Path. 7:14 – Chuck. 7:18 – David: It was similar to a boot camp. 7:43 – David and Chuck. 7:52 – Chuck: When did you settle on JavaScript? 7:55 – David: Settle. When the Internet became publically available and wrote my website through Notepad. David continues this conversation. 9:30 – Chuck: Are you primarily a Dot Net developer? 9:43 – David: Primarily; also, C++. 10:55 – Chuck: How did you get into being self-employed? 11:07 – David: That was the plan all along. When you are self-employed you have multiple bosses! I got fired from my last job and working with agencies. So I count that time as being self-employed then, too. In 2000, I switched to LLC and more direct contracts. 12:45 – Chuck: How do you find contracts? 12:51 – David: Started working for Bloomberg and then later they converted me to being an employer. It was attractive, so I am not an employee. 13:24 – Chuck: What things are you proud of and what contributions have you made within the community? 13:29 – David: The writing in my blogs. 14:20 – Chuck: How do you get into blogging – and how is it successful? 14:44 – David: Keep writing. Sometimes I think: this article will be awesome and it will fall flat. But then the times I don’t think it’s good those are the articles that blowup. You can’t tell. The other thing is you need to have a thick skin. 15:29 – Chuck: True with podcasting as well. 15:36 – David: You will never make anyone happy. You learn to read the comment for the content and not the attitude behind it. Take the value out of the content that you can. The blog is just for me. I write so I have some place to point my colleagues to. It’s for me to retrieve information. The blog really is for me. 16:56 – Chuck: What are you working on now? 17:00 – David answers this question. 19:07 – David continues the talk. David: I posted my book through GitHub and took it off of Amazon. A long-term goal of mine is... I am interested in functional programming, too. 20:41 – Chuck: That’s cool. I am a huge fan of making things accessible of where they are at. The Vue portion of Angular why couldn’t we switch that out. 21:08 – David: Dependency injection doesn’t mix well l with React. For all of my code, I put all my logic in... 21:45 – Chuck: How can people find you? 21:53 – David: LinkedIn is my best one. Twitter, GitHub, etc. 23:09 – Chuck: LinkedIn. Facebook I am more discerning because I post pictures of my children there. 23:41 – Chuck: Awesome – if people want to get your book? 23:50 – David: I will send you those links. See links below. 24:07 – Chuck: Picks! Links: jQuery Angular JavaScript Vue Dave’s Notebook Dave’s Stack Overflow Dave’s Twitter Dave’s GitHub Dave’s YouTube Videos Get Started with Angular Past Episode with David Bush – DevChat TV C++ Sponsors: Get A Coder Job Code Badges Cache Fly Picks: David How you do anything is how you do everything – for example: dress a little better. Don’t beat yourself up when you mess up. Encrypt.me Charles Mojave Public Beta High Sierra If upgrading: Listen to Chuck’s tips to make the transition easier! GitHub: Home_Brew Developer Express VPN
Forget the Past Episode 61: As we close out the week allow me to share with you something that has been weighing in my heart. The Past is something we all need to think about at times but, sometimes we need to let the Past go..SPECIAL THANKS TO GABBIE SANTANA FOR THE USE OF THE SONG “TESTED” GABBIE YOUTUBE CHANNEL: GABBIE SANTANA Download, Subscribe, we are on all the following app platforms: Spreaker, ITunes, Podcast Player, IHeartRadio, tumblr & SoundCloud, PlayerFMSubscribe to our YouTube channel: AWS SANTANA https://youtu.be/mofuwf5iVC4Facebook Like Page: @HFLIB1978Email us: HaveFaithLig@gmail.com or at Twitter @HaveFaithlibI plan to fill your daily commute with inspiring, motivational stories. Every Monday-Friday I will have a new episode.
Stop suffering from recurrent gout attacks and relying on medications to keep your out of pain. Gout is very much preventable with lifestyle measures that I am going to outline on the show today. Make sure you tune in to learn more. Thank you for tuning in to another episode of "Your Nutrition Prescription". If you haven't left a review for the show, I would appreciate it if you could take the time to do so now. Past Episode on Water Schedule a Consultation Health IQ Supplements
Panel: Charles Max Wood Guest: Greg Wilson This week on My JavaScript Story, Charles speaks with Greg Wilson about his educational and programming background, a Canadian company (Rangle) who’s doing amazing things, and much more! Currently, Greg is the head of instructor training at DataCamp. In particular, we dive pretty deep on: Past Episode – 184 JavaScript The one unavoidable language. Company in Canada – Rangle. 1980’s when Greg got into super computing – everything was custom hardware. Want to be “rich, famous, and popular?” – check out 11:58! Rangle – what a great company! Emily Porta Rangle’s program, Bridge, aimed at women who are trying to get into the tech industry. How did you get into programming? Queen’s University – 1980. Started off as chemistry major. From Vancouver, Canada. Engineering degree. Got hired to do math with computers. Software. 1985 – working for a lab in Ottawa. Master’s degree in Artificial Intelligence (AI) – Scotland. Ph.D. Academia. Moved to Toronto. Ruby Greg is a Python user. Not familiar with Ruby. Violence and video games? Where is the data? If people had the habit of being skeptical, such as fake news and other things, that simply isn’t true. For example: are vaccines dangerous? Professor Marian Petre – Open University Book: “Software Designs Decoded: 66 Ways Experts Think” by Marian Petre Links: Digital Ocean, LLC FreshBooks Greg Wilson’s Third Bit Greg Wilson’s Twitter Greg Wilson’s GitHub Greg Wilson’s LinkedIn Greg Wilson’s “What We Actually Know About Software Development, and Why We Believe It’s True” JavaScript Past Episode – 184 Rangle Rangle’s Bridge Python Ruby Professor Marian Petre – Open University Book: “Software Designs Decoded: 66 Ways Experts Think” by Marian Petre CacheFly Charles Max Wood’s Twitter Sponsor: Digital Ocean, LLC Picks: Charles St. George, Utah Parade of Homes Upside Bose SoundLink Headphones ATR2100 Microphone Greg Rangle’s Bridge Inclusivity and diversity AOSABOOK.ORG Samson Meteor Microphone
Panel: Charles Max Wood Guest: Greg Wilson This week on My JavaScript Story, Charles speaks with Greg Wilson about his educational and programming background, a Canadian company (Rangle) who’s doing amazing things, and much more! Currently, Greg is the head of instructor training at DataCamp. In particular, we dive pretty deep on: Past Episode – 184 JavaScript The one unavoidable language. Company in Canada – Rangle. 1980’s when Greg got into super computing – everything was custom hardware. Want to be “rich, famous, and popular?” – check out 11:58! Rangle – what a great company! Emily Porta Rangle’s program, Bridge, aimed at women who are trying to get into the tech industry. How did you get into programming? Queen’s University – 1980. Started off as chemistry major. From Vancouver, Canada. Engineering degree. Got hired to do math with computers. Software. 1985 – working for a lab in Ottawa. Master’s degree in Artificial Intelligence (AI) – Scotland. Ph.D. Academia. Moved to Toronto. Ruby Greg is a Python user. Not familiar with Ruby. Violence and video games? Where is the data? If people had the habit of being skeptical, such as fake news and other things, that simply isn’t true. For example: are vaccines dangerous? Professor Marian Petre – Open University Book: “Software Designs Decoded: 66 Ways Experts Think” by Marian Petre Links: Digital Ocean, LLC FreshBooks Greg Wilson’s Third Bit Greg Wilson’s Twitter Greg Wilson’s GitHub Greg Wilson’s LinkedIn Greg Wilson’s “What We Actually Know About Software Development, and Why We Believe It’s True” JavaScript Past Episode – 184 Rangle Rangle’s Bridge Python Ruby Professor Marian Petre – Open University Book: “Software Designs Decoded: 66 Ways Experts Think” by Marian Petre CacheFly Charles Max Wood’s Twitter Sponsor: Digital Ocean, LLC Picks: Charles St. George, Utah Parade of Homes Upside Bose SoundLink Headphones ATR2100 Microphone Greg Rangle’s Bridge Inclusivity and diversity AOSABOOK.ORG Samson Meteor Microphone
Panel: Charles Max Wood Guest: Greg Wilson This week on My JavaScript Story, Charles speaks with Greg Wilson about his educational and programming background, a Canadian company (Rangle) who’s doing amazing things, and much more! Currently, Greg is the head of instructor training at DataCamp. In particular, we dive pretty deep on: Past Episode – 184 JavaScript The one unavoidable language. Company in Canada – Rangle. 1980’s when Greg got into super computing – everything was custom hardware. Want to be “rich, famous, and popular?” – check out 11:58! Rangle – what a great company! Emily Porta Rangle’s program, Bridge, aimed at women who are trying to get into the tech industry. How did you get into programming? Queen’s University – 1980. Started off as chemistry major. From Vancouver, Canada. Engineering degree. Got hired to do math with computers. Software. 1985 – working for a lab in Ottawa. Master’s degree in Artificial Intelligence (AI) – Scotland. Ph.D. Academia. Moved to Toronto. Ruby Greg is a Python user. Not familiar with Ruby. Violence and video games? Where is the data? If people had the habit of being skeptical, such as fake news and other things, that simply isn’t true. For example: are vaccines dangerous? Professor Marian Petre – Open University Book: “Software Designs Decoded: 66 Ways Experts Think” by Marian Petre Links: Digital Ocean, LLC FreshBooks Greg Wilson’s Third Bit Greg Wilson’s Twitter Greg Wilson’s GitHub Greg Wilson’s LinkedIn Greg Wilson’s “What We Actually Know About Software Development, and Why We Believe It’s True” JavaScript Past Episode – 184 Rangle Rangle’s Bridge Python Ruby Professor Marian Petre – Open University Book: “Software Designs Decoded: 66 Ways Experts Think” by Marian Petre CacheFly Charles Max Wood’s Twitter Sponsor: Digital Ocean, LLC Picks: Charles St. George, Utah Parade of Homes Upside Bose SoundLink Headphones ATR2100 Microphone Greg Rangle’s Bridge Inclusivity and diversity AOSABOOK.ORG Samson Meteor Microphone
HSWC Sermon - A Woman Haunted by the Past - Episode 18 - 2018 May 13th, 2018 HighStreet Worship Center is a church in Burlington, New Jersey In this Episode, Pastor Paul Spuler speaks on this Mother's Day 2018 on the origins of Mother's Day. For any additional Information, please come visit us at www.hswc.us Date: 05/13/2018
This week speaking in Pioneer Chapel is Steve Bowen ’68, with his talk titled: “When College Days are Past" Episode 15 - Original Speech Date: Dec. 8, 2016
Carpe diem, baby. In part 3 of our 4-part miniseries on Storytelling, we go deep on the role the present in shaping our stories. We explore the power of being able to bring new awareness to what you see right now using the wise words of the late writer David Foster Wallace (this is water!). We also learn about how being really clear about what’s real in your present is key not just to telling the Story of You but to feeling sane in the process. Sharon also dishes on some of her favorite shopping destinations around DC. Oh and there are some crazy prancing deer that show up which lead Sharon to record the this episode in two-parts. Seriously? Seriously! Enjoy! I so loved that the recording of this show kicked off with me being surprised by seeing a doe and 3 fawns prance around the shallow waters of Lake Wallenpaupack. The fawns were living it up – jumping here, there and everywhere seemingly enjoying the splashing and fun of it as much as my own little toddlers are on this Labor Day weekend trip. In this episode, I shared a few of my favorite excerpts of a marvelous speech that I witnessed in 2005 back at my alma mater Kenyon College. (Oh boy, did I love my 3 years living on this hill surrounded by cornfields.) The speech, This is Water, was given by the sadly now diseased author David Foster Wallace. The opening vignette of the speech still blows my mind a bit: There are these two young fish swimming along, and they happen to meet an older fish swimming the other way, who nods at them and says, “Morning, boys, how’s the water?” And the two young fish swim on for a bit, and then eventually one of them looks over at the other and goes, “What the hell is water?” … The immediate point of the fish story is that the most obvious, ubiquitous, important realities are often the ones that are the hardest to see and talk about. For those who are interested in seeing the full text of the speech, you can do so here. You can also purchase a beautiful little hardcover volume, which is a delight for any bibliophile, especially one in the middle of a life transition. It’s a book I find myself reaching for at not infrequent intervals. I wish I could personally transport you back to that sunny day in May in Gambier, Ohio to experience the speech yourself. In lieu of inventing time travel, I will share that you can listen the audio for yourself. The two key ideas I explore on the topic of The Present are: That it’s possible to see the water. We have the choice of consciousness and an ever expansive ability to grow the scope of what we see. This isn’t a yes or no – I did it or I didn’t do it – kind of choice. This is an active practice that we must choose (or not choose) every day. That cozying up to what’s real for you right now is critical not just to moving you to where you want to be, but to finding a sense of peace and sanity in the here and now. Curious to go deeper on the sufficiency (“I have enough”) vs. scarcity (“There’s not enough” or “I need more”) mindset that I reference in this show? Lynne Twist’s book Soul of Money is a great first stop. At the end of the podcast, I shared a beautiful, fully present experience I had had in the past week. Oddly – because I’m not much for shopping these days – this experience included my heading into and out of several spots in the U Street Corridor of NW, Washington, D.C. In case you are curious to check them out, they are: Fyubi Makeup and Brow Studio – I love this place. I head here every few months to have my brows shaped. The owner, Flami Garioni, is a true inspiration and I’m delighted to report that she’s agreed to be a guest on the podcast. Stay tuned! Good Wood – This shop has furnished a great deal of my living spaces over the years. Beautiful vintage/antique pieces. On this day I got some great end of summer steals, including a dress crafted by a design team that I adore, Osei Duro. Osei Duro is a small fashion house based in Los Angeles, CA and Accra, Ghana. Each piece is not only beautiful, but I always rest easy knowing that I can feel good about how it was created as well. Redeem – I popped into this clothing boutique and came across a pop up shop for Be Clean, which sells products for your body, mind, and home that are chemical-free and american-made. I’m obsessed with this lip stain that I got on this visit. It’s stellar and I can’t wait to learn more about Be Clean and it’s intriguing product lineup. I became interested in this wellness movement in make up and skin care when I stumbled across Follain in Boston on a visit there this summer. Sadly, I was pressed for time and so haven’t been able to explore there a ton…yet! (They also have a store in my native DC at Union Market.) Salt and Sundry – The final stop on my U Street crawl where I scored a sweet gift for my hubby and ran into an old friend and colleague who wonderfully and bizarrely thought I was in upstate NY running a training and development center and writing novels. Not yet, Paul. But maybe soon. =) Curious about the other episodes in this Storytelling Miniseries? Check out: Episode 9, The Introduction Episode 10, The Past Episode 12, The Future
The Genealogy Gems Podcast with Lisa Louise Cooke - Your Family History Show
Enjoy a blast from the past with episode #10 featuring Steve Morse and his One-Step website. Then delight in Darius Gray, a genealogist and storyteller who provides tips on sharing your family history stories with your family, (recorded at #RootsTech 2013) GEM: A Blast from the Past -Episode: # 10 Original Publish Date: May 01, 2007 GEM: Stephen Morse On August 21, 2007 I attended a seminar sponsored by a local genealogical society. The speaker was Stephen P. Morse who is very well-known in the genealogy community for his ingenious database search tools available to everyone free from his website: It's estimated that nearly 40% of Americans today have an ancestor who arrived in the United States at Ellis Island. I know I certainly do. Well, ship's passenger records are really exciting to find and to work with. If you have an ancestor who came through Ellis Island, you're going to want to make it a priority to find their record. Steve Morse, described to those of us at the seminar, the success and the frustrations that he encountered in trying to retrieve records from the ellisisland.org database. Steve experienced much of the same frustration that we often do. However, he just happens to be a world renowned engineer. He holds electrical engineering degrees from three universities, which he put to good use when he designed the Intel 8086, the predecessor to today's Pentium processor. And being an amateur genealogist he put those skills to good use by developing the One-Step Ellis Island website to make those records easier to find. Since that time the One-Step site has really been expanded to include new search capabilities and an array of color-coded search forms. Today Steve recommends use of his Gold Form that searches all New York passengers using enhanced search options. It uses the database at ellisisland.org but has its own search form and search engine that provides the enhanced features. When you use the Ellis Island website you'll most likely have to keep going back and revising and adding to your search to get what you need. But using the Steve's Gold Form website, all the search criteria are there on one page for you to choose from and use. You'll be using your search time much more effectively – and you know me, I want to get the most I can out of my research time. The One-Step website started out as an aid for finding these ship passengers in the Ellis Island database. Shortly afterwards it was expanded to help with searching in the 1930 census. Over the years it has continued to evolve and today includes over 100 web-based tools divided into twelve separate categories. They range from genealogical searches to astronomical calculations. He even has a last-minute bidding form you can use for e-bay! If you listened to Episode 3 of the Genealogy Gems Podcast on Ebay, then you know that I was excited to hear that! Please let other genealogists know about how much you enjoy the Genealogy Gems Podcast: If you're enjoying the show & have an itunes account, would you please do me a favor? Go to the and leave a positive review. Thanks! GEM: Interview with Genealogy Guru and Storyteller Darius Gray at RootsTech 2013 your genealogy group about how to use Google Earth for Genealogy! to see where Lisa will be speaking next in person
Hello JWTB Subscribers and Friends I AM VERY SORRY ABOUT PUTTING THE EPISODE OUT LATE I am a busy person anyways This week I am starting the Monthly JWTB Back from the Past Episode!! On the 3rd week of every month I will be posting an episode that as already day viewed JWTB. This week is Owen's Disco!!! From almost a year ago!! Hope you enjoy be sure to email me Josh Publisher Jamming with the band jammingwiththeband@gmail.com jammingwiththeband.com