Podcast appearances and mentions of Paul Irish

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Paul Irish

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Best podcasts about Paul Irish

Latest podcast episodes about Paul Irish

Hey History!
First meetings at Kamay Botany Bay

Hey History!

Play Episode Listen Later May 14, 2024 23:28


In 1770, Captain Cook got secret instructions to find the ‘Great South Land'.   His ship The Endeavour sailed into Kamay Botany Bay, the land of the Gweagal people.  How did the Gweagal people meet Captain Cook and his crew?  How did they communicate?  What happened over the eight days that Captain Cook stayed in Botany Bay?  Students from Marrickville West Primary School in Sydney tell us what they know about this encounter.  Ray Ingrey and Paul Irish, along with Captain Cook's own diary, tell the story of this first meeting, answer kids' questions, and reflect on how it went.  How to use this episode in your classroom Play all the way through (23 minutes) or play half the episode (11 minutes) and pause. We'll tell you when you've reached halfway, and recap the episode. Use the 4 page Learning Materials worksheet PDF with your class, and find more resources on our website. Voices  Ray Ingrey is a Dharawal person from the La Perouse Community. He is a Director of the Gujuga Foundation.  Paul Irish is a professional historian who has worked for the past twenty years with Aboriginal heritage and history.  Captain's Cook diary is voiced by Nick Hopwood.  Episode image  Gweagal spears reproduced with the permission of the Dharawal and La Perouse community, and Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology, University of Cambridge, formerly MAA D 1914.1-4 Transcript Download a transcript of First meetings at Kamay Botany Bay in Word Download a transcript of First meetings at Kamay Botany Bay as PDF Music Curiously and Curiously and Roundpine by Blue Dot Sessions. Transcript Download a transcript of First meetings at Kamay Botany Bay in Word Download a transcript of First meetings at Kamay Botany Bay as PDF Credits Hosted by Axel Clark.   Made on Gadigal Country by Anna Clark, Clare Wright, Jane Curtis and Britta Jorgensen. Executive producers are Clare Wright and Anna Clark.  Podcast concept, design and development by Anna Clark.   Indigenous Cultural Consultant is Katrina Thorpe.   Story editor is Kyla Slaven. Learning material by Nick Adeney, Victorian primary educator Curriculum advisors are Nicole Laauw, Department of Education NSW, and Rose Reid, Association of Independent Schools of NSW Thanks to all the students whose voices you hear in this episode and their schools and teachers: Sandy Bay Primary school, Marrickville West Primary School, Westbourne Grammar School, Preshil Primary School, La Perouse Primary School, and Yirrkala Bilingual School.    Hey History! is produced by the Australian Centre for Public History at UTS and UTS Impact Studios. Impact Studios' executive producer is Sarah Gilbert. 

Syntax - Tasty Web Development Treats

In this Hasty Treat, Scott and Wes talk about some Javascript one liners that speed up your coding experience in one line. Sponsor - Linode Whether you're working on a personal project or managing enterprise infrastructure, you deserve simple, affordable, and accessible cloud computing solutions that allow you to take your project to the next level. Simplify your cloud infrastructure with Linode's Linux virtual machines and develop, deploy, and scale your modern applications faster and easier. Get started on Linode today with a $100 in free credit for listeners of Syntax. You can find all the details at linode.com/syntax. Linode has 11 global data centers and provides 24/7/365 human support with no tiers or hand-offs regardless of your plan size. In addition to shared and dedicated compute instances, you can use your $100 in credit on S3-compatible object storage, Managed Kubernetes, and more. Visit linode.com/syntax and click on the “Create Free Account” button to get started. Sponsor - Sentry If you want to know what's happening with your code, track errors and monitor performance with Sentry. Sentry's Application Monitoring platform helps developers see performance issues, fix errors faster, and optimize their code health. Cut your time on error resolution from hours to minutes. It works with any language and integrates with dozens of other services. Syntax listeners new to Sentry can get two months for free by visiting Sentry.io and using the coupon code TASTYTREAT during sign up. Show Notes 00:24:12 Welcome 01:24:11 Sponsor: Linode 02:11:02 Sponsor: Sentry 03:54:18 Twitter ask for One Liners 04:24:05 Math random const getPsuedoID =() => Math.floor(Math.random() * 1e15); 05:43:09 Random color Paul Irish random color '#'+Math.floor(Math.random()*16777215).toString(16); 06:41:06 Console.log as an object. console.log({ dog, person }); VS Marketplace Link 08:29:17 Edit anything document.designMode = "on" 10:15:15 Temporal date export const today = Temporal.Now.plainDateISO(); 11:44:05 Console(log) const myFunc = (age) ⇒ console.log(age) || updateAge() 13:26:13 Remove a prop const { propToRemove, ...rest } = obj; 15:29:01 PHP style debugging preElement.innerText ={JSON.stringify(val, '', ' ')}` 16:31:00 First and Last Destructure var {0: first, length, [length - 1]: last} = [1,2,3]; 17:34:17 Speed up audio video document.querySelector('audio, video').playbackRate = 2 Overcast 19:44:15 Sleep function let sleep = (time = 0) => new Promise(r => setTimeout(r, time)) 20:26:00 If statements on one line If (!thing) return 'something' Tweet us your tasty treats Scott's Instagram LevelUpTutorials Instagram Wes' Instagram Wes' Twitter Wes' Facebook Scott's Twitter Make sure to include @SyntaxFM in your tweets

Working Draft » Podcast Feed
Revision 500: AMA!

Working Draft » Podcast Feed

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 27, 2021 132:48


Zu Folge 500 haben Schepp, Vanessa, Hans, Peter und Stefan Hörer:innen-Fragen eingesammelt und beantwortet! Schaunotizen AMA Gefragt nach unseren Lieblings-Folgen von Working Draft finden die Revisionen 100 (mit Paul Irish), 446 (zu PHP) und 468 (CSS in JS Super Throwdown Challenge) Erwähnung, ebenso die Live-Events zum SmashingMagazine Meetup #3 und von der beyond tellerrand. In […]

Drive
Paul Irish “Hidden In Plain View” – The Aboriginal People of Coastal Sydney

Drive

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 13, 2020 19:51


Australian author and historian Paul Irish speaks about his book “Hidden In Plain View”. The book tells the fascinating history of Sydney’s Aboriginal people. Explore Aboriginal Sydney with Paul and see it with new eyes.

Drive
Paul Irish “Hidden In Plain View” – The Aboriginal People of Coastal Sydney

Drive

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 13, 2020 19:51


Australian author and historian Paul Irish speaks about his book “Hidden In Plain View”. The book tells the fascinating history of Sydney’s Aboriginal people. Explore Aboriginal Sydney with Paul and see it with new eyes. [...]Read More... from Paul Irish “Hidden In Plain View” – The Aboriginal People of Coastal Sydney

GLAMcity
Paul Irish on Hidden in Plain View

GLAMcity

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 12, 2019 29:57


This episode we speak to Paul Irish, a Sydney based historian and archaeologist. Paul is the author of Hidden In Plain View: The Aboriginal people of coastal Sydney, which explores the history of Aboriginal people in Sydney, and their interactions with early colonists.If you have a GLAM idea for something that should be on the show- get in touch! GLAMcity@2ser.com

Ross F Podcast & Coffee
# 32 Paul | Irish Football Fan TV | The Love For Football, Chasing Your Passion

Ross F Podcast & Coffee

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 11, 2019 25:07


Conversations & Coffee: Episode # 32 Paul | Irish Football Fan TV In this episode of the Conversations & Coffee Podcast we are joined by Paul from Irish Football Fan TV. we spoke to Paul about how he started this platform and since then how successful it has became. Paul spoke to us about his past interviews and experiences travelling all across the country and overseas. Paul gave us an insight about what it was like interviewing such high profile football figures such as Rio Ferdinand, Gary Neville and much more. We wish Paul & Irish Football Fan TV huge success in the future. I hope this journey inspires you to do more, and try harder or pursue that passion that is in you. Because we all have it; whether it be for Arts, Music, Fitness or whatever it is that drives you. . _____________________________ the

Conversations & Coffee
# 32 Paul | Irish Football Fan TV | The Love For Football, Chasing Your Passion

Conversations & Coffee

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 11, 2019 25:07


Conversations & Coffee: Episode # 32 Paul | Irish Football Fan TV In this episode of the Conversations & Coffee Podcast we are joined by Paul from Irish Football Fan TV. we spoke to Paul about how he started this platform and since then how successful it has became. Paul spoke to us about his past interviews and experiences travelling all across the country and overseas. Paul gave us an insight about what it was like interviewing such high profile football figures such as Rio Ferdinand, Gary Neville and much more. We wish Paul & Irish Football Fan TV huge success in the future. I hope this journey inspires you to do more, and try harder or pursue that passion that is in you. Because we all have it; whether it be for Arts, Music, Fitness or whatever it is that drives you. . _____________________________ the

Ceritanya Developer Podcast
bonus[2] = Chrome Dev Summit

Ceritanya Developer Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 4, 2019 25:00


Di episode bonus ini saya akan bercerita tentang pengalaman pertama saya menghadiri Chrome Dev Summit 2018. Sehari sebelum acara Chrome Dev Summit, saya bertemu dengan Mas Ariya Hidayat yang memang domisili di San Jose, dekat dengan lokasi hotel dan venue Experts Summit. Dan saya diberi bocoran bahwa Chrome Dev Summititu serunya adalah bagian networking-nya karena untuk sesi talks-nya dapat dinikmati secara live-streaming via youtube. Dan itulah yang saya lakukan! Pastinya banyak developer kelas dunia berseliweran disana, sebagian besar karyawan Google sih, beberapa idola saya. Jadi sekalian berburu selfie atau sekedar say hi. Setelah nonton beberapa sesi, terutama sesi yang dibawakan oleh pak Paul Irish tentang performa dan tools lighthouse.. eh, ternyata pak Paul malah nongkrong jaga stand lighthouse. Ngga kebayang sih, orang sepenting beliau masih sempat ikutan jaga stand. Ya mumpung beliau idola saya sejak HTML5 Boilerplate, say hi dan foto bareng tentunya. Saat dulu diminta untuk membawakan materi tentang Progressive Web Apps di TechInAsia Product Development Conference 2017 saya banyak belajar topik tersebut dari online course ini. Instrukturnya Pete LePage yang sangat, sangat lucu dan membawakan materi dengan menarik. Jauh dari kata boring. Saya yakin beberapa teman-teman di Indonesia pernah bertemu atau melihat bapak Pete ini karena beliau pernah datang ke Indonesia untuk mengisi materi workshop PWA. Di hari kedua CDS sekilas saya melihat sosok tersebut. Awalnya saya lupa namanya sampai harus googling dulu supaya ingat namanya. Kemudian tentu, saya bertemu dengan Jeff Posnick yang menginterview saya dan meloloskan saya menjadi GDE. Menariknya, saya sempat bertemu pak Jeff ini dihari pertama, tapi saya ngga ngeh kalo itu dia. Beda banget tampilannya di video call dengan aslinya, jadi pangling saya. Ketika ngobrol dengan Mas Yohan saya bilang pengen ketemu pak Jeff, dia kaget. “Lah, yang kemaren sebelah gue i Lalu di hari kedua atau hari terakhir, saya bisa bertemu developer heroes seperti pak Ben Galbraith, pak Dion Almaer, ibu Elizabeth Sweeny, bang Addy Osmanidan om Alex Russell! Itu dia cerita singkatnya. Oh iya, agar tidak ketinggalan informasi terbaru dari podcast ini, silakan subscribe ke email newsletter disini.

Devchat.tv Master Feed
VoV031: “Panelists Contributing to Opensource: Do Good, Do Well” (Pt. 1)

Devchat.tv Master Feed

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 2, 2018 70:55


Panel: Divya Sasidharan Charles Max Wood Joe Eames Chris Fritz Erik Hanchett John Papa Special Guest: No Guest(s) In this episode, the panel talks amongst themselves on the topic: how does one contribute to opensource work? They discuss their various ways that they contribute, such as speaking at conferences, recording videos for YouTube, podcasting, among others. Check-out today’s episode to get some insight and inspiration of how YOU can contribute to YOUR community!  Show Topics: 1:31 – Erik: Contributing to opensource – and being a good resource for the community. Contributing and still making a living. If people want to make this more sustainable and doing work for the community. 2:26 – Chuck: What do you been by “contributing” – because people could think that “code contributions” would be it. 2:50 – Erik: Answering people’s questions in a chat, code contributions, or doing a podcast or doing a blog posts. I think there are a lot of ways to contribute. Really anything to make their lives and work easier. 3:33 – Panelist: Can we go around and ask the panel individually what THEY do? It could be as simple as mentoring someone at your work. I’m curious to see what the panelist members have done. Sometimes you can get paid for those contributions. 4:40 – Panelist: I am super scared to contribute source code. I really love organizing things: Meetups, conferences, etc. That’s my favorite sort of work. It is also terrifying, though, too. Educational content and organizing conferences are my favorite ways to contribute. 6:10 – Panelist: Why is that attractive for you? 6:22 – Panelist: That’s a good question. I’ve already started planning for the 2022 conference. It’s very physical – there are people that are present. Very direct interaction. My second favorite is sometimes I will teach at local boot camp, and the topic is about interviewing. There is interaction there, too. 8:32 – Panelist: Why do you think organizing conferences is useful? 8:46 – Panelist: Top way is that I will hear stories after the fact. “Oh I came to the conference, met this person, and now I have a new job that pays 30% more...thank you!” Stories like that are rewarding. It’s a ripple effect. A conference the main thing you are putting out there are videos (main product) going to YouTube. The people that are there, at the conference, are interacting people and they are making friends and making contacts. It inspires them to do better. John Papa just goes out there to talk into the hallway. You can talk to Chris Fritz in the hall. Make yourself available. You are the celebrities and people want to meet you. 12:20 – Panel talks about how desperate they are to talk to Chris. 12:36 – Panelist: Going to conferences and meeting other people. 13:08 – Panelist: Taking part of conferences in other ways. That’s something that you do Divya Sasidharan? 13:33 – Divya: It depends on your personality. You get to speak as a speaker, because you get visibility fast. I don’t think you don’t have to speak if you don’t want to speak. Anything within your community that is beneficial. Or the one-to-one interactions are great. Having a conversation with another person that cannot respond. It’s nice to give a speech because it’s a one-way conversation. I like the preparation part of it. The delivery is the nerves, afterwards is a high because it’s over with. I really like writing demos. For the demos I put in a lot of time into it. It gives me the space and time constraint to work on those demos. 16:10 – Do you like the preparation or the delivery? 16:20 – Preparation part that I do not like as much because it is nerve-wrecking, and then the anticipation to go up there on stage. 16:55 – Panelist: I am nervous until when it starts. Once I start talking – well that’s it! Can’t go back now. 17:26 – John: I have given a few talks at a conference. 17:39 – Panelist: Doing good and contributing. I knew John Papa when he was in Microsoft in 2000/2001. I read about it. Everyone knew about him. It would be so GREAT to meet John Papa, and now we are friends! We get to talk about personal stuff and I learn from him. 18:42 – Chris: I have had moments like that, too. Act like they are a normal person. 19:01 – Chuck: After I walk off the stage people want to talk to me afterwards. 19:24 – John: For my personal style, I learn about talking at conferences. I spend a lot of times building a demo. I don’t spend a lot of times with decks. I work on the code, the talk separately. I whip that up quickly, so I don’t This is the story I am going to tell – that’s what I tell myself before I do a talk at a conference. Afterwards, people come up to you years later – and they give you these awesome feedback comments. It’s a huge reward and very fulfilling. There was someone in this world you were able to impact. That’s why I like teaching. I watch the sessions on YouTube. I want to have deep conversations with people. You are missing out if you aren’t talking to people at the conference. 23:26 – Panelist: Yeah, I agree. I do a lot of YouTube videos. I write a blog for a few years on Node and such. Then I got into videos, and helping new developers. Videos on Vue.js. Like you, Joe, I try to combine the two. If I can help myself, and OTHERS, that is great. I promote my own courses, my own affiliate links. It’s really fun talking in front of a video camera. Talking through something complex and making it simple. 24:52 – Panelist: Creating videos vs. speaking at a conference. 25:02 – Panelist: My bucket list is to do my conferences. I want to start putting out proposals. Easiest thing for me is to make videos. I used to do 20 takes before I was happy, but now I do one take and that’s it. 256:00 – Sounds like lower effort. You don’t have to ask anyone for permission to do a YouTube video. 26:21 – Panelist: Even if you are a beginner, then you can probably help others, too. At first, you feel like you are talking to yourself. If anything else, you are learning and you are getting experience. The ruby ducky programming. Talking to something that cannot respond to you. 27:11 – Like when I write a... 27:29 – Check out duck punching, and Paul Irish. 28:00 – Digital Ocean 28:42 – The creativity of doing YouTube videos. Is that rewarding to be creative or the organization? What part do you like in the creation process? 29:23 – I think a blog you have text you can be funny you can make the text interesting. With videos it’s a whole new world of teaching. YouTubers teaching certain concepts.  There are other people that have awesome animations. If I wanted to talk about a topic and do something simple or talk outside – there are a ton of different ways 31:10 – Panelist: Some times I just want to go off and be creative; hats-off to you. 31:28 – Panelist: I have tried to do a course with time stamps and certain 32:00 – D: Do you have a process of how you want to create your videos – what is your process? 32:22 – Panelist: I have a list of topics that I want to talk about. Then when I record it then I have a cheat sheet and I just go. Other people do other things, though. Like sketches and story boarding. 33:16 – D: Fun, fun, function. He has poster boards that he holds up and stuff. 33:36 – Panelist: People who listen to this podcast might be interested in podcasting? 33:54 – Panelist: Anyone who runs a podcast, Chuck? 34:16 – Chuck: When I started podcasting – I initially had to edit and publish – but now I pay someone to do it. It is a lot more work than it is. All you have to do is record and have a decent microphone, and put it out there. 35:18 – Panelist: It’s a labor of love. You almost lost your house because at first it wasn’t profitable. 35:45 – Chuck: Yeah for the most part we have it figured it out. Even then, we have 12 shows on the network on DevChat TV. 3 more I want to start and I want to put those on YouTube. Some people want to be on a new show with me. We will see. 36:37 – Chuck: I have a lot of people who asked about Python. We all come together and talk about what we are doing and seeing. It’s the water cooler discussion that people can hear for themselves. The conversation that you wish you could have to talk to experts. 38:03 – Podcasts provide that if you cannot get that at a conference? 38:16 – Conference talks are a little bit more prepared. We can go deeper in a podcast interview, because we can bring them back. You can get as involved as you want. It’s also 38:53 – Chuck: Podcasting is good if there is good content and it’s regular. 39:09 – Panelist: What is GOOD content? 39:20 – Chuck: There are different things people want. Generally they want something like: Staying Current Staying on the Edge When you go into the content it’s the host(s). I identify the way this host says THIS a certain way or that person says something THAT Way. That is all community connection. We do give people an introduction to topics that they might not hear anywhere else. With a Podcast if something new comes up we can interview someone THIS week and publish next week. Always staying current. 41:36 – Chuck: A lot of things go into it and community connection and staying current. 41:52 – Panelist: How to get started in EACH of the things we talked about. How do we try to get paid for some of these things? So we can provide value to communities. Talking about money sometimes is taboo. 43:36 – Panelist: Those are full topics all in by themselves. 43:55 – Chuck: Sustainability – let’s talk about that. I think we can enter into that 44:15 – Panelist: How do you decide what’s for free and what you are charging? How do you decide? 44:55 – Joe: I think one thing to start off is the best way to operate – do it because you feel like it needs to be done. The money follows. The minute you start solving people’s problems, money will follow. It’s good to think about the money, but don’t be obsessed. React conference. The react team didn’t want to do the conference, but it’s got to happen. The money happened afterwards. The money follows. Look for opportunities. Think ahead and be the responsible one. 47:28 – Panelist: If you want to setup a Meetup then go to... 47:45 – Panelist: I bet if you went to a Meet up and said you want to help – they would love that. 47:59 – Panelist: Yes, do something that is valuable. But events you will have a budget. Is it important to have money afterwards or try to break even? 48:38 – Joe: I think having money after the conference is just fine. The #1 thing is that if you are passionate about the project then you will make decisions to get that project out there. I can’t spend 500+ hours on something that it won’t help me pay my mortgage. 51:29 – Panelist: It’s not greedy to want money. 51:46 – Panelist: It’s a very thankless job. Many people don’t know how much effort goes into a conference. It’s a pain. People like Joe will put in 90 hours a week to pull off a conference. It’s a very, very difficult job. 53:42 – Panelist: Question to Divya. 54:00 – Divya: I have only been speaking for about a year now. For me, I feel this need to speak at different events to get my name out there. You wan the visibility, access to community and other benefits. These things trump the speaker’s fee. As I get more experience then I will look for a speaker’s fee. This fee is a baseline to make sure that you are given value for your time and effort. Most conferences do pay for your hotel and transportation. 56:58 – Panelist: How much is worth it to me to go and speak? Even if at the lower level; but someone who is a luminary in the field (John Papa). But for me it’s worth it. I am willing to spend my own dime. 58:14 – Panelist: John? 58:37 – John: You learn the most when you listen. I am impressed on your perspectives. Yes, early on you’ve got to get your brand out there. It’s an honor to speak then I’m honored. Do I have time? Will my family be okay if I am gone 3-4 days? Is this something that will have an impact in some way? Will I make connections? Will I be able to help the community? There is nothing wrong with saying I need to be paid X for that speech. It’s all of the blood, sweat, and tears that go into it. 1:01:30 – Panelist chimes in. I run conferences we cannot even cover their travel costs. Other conferences we can cover their travel costs; and everything in-between. There is nothing wrong with that. 1:02:11 – You have to be financially sound. Many of us do workshops, too. 1:02:59 – How do you get paid for podcasting? 1:03:11 – Chuck: I do get crap for having ads in the podcast. Nobody knows how much editing goes into one episode. It takes money for hosting, and finding guests, and it costs through Zoom. The amount of time it takes to produce these 12 shows is time-consuming. If you want to get something sponsored. Go approach companies and see. Once you get larger 5-10,000 listeners then that’s when you can pay your car payment. It’s a labor of love at first. The moral is that you WANT to do what you are doing. 1:06:11 – Advertisement. Links: The First Vue.js Sprint – Summary Conferences You Shouldn’t Miss The Expanse Handling Authentication in Vue Using Vuex Sponsors: Kendo UI Digital Ocean Code Badge Cache Fly Picks: Chris Vue Mastery Expanse TV Show Divya Disenchantment Handling Authentication in Vue Using VueX Joe Keystone Habits Charles The Traveler’s Gift The Shack Money! John Framework Summit Angular Mix

Views on Vue
VoV031: “Panelists Contributing to Opensource: Do Good, Do Well” (Pt. 1)

Views on Vue

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 2, 2018 70:55


Panel: Divya Sasidharan Charles Max Wood Joe Eames Chris Fritz Erik Hanchett John Papa Special Guest: No Guest(s) In this episode, the panel talks amongst themselves on the topic: how does one contribute to opensource work? They discuss their various ways that they contribute, such as speaking at conferences, recording videos for YouTube, podcasting, among others. Check-out today’s episode to get some insight and inspiration of how YOU can contribute to YOUR community!  Show Topics: 1:31 – Erik: Contributing to opensource – and being a good resource for the community. Contributing and still making a living. If people want to make this more sustainable and doing work for the community. 2:26 – Chuck: What do you been by “contributing” – because people could think that “code contributions” would be it. 2:50 – Erik: Answering people’s questions in a chat, code contributions, or doing a podcast or doing a blog posts. I think there are a lot of ways to contribute. Really anything to make their lives and work easier. 3:33 – Panelist: Can we go around and ask the panel individually what THEY do? It could be as simple as mentoring someone at your work. I’m curious to see what the panelist members have done. Sometimes you can get paid for those contributions. 4:40 – Panelist: I am super scared to contribute source code. I really love organizing things: Meetups, conferences, etc. That’s my favorite sort of work. It is also terrifying, though, too. Educational content and organizing conferences are my favorite ways to contribute. 6:10 – Panelist: Why is that attractive for you? 6:22 – Panelist: That’s a good question. I’ve already started planning for the 2022 conference. It’s very physical – there are people that are present. Very direct interaction. My second favorite is sometimes I will teach at local boot camp, and the topic is about interviewing. There is interaction there, too. 8:32 – Panelist: Why do you think organizing conferences is useful? 8:46 – Panelist: Top way is that I will hear stories after the fact. “Oh I came to the conference, met this person, and now I have a new job that pays 30% more...thank you!” Stories like that are rewarding. It’s a ripple effect. A conference the main thing you are putting out there are videos (main product) going to YouTube. The people that are there, at the conference, are interacting people and they are making friends and making contacts. It inspires them to do better. John Papa just goes out there to talk into the hallway. You can talk to Chris Fritz in the hall. Make yourself available. You are the celebrities and people want to meet you. 12:20 – Panel talks about how desperate they are to talk to Chris. 12:36 – Panelist: Going to conferences and meeting other people. 13:08 – Panelist: Taking part of conferences in other ways. That’s something that you do Divya Sasidharan? 13:33 – Divya: It depends on your personality. You get to speak as a speaker, because you get visibility fast. I don’t think you don’t have to speak if you don’t want to speak. Anything within your community that is beneficial. Or the one-to-one interactions are great. Having a conversation with another person that cannot respond. It’s nice to give a speech because it’s a one-way conversation. I like the preparation part of it. The delivery is the nerves, afterwards is a high because it’s over with. I really like writing demos. For the demos I put in a lot of time into it. It gives me the space and time constraint to work on those demos. 16:10 – Do you like the preparation or the delivery? 16:20 – Preparation part that I do not like as much because it is nerve-wrecking, and then the anticipation to go up there on stage. 16:55 – Panelist: I am nervous until when it starts. Once I start talking – well that’s it! Can’t go back now. 17:26 – John: I have given a few talks at a conference. 17:39 – Panelist: Doing good and contributing. I knew John Papa when he was in Microsoft in 2000/2001. I read about it. Everyone knew about him. It would be so GREAT to meet John Papa, and now we are friends! We get to talk about personal stuff and I learn from him. 18:42 – Chris: I have had moments like that, too. Act like they are a normal person. 19:01 – Chuck: After I walk off the stage people want to talk to me afterwards. 19:24 – John: For my personal style, I learn about talking at conferences. I spend a lot of times building a demo. I don’t spend a lot of times with decks. I work on the code, the talk separately. I whip that up quickly, so I don’t This is the story I am going to tell – that’s what I tell myself before I do a talk at a conference. Afterwards, people come up to you years later – and they give you these awesome feedback comments. It’s a huge reward and very fulfilling. There was someone in this world you were able to impact. That’s why I like teaching. I watch the sessions on YouTube. I want to have deep conversations with people. You are missing out if you aren’t talking to people at the conference. 23:26 – Panelist: Yeah, I agree. I do a lot of YouTube videos. I write a blog for a few years on Node and such. Then I got into videos, and helping new developers. Videos on Vue.js. Like you, Joe, I try to combine the two. If I can help myself, and OTHERS, that is great. I promote my own courses, my own affiliate links. It’s really fun talking in front of a video camera. Talking through something complex and making it simple. 24:52 – Panelist: Creating videos vs. speaking at a conference. 25:02 – Panelist: My bucket list is to do my conferences. I want to start putting out proposals. Easiest thing for me is to make videos. I used to do 20 takes before I was happy, but now I do one take and that’s it. 256:00 – Sounds like lower effort. You don’t have to ask anyone for permission to do a YouTube video. 26:21 – Panelist: Even if you are a beginner, then you can probably help others, too. At first, you feel like you are talking to yourself. If anything else, you are learning and you are getting experience. The ruby ducky programming. Talking to something that cannot respond to you. 27:11 – Like when I write a... 27:29 – Check out duck punching, and Paul Irish. 28:00 – Digital Ocean 28:42 – The creativity of doing YouTube videos. Is that rewarding to be creative or the organization? What part do you like in the creation process? 29:23 – I think a blog you have text you can be funny you can make the text interesting. With videos it’s a whole new world of teaching. YouTubers teaching certain concepts.  There are other people that have awesome animations. If I wanted to talk about a topic and do something simple or talk outside – there are a ton of different ways 31:10 – Panelist: Some times I just want to go off and be creative; hats-off to you. 31:28 – Panelist: I have tried to do a course with time stamps and certain 32:00 – D: Do you have a process of how you want to create your videos – what is your process? 32:22 – Panelist: I have a list of topics that I want to talk about. Then when I record it then I have a cheat sheet and I just go. Other people do other things, though. Like sketches and story boarding. 33:16 – D: Fun, fun, function. He has poster boards that he holds up and stuff. 33:36 – Panelist: People who listen to this podcast might be interested in podcasting? 33:54 – Panelist: Anyone who runs a podcast, Chuck? 34:16 – Chuck: When I started podcasting – I initially had to edit and publish – but now I pay someone to do it. It is a lot more work than it is. All you have to do is record and have a decent microphone, and put it out there. 35:18 – Panelist: It’s a labor of love. You almost lost your house because at first it wasn’t profitable. 35:45 – Chuck: Yeah for the most part we have it figured it out. Even then, we have 12 shows on the network on DevChat TV. 3 more I want to start and I want to put those on YouTube. Some people want to be on a new show with me. We will see. 36:37 – Chuck: I have a lot of people who asked about Python. We all come together and talk about what we are doing and seeing. It’s the water cooler discussion that people can hear for themselves. The conversation that you wish you could have to talk to experts. 38:03 – Podcasts provide that if you cannot get that at a conference? 38:16 – Conference talks are a little bit more prepared. We can go deeper in a podcast interview, because we can bring them back. You can get as involved as you want. It’s also 38:53 – Chuck: Podcasting is good if there is good content and it’s regular. 39:09 – Panelist: What is GOOD content? 39:20 – Chuck: There are different things people want. Generally they want something like: Staying Current Staying on the Edge When you go into the content it’s the host(s). I identify the way this host says THIS a certain way or that person says something THAT Way. That is all community connection. We do give people an introduction to topics that they might not hear anywhere else. With a Podcast if something new comes up we can interview someone THIS week and publish next week. Always staying current. 41:36 – Chuck: A lot of things go into it and community connection and staying current. 41:52 – Panelist: How to get started in EACH of the things we talked about. How do we try to get paid for some of these things? So we can provide value to communities. Talking about money sometimes is taboo. 43:36 – Panelist: Those are full topics all in by themselves. 43:55 – Chuck: Sustainability – let’s talk about that. I think we can enter into that 44:15 – Panelist: How do you decide what’s for free and what you are charging? How do you decide? 44:55 – Joe: I think one thing to start off is the best way to operate – do it because you feel like it needs to be done. The money follows. The minute you start solving people’s problems, money will follow. It’s good to think about the money, but don’t be obsessed. React conference. The react team didn’t want to do the conference, but it’s got to happen. The money happened afterwards. The money follows. Look for opportunities. Think ahead and be the responsible one. 47:28 – Panelist: If you want to setup a Meetup then go to... 47:45 – Panelist: I bet if you went to a Meet up and said you want to help – they would love that. 47:59 – Panelist: Yes, do something that is valuable. But events you will have a budget. Is it important to have money afterwards or try to break even? 48:38 – Joe: I think having money after the conference is just fine. The #1 thing is that if you are passionate about the project then you will make decisions to get that project out there. I can’t spend 500+ hours on something that it won’t help me pay my mortgage. 51:29 – Panelist: It’s not greedy to want money. 51:46 – Panelist: It’s a very thankless job. Many people don’t know how much effort goes into a conference. It’s a pain. People like Joe will put in 90 hours a week to pull off a conference. It’s a very, very difficult job. 53:42 – Panelist: Question to Divya. 54:00 – Divya: I have only been speaking for about a year now. For me, I feel this need to speak at different events to get my name out there. You wan the visibility, access to community and other benefits. These things trump the speaker’s fee. As I get more experience then I will look for a speaker’s fee. This fee is a baseline to make sure that you are given value for your time and effort. Most conferences do pay for your hotel and transportation. 56:58 – Panelist: How much is worth it to me to go and speak? Even if at the lower level; but someone who is a luminary in the field (John Papa). But for me it’s worth it. I am willing to spend my own dime. 58:14 – Panelist: John? 58:37 – John: You learn the most when you listen. I am impressed on your perspectives. Yes, early on you’ve got to get your brand out there. It’s an honor to speak then I’m honored. Do I have time? Will my family be okay if I am gone 3-4 days? Is this something that will have an impact in some way? Will I make connections? Will I be able to help the community? There is nothing wrong with saying I need to be paid X for that speech. It’s all of the blood, sweat, and tears that go into it. 1:01:30 – Panelist chimes in. I run conferences we cannot even cover their travel costs. Other conferences we can cover their travel costs; and everything in-between. There is nothing wrong with that. 1:02:11 – You have to be financially sound. Many of us do workshops, too. 1:02:59 – How do you get paid for podcasting? 1:03:11 – Chuck: I do get crap for having ads in the podcast. Nobody knows how much editing goes into one episode. It takes money for hosting, and finding guests, and it costs through Zoom. The amount of time it takes to produce these 12 shows is time-consuming. If you want to get something sponsored. Go approach companies and see. Once you get larger 5-10,000 listeners then that’s when you can pay your car payment. It’s a labor of love at first. The moral is that you WANT to do what you are doing. 1:06:11 – Advertisement. Links: The First Vue.js Sprint – Summary Conferences You Shouldn’t Miss The Expanse Handling Authentication in Vue Using Vuex Sponsors: Kendo UI Digital Ocean Code Badge Cache Fly Picks: Chris Vue Mastery Expanse TV Show Divya Disenchantment Handling Authentication in Vue Using VueX Joe Keystone Habits Charles The Traveler’s Gift The Shack Money! John Framework Summit Angular Mix

Cross Cutting Concerns Podcast
Podcast 099 - Ed Charbeneau on Blazor

Cross Cutting Concerns Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 16, 2018 20:14


Ed Charbeneau is writing SPA with Blazor. This episode is sponsored by Smartsheet. Show Notes: Ed is the host of the Eat Sleep Code podcast, check it out! We even did a cross-over episode for the Stir Trek conference (episode 45) Daniel Roth is a Program Manager at Microsoft WebAssembly (aka Wasm) 1.0 has shipped to all the major browsers. Blazor Blazor on GitHub Mono is an open-source implementation of .NET. Steve Sanderson created the original pilot of Blazor (he also created Knockout.js) The term "evergreen browsers" has been around for some time. It may have been popularized by Paul Irish. asm.js is a WebAssembly polyfill NuGet (where you can find Markdig) Ed Charbeneau on Channel 9 Ed Charbeneau is on Twitter. Want to be on the next episode? You can! All you need is the willingness to talk about something technical. Music is by Joe Ferg, check out more music on JoeFerg.com!

HTTP 203
I/O chat with Paul Irish and Jason Miller

HTTP 203

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 11, 2018 19:14


What's new in DevTools.

Talking History
Hidden in Plain Sight

Talking History

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 27, 2018 54:55


Paul Irish & Tom Gara presented on 10 August 2017 'Hidden in Plain Sight'. Aboriginal settlements and camps were a feature of Australia’s capital cities – and, indeed, other major cities and towns – throughout most of the 19th and 20th centuries. They took many forms from transient camps to more or less permanent settlements, but they have one thing in common; they have been largely forgotten and their existence has been ignored – perhaps even deliberately erased – from local histories. Paul Irish, a Sydney researcher and author of the recently published book 'Hidden in Plain View', examined the origin, history and nature of settlements in Sydney and discussed the traditional affiliations and lifestyle of the residents of those camps. Tom Gara discussed the history of Aboriginal camps in Adelaide in the 19th and 20 centuries. Paul Irish is a Sydney historian and archaeologist with heritage consultancy MDCA. He was the recipient of the 2015 NSW History Fellowship and has recently published the book Hidden In Plain View: The Aboriginal People of Coastal Sydney (NewSouth Publishing). Tom Gara has worked for several decades as an historian specialising in Aboriginal history. He is currently employed as the senior research officer in the Native Title Section of the SA Crown Solicitor’s Office. His publications include several papers on the post-contact Aboriginal history of the Adelaide area. This free public lecture was part of the History Trust of South Australia's Talking History series. For upcoming events visit: history.sa.gov.au/whats-on/events/

From Cork with Love Adventure
Do you know your geography?

From Cork with Love Adventure

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 15, 2018 16:10


My friend Ray Renati complained about how poor Americans' knowledge of geography is. Paul O'Mahony needed a compass - so he recorded: Geography Tests - Jo, Ray, Paul • Irish & geography research • A 2nd geography question • The Irish were so clueless • Islands of the Caribbean- name them • More embarrassed • Final question • Geography test for Roger Overall • Geographical Research - cross-cultural (Note: there may be a part 2)

New Books Network
Paul Irish, “Hidden in Plain View: The Aboriginal People of Coastal Sydney” (NewSouth Publishing, 2017)

New Books Network

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 1, 2017 18:09


In his new book, Hidden in Plain View: The Aboriginal People of Coastal Sydney (NewSouth Publishing, 2017), historian Paul Irish debunks the myth that local Aboriginal people disappeared from Sydney within decades of the arrival of Europeans in 1788. Instead, Irish argues, Aboriginal Australians adapted and maintained a strong bond with the Sydney and tried to live on their own terms. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

New Books in Australian and New Zealand Studies
Paul Irish, “Hidden in Plain View: The Aboriginal People of Coastal Sydney” (NewSouth Publishing, 2017)

New Books in Australian and New Zealand Studies

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 1, 2017 17:57


In his new book, Hidden in Plain View: The Aboriginal People of Coastal Sydney (NewSouth Publishing, 2017), historian Paul Irish debunks the myth that local Aboriginal people disappeared from Sydney within decades of the arrival of Europeans in 1788. Instead, Irish argues, Aboriginal Australians adapted and maintained a strong bond with the Sydney and tried to live on their own terms. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

New Books in Archaeology
Paul Irish, “Hidden in Plain View: The Aboriginal People of Coastal Sydney” (NewSouth Publishing, 2017)

New Books in Archaeology

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 1, 2017 17:57


In his new book, Hidden in Plain View: The Aboriginal People of Coastal Sydney (NewSouth Publishing, 2017), historian Paul Irish debunks the myth that local Aboriginal people disappeared from Sydney within decades of the arrival of Europeans in 1788. Instead, Irish argues, Aboriginal Australians adapted and maintained a strong bond... Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

New Books in History
Paul Irish, “Hidden in Plain View: The Aboriginal People of Coastal Sydney” (NewSouth Publishing, 2017)

New Books in History

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 1, 2017 18:09


In his new book, Hidden in Plain View: The Aboriginal People of Coastal Sydney (NewSouth Publishing, 2017), historian Paul Irish debunks the myth that local Aboriginal people disappeared from Sydney within decades of the arrival of Europeans in 1788. Instead, Irish argues, Aboriginal Australians adapted and maintained a strong bond with the Sydney and tried to live on their own terms. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Laravel News Podcast
Laracon EU, incoming mail, and API resources

Laravel News Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 29, 2017 25:05


In this episode of Laravel News, Jake and Michael talk about Laracon EU, handling incoming email, bash aliases, and API resources

REACTIVE
79: I Really Enjoy Refactoring For Some Reason

REACTIVE

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 3, 2017 56:44


Henning is out on a conflict resolution retreat with Evil Henning this week. Rockbot tells us about how npm deals with security issues. She also went to the Node Summit. We are fangirling and fanboying over Paul Irish and Rebecca Murphy. Kahlil is refactoring something and iterated on Oddstream. npm is hiring again. npm adopted a wombat. What The Health is an interesting documentary.

JS Party
yayQuery Reunion!

JS Party

Play Episode Listen Later May 2, 2017 70:25 Transcription Available


In this special episode, it’s a yayQuery podcast reunion. Alex Sexton, Paul Irish, Rebecca Murphey, and Adam Sontag are back for a takeover episode here on JS Party where they catch up on the latest happenings in JavaScript, share JavaScript predictions, thoughts on TypeScript, React, PWAs, and more.

Changelog Master Feed
yayQuery Reunion! (JS Party #10)

Changelog Master Feed

Play Episode Listen Later May 2, 2017 70:25 Transcription Available


In this special episode, it’s a yayQuery podcast reunion. Alex Sexton, Paul Irish, Rebecca Murphey, and Adam Sontag are back for a takeover episode here on JS Party where they catch up on the latest happenings in JavaScript, share JavaScript predictions, thoughts on TypeScript, React, PWAs, and more.

Front End Happy Hour
Episode 015 - A flight of JavaScript frameworks

Front End Happy Hour

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 13, 2016 48:35


In the JavaScript community, we have a lot of amazing frameworks that help us in our day to day work. It can be at times overwhelming to understand what framework is the best one to use. In this episode, we discuss our thoughts and opinions on the various frameworks. Items mentioned in the episode: React, Angular, Ember, JQuery, Backbone, Marionette, Knockout, Troop, Prototype, YUI, Webpack, GWT, Brian Holt's React & ES6 workshop, Ghost, Frontend Masters, Egghead.io, Pluralsight, Linda.com, Ember Slack, Paul Irish, John Lindquist Panelists: Ryan Burgess - @burgessdryan Augustus Yuan - @augburto Derrick Showers - @derrickshowers Picks: Ryan Burgess - React in 7 minutes Ryan Burgess - Mackup Augustus Yuan - AMP Project Augustus Yuan - DoodlesTV Derrick Showers - Fidget cube Derrick Showers - Sully Derrick Showers - Alamo Drafthouse

WeCodeSign Podcast
9 - El estado actual de Angular y Polymer

WeCodeSign Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 30, 2016 53:57


Descripcion del programa Alejandro Arroyo Duque de Sngular nos cuenta su experiencia con Angular y Polymer en empresas tan destacadas como BBVA, Mapfre o Bankia. Hablamos de como le surge la idea de desarrollar videojuegos en JavaScript. Comentamos que son las Progressive Web Apps y las Instant Apps, dos nuevos conceptos que han surgido tras el último Google I/O y que tiene que ver en este ecosistema React y los Web Components. Si crees que puedes adivinar el futuro de la web, disfruta el presente. ¿Te lo vas a perder? Encuesta para pedir Feedback Posibles topics, entrevistados y duración del programa Preguntas rápidas: Alejandro Arroyo Duque Quién me ha inspirado: Steve Jobs Recomiéndanos un recurso: Addy Osmani Recomiéndanos un recurso: Paul Irish Recomiéndanos a un invitado: Ángel González de la Fuente ¿Qué tema te gustaría que tratásemos?: Gamificación Contacta con: Alejandro Arroyo Duque Web Twitter Github LinkedIn Links del programa Vide Game Army (Meetup) ide Game Army (YouTube) The myth of the “Real JavaScript Developer” CSS is easy via @cristinafsanz Angular 2 Ionic React JSX Progressive Web Apps Google opens Polymer for PWA Instant Apps Instant Articles AMP Web Components Recomendaciones de Nacho Awesome Polymer VIOLAINE & JÉRÉMY Contacta con nosotros Web de WeCodeSign Twitter de WeCodeSign eMail de WeCodeSign Web de Ignacio Villanueva Twitter de Ignacio Villanueva

Devchat.tv Master Feed
045 AiA Performance with Gleb Bahmutov

Devchat.tv Master Feed

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 4, 2015 54:52


Check out Ruby Remote Conf!   02:19 - Gleb Bahmutov Introduction Twitter GitHub Blog 03:21 - Perceptual Performance Paul Irish: "Delivering the goods" Fluent 2014 Keynote Gleb Bahmutov: Improving Angular web app performance example. [YouTube] Gleb Bahmutov: Profile and Optimize Your JavaScript Like a Ninja 07:09 - Getting User Feedback 12:15 - Profiling, Tools and Techniques code-snippets 16:45 - Performance Optimization The Pareto Principle Chrome DevTools 20:38 - Benchmarks 22:20 - Extracting Value from Profiling angular-vs-repeat 26:11 - Top Performance Problems Two-Way Binding Keeping Up-to-Date with Versions Minimize the Number of Expressions in Template Elements 28:44 - Performance Lessons Ng-webworker Dave Smith: Angular + React = Speed @ ng-conf 2015 34:30 - Public Opinion on Performance in Angular 40:57 - Drive-by Optimizations 42:26 - Angular 2 Performance Predictions Minko Gechev: Bringing Immutability to Angular @ ng-vegas 2015   More From Gleb: Fast Legoization Angular plus React equals Speed revisited JavaScript and AngularJs learning resources Picks The CodeNewbie Podcast (Chuck) Ruby Remote Conf (Chuck) Wait Wait... Don't Tell Me! (Chuck) Ask Me Another (Chuck) Ruby Rogues (Chuck) JavaScript Jabber (Chuck) The Freelancers’ Show (Chuck) The iPhreaks Show (Chuck) RailsClips (Chuck) Car Talk (Gleb) Colorsublime (Gleb)      

All Angular Podcasts by Devchat.tv
045 AiA Performance with Gleb Bahmutov

All Angular Podcasts by Devchat.tv

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 4, 2015 54:52


Check out Ruby Remote Conf!   02:19 - Gleb Bahmutov Introduction Twitter GitHub Blog 03:21 - Perceptual Performance Paul Irish: "Delivering the goods" Fluent 2014 Keynote Gleb Bahmutov: Improving Angular web app performance example. [YouTube] Gleb Bahmutov: Profile and Optimize Your JavaScript Like a Ninja 07:09 - Getting User Feedback 12:15 - Profiling, Tools and Techniques code-snippets 16:45 - Performance Optimization The Pareto Principle Chrome DevTools 20:38 - Benchmarks 22:20 - Extracting Value from Profiling angular-vs-repeat 26:11 - Top Performance Problems Two-Way Binding Keeping Up-to-Date with Versions Minimize the Number of Expressions in Template Elements 28:44 - Performance Lessons Ng-webworker Dave Smith: Angular + React = Speed @ ng-conf 2015 34:30 - Public Opinion on Performance in Angular 40:57 - Drive-by Optimizations 42:26 - Angular 2 Performance Predictions Minko Gechev: Bringing Immutability to Angular @ ng-vegas 2015   More From Gleb: Fast Legoization Angular plus React equals Speed revisited JavaScript and AngularJs learning resources Picks The CodeNewbie Podcast (Chuck) Ruby Remote Conf (Chuck) Wait Wait... Don't Tell Me! (Chuck) Ask Me Another (Chuck) Ruby Rogues (Chuck) JavaScript Jabber (Chuck) The Freelancers’ Show (Chuck) The iPhreaks Show (Chuck) RailsClips (Chuck) Car Talk (Gleb) Colorsublime (Gleb)      

Adventures in Angular
045 AiA Performance with Gleb Bahmutov

Adventures in Angular

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 4, 2015 54:52


Check out Ruby Remote Conf!   02:19 - Gleb Bahmutov Introduction Twitter GitHub Blog 03:21 - Perceptual Performance Paul Irish: "Delivering the goods" Fluent 2014 Keynote Gleb Bahmutov: Improving Angular web app performance example. [YouTube] Gleb Bahmutov: Profile and Optimize Your JavaScript Like a Ninja 07:09 - Getting User Feedback 12:15 - Profiling, Tools and Techniques code-snippets 16:45 - Performance Optimization The Pareto Principle Chrome DevTools 20:38 - Benchmarks 22:20 - Extracting Value from Profiling angular-vs-repeat 26:11 - Top Performance Problems Two-Way Binding Keeping Up-to-Date with Versions Minimize the Number of Expressions in Template Elements 28:44 - Performance Lessons Ng-webworker Dave Smith: Angular + React = Speed @ ng-conf 2015 34:30 - Public Opinion on Performance in Angular 40:57 - Drive-by Optimizations 42:26 - Angular 2 Performance Predictions Minko Gechev: Bringing Immutability to Angular @ ng-vegas 2015   More From Gleb: Fast Legoization Angular plus React equals Speed revisited JavaScript and AngularJs learning resources Picks The CodeNewbie Podcast (Chuck) Ruby Remote Conf (Chuck) Wait Wait... Don't Tell Me! (Chuck) Ask Me Another (Chuck) Ruby Rogues (Chuck) JavaScript Jabber (Chuck) The Freelancers’ Show (Chuck) The iPhreaks Show (Chuck) RailsClips (Chuck) Car Talk (Gleb) Colorsublime (Gleb)      

The New Stack Analysts
#44: It's an Unsettling Time for Browsers and the Web

The New Stack Analysts

Play Episode Listen Later May 21, 2015 50:48


Alex Williams convenes a spirited panel for some analysis of the state of the browser, and by extension the state of the Web, leading to a fair amount of speculation about the direction of things. Sometime co-host James Governor, co-founder of Red Monk, John Edgar, Strategic Initiative VP at DigitalOcean, and John Lilly, Partner at Greylock (and who was CEO of Mozilla from 2008 until 2010) add their perspectives, while Paul Irish, Project Manager at Google, finds himself in the middle of the ring as the voice of Team Chrome, the leading browser. Learn more at: https://thenewstack.io/tns-analysts-show-44-its-an-unsettling-time-for-browsers-and-the-web/

Devchat.tv Master Feed
038 AiA Performance with Ben Nadel

Devchat.tv Master Feed

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 16, 2015 56:32


01:35 - Katya Eames Introduction Twitter [YouTube] Katya Eames: How to Teach Angular to Your Kids 01:52 - Ben Nadel Introduction Twitter GitHub Blog Adventures in Angular Episode 029: Angular At Work with Ben Nadel InVision @InVisionApp 04:47 - Performance Basecamp Nested Pages 08:04 - User Experience 10:01 - Fixing Performance Problems as a Team Engineering Validation “Premature optimization is the root of all evil -- Donald Knuth” DOM Manipulation ngRepeat Screen Experience 23:28 - Finding Performance Issues Chrome Developer Tools Firefox Firebug Utilizing Chrome Dev Tools and Creating the Videos on Ben’s Blog “Imposter Syndrome” Addy Osmani Paul Irish 29:27 - “Just-in-Time View Construction” 34:43 - ngIf 37:16 - Angular 2 Opinions [YouTube] Dave Smith: Angular + React = Speed Unit Directional Data Flow & Functionality Victor Savkin: Change Detection in Angular 2 [Egghead.io] John Lindquist: Angular 2: Template Syntax ES5, ES6    AtScript, TypeScript traceur-compiler Babel 46:01 - Moving to 2.0 Picks BrowserSync (John) [Egghead.io] Angular 2: Template Syntax (Joe) Win an InVision App T-Shirt! (Lukas) Adventures in Angular (Lukas) WELCOME TO NIGHT VALE (Katya) Being and Time (Harper Perennial Modern Thought) by Martin Heidegger (Ward) Angular Grid (Ward) Steelheart (The Reckoners) by Brandon Sanderson (Chuck) StarTech.com MUHSMF2M 2m 4 Position TRRS Headset Extension Cable (Ben) Any Given Sunday (Ben) News ng-vegas: May 7th and 8th, 2015! AngularU in the Bay Area in June

moving news performance team blog adventures videos imposter syndrome bay area ward utilizing babel impostors t shirts github user experience basecamp firefox premature creativeasin brandon sanderson angular your kids functionality typescript any given sunday martin heidegger invision eggheads welcome to night vale firebug es6 donald knuth paul irish chrome devtools startech addy osmani es5 invisionapp change detection ben nadel chrome developer tools steelheart the reckoners angular episode angular u dom manipulation browsersync atscript ngif xqm0k6yg18s koshkaeames ah9plt77cjm teach angular savkin ben nadel introduction angular at work unit directional data flow ngrepeat
Adventures in Angular
038 AiA Performance with Ben Nadel

Adventures in Angular

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 16, 2015 56:32


01:35 - Katya Eames Introduction Twitter [YouTube] Katya Eames: How to Teach Angular to Your Kids 01:52 - Ben Nadel Introduction Twitter GitHub Blog Adventures in Angular Episode 029: Angular At Work with Ben Nadel InVision @InVisionApp 04:47 - Performance Basecamp Nested Pages 08:04 - User Experience 10:01 - Fixing Performance Problems as a Team Engineering Validation “Premature optimization is the root of all evil -- Donald Knuth” DOM Manipulation ngRepeat Screen Experience 23:28 - Finding Performance Issues Chrome Developer Tools Firefox Firebug Utilizing Chrome Dev Tools and Creating the Videos on Ben’s Blog “Imposter Syndrome” Addy Osmani Paul Irish 29:27 - “Just-in-Time View Construction” 34:43 - ngIf 37:16 - Angular 2 Opinions [YouTube] Dave Smith: Angular + React = Speed Unit Directional Data Flow & Functionality Victor Savkin: Change Detection in Angular 2 [Egghead.io] John Lindquist: Angular 2: Template Syntax ES5, ES6    AtScript, TypeScript traceur-compiler Babel 46:01 - Moving to 2.0 Picks BrowserSync (John) [Egghead.io] Angular 2: Template Syntax (Joe) Win an InVision App T-Shirt! (Lukas) Adventures in Angular (Lukas) WELCOME TO NIGHT VALE (Katya) Being and Time (Harper Perennial Modern Thought) by Martin Heidegger (Ward) Angular Grid (Ward) Steelheart (The Reckoners) by Brandon Sanderson (Chuck) StarTech.com MUHSMF2M 2m 4 Position TRRS Headset Extension Cable (Ben) Any Given Sunday (Ben) News ng-vegas: May 7th and 8th, 2015! AngularU in the Bay Area in June

moving news performance team blog adventures videos imposter syndrome bay area ward utilizing babel impostors t shirts github user experience basecamp firefox premature creativeasin brandon sanderson angular your kids functionality typescript any given sunday martin heidegger invision eggheads welcome to night vale firebug es6 donald knuth paul irish chrome devtools startech addy osmani es5 invisionapp change detection ben nadel chrome developer tools steelheart the reckoners angular episode angular u dom manipulation browsersync atscript ngif xqm0k6yg18s koshkaeames ah9plt77cjm teach angular savkin ben nadel introduction angular at work unit directional data flow ngrepeat
All Angular Podcasts by Devchat.tv
038 AiA Performance with Ben Nadel

All Angular Podcasts by Devchat.tv

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 16, 2015 56:32


01:35 - Katya Eames Introduction Twitter [YouTube] Katya Eames: How to Teach Angular to Your Kids 01:52 - Ben Nadel Introduction Twitter GitHub Blog Adventures in Angular Episode 029: Angular At Work with Ben Nadel InVision @InVisionApp 04:47 - Performance Basecamp Nested Pages 08:04 - User Experience 10:01 - Fixing Performance Problems as a Team Engineering Validation “Premature optimization is the root of all evil -- Donald Knuth” DOM Manipulation ngRepeat Screen Experience 23:28 - Finding Performance Issues Chrome Developer Tools Firefox Firebug Utilizing Chrome Dev Tools and Creating the Videos on Ben’s Blog “Imposter Syndrome” Addy Osmani Paul Irish 29:27 - “Just-in-Time View Construction” 34:43 - ngIf 37:16 - Angular 2 Opinions [YouTube] Dave Smith: Angular + React = Speed Unit Directional Data Flow & Functionality Victor Savkin: Change Detection in Angular 2 [Egghead.io] John Lindquist: Angular 2: Template Syntax ES5, ES6    AtScript, TypeScript traceur-compiler Babel 46:01 - Moving to 2.0 Picks BrowserSync (John) [Egghead.io] Angular 2: Template Syntax (Joe) Win an InVision App T-Shirt! (Lukas) Adventures in Angular (Lukas) WELCOME TO NIGHT VALE (Katya) Being and Time (Harper Perennial Modern Thought) by Martin Heidegger (Ward) Angular Grid (Ward) Steelheart (The Reckoners) by Brandon Sanderson (Chuck) StarTech.com MUHSMF2M 2m 4 Position TRRS Headset Extension Cable (Ben) Any Given Sunday (Ben) News ng-vegas: May 7th and 8th, 2015! AngularU in the Bay Area in June

moving news performance team blog adventures videos imposter syndrome bay area ward utilizing babel impostors t shirts github user experience basecamp firefox premature creativeasin brandon sanderson angular your kids functionality typescript any given sunday martin heidegger invision eggheads welcome to night vale firebug es6 donald knuth paul irish chrome devtools startech addy osmani es5 invisionapp change detection ben nadel chrome developer tools steelheart the reckoners angular episode angular u dom manipulation browsersync atscript ngif xqm0k6yg18s koshkaeames ah9plt77cjm teach angular savkin ben nadel introduction angular at work unit directional data flow ngrepeat
Campus Conversations
Adjudicating Sexual Assault on Campus

Campus Conversations

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 10, 2014 90:27


Given the national attention on Title IX investigations of colleges and universities accused of mishandling sexual assault cases, and legislation introduced to improve Campus Accountability and Safety with regard to sexual violence, this discussion considers the pros and cons of adjudicating sexual assaults on campus or in the criminal court system. Featured discussants are: Stephenie Chaudoir, assistant professor of psychology; Elizabeth Inman '15; Paul Irish, associate dean of students; Terry McLaughlin, a representative from the Worcester County District Attorney's office; and Emily Winn '17. Thomas M. Landy, director of the McFarland Center, moderates the discussion. Co-sponsored with Women's and Gender Studies.

The Breaking Development Podcast
The Mobile Web Is Dying And Needs Your Help By Paul Irish with Paul Irish

The Breaking Development Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 19, 2013 54:13


Developing for the mobile web is a wild west of exploring technique, quickly adopting browser standards, dealing with a legacy browser and tackling brand new browsers constantly. It's already a huge challenge to do it right, but still we're not taking it seriously enough. We're losing the battle and slowly losing the war. In this talk Paul will outline the current state of the mobile web as an application platform and what needs to happen to recover the platform we've invested our time and passion into.

The Breaking Development Podcast
Going Native - Difficulties in Building Web Apps with Mike Mahemoff with Mike Mahemoff

The Breaking Development Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 12, 2013 37:20


Jim discusses the difficulties in building web apps with Mike Mahemoff. We discuss some of the fundamental issues that pushed Player FM to release a native app over a web app as well as reiterate Paul Irish's point that the mobile web is in trouble. We spend some time discussing the state of the web in the shadow of both Google I/O and Apple's WWDC Keynote. Finally we discuss the issues around web app discoverability.

The Breaking Development Podcast
Blink and the Mobile Web is in Trouble with Paul Irish with Paul Irish

The Breaking Development Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 17, 2013 27:50


Paul and Jim discuss Google's transition from WebKit to Blink and then discuss why the mobile web is in trouble as well as what we can do to fix it.

The Web Ahead
51: Rendering Engines, Vendor Prefixes & Chrome Blink

The Web Ahead

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 11, 2013 78:19


Chrome recently announced they will replacing the webkit rendering engine with a new one, named Blink. What's up with that? To find out, Chris Wilson and Paul Irish join Jen Simmons to explain rendering engines and vendor prefixes.

Kevin's Thoughts and Comments
HTML5, JavaScript, Chrome and the Web Platform with Paul Irish

Kevin's Thoughts and Comments

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 26, 2013


I just finished this on my drive in this morning. Great discussion. Scott sits down with Chrome Developer Advocate Paul Irish to talk HTML5, JavaScript, Chrome and the Web. What Chrome Developer Tools features make web dev easier? While Webkit marches on, should we embrace or fear monoculture? Will modules make JavaScript apps easier to […]

Hanselminutes - Fresh Talk and Tech for Developers
HTML5, JavaScript, Chrome and the Web Platform with Paul Irish

Hanselminutes - Fresh Talk and Tech for Developers

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 21, 2013 35:23


Scott sits down with Chrome Developer Advocate Paul Irish to talk HTML5, JavaScript, Chrome and the Web. What Chrome Developer Tools features make web dev easier? While Webkit marches on, should we embrace or fear monoculture? Will modules make JavaScript apps easier to write? Where does Windows fit into the world of web development?

All JavaScript Podcasts by Devchat.tv
046 JSJ Staying Current

All JavaScript Podcasts by Devchat.tv

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 8, 2013 44:47


Panel Joe Eames (twitter github blog) Merrick Christensen (twitter github) AJ O’Neal (twitter github blog) Charles Max Wood (twitter github Teach Me To Code Rails Ramp Up) Discussion 03:19 - The Future of JavaScript and ES6 es-discuss -- Discussion of ECMAScript @esdiscuss six ES6 in node.js @brendaneich (Brendan Eich) @rwaldron (Rick Waldron) 10:18 - Getting News about JavaScript @derickbailey (Derick Bailey) @tjholowaychuk (TJ Holowaychuk aka Vision Media) @substack (James Halliday) @maxodgen (Max Ogden) Peter Cooper’s JavaScript Weekly Peter Cooper’s HTML5 Weekly @badass_js (Badass JavaScript) @seb_ly (Seb Lee-Delisle) 12:43 - Blogs Ben Alman James Burke LosTechies Alvin Ashcraft’s Morning Dew The Changelog reddit 17:02 - Filtering Readability Pocket (formerly Read It Later) Instapaper three.js UTOSC 2012 Machine Learning in JavaScript Jamison Dance VIDEO0023 23:21 - The Community Airbnb Meetups Addy Osmani: Articles for Developers Utah JS Utah Software Craftsmanship Group Ruby Rogues Parley 27:33 - Podcasts and Videos The Changelog YUI Theater (Yahoo Theater) Google Tech Talks Coursera InfoQ Talks to Help You Become A Better Front-End Developer in 2013: Addy Osmani How To Stay Up To Date on Web Technology: Chris Coyier RubyTapas The JavaScript Show Wide Teams Emacs Rocks! The Breakpoint with Paul Irish and Addy Osmani NodeUp 35:53 - More Blogs HTML5 Rocks A Minute With Brendan Eich John Resig 36:16 - Conferences CascadiaJS JSConf NodeConf Picks Sherlock Holmes Consulting Detective (Joe) Might & Magic Clash of Heroes (Joe) Diet Coke (Merrick) Noah Gundersen (Merrick) Anis Mojgani (Merrick) How to create a bookmarklet (and load jQuery anywhere)! (AJ) So I installed Ubuntu Linux... Now what? (AJ) Doctor Who Sonic Screwdriver of the 10th Doctor (Chuck) Powermat Power Dual 1200 Rechargeable Backup Battery (Chuck) Next Week Monolithic vs Modular Design w/ Tom Dale and James Halliday Transcript AJ: I ate a lot of pickle chips this morning. [Hosting and bandwidth provided by the Blue Box Group. Check them out at BlueBox.net.] [This episode is sponsored by Component One, makers of Wijmo. If you need stunning UI elements or awesome graphs and charts, then go to Wijmo.com and check them out.] CHUCK:  Hey everybody and welcome to Episode 46 of the JavaScript Jabber show. This week on our panel, we have Joe Eames. JOE: Howdy! CHUCK: We have Merrick Christensen. MERRICK: Hey guys! CHUCK: AJ O'Neal. AJ: I was informed that I'm not actually live. CHUCK: [laughs] Charles Max Wood from Devchat.tv. And real quick I just want to mention...I know that most of the people who listen to this show are JavaScript developers, but if you're interested in learning Ruby on Rails, then I'm going to be teaching a course. It starts in March and you basically get unlimited access to me during the course, access of forms. It's going to be online live training and then coding and Q&A. So if you're interested in that, go to railsrampup.com and sign up. AJ: Now what is "unlimited" mean when you talk about access to you? MERRICK: [scoffs] Come on, man! CHUCK: [laughs] If I'm awake, I'm probably available to answer to all your questions. MERRICK: Do panelists get discounts? CHUCK: If you're interested, I can probably work something out. JOE: Interesting. CHUCK: In fact, I'm offering a discount for anyone who listens to the podcast. If you go and sign up and you enter the coupon code podcast, it'll give you $200 off. MERRICK: Oh nice! Nice! AJ: Panelists only get $50 off, though. CHUCK: That's right. It's like my dad when he graduated from demo school, his cousin came up to him and said "So, do we get a family discount?" and he says "Yeah, I'll charge you 50% more". MERRICK: [laughs] No, kidding!

Devchat.tv Master Feed
046 JSJ Staying Current

Devchat.tv Master Feed

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 8, 2013 44:47


Panel Joe Eames (twitter github blog) Merrick Christensen (twitter github) AJ O’Neal (twitter github blog) Charles Max Wood (twitter github Teach Me To Code Rails Ramp Up) Discussion 03:19 - The Future of JavaScript and ES6 es-discuss -- Discussion of ECMAScript @esdiscuss six ES6 in node.js @brendaneich (Brendan Eich) @rwaldron (Rick Waldron) 10:18 - Getting News about JavaScript @derickbailey (Derick Bailey) @tjholowaychuk (TJ Holowaychuk aka Vision Media) @substack (James Halliday) @maxodgen (Max Ogden) Peter Cooper’s JavaScript Weekly Peter Cooper’s HTML5 Weekly @badass_js (Badass JavaScript) @seb_ly (Seb Lee-Delisle) 12:43 - Blogs Ben Alman James Burke LosTechies Alvin Ashcraft’s Morning Dew The Changelog reddit 17:02 - Filtering Readability Pocket (formerly Read It Later) Instapaper three.js UTOSC 2012 Machine Learning in JavaScript Jamison Dance VIDEO0023 23:21 - The Community Airbnb Meetups Addy Osmani: Articles for Developers Utah JS Utah Software Craftsmanship Group Ruby Rogues Parley 27:33 - Podcasts and Videos The Changelog YUI Theater (Yahoo Theater) Google Tech Talks Coursera InfoQ Talks to Help You Become A Better Front-End Developer in 2013: Addy Osmani How To Stay Up To Date on Web Technology: Chris Coyier RubyTapas The JavaScript Show Wide Teams Emacs Rocks! The Breakpoint with Paul Irish and Addy Osmani NodeUp 35:53 - More Blogs HTML5 Rocks A Minute With Brendan Eich John Resig 36:16 - Conferences CascadiaJS JSConf NodeConf Picks Sherlock Holmes Consulting Detective (Joe) Might & Magic Clash of Heroes (Joe) Diet Coke (Merrick) Noah Gundersen (Merrick) Anis Mojgani (Merrick) How to create a bookmarklet (and load jQuery anywhere)! (AJ) So I installed Ubuntu Linux... Now what? (AJ) Doctor Who Sonic Screwdriver of the 10th Doctor (Chuck) Powermat Power Dual 1200 Rechargeable Backup Battery (Chuck) Next Week Monolithic vs Modular Design w/ Tom Dale and James Halliday Transcript AJ: I ate a lot of pickle chips this morning. [Hosting and bandwidth provided by the Blue Box Group. Check them out at BlueBox.net.] [This episode is sponsored by Component One, makers of Wijmo. If you need stunning UI elements or awesome graphs and charts, then go to Wijmo.com and check them out.] CHUCK:  Hey everybody and welcome to Episode 46 of the JavaScript Jabber show. This week on our panel, we have Joe Eames. JOE: Howdy! CHUCK: We have Merrick Christensen. MERRICK: Hey guys! CHUCK: AJ O'Neal. AJ: I was informed that I'm not actually live. CHUCK: [laughs] Charles Max Wood from Devchat.tv. And real quick I just want to mention...I know that most of the people who listen to this show are JavaScript developers, but if you're interested in learning Ruby on Rails, then I'm going to be teaching a course. It starts in March and you basically get unlimited access to me during the course, access of forms. It's going to be online live training and then coding and Q&A. So if you're interested in that, go to railsrampup.com and sign up. AJ: Now what is "unlimited" mean when you talk about access to you? MERRICK: [scoffs] Come on, man! CHUCK: [laughs] If I'm awake, I'm probably available to answer to all your questions. MERRICK: Do panelists get discounts? CHUCK: If you're interested, I can probably work something out. JOE: Interesting. CHUCK: In fact, I'm offering a discount for anyone who listens to the podcast. If you go and sign up and you enter the coupon code podcast, it'll give you $200 off. MERRICK: Oh nice! Nice! AJ: Panelists only get $50 off, though. CHUCK: That's right. It's like my dad when he graduated from demo school, his cousin came up to him and said "So, do we get a family discount?" and he says "Yeah, I'll charge you 50% more". MERRICK: [laughs] No, kidding!

JavaScript Jabber
046 JSJ Staying Current

JavaScript Jabber

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 8, 2013 44:47


Panel Joe Eames (twitter github blog) Merrick Christensen (twitter github) AJ O’Neal (twitter github blog) Charles Max Wood (twitter github Teach Me To Code Rails Ramp Up) Discussion 03:19 - The Future of JavaScript and ES6 es-discuss -- Discussion of ECMAScript @esdiscuss six ES6 in node.js @brendaneich (Brendan Eich) @rwaldron (Rick Waldron) 10:18 - Getting News about JavaScript @derickbailey (Derick Bailey) @tjholowaychuk (TJ Holowaychuk aka Vision Media) @substack (James Halliday) @maxodgen (Max Ogden) Peter Cooper’s JavaScript Weekly Peter Cooper’s HTML5 Weekly @badass_js (Badass JavaScript) @seb_ly (Seb Lee-Delisle) 12:43 - Blogs Ben Alman James Burke LosTechies Alvin Ashcraft’s Morning Dew The Changelog reddit 17:02 - Filtering Readability Pocket (formerly Read It Later) Instapaper three.js UTOSC 2012 Machine Learning in JavaScript Jamison Dance VIDEO0023 23:21 - The Community Airbnb Meetups Addy Osmani: Articles for Developers Utah JS Utah Software Craftsmanship Group Ruby Rogues Parley 27:33 - Podcasts and Videos The Changelog YUI Theater (Yahoo Theater) Google Tech Talks Coursera InfoQ Talks to Help You Become A Better Front-End Developer in 2013: Addy Osmani How To Stay Up To Date on Web Technology: Chris Coyier RubyTapas The JavaScript Show Wide Teams Emacs Rocks! The Breakpoint with Paul Irish and Addy Osmani NodeUp 35:53 - More Blogs HTML5 Rocks A Minute With Brendan Eich John Resig 36:16 - Conferences CascadiaJS JSConf NodeConf Picks Sherlock Holmes Consulting Detective (Joe) Might & Magic Clash of Heroes (Joe) Diet Coke (Merrick) Noah Gundersen (Merrick) Anis Mojgani (Merrick) How to create a bookmarklet (and load jQuery anywhere)! (AJ) So I installed Ubuntu Linux... Now what? (AJ) Doctor Who Sonic Screwdriver of the 10th Doctor (Chuck) Powermat Power Dual 1200 Rechargeable Backup Battery (Chuck) Next Week Monolithic vs Modular Design w/ Tom Dale and James Halliday Transcript AJ: I ate a lot of pickle chips this morning. [Hosting and bandwidth provided by the Blue Box Group. Check them out at BlueBox.net.] [This episode is sponsored by Component One, makers of Wijmo. If you need stunning UI elements or awesome graphs and charts, then go to Wijmo.com and check them out.] CHUCK:  Hey everybody and welcome to Episode 46 of the JavaScript Jabber show. This week on our panel, we have Joe Eames. JOE: Howdy! CHUCK: We have Merrick Christensen. MERRICK: Hey guys! CHUCK: AJ O'Neal. AJ: I was informed that I'm not actually live. CHUCK: [laughs] Charles Max Wood from Devchat.tv. And real quick I just want to mention...I know that most of the people who listen to this show are JavaScript developers, but if you're interested in learning Ruby on Rails, then I'm going to be teaching a course. It starts in March and you basically get unlimited access to me during the course, access of forms. It's going to be online live training and then coding and Q&A. So if you're interested in that, go to railsrampup.com and sign up. AJ: Now what is "unlimited" mean when you talk about access to you? MERRICK: [scoffs] Come on, man! CHUCK: [laughs] If I'm awake, I'm probably available to answer to all your questions. MERRICK: Do panelists get discounts? CHUCK: If you're interested, I can probably work something out. JOE: Interesting. CHUCK: In fact, I'm offering a discount for anyone who listens to the podcast. If you go and sign up and you enter the coupon code podcast, it'll give you $200 off. MERRICK: Oh nice! Nice! AJ: Panelists only get $50 off, though. CHUCK: That's right. It's like my dad when he graduated from demo school, his cousin came up to him and said "So, do we get a family discount?" and he says "Yeah, I'll charge you 50% more". MERRICK: [laughs] No, kidding!

Working Draft » Podcast Feed
Revision 100: Anniversary with Paul Irish

Working Draft » Podcast Feed

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 12, 2012 56:36


Wow, can it really be the 100th episode already? Almost 2 years of weekly updates and discussions on web development – and we’re still here. And so no one less than Paul Irish joined Hans, Kahlil, Rodney and Schepp. While our podcast is a German thing, we’re thrilled how things turned out with recording an English […]

The Web Ahead
21: Process & Tools with Paul Irish

The Web Ahead

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 23, 2012 75:57


Front-end developer extraordinaire Paul Irish joins Jen Simmons to discuss work process, tools and best-practices.

All JavaScript Podcasts by Devchat.tv
006 JSJ Chrome Dev Tools with Paul Irish

All JavaScript Podcasts by Devchat.tv

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 24, 2012 51:26


The panelists discuss Chrome dev tools with Paul Irish.

Devchat.tv Master Feed
006 JSJ Chrome Dev Tools with Paul Irish

Devchat.tv Master Feed

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 24, 2012 51:26


The panelists discuss Chrome dev tools with Paul Irish.

JavaScript Jabber
006 JSJ Chrome Dev Tools with Paul Irish

JavaScript Jabber

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 24, 2012 51:26


The panelists discuss Chrome dev tools with Paul Irish.

Ploppcasts
Ploppcasts 012 - Operations, Monitoring und Post-Mortems mit Mathias Meyer (Travis CI)

Ploppcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 31, 2011 75:38


Mit guten Podcasts ist es wie mit gutem Wein: Was lange reift, ploppt am Ende doppelt so gut. Daher hoffen wir, dass sich das Warten auf diese Episode gelohnt hat - wir haben uns Mathias Meyer (http://twitter.com/roidrage) eingeladen und löchern ihn zu Infrastruktur und weiteren DevOps-Themen. Shownotes - Travis-CI https://travis-ci.org - Release It http://pragprog.com/book/mnee/release-it - Post-Mortem http://about.travis-ci.org/blog/2012-09-24-post-mortem-pull-request-unavailability - Chaos-Monkey - New Relic - Dev Ops Game Day https://github.com/cloudworkshop/devopsgameday/wiki - metriks https://github.com/eric/metriks - Ganglia http://ganglia.sourceforge.net - Graphite http://graphite.wikidot.com - Librato Metrics https://metrics.librato.com - Papertrail https://papertrailapp.com - Graylog2 http://graylog2.org - rsyslogd - Chef http://www.opscode.com/chef - Puppet http://puppetlabs.com/solutions/devops - Deploying Rails http://pragprog.com/book/cbdepra/deploying-rails - Scalability Rules http://www.amazon.de/Scalability-Rules-Principles-Scaling-Sites/dp/0321753887 - Scalable Internet Architectures http://www.amazon.de/Scalable-Internet-Architectures-Theo-Schlossnagle/dp/067232699X - Web Operations http://www.amazon.de/Web-Operations-Keeping-Data-Time/dp/1449377440 - Architecture of Open Source Applications - http://www.amazon.de/The-Architecture-Open-Source-Applications/dp/1257638017 - http://www.amazon.de/Architecture-Open-Source-Applications-Volume/dp/11055 Picks Mathias - OnePiece Onesies http://onepiece.com Dennis - Startups for the Rest of Us Podcast http://www.startupsfortherestofus.com - xScope http://xscopeapp.com/ - Highlight.js https://github.com/isagalaev/highlight.js Jan - iA Writer http://www.iawriter.com - “The Breakpoint” mit Paul Irish und Addy Osmani http://addyosmani.com/blog/the-breakpoint-episode1 Peter - http://www.smore.com/clippy-js - http://www.railsplugins.org - http://www.amazon.de/Silver-Hawk-Ladeger%C3%A4t-Batterien-Akkus/dp/B004FPMY5U

Working Draft » Podcast Feed
Revision 53: At the Smashing Magazine meetup!

Working Draft » Podcast Feed

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 30, 2011 49:53


Am 21.12.2011 fand das dritte Smashing Magazine Meetup statt, diesmal in Zusammenarbeit mit der Stuttgarter Google Technology Usergroup in… ähm ja Stuttgart. Zu Besuch waren Paul Irish von Google, dessen Bruder in Stuttgart lebt und den er besuchte, sowie Chris Heilmann von Mozilla, der auf Heimatbesuch war. Beide hielten je einen Vortrag: History of HTML5 […]

Working Draft » Podcast Feed
Revision 42: Zweiundvierzig!

Working Draft » Podcast Feed

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 8, 2011 0:01


Schaunotizen [00:00:44.000] You may soon be developing for 76 browsers. Paul Irish sagt eine Zukunft voraus, in der wir für 72 Internet Explorer entwickeln werden. Das liegt dann angeblich an der 10-Jahre-Support-Regelung von Microsoft. [00:19:39.000] Web technologies need an owner Joe Hewitt (Firebug-Entwickler und einst bei Facebook) meint, dass das Web doomed ist und wir […]

The Changelog
HTML5 Boilerplate and JavaScript

The Changelog

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 19, 2011 57:34


Adam and Wynn caught up with Paul Irish of Google’s Chrome developer relations team to talk about HTML5, JavaScript, CSS3, polyfills, and more.

Changelog Master Feed
HTML5 Boilerplate and JavaScript (The Changelog #67)

Changelog Master Feed

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 19, 2011 57:34


Adam and Wynn caught up with Paul Irish of Google’s Chrome developer relations team to talk about HTML5, JavaScript, CSS3, polyfills, and more.

Fronteers Videos
Paul Irish | The State of HTML5: Inaugural Address [Fronteers 2010]

Fronteers Videos

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 8, 2010 56:42


HTML5 and friends have been getting implemented in browsers at an impressively quick pace. But that leaves us as web developers wondering, "Great, but how am I supposed to build cross-browser applications with these features when I still have to support IE". More info at: https://fronteers.nl/congres/2010/sessions/the-state-of-html5-inaugural-address-paul-irish

Fronteers Videos
Paul Irish | The State of HTML5: Inaugural Address [Fronteers 2010]

Fronteers Videos

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 8, 2010 56:42


HTML5 and friends have been getting implemented in browsers at an impressively quick pace. But that leaves us as web developers wondering, "Great, but how am I supposed to build cross-browser applications with these features when I still have to support IE". More info at: https://fronteers.nl/congres/2010/sessions/the-state-of-html5-inaugural-address-paul-irish

yayQuery
Episode 0: Inaugural zero-indexed episode

yayQuery

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 6, 2009 34:33


In this episode of yayQuery, the team introduces themselves. Paul Irish, Rebecca Murphey, Adam J. Sontag, and Alex Sexton each offer their insight on a variety of topics. Paul Irish continues his anti-pattern knowledge-giving that he started at jQuery Con '09 and then goes on to publicly show his support for the end of Thickbox's life. Mobile front-end development is discussed in some detail, however any information passed on is nullified by the dancing at the end of the video.

yayQuery (audio only)
Episode 0: Inaugural zero-indexed episode

yayQuery (audio only)

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 6, 2009 34:33


In this episode of yayQuery, the team introduces themselves. Paul Irish, Rebecca Murphey, Adam J. Sontag, and Alex Sexton each offer their insight on a variety of topics. Paul Irish continues his anti-pattern knowledge-giving that he started at jQuery Con '09 and then goes on to publicly show his support for the end of Thickbox's life. Mobile front-end development is discussed in some detail, however any information passed on is nullified by the dancing at the end of the video.