Belgian CEO, software developer, author
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RJJ Software's Software Development Service This episode of The Modern .NET Show is supported, in part, by RJJ Software's Podcasting Services, whether your company is looking to elevate its UK operations or reshape its US strategy, we can provide tailored solutions that exceed expectations. Show Notes "I don't want to go into the details right now, but for the listeners, I will say that we are right in the middle of an explosive situation right now with some WordPress drama. WordPress and WP Engine are experiencing a lot of the fallout, kind of related to what we talked about in the last episode, where you start out with some good intentions and then you get in a situation where both sides kind of feel burned. And I'm not going to say that there's a perfect solution out there, But I do think that this frequent check-ins and asking, you know, "is this good for me and what needs to change for this to be good for my life?" is important."— Scott Harden Welcome friends to The Modern .NET Show; the premier .NET podcast, focusing entirely on the knowledge, tools, and frameworks that all .NET developers should have in their toolbox. We are the go-to podcast for .NET developers worldwide, and I am not your host: Jamie. I'm Delilah and I will be recording the intro for this episode because Jamie is suffering with a throat infection. In this episode, Scott Harden joined us to talk more about open-source, software licensing, and a little on some of the most recent NuGet package updates that .NET developers should know about. It's important to note, Scott and Jamie talked about the WordPress controversy which was still unfolding as we recorded (which on October 19th, 2024). They brought it up not to make fun of WordPress or to add fuel to the flames, but to talk about the fact that it highlighted Scott's point about checking in with yourself regularly, as an open-source developer, about whether you're getting what you want from your public repos. Whilst talking about open-source development and licensing, Scott brought up a question on our collective and individual digital legacies. "And this is kind of a startling topic to bring up, but what if you just disappeared tomorrow? Because people just leave because they have some medical situation or some life situation, or they die. And this happens. This happens in software. We'll talk about some specific examples in a minute. But, you know, if you disappear tomorrow, it's interesting to think about kind of what your digital legacy would be. And, you know, you could have left this thing behind in a way that it could have been used by everyone or anyone."— Scott Harden This episode has a lot of resources in the accompanying show notes, so if you're listening along in a podcast player make sure to head to the website (there'll be a link). That way you don't miss out on all the wonderful things Scott and Jamie talked about. As a form of trigger warning, at around the 58 minute mark Scott talks about how his own journey with cancer brought the idea of his digital legacy to the forefront for him. Both Scott and Jamie also talk about the late Abel Wang and Pieter Hintjens. And they talk about other examples of developers who are very public with their health struggles: Jeremy Likness and (previous guest of the show) Jon Smith, who suffer with Alzheimer's disease and dementia respectively. We understand completely if you want to skip this entire section. But we also feel that there are very important points raised whilst talking about these, less cheery, matters. This conversation makes up the bulk for the final 10-15 minutes of the episode. Aside from a teaser for the next part (which is all about NuGet packages), you won't miss anything .NET specific if you choose to skip this part. Anyway, without further ado, let's sit back, open up a terminal, type in `dotnet new podcast` and we'll dive into the core of Modern .NET. Supporting the Show If you find this episode useful in any way, please consider supporting the show by either leaving a review (check our review page for ways to do that), sharing the episode with a friend or colleague, buying the host a coffee, or considering becoming a Patron of the show. Full Show Notes The full show notes, including links to some of the things we discussed and a full transcription of this episode, can be found at: https://dotnetcore.show/season-7/open-source-and-our-digital-legacies-with-scott-harden/ Scott's Links: scottplot.net swharden.com GitHub LinkedIn Jamie's Public NuGet Packages: OwaspHeaders.Core ClackMiddleware OnionArch.Mvc Useful Links GNU Terry Pratchett OWASP Secure Headers Project GitHub sponsors Jamie on Coffee and Open Source with Isaac Levin The WordPress vs VP Engine drama, explained What we know about the xz Utils backdoor that almost infected the world .NET Foundation Finding Strength in Weakness by Jeremy Likness How to update a NuGet library once the author isn't available by Jon Smith Entity Framework Core with Jon Smith A protocol for dying Get Busy Living with Abel Wang ScottPlot.NET: GitHub NuGet scottplot.net The charts that Scott was referring to when talking about downloads per day, can be seen here Supporting the show: Leave a rating or review Buy the show a coffee Become a patron Getting in Touch: Via the contact page Joining the Discord Remember to rate and review the show on Apple Podcasts, Podchaser, or wherever you find your podcasts, this will help the show's audience grow. Or you can just share the show with a friend. And don't forget to reach out via our Contact page. We're very interested in your opinion of the show, so please get in touch. You can support the show by making a monthly donation on the show's Patreon page at: https://www.patreon.com/TheDotNetCorePodcast.
Fredrik och Kristoffer snackar med Lars Wikman om skrivande, nyttan med ritualer och variationer, att arrangera bra events, och ganska mycket mer. Varför finns det här mötet? Varför kan både promenader och skrivande vara så orimligt effektiva sätt att få ordning på tankarna eller bli på bättre humör? Varför borde fler tänka mer på effekter av GDPR? Varför är det så svårt att ta bort något? Varför har inte ditt företag en tarotlek? Som avslutning pratar vi om att skapa tid för saker man vill göra, och om det inte vore fint att vårt jobb hade lite mer cykler och om inte våra arbetsliv skulle må bra av lite fler cykler och variationer. Och kanske lite fler fåniga hattar? Avsnittet sponsras av Grebban - en e-handelsbyrå som söker fler utvecklare. Söker du och får ett jobb och nämner Kodsnack i din ansökan så får du en sign-on-bonus på 20000 kronor. Surfa in på grebban.com/kodsnack för mer information och ansökan! Ett stort tack till Cloudnet som sponsrar vår VPS! Har du kommentarer, frågor eller tips? Vi är @kodsnack, @tobiashieta, @oferlund, och @bjoreman på Twitter, har en sida på Facebook och epostas på info@kodsnack.se om du vill skriva längre. Vi läser allt som skickas. Gillar du Kodsnack får du hemskt gärna recensera oss i iTunes! Du kan också stödja podden genom att ge oss en kaffe (eller två!) på Ko-fi, eller handla något i vår butik. Länkar Lars Purple Scout Fredriks webbkamera är en föregångare till Logitech C920 Panasonic G100 Bokeh Fathead phantom Frilansforumet - Frilansare Sverige Grapefrukt-Martin Inventarier Fastmail Schrems II Patriot act Protonmail IKEAs ägarstruktur Scaleway Upcloud Glesys - har både sponsrat Kodsnack och samarbetat med Lars Hetzner - tysk VPS-leverantör Calendly Savycal Cal.com Shopify Lars på Youtube Lars Youtubekortisar CAP-teoremet - “den klassiska triangeln” Grebban - veckans sponsor söker utvecklare grebban.com/kodsnack - läs mer eller ansök Lars nyhetsbrev Indiehackers Jonathan Stark - skriver dagligt nyhetsbrev Ditching hourly - Jonathan Starks podd The business of authority Bartek Tarotlek Celtic cross (inte irish) är en tarotläggning Priya Parker The art of gathering Codebeam Stockholm Nerves Elixirconf Lissabon Daniel Stenberg linux.conf.au Land acknowledgement Pieter Hintjens - skrev Zeromq Zeromq Lars snack på Elixirconf Africa OTP - ungefär Erlangs standardbibliotek Sandby kafferosteri Refactoring UI Titlar Frifräs på eftermiddagen Jag är alltid i fokus Sonys autofokus Vad som är en inventarie IT-mupparna jag lär känna Frilans-outtakes En brevlåda i Luxemburg Att du hinner Mycket extracurriculars Blogga i olika former Att publicera har varit en stor aspiration Marginal och en ursäkt Nördtekniketisk kompass Vi har nog hört allt han har att säga Få tankarna i ordning Töntiga köttsäckar Om man vill vara lite gladare Företagets tarotlek En form att bearbeta saker inom Att dra ett kort Det ska vara lite fåniga hattar Känna skillnaden En liten kändis med oss Vissa konferenser poppar Ett designval Ett trängande behov av att nyansera En torr presentation av OTP Lite avsikt går ganska långt Slussa in folk i min sfär Tillgång till ett brett universum Jag känner igen din röst Jag behöver kolla filtret När tvättar du mellan tangenterna? Sprintstädning
How can a technology change the way humans interact with each other for a better world? How can a global community shape a technology in that way? And how can it be used to build more open and inclusive institutions which could move the needle for humanity? These are just some questions we’d like to tackle in this episode with Boris Mann and Lane Rettig. Both are highly active in the Ethereum community. If you think that Ethereum and it’s community is only thinking about cryptocurrency, you will be surprised. It’s much, much more than that. What exactly you may ask? Well let’s not wait any longer and dive into this episode, with me in Zurich I have Ozan Polat, Lane joining from New York and Boris in Vancouver. Relevant links // Shownotes: A list of EVM networks – ChainID.network // Nepal blockchain Network https://twitter.com/NepalBlockchain https://nepalblockchain.network/ // Lane Rettig - So you think you want to be a core developer – https://medium.com/crypto-nyc/so-you-think-you-want-to-be-a-core-developer-87cca2cb475e // Fellowship of Ethereum Magicians – https://ethereum-magicians.org/ https://twitter.com/EthMagicians // Ethereum Cat Herders – http://www.ethereumcatherders.com/ https://twitter.com/ethcatherders // no loss lottery – https://www.pooltogether.us/ // Pedro Gomez – https://twitter.com/pedrouid Walletconnect – https://walletconnect.org/ // Vyper smart contract language – https://vyper.readthedocs.io/ // burnerwallet – xdai.io //OMI open money initiative – https://www.openmoneyinitiative.org/ // Social Architecture: Building On-line Communities by Pieter Hintjens – https://hintjens.gitbooks.io/social-architecture/content/ // Humans of ethereum Podcast – https://humansofethereum.simplecast.com/ https://twitter.com/0xhumans
In this special edition memorial episode Adam interviews Pieter Hintjens. Pieter was a published author, an expert in distributed computing, a passionate supporter of free software and a very dear friend. To access comprehensive show notes, a complete guest bio and links mentioned in the episode take a look below or go to advancetechmedia.org and click the episode title.
Originally posted on June 23, 2016. Pieter Hintjens grew up writing software by himself. The act of writing code brought him great pleasure, but the isolated creative process disconnected him from the rest of the world. As his life progressed he became involved in open source communities, and he discovered a passion for human interaction. The post Death and Distributed Systems with Pieter Hintjens Holiday Repeat appeared first on Software Engineering Daily.
Pieter Hintjens grew up writing software by himself. The act of writing code brought him great pleasure, but the isolated creative process disconnected him from the rest of the world. As his life progressed he became involved in open source communities, and he discovered a passion for human interaction. Open source software succeeds or fails The post Death and Distributed Systems with Pieter Hintjens appeared first on Software Engineering Daily.
Pieter Hintjens grew up writing software by himself. The act of writing code brought him great pleasure, but the isolated creative process disconnected him from the rest of the world. As his life progressed he became involved in open source communities, and he discovered a passion for human interaction. Open source software succeeds or fails The post Death and Distributed Systems with Pieter Hintjens appeared first on Software Engineering Daily.
Since airing this show, Pieter passed away due to his battle with a metastasis of bile duct cancer in both lungs. But rather than listen to this show with sadness, listen with a happy heart and let’s celebrate Pieter’s life, and what he has accomplished. Thank you Pieter from the bottom of our hearts for your time on this show and for all that you are. You are loved by us my friend. This show will forever be a very special show for us. Pieter Hintjens is the creator of ZeroMQ and The Collective Code Construction Contract (C4), a writer of many books and protocols, as well as a developer with decades of building software and communities – he’s someone who’s given so much, and continues to give - even up until the time he is planning for his death.
Since airing this show, Pieter passed away due to his battle with a metastasis of bile duct cancer in both lungs. But rather than listen to this show with sadness, listen with a happy heart and let’s celebrate Pieter’s life, and what he has accomplished. Thank you Pieter from the bottom of our hearts for your time on this show and for all that you are. You are loved by us my friend. This show will forever be a very special show for us. Pieter Hintjens is the creator of ZeroMQ and The Collective Code Construction Contract (C4), a writer of many books and protocols, as well as a developer with decades of building software and communities – he’s someone who’s given so much, and continues to give - even up until the time he is planning for his death.
Stefan HASLINGER, Gregor PRIDUN, Denis KNAUF, Horst JENS, Johnny ZWENG, Jana und Sven GUCKES plaudern über freie Software und andere Nerd-Themen. Shownotes auf http://goo.gl/g82jgS oder http://biertaucher.at
Check out RailsClips on Kickstarter!! 02:23 - Justin Searls Introduction Twitter GitHub Blog Test Double @testdouble 03:02 - Justin Searls: The Social Coding Contract Open Source GitHub 04:58 - Transitive Dependences and Understanding Technical Debt RailsConf 2014 - Keynote: 10 Years! by Yehuda Katz The CAP Theorem 15:21 - Learning Outside Work Hours Tracking Time Micromanagement 21:21 - Understanding Transitive Dependencies (Cont’d) Gary Bernhardt 23:00 - Use Someone Else’s Framework or Write Your Own? “It Depends.” “A dirty code base is the sign of a well-monetized application.” - Matt Scantland 31:25 - When Does it Hurt to Use Tools You Don’t Completely Understand? Elasticsearch 34:14 - Leaving Code Behind 36:26 - Be a Responsible Open Source User Pull Request Sample Amount of Investment Community Management Communication cancan => cancancan GitX Graphical User Interface (GUI) rowanj GitX 47:22 - Reacting to Change Process and Ceremony Deming’s Common Cause and Special Cause Pair Programming [YouTube] Justin Searls and Aaron Patterson: The act of using vim, tenderly. 54:16 - Just Blog It! Picks Royalty Free Music by Kevin MacLeod (David) Rebif (David) Ruby Rogues Episode #188: Community Building with Pieter Hintjens (Jessica) Commercial Users of Functional Programming 2015: Call for Presentations (Jessica) James Clear: Forget About Setting Goals. Focus on This Instead. (Jessica) Screw motivation, what you need is discipline. (Jessica) A Wizard of Earthsea by Ursula K. Le Guin (Chuck) Conform: Exposing the Truth About Common Core and Public Education by Glenn Beck (Chuck) Sony NEX-5T Compact Interchangeable Lens Digital Camera (Justin) Justin’s Talk at RailsConf 2015: Boring Code (Sometimes a Controller is Just a Controller) (Justin) Alpine iLX-007 7-Inch In-Dash Receiver with Apple CarPlay (Justin)
Check out RailsClips on Kickstarter!! 02:23 - Justin Searls Introduction Twitter GitHub Blog Test Double @testdouble 03:02 - Justin Searls: The Social Coding Contract Open Source GitHub 04:58 - Transitive Dependences and Understanding Technical Debt RailsConf 2014 - Keynote: 10 Years! by Yehuda Katz The CAP Theorem 15:21 - Learning Outside Work Hours Tracking Time Micromanagement 21:21 - Understanding Transitive Dependencies (Cont’d) Gary Bernhardt 23:00 - Use Someone Else’s Framework or Write Your Own? “It Depends.” “A dirty code base is the sign of a well-monetized application.” - Matt Scantland 31:25 - When Does it Hurt to Use Tools You Don’t Completely Understand? Elasticsearch 34:14 - Leaving Code Behind 36:26 - Be a Responsible Open Source User Pull Request Sample Amount of Investment Community Management Communication cancan => cancancan GitX Graphical User Interface (GUI) rowanj GitX 47:22 - Reacting to Change Process and Ceremony Deming’s Common Cause and Special Cause Pair Programming [YouTube] Justin Searls and Aaron Patterson: The act of using vim, tenderly. 54:16 - Just Blog It! Picks Royalty Free Music by Kevin MacLeod (David) Rebif (David) Ruby Rogues Episode #188: Community Building with Pieter Hintjens (Jessica) Commercial Users of Functional Programming 2015: Call for Presentations (Jessica) James Clear: Forget About Setting Goals. Focus on This Instead. (Jessica) Screw motivation, what you need is discipline. (Jessica) A Wizard of Earthsea by Ursula K. Le Guin (Chuck) Conform: Exposing the Truth About Common Core and Public Education by Glenn Beck (Chuck) Sony NEX-5T Compact Interchangeable Lens Digital Camera (Justin) Justin’s Talk at RailsConf 2015: Boring Code (Sometimes a Controller is Just a Controller) (Justin) Alpine iLX-007 7-Inch In-Dash Receiver with Apple CarPlay (Justin) Special Guest: Justin Searls.
Jessica and Charles talk about community building with ZeroMQ's Pieter Hintjens.
Jessica and Charles talk about community building with ZeroMQ's Pieter Hintjens.
Jessica and Charles talk about community building with ZeroMQ's Pieter Hintjens.