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This week I'm joined by August Yadon. August is a game developer, a software engineer, and he's the creator behind the comical VR experience, Plunker. We chat about our experience with Ludum Dare 41 (Combine two incompatible game genres) - my first ever game jam, in which August and I teamed up to create Death Fog Dash. In the end, we come up with a rather unique game mechanic surrounding the theme "Transmission". You can play our LD41 submission, Death Fog Dash here . To keep up with August, follow him on Twitter @auggodoggo or on Instagram @auggodoggogames To submit your own game jam themes, visit JammersPodcast.com . Follow us on Twitter for updates on past and future guests @jammerspodcast . --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/jammerspodcast/message
The Rainbow Family Of Living Light with Barry "Plunker" Adams. A founding member of The Rainbow Family Barry, better know as Plunker, was part of the first Eugene Rennisance fair now known as the Oregon Country Fair. Not to mention Plunker was a judge at the original Cannabis Cup, receiving his name from a two-string instrument he plays at these various festivities. the Rainbow Family's full name is the Rainbow Family of Living Light, but you can just call them the Rainbow Family. Around since the early 1970s, this counter-culture group was heavily inspired by the famous 1969 Woodstock Festival as well as the anti-war, pro-love movements. Unlike many of the hippie groups that saturated the 1960s before fading away, the Rainbow Family lives on, holding annual Rainbow Gatherings.
Colin & Michael, the unselfish hosts of this podcast, teach listeners how to practice writing a novel! Later, they invite author Jo Jo Plunker (Chrissy Shackelford) onto the show to read from her book, Wake Me Up Before You Jo Jo.---PLEASE SUBSCRIBE/RATE US on Apple Podcasts, Google Play, Stitcher, or wherever you get your podcasts.LITERATI is a Forever Dog Podcast.http://foreverdogproductions.com/fdpn/podcasts/literati/
Panel: Charles Max Wood Special Guest: Rodric Haddad Rodric used to be part of the Angular team initially as an intern and eventually a contractor. He is a CTO at Coddict, a startup in Lebanon that manages high traffic in websites like magazines and newspapers. At the age of 14, he aimed to build a tool for a browser-based game he was playing. His brother and best friend who were both into programming helped him do it. Not only did they build tools just for themselves, they also shared it to the community. Rodric got into angular when he was helping his brother build websites. Since the start, he's always been the JavaScript fanatic. Angular soon came into popularity, and he started on it around 2011 or 2012. His purpose for using Angular was for his own projects and helping people in Plunker. He soon moved to Github issues sending per request to the framework. In the NG conference in 2014, he was invited by the Angular team to work with them as an intern. At the beginning, an intern comes for a few months usually around summer. In Rodric's case, he ended up as a contractor back when he was in Montreal, doing some remote work. A full-timer works as a part of the team in Google. In his experience as an intern in the Angular team, he had knowledge on the Angular 1 which made him do similar responsibilities with other team members, particularly working on the core. He realized that it's more about your knowledge than your employment status. He was with the Angular core team around 2014 or 2015. When he released a new version, it had a bug that brought down a lot of tests inside Google. It ended up like the name collision was a library used by many Google's Angular applications used internally. He, along with the team, figured out its naming inclusion and ended up making its property become unique. They added his favorite number to it which was 339. If you look at any element in Angular 1, you would find a property called NG 339. To hear the rest of My Angular Rodric Haddad, download and listen to the entire episode. Get in touch with Rodric and learn more about him by following him on Twitter and by liking his Facebook page Coddict. Don't forget to let Rodric know you heard about him on Devchat.tv's Adventures in Angular My Angular Story! Rodric on Twitter If you're short on time, here are the highlights of My Angular Story Rodric Haddad: How everything in programming started for Rodric? (1:09) How did he become a part of the Angular team as an intern? (1:40) Difference between an intern and full-time Google Engineer? (4:14) Life in the Angular Core Team? (5:30) What is Coddict? (17:28) Coddict's impact on the Lebanese marketplace? (20:31) How he got into Ionic? (24:14) Picks: Charles: Game of War and The 12 Week Year by Brian P. Moran and Michael Lennington
Panel: Charles Max Wood Special Guest: Rodric Haddad Rodric used to be part of the Angular team initially as an intern and eventually a contractor. He is a CTO at Coddict, a startup in Lebanon that manages high traffic in websites like magazines and newspapers. At the age of 14, he aimed to build a tool for a browser-based game he was playing. His brother and best friend who were both into programming helped him do it. Not only did they build tools just for themselves, they also shared it to the community. Rodric got into angular when he was helping his brother build websites. Since the start, he's always been the JavaScript fanatic. Angular soon came into popularity, and he started on it around 2011 or 2012. His purpose for using Angular was for his own projects and helping people in Plunker. He soon moved to Github issues sending per request to the framework. In the NG conference in 2014, he was invited by the Angular team to work with them as an intern. At the beginning, an intern comes for a few months usually around summer. In Rodric's case, he ended up as a contractor back when he was in Montreal, doing some remote work. A full-timer works as a part of the team in Google. In his experience as an intern in the Angular team, he had knowledge on the Angular 1 which made him do similar responsibilities with other team members, particularly working on the core. He realized that it's more about your knowledge than your employment status. He was with the Angular core team around 2014 or 2015. When he released a new version, it had a bug that brought down a lot of tests inside Google. It ended up like the name collision was a library used by many Google's Angular applications used internally. He, along with the team, figured out its naming inclusion and ended up making its property become unique. They added his favorite number to it which was 339. If you look at any element in Angular 1, you would find a property called NG 339. To hear the rest of My Angular Rodric Haddad, download and listen to the entire episode. Get in touch with Rodric and learn more about him by following him on Twitter and by liking his Facebook page Coddict. Don't forget to let Rodric know you heard about him on Devchat.tv's Adventures in Angular My Angular Story! Rodric on Twitter If you're short on time, here are the highlights of My Angular Story Rodric Haddad: How everything in programming started for Rodric? (1:09) How did he become a part of the Angular team as an intern? (1:40) Difference between an intern and full-time Google Engineer? (4:14) Life in the Angular Core Team? (5:30) What is Coddict? (17:28) Coddict's impact on the Lebanese marketplace? (20:31) How he got into Ionic? (24:14) Picks: Charles: Game of War and The 12 Week Year by Brian P. Moran and Michael Lennington
Panel: Charles Max Wood Special Guest: Rodric Haddad Rodric used to be part of the Angular team initially as an intern and eventually a contractor. He is a CTO at Coddict, a startup in Lebanon that manages high traffic in websites like magazines and newspapers. At the age of 14, he aimed to build a tool for a browser-based game he was playing. His brother and best friend who were both into programming helped him do it. Not only did they build tools just for themselves, they also shared it to the community. Rodric got into angular when he was helping his brother build websites. Since the start, he's always been the JavaScript fanatic. Angular soon came into popularity, and he started on it around 2011 or 2012. His purpose for using Angular was for his own projects and helping people in Plunker. He soon moved to Github issues sending per request to the framework. In the NG conference in 2014, he was invited by the Angular team to work with them as an intern. At the beginning, an intern comes for a few months usually around summer. In Rodric's case, he ended up as a contractor back when he was in Montreal, doing some remote work. A full-timer works as a part of the team in Google. In his experience as an intern in the Angular team, he had knowledge on the Angular 1 which made him do similar responsibilities with other team members, particularly working on the core. He realized that it's more about your knowledge than your employment status. He was with the Angular core team around 2014 or 2015. When he released a new version, it had a bug that brought down a lot of tests inside Google. It ended up like the name collision was a library used by many Google's Angular applications used internally. He, along with the team, figured out its naming inclusion and ended up making its property become unique. They added his favorite number to it which was 339. If you look at any element in Angular 1, you would find a property called NG 339. To hear the rest of My Angular Rodric Haddad, download and listen to the entire episode. Get in touch with Rodric and learn more about him by following him on Twitter and by liking his Facebook page Coddict. Don't forget to let Rodric know you heard about him on Devchat.tv's Adventures in Angular My Angular Story! Rodric on Twitter If you're short on time, here are the highlights of My Angular Story Rodric Haddad: How everything in programming started for Rodric? (1:09) How did he become a part of the Angular team as an intern? (1:40) Difference between an intern and full-time Google Engineer? (4:14) Life in the Angular Core Team? (5:30) What is Coddict? (17:28) Coddict's impact on the Lebanese marketplace? (20:31) How he got into Ionic? (24:14) Picks: Charles: Game of War and The 12 Week Year by Brian P. Moran and Michael Lennington
Panel: Charles Max Wood Shai Reznik Joe Eames Special Guests: Juri Strumpflohner In this episode, the JavaScript Jabber panelists discuss Angular libraries with Juri Strumpflohner. Juri is a software developer that previously has done a lot of full-stack development with JavaScript and Angular.js on the front-end and C# and Java on the back-end. More recently, he has begun to focus more on the front-end with Angular development as a freelance developer and has created training courses on Egghead. They talk about what an Angular library is, how you can create an Angular Package Format, and much more! In particular, we dive pretty deep on: Juri intro Create and publish Angular libs like a Pro- Juri’s NG-BE Talk What are Angular libraries? How do Angular libraries connect to Angular? Angular modules Open source as the main use case CSS and Sass Have to follow a certain series of steps to build your libraries WebPack Plunker Server-side rendering Tree shaking things that aren’t used on your library Angular Package Format Component library Secondary entry points How do you go about making a package like this? TypeScript Modules Now have built-in support of Angular libraries ng-packagr And much, much more! Links: JavaScript Angular.js Egghead Juri’s Egghead Courses Create and publish Angular libs like a Pro Angular modules Sass WebPack Plunker TypeScript Modules ng-packagr @juristr juristr.com Juri’s GitHub Sponsors Linode Angular Boot Camp FreshBooks Picks: Charles FullContact Set Appointments on Google Calendar Shai Competing Against Luck by Clayton M. Christensen His Blog Post Joe Unit Testing in Angular PluralSight Course Prettier Juri ngx-tabs-libdemo ngx-formly Juri’s Egghead Courses
Panel: Charles Max Wood Shai Reznik Joe Eames Special Guests: Juri Strumpflohner In this episode, the JavaScript Jabber panelists discuss Angular libraries with Juri Strumpflohner. Juri is a software developer that previously has done a lot of full-stack development with JavaScript and Angular.js on the front-end and C# and Java on the back-end. More recently, he has begun to focus more on the front-end with Angular development as a freelance developer and has created training courses on Egghead. They talk about what an Angular library is, how you can create an Angular Package Format, and much more! In particular, we dive pretty deep on: Juri intro Create and publish Angular libs like a Pro- Juri’s NG-BE Talk What are Angular libraries? How do Angular libraries connect to Angular? Angular modules Open source as the main use case CSS and Sass Have to follow a certain series of steps to build your libraries WebPack Plunker Server-side rendering Tree shaking things that aren’t used on your library Angular Package Format Component library Secondary entry points How do you go about making a package like this? TypeScript Modules Now have built-in support of Angular libraries ng-packagr And much, much more! Links: JavaScript Angular.js Egghead Juri’s Egghead Courses Create and publish Angular libs like a Pro Angular modules Sass WebPack Plunker TypeScript Modules ng-packagr @juristr juristr.com Juri’s GitHub Sponsors Linode Angular Boot Camp FreshBooks Picks: Charles FullContact Set Appointments on Google Calendar Shai Competing Against Luck by Clayton M. Christensen His Blog Post Joe Unit Testing in Angular PluralSight Course Prettier Juri ngx-tabs-libdemo ngx-formly Juri’s Egghead Courses
Panel: Charles Max Wood Shai Reznik Joe Eames Special Guests: Juri Strumpflohner In this episode, the JavaScript Jabber panelists discuss Angular libraries with Juri Strumpflohner. Juri is a software developer that previously has done a lot of full-stack development with JavaScript and Angular.js on the front-end and C# and Java on the back-end. More recently, he has begun to focus more on the front-end with Angular development as a freelance developer and has created training courses on Egghead. They talk about what an Angular library is, how you can create an Angular Package Format, and much more! In particular, we dive pretty deep on: Juri intro Create and publish Angular libs like a Pro- Juri’s NG-BE Talk What are Angular libraries? How do Angular libraries connect to Angular? Angular modules Open source as the main use case CSS and Sass Have to follow a certain series of steps to build your libraries WebPack Plunker Server-side rendering Tree shaking things that aren’t used on your library Angular Package Format Component library Secondary entry points How do you go about making a package like this? TypeScript Modules Now have built-in support of Angular libraries ng-packagr And much, much more! Links: JavaScript Angular.js Egghead Juri’s Egghead Courses Create and publish Angular libs like a Pro Angular modules Sass WebPack Plunker TypeScript Modules ng-packagr @juristr juristr.com Juri’s GitHub Sponsors Linode Angular Boot Camp FreshBooks Picks: Charles FullContact Set Appointments on Google Calendar Shai Competing Against Luck by Clayton M. Christensen His Blog Post Joe Unit Testing in Angular PluralSight Course Prettier Juri ngx-tabs-libdemo ngx-formly Juri’s Egghead Courses
Panel: Charles Max Wood Ward Bell Special Guests: Minko Gechev In this episode of Adventures in Angular, the panel talks to Minko Gechev about teaching Angular through Rhyme.com. Minko is currently working on Rhyme.com, which is a platform for hands-on demos and trainings. They touch on what Rhyme.com is, how it works, and the advantages to using it, especially in training. They also go into detail as to how an all sides workshop is set up and the versatility of using Rhyme with many different frameworks. In particular, we dive pretty deep on: Minko intro What are you most famous for in the Angular community? Angular.js style guide What is Rhyme? How does Rhyme work? All sides workshop advantages CodeSandbox.io Plunker Full on BM with virtual access Run things in your bowser eventually Working in the cloud Linux and Windows How workshops work Providing video recordings You can teach anything through Rhyme Have you used this in a coding environment? Angular CLI How are you using Angular to build this system? How much of the work is Angular pulling for you? TypeScript Architecture of Rhyme What is WebRTC? And much, much more! Links: Rhyme.com Angular.js style guide CodeSandbox.io Plunker Linux Windows Angular CLI TypeScript WebRTC Minko’s GitHub @MGechev Minko’s Blog Picks: Charles 12 Rules for Life by Jordan B. Peterson DevChat.tv YouTube Ward Building Microservices by Sam Newman Hit Refresh by Satya Nadella Minko ngConf
Panel: Charles Max Wood Ward Bell Special Guests: Minko Gechev In this episode of Adventures in Angular, the panel talks to Minko Gechev about teaching Angular through Rhyme.com. Minko is currently working on Rhyme.com, which is a platform for hands-on demos and trainings. They touch on what Rhyme.com is, how it works, and the advantages to using it, especially in training. They also go into detail as to how an all sides workshop is set up and the versatility of using Rhyme with many different frameworks. In particular, we dive pretty deep on: Minko intro What are you most famous for in the Angular community? Angular.js style guide What is Rhyme? How does Rhyme work? All sides workshop advantages CodeSandbox.io Plunker Full on BM with virtual access Run things in your bowser eventually Working in the cloud Linux and Windows How workshops work Providing video recordings You can teach anything through Rhyme Have you used this in a coding environment? Angular CLI How are you using Angular to build this system? How much of the work is Angular pulling for you? TypeScript Architecture of Rhyme What is WebRTC? And much, much more! Links: Rhyme.com Angular.js style guide CodeSandbox.io Plunker Linux Windows Angular CLI TypeScript WebRTC Minko’s GitHub @MGechev Minko’s Blog Picks: Charles 12 Rules for Life by Jordan B. Peterson DevChat.tv YouTube Ward Building Microservices by Sam Newman Hit Refresh by Satya Nadella Minko ngConf
Panel: Charles Max Wood Ward Bell Special Guests: Minko Gechev In this episode of Adventures in Angular, the panel talks to Minko Gechev about teaching Angular through Rhyme.com. Minko is currently working on Rhyme.com, which is a platform for hands-on demos and trainings. They touch on what Rhyme.com is, how it works, and the advantages to using it, especially in training. They also go into detail as to how an all sides workshop is set up and the versatility of using Rhyme with many different frameworks. In particular, we dive pretty deep on: Minko intro What are you most famous for in the Angular community? Angular.js style guide What is Rhyme? How does Rhyme work? All sides workshop advantages CodeSandbox.io Plunker Full on BM with virtual access Run things in your bowser eventually Working in the cloud Linux and Windows How workshops work Providing video recordings You can teach anything through Rhyme Have you used this in a coding environment? Angular CLI How are you using Angular to build this system? How much of the work is Angular pulling for you? TypeScript Architecture of Rhyme What is WebRTC? And much, much more! Links: Rhyme.com Angular.js style guide CodeSandbox.io Plunker Linux Windows Angular CLI TypeScript WebRTC Minko’s GitHub @MGechev Minko’s Blog Picks: Charles 12 Rules for Life by Jordan B. Peterson DevChat.tv YouTube Ward Building Microservices by Sam Newman Hit Refresh by Satya Nadella Minko ngConf
04:25 - Error message: “Unknown provider” 6:00 - Error message: “Can’t resolve all parameters” 10:00 - Mistakes from Angular’s framework 12:55 - Should I be using relative paths? 17:45 - Error Message: “Ng4 let customer end customer” 19:35 - Error Message: “Component dashboard component is not part of any module” 20:37 - Lazy loading and module errors 33:10 - NgModule for data collection errors 35:30 - No errors schema 39:30 - Syntax errors and decorators 45:25 - Forgetting to add a component to your template 49:30 - Rating Angular 2’s error messages 54:10 -Error Message: Object supporting error for NG4 56:30 - Mapping result errors 1:05:00 - Words for the wise Picks: Artisanal Pencil Sharpening (Ward) Bob and Ray, “Most Beautiful Face Contest Winner” (Ward) Plunker (John) Jamba Juice’s Peanut Butter Chocolate Love Shake (Joe) Smashburger (Joe) Tesla Solar (Joe) Covert game (Joe) Doctor (Lukas) Legoland Discovery Center (Lukas) One Stop Nutrition shakes (Lukas) Bike Prank video (Lukas) Born to Win seminar by Zig Ziglar on Audible (Charles) MindMup2 (Charles) Devchat Conferences Devchat Webinars NgConf 2017
04:25 - Error message: “Unknown provider” 6:00 - Error message: “Can’t resolve all parameters” 10:00 - Mistakes from Angular’s framework 12:55 - Should I be using relative paths? 17:45 - Error Message: “Ng4 let customer end customer” 19:35 - Error Message: “Component dashboard component is not part of any module” 20:37 - Lazy loading and module errors 33:10 - NgModule for data collection errors 35:30 - No errors schema 39:30 - Syntax errors and decorators 45:25 - Forgetting to add a component to your template 49:30 - Rating Angular 2’s error messages 54:10 -Error Message: Object supporting error for NG4 56:30 - Mapping result errors 1:05:00 - Words for the wise Picks: Artisanal Pencil Sharpening (Ward) Bob and Ray, “Most Beautiful Face Contest Winner” (Ward) Plunker (John) Jamba Juice’s Peanut Butter Chocolate Love Shake (Joe) Smashburger (Joe) Tesla Solar (Joe) Covert game (Joe) Doctor (Lukas) Legoland Discovery Center (Lukas) One Stop Nutrition shakes (Lukas) Bike Prank video (Lukas) Born to Win seminar by Zig Ziglar on Audible (Charles) MindMup2 (Charles) Devchat Conferences Devchat Webinars NgConf 2017
04:25 - Error message: “Unknown provider” 6:00 - Error message: “Can’t resolve all parameters” 10:00 - Mistakes from Angular’s framework 12:55 - Should I be using relative paths? 17:45 - Error Message: “Ng4 let customer end customer” 19:35 - Error Message: “Component dashboard component is not part of any module” 20:37 - Lazy loading and module errors 33:10 - NgModule for data collection errors 35:30 - No errors schema 39:30 - Syntax errors and decorators 45:25 - Forgetting to add a component to your template 49:30 - Rating Angular 2’s error messages 54:10 -Error Message: Object supporting error for NG4 56:30 - Mapping result errors 1:05:00 - Words for the wise Picks: Artisanal Pencil Sharpening (Ward) Bob and Ray, “Most Beautiful Face Contest Winner” (Ward) Plunker (John) Jamba Juice’s Peanut Butter Chocolate Love Shake (Joe) Smashburger (Joe) Tesla Solar (Joe) Covert game (Joe) Doctor (Lukas) Legoland Discovery Center (Lukas) One Stop Nutrition shakes (Lukas) Bike Prank video (Lukas) Born to Win seminar by Zig Ziglar on Audible (Charles) MindMup2 (Charles) Devchat Conferences Devchat Webinars NgConf 2017
02:59 - Rob Wormald Introduction Twitter GitHub 03:46 - Stephen Fluin Introduction Twitter GitHub Blog 04:28 - Improvements Coming for Routing in Angular 08:22 - Syntax 11:10 - Preloading Data 13:59 - Brian Ford’s Router => The New Router Lifecycle Hooks canActivate canDeactivate 17:23 - Does the new router do these things? Can I click on a link and tell it to go to a route? Can I pass parameters; multiple parameters? Can I add multiple routes to multiple different regions on the page? If I’m a child component, can I reach up and learn anything about my parent, and if so, what can I do? Will, with this router, do I have the option of Lazy loading the routes or loading them all up front? Can I route to two different states on the same page? 23:28 - Auxiliary Route 24:51 - Offline Compilation CSS (Cascading Style Sheets) 29:38 - Bundling; Development Experience 32:46 - Relative Pass 41:25 - Treeshaking 43:21 - What’s left before Angular goes live? Picks rollup.js (Rob) Google Play’s Family Plan (Jules) Plunker (Stephen) Ford and Chevrolet (John) Adobe Lightroom (John) X-Men Apocalypse (Joe) P.I. (Joe)
02:59 - Rob Wormald Introduction Twitter GitHub 03:46 - Stephen Fluin Introduction Twitter GitHub Blog 04:28 - Improvements Coming for Routing in Angular 08:22 - Syntax 11:10 - Preloading Data 13:59 - Brian Ford’s Router => The New Router Lifecycle Hooks canActivate canDeactivate 17:23 - Does the new router do these things? Can I click on a link and tell it to go to a route? Can I pass parameters; multiple parameters? Can I add multiple routes to multiple different regions on the page? If I’m a child component, can I reach up and learn anything about my parent, and if so, what can I do? Will, with this router, do I have the option of Lazy loading the routes or loading them all up front? Can I route to two different states on the same page? 23:28 - Auxiliary Route 24:51 - Offline Compilation CSS (Cascading Style Sheets) 29:38 - Bundling; Development Experience 32:46 - Relative Pass 41:25 - Treeshaking 43:21 - What’s left before Angular goes live? Picks rollup.js (Rob) Google Play’s Family Plan (Jules) Plunker (Stephen) Ford and Chevrolet (John) Adobe Lightroom (John) X-Men Apocalypse (Joe) P.I. (Joe)
02:59 - Rob Wormald Introduction Twitter GitHub 03:46 - Stephen Fluin Introduction Twitter GitHub Blog 04:28 - Improvements Coming for Routing in Angular 08:22 - Syntax 11:10 - Preloading Data 13:59 - Brian Ford’s Router => The New Router Lifecycle Hooks canActivate canDeactivate 17:23 - Does the new router do these things? Can I click on a link and tell it to go to a route? Can I pass parameters; multiple parameters? Can I add multiple routes to multiple different regions on the page? If I’m a child component, can I reach up and learn anything about my parent, and if so, what can I do? Will, with this router, do I have the option of Lazy loading the routes or loading them all up front? Can I route to two different states on the same page? 23:28 - Auxiliary Route 24:51 - Offline Compilation CSS (Cascading Style Sheets) 29:38 - Bundling; Development Experience 32:46 - Relative Pass 41:25 - Treeshaking 43:21 - What’s left before Angular goes live? Picks rollup.js (Rob) Google Play’s Family Plan (Jules) Plunker (Stephen) Ford and Chevrolet (John) Adobe Lightroom (John) X-Men Apocalypse (Joe) P.I. (Joe)
02:28 - Ward Bell (and Co.’s) Documentation Contributions for Angular 2 05:39 - Peter Bacon Darwin (and Co.) & Jade 07:38 - John Papa and the Tour of Heroes Tutorial 09:01 - Geoff Goodman & Plunker 10:07 - GDE (Google Developer Expert) Program/Summit 13:37 - Thomas Burleson & Angular Material 16:07 - The Angular Team
02:28 - Ward Bell (and Co.’s) Documentation Contributions for Angular 2 05:39 - Peter Bacon Darwin (and Co.) & Jade 07:38 - John Papa and the Tour of Heroes Tutorial 09:01 - Geoff Goodman & Plunker 10:07 - GDE (Google Developer Expert) Program/Summit 13:37 - Thomas Burleson & Angular Material 16:07 - The Angular Team
02:28 - Ward Bell (and Co.’s) Documentation Contributions for Angular 2 05:39 - Peter Bacon Darwin (and Co.) & Jade 07:38 - John Papa and the Tour of Heroes Tutorial 09:01 - Geoff Goodman & Plunker 10:07 - GDE (Google Developer Expert) Program/Summit 13:37 - Thomas Burleson & Angular Material 16:07 - The Angular Team
Get your tickets for Angular Remote Conf! Enter the ng-conf ticket lottery! 03:44 - egghead.io Lukas' AngularJS Fundamentals egghead.io Course 04:58 - Pluralsight 06:26 - Code School: AngularJS Tutorial 06:38 - Dan Wahlin: AngularJS Fundamentals In 60-ish Minutes 06:52 - DEVintersection Conference 07:30 - Stack Overflow + Plunker 08:02 - Angular Remote Conf 08:50 - AngularConnect 08:58 - Onsite Training Oasis Digital 11:10 - Backends Lukas Firebase Node Ward Legacy Codebases Chuck Ruby RailsClips 14:09 - John Papa's Angular Style Guide 14:24 - Lukas’ Blog 15:04 - ng-newsletter 15:39 - ng-book 16:29 - Getting Started with Angular AngularJS.org 18:41 - Working with Designers Lukas Reubbelke: Just Enough Angular for Designers D3.js Adventures in Angular Episode #58: D3 with Aysegul Yonet 20:14 - Hack Reactor 20:42 - Angular Boot Camp 21:22 - Khan Academy 21:30 - Angular 2 Resources & Skills You Should Know Exploring ES6 by Axel Rauschmayer TypeScript Adventures in Angular Episode #41: TypeScript with Dan Wahlin JavaScript Jabber Episode #167: TypeScript and Angular with Jonathan Turner and Alex Eagle Visual Studio Code Adventures in Angular Episode #54: Visual Studio Code with Erich Gamma and Chris Dias Babel JavaScript Jabber Episode #171: Babel with Sebastian McKenzie Angular.io Angular Articles by Pascal Precht 25:54 - Podcasts JavaScript Jabber Angular Air 26:33 - Angular Unit Testing 27:22 - AngularJS on YouTube Picks Slack (Ward) The Pillars of Reality Series by Jack Campbell (Lukas) Angular Remote Conf (Chuck) Essentialism: The Disciplined Pursuit of Less by Greg McKeown (Chuck)
Get your tickets for Angular Remote Conf! Enter the ng-conf ticket lottery! 03:44 - egghead.io Lukas' AngularJS Fundamentals egghead.io Course 04:58 - Pluralsight 06:26 - Code School: AngularJS Tutorial 06:38 - Dan Wahlin: AngularJS Fundamentals In 60-ish Minutes 06:52 - DEVintersection Conference 07:30 - Stack Overflow + Plunker 08:02 - Angular Remote Conf 08:50 - AngularConnect 08:58 - Onsite Training Oasis Digital 11:10 - Backends Lukas Firebase Node Ward Legacy Codebases Chuck Ruby RailsClips 14:09 - John Papa's Angular Style Guide 14:24 - Lukas’ Blog 15:04 - ng-newsletter 15:39 - ng-book 16:29 - Getting Started with Angular AngularJS.org 18:41 - Working with Designers Lukas Reubbelke: Just Enough Angular for Designers D3.js Adventures in Angular Episode #58: D3 with Aysegul Yonet 20:14 - Hack Reactor 20:42 - Angular Boot Camp 21:22 - Khan Academy 21:30 - Angular 2 Resources & Skills You Should Know Exploring ES6 by Axel Rauschmayer TypeScript Adventures in Angular Episode #41: TypeScript with Dan Wahlin JavaScript Jabber Episode #167: TypeScript and Angular with Jonathan Turner and Alex Eagle Visual Studio Code Adventures in Angular Episode #54: Visual Studio Code with Erich Gamma and Chris Dias Babel JavaScript Jabber Episode #171: Babel with Sebastian McKenzie Angular.io Angular Articles by Pascal Precht 25:54 - Podcasts JavaScript Jabber Angular Air 26:33 - Angular Unit Testing 27:22 - AngularJS on YouTube Picks Slack (Ward) The Pillars of Reality Series by Jack Campbell (Lukas) Angular Remote Conf (Chuck) Essentialism: The Disciplined Pursuit of Less by Greg McKeown (Chuck)
Get your tickets for Angular Remote Conf! Enter the ng-conf ticket lottery! 03:44 - egghead.io Lukas' AngularJS Fundamentals egghead.io Course 04:58 - Pluralsight 06:26 - Code School: AngularJS Tutorial 06:38 - Dan Wahlin: AngularJS Fundamentals In 60-ish Minutes 06:52 - DEVintersection Conference 07:30 - Stack Overflow + Plunker 08:02 - Angular Remote Conf 08:50 - AngularConnect 08:58 - Onsite Training Oasis Digital 11:10 - Backends Lukas Firebase Node Ward Legacy Codebases Chuck Ruby RailsClips 14:09 - John Papa's Angular Style Guide 14:24 - Lukas’ Blog 15:04 - ng-newsletter 15:39 - ng-book 16:29 - Getting Started with Angular AngularJS.org 18:41 - Working with Designers Lukas Reubbelke: Just Enough Angular for Designers D3.js Adventures in Angular Episode #58: D3 with Aysegul Yonet 20:14 - Hack Reactor 20:42 - Angular Boot Camp 21:22 - Khan Academy 21:30 - Angular 2 Resources & Skills You Should Know Exploring ES6 by Axel Rauschmayer TypeScript Adventures in Angular Episode #41: TypeScript with Dan Wahlin JavaScript Jabber Episode #167: TypeScript and Angular with Jonathan Turner and Alex Eagle Visual Studio Code Adventures in Angular Episode #54: Visual Studio Code with Erich Gamma and Chris Dias Babel JavaScript Jabber Episode #171: Babel with Sebastian McKenzie Angular.io Angular Articles by Pascal Precht 25:54 - Podcasts JavaScript Jabber Angular Air 26:33 - Angular Unit Testing 27:22 - AngularJS on YouTube Picks Slack (Ward) The Pillars of Reality Series by Jack Campbell (Lukas) Angular Remote Conf (Chuck) Essentialism: The Disciplined Pursuit of Less by Greg McKeown (Chuck)