Process of software building
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With NixOS 25.05 around the corner, we sit down with a release manager to unpack what's new, what's changing, and what's finally getting easier. Spoiler: it's not just the tooling.Sponsored By:Tailscale: Tailscale is a programmable networking software that is private and secure by default - get it free on up to 100 devices! 1Password Extended Access Management: 1Password Extended Access Management is a device trust solution for companies with Okta, and they ensure that if a device isn't trusted and secure, it can't log into your cloud apps. Support LINUX UnpluggedLinks:
Send Us A Message or Ask Us A Question? Joshua Singh - Finding Authenticity and Empowerment in the Music IndustrySavia Rocks dives into an insightful conversation with Joshua Singh, Release Manager, musician, and a beacon of creativity and authenticity within the music industry. This episode of the Us People podcast, hosted by Savia Rocks, navigates the waters of diversity, empowerment, and the personal journey of self-discovery through the lens of Joshua's life experiences. From navigating the challenges of the music industry to finding one's voice amidst adversity, Joshua shares his compelling story of personal growth, the dynamics of the music industry, and the power of staying true to oneself. You will leave inspired, empowered, and with a deeper understanding of the importance of authenticity in the creative world.00:00 Welcome to Season Five: Embracing Creativity and Diversity01:00 Celebrating Five Years of the Us People Podcast01:34 Introducing Joshua: Musician and Release Manager at AWAL03:15 Joshua's Journey: From Birmingham to the Brit School08:54 The Challenges of Balancing Creativity and Education18:47 Finding Identity and Authenticity in a Changing World26:22 Navigating the Pandemic: Reflections and Growth32:34 A Day in the Life of a Digital Promotions Coordinator / Release Manager 38:53 The Ins and Outs of Music Distribution41:17 Advice for Aspiring Music Industry Professionals51:44 Navigating Diversity and Representation in the Music Industry01:04:25 Personal Reflections and Future Aspirations01:09:22 Connecting with Joshua: Social Media and Music01:12:32 Closing Thoughts and Podcast OutroLinkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/joshua-singh-190/?originalSubdomain=uk“When we let go of strict definitions, we allow purpose to emerge in its most authentic and transformative form ” - Savia RocksSupport the Show.
We're building a completely hidden Linux OS inside an existing system—with no trace left behind.Sponsored By:Tailscale: Tailscale is a programmable networking software that is private and secure by default - get it free on up to 100 devices!Kolide: Kolide is a device trust solution for companies with Okta, and they ensure that if a device isn't trusted and secure, it can't log into your cloud apps.Support LINUX UnpluggedLinks:
Topics covered in this episode: logmerger The third and final Python 3.12 RC is out now The Python dictionary dispatch pattern Visualizing the CPython Release Process Extras Joke Watch on YouTube About the show Sponsored by us! Support our work through: Our courses at Talk Python Training Python People Podcast Patreon Supporters Connect with the hosts Michael: @mkennedy@fosstodon.org Brian: @brianokken@fosstodon.org Show: @pythonbytes@fosstodon.org Join us on YouTube at pythonbytes.fm/live to be part of the audience. Usually Tuesdays at 11am PT. Older video versions available there too. Brian #1: logmerger Paul McGuire logmerger is a TUI for viewing a merged display of multiple log files, merged by timestamp. Built on textual Awesome flags: --output - to send the merged logs to stdout --start START and --end END start and end time to select time window for merging logs Caveats: new. no pip install yet. so clone the code or download perhaps I jumped the gun on covering this, but it's cool Michael #2: The third and final Python 3.12 RC is out now Get your final bugs fixed before the full release Call to action: We strongly encourage maintainers of third-party Python projects to prepare their projects for 3.12 compatibilities during this phase How to test. Discussion on the issue. Count down until October 2nd, 2023. Brian #3: The Python dictionary dispatch pattern I kinda love (and hate) jump tables in C We don't talk about dictionary dispatch much in Python, so this is nice, if not dangerous. Short story: you can store lambdas or functions in dictionaries, then look them up and call them at the same time. Also, I gotta shout out to the first blogroll I've seen in a very long time. Should we bring back blogrolls? Michael #4: Visualizing the CPython Release Process by Seth Larson Here's the deal (you should see the image in the article
This week on the podcast, Eric, John, and Thomas talk about Lastpass, 2 Factor, Release Manager for PHP 8.3, PHP Tek, and more...Links from the show:Release Managers for PHP 8.3 - ExternalsSlack Open Sources Hakana, a Type Checker for Hack Languagehhvm/hphp/hack at master · facebook/hhvm · GitHubAn update on two-factor authentication using SMS on TwitterThe LastPass hack saga just keeps getting worse | AppleInsiderGoDaddy says a multi-year breach hijacked customer websites and accounts | Ars TechnicaPHPUgly streams the recording of this podcast live. Typically every Thursday night around 9 PM PT. Come and join us, and subscribe to our Youtube Channel, Twitch, or Twitter. Also, be sure to check out our Patreon Page.Twitter Account https://twitter.com/phpuglyHost:Eric Van JohnsonJohn CongdonTom RideoutStreams:Youtube ChannelTwitchPowered by RestreamPatreon PagePHPUgly Anthem by Harry Mack / Harry Mack Youtube ChannelThanks to all of our Patreon Sponsors:******* SPONSORS **Honeybadger (https://honeybader.io)** Patreon Supports **ButteryCrumpetFrank WDavid QShawnKen FBoštjanMarcusShelby CS FergusonRodrigo CBillyDarryl HKnut Erik BDmitri GElgimboMikePageDevKenrick BKalen JR. C. S.Peter AClayton SRonny MBen RAlex BKevin YEnno RWayneJeroen FAndy HSeviCharltonSteve MRobert SThorstenEmily JJoe FAndrew WulrikJohn CJames HEric MEd GRirielilHermitChampJeffrey DChris BTore BBek J
Ben shared with us his experience being a Release Manager for PHP 8.1. We also talk about the voting process for Release Manager voting for 8.2 (https://externals.io/message/117716#117746). Congratulations to Sergey Panteleev and Pierrick Charron on becoming the Release Managers for PHP 8.2. We share our thoughts on how to follow along with discussions happening on PHP Internals. We also talk about PHP Internal's move to Github (https://github.com/php). What's been going on at the PHP Foundation. Joining PHP Social-verse and the overall Fediverse at https://phpc.social. The return of PHP in-person Meetups and Conferences and MergePHP - https://twitter.com/mergephp. Stay current with what we are doing by following and subscribing. Website: https://phproundtable.comYoutube: https://www.youtube.com/phproundtableTwitter: @phproundtable Maston: @phproundtable@phpc.socialAudio Podcast: https://pca.st/usqnzuifDiscord: https://discord.gg/wmD3sGnMMe
Björn Jensen studierte Informatik an der Hochschule für Angewandte Wissenschaften in Hamburg und ist Diplom-Informatiker. Er begann im Jahr 2000 als Softwareentwickler in der IT-Branche zu arbeiten. Seitdem hat er viele Erfahrungen in verschiedenen Positionen innerhalb des Softwareentwicklungsprozesses gesammelt, wie z.B. Tester, Build Manager, Release Manager, Configuration Manager, Projektleiter und Entwicklungsleiter. Die Größe der Unternehmen, für die er arbeitet, variiert von sehr klein bis sehr groß (und stark verteilt). Er ist Gründer und Leiter der Java User Group Hamburg (JUGHH) und der Android User Group Hamburg. Außerdem ist er Gründungsmitglied der JetBrains Academy of Development. Seit seinem ersten Kontakt mit agiler Praxis (XP) im Jahr 2001 taucht er tief in die agile Welt ein und führte agile Entwicklungspraktiken und Scrum erfolgreich in mehreren Unternehmen ein. Mittlerweile ist er auch Certified Scrum Trainer (CST) sowie Mitglied im Trainer Approval Committee der Scrum Alliance.
Listen as host Khayrattee Wasseem talks with Derick Rethans – indepth xdebug & xdebug Cloud discussion, his role as Release Manager for PHP 7.4, feature freeze, his creative side and the rapid-fire round. @derickr Show Notes Derick Rethans on Twitter Derick Rethans' Website Xdebug Xdebug CLOUD The 7PHP INTERVIEW WITH DERICK RETHANS THE FATHER OF […] The post Ep#362 – Interview with Derick Rethans appeared first on Voices of the ElePHPant.
Abstract of the talk… AHOY is a release manager for Kubernetes, fully open source. Bio… I thought, this is easier explained, in, interpretive rap... Look, if you had one shot, one opportunity To fix everything that was ever broke In one deployment Would you rebuild it, or just let it fail? Yo His palms are sweaty, config weak, server load is heavy There's vomit on this keyboard already, Kubernetes He's nervous, but the control plane says Nodes are ready Fork Bomb, but he keeps on forgetting Commands he wrote down, to restart all the pods He opens up Wikis, but the page won't load out Server's chokin now, everybody's phoning now. Release window runs out, times up, over bloaw! Roll back to the previous, oh this is grievous Oh there goes docker, it's borked! He's mad cause K8 don't, downgrade that easily? No He won't have it, he knows, manual deploys back's on the ropes It don't' matter He's dope, he knows that, but he broke He's whole Openstack So when he goes back to his mobile app,that's when it's Back to the Trello Board yo, this whole Agile thing sux He better go capture the screen logs next time using tmux You better lose yourself in this DevOps, the SecOps You own it, you better never let it go Ho! You only get one shot, do not miss your change to Window This opportunity comes once in a weeks time Yo! So that is what I do on a typical day. For those who want the more traditional summary.... Open source consultant specializing in enterprise grade solutions based on open source software and open source integration. Worked with multiple DevOps teams inside numerous South Africa companies, to help bring these worlds together. Then watching the worlds explode. Sometimes for the good, sometimes for the bad. Currently a strong focus on Kubernetes. And then all the usual toppings, GitOps, CI/CD tooling, automation, test-driven infrastructure, and everything cloud native. Key take-aways from the talk… It automatically incorporates GitOps, auto-generation of Helm charts, all stored on Git.
In this conversation Srilakshmi, Program Manager shares her 30+ year story with Chitra through her essence of being a person who naturally brings people together. Her story board contains Science as her forte and choosing to study engineeringGetting her first job in HAL (Hindustan Aeronautics Ltd) to build the Light Combat Aircraft or LCA, her first exposure to program managementLearning slowly and a project definition phase of 2-3 yearsWorking on mini computers and coding in machine languageMoving to the US for a PhD, choosing computer science over management & economics, multiple transitionsBeing the first batch of computer science graduates from portland state universityJoining Intel and staying there for 15 yearsWorking in bunny suits inside fab labs on software for p-n junctionsrealising that software engineering was a job and her passion lay in bringing people together and organizing thingsBeing part of various server teams at Intel and becoming a program manager in 2002Moving to India, discovering that leading by influence was her preferred way of working, working at NetApp, Cisco, VMWareSharing her Program Management principles of equal authority, responsibility and weightage to all functions of a groupCollaboration via a "map day" exercise and common understanding of the "why" of a project, examples from her experience at Intel and ADE (Aeronautical Development Establishment) & the importance of keeping the vision in mind at all times and to know how everything is connectedChanges across time around collaborationHow the pandemic has brought about awareness of different ecosystems Exploring influence without authority in the role of a program manager, knowing yourself when a job is well done and being approachableHer passion around voluntarismLooking long term, making technology an ally in your work and finding happiness in what you do.Srilakshmi Renganathan was a Software Developer and is now a Release Manager & Program Manager. She started her career at the Hindustan Aeronautics Limited HAL in Bangalore and moved to the US for her Masters in Computer Science. She worked in various MNCs - Intel Corp, NetApp, Cisco & VMware. She is currently a Software Release & Deployment Program Management at Zebra Technologies ( for Reflexis Retail Task & Schedule Management Software products recently acquired by Zebra).She describes herself as a mother, daughter, wife, friend, ever longing to be a social worker.As a software Program Manager trying to stay connected to technology by doing hands-on tactical coordination work assisting in moving products from inception to entity. She's touched various domains albeit from the periphery including aircraft communication systems, chip manufacturing, storage technology, cloud infrastructure to more recently SAAS - Software as a Service. Sri continues to engage & adapt through changing tools & technologies through the past 3 decades! Electronics & Computer Science Engineer by Education & Software Engineer by training. Multi-Tasker, organizer, blogger & constant social media updater :) who lives by the phrase “sharing is caring”.
Lots of Laravel talk in this episode. Plus PHP 8.1 Release manager needed. In-person conferences are back, are you interested in doing an IRL conference again? How, and when, no to deploy to production. All this and much more.Links from the show:Longhorn PHPLARACON Online | The official Laravel Online conferenceLaracon Online Merch StoreSlack Connectphp-src/release-process.md at master · php/php-srcLaravel 8.30 Released | Laravel NewsHow the Laravel Release Process Works | Laravel NewsPHP: internals:release-managersGit Support is Coming to the Laravel Installer | Laravel NewsDevelopers - AkauntingGoogle to Stop Selling Targeted Ads Based on Browsing History - TheStreetOrganize your tabs with tab groups in Google ChromeHigh severity Linux network security holes found, fixed | ZDNetPricing by Plan | LastPassPHPUgly streams the recording of this podcast live. Typically every Thursday night around 9 PM PT. Come and join us, and subscribe to our Youtube Channel, Twitch, or Periscope. Also, be sure to check out our Patreon Page.Twitter Account https://twitter.com/phpuglyHost:Eric Van JohnsonJohn CongdonTom RideoutStreams:Youtube ChannelTwitchPeriscopePowered by RestreamPatreon PagePHPUgly Anthem by Harry Mack / Harry Mack Youtube Channel
Bienvenidos al episodio N°33 donde traemos un tema muy importante dado el contexto que estamos viviendo en el mercado de criptomonedas y su apreciación en valor los últimos meses, y tiene que ver con la seguridad, específicamente las wallets o billeteras que nos permiten almacenar nuestras criptomonedas de manera segura. Pero ¿Qué es una wallet?, ¿Cómo funciona?, ¿Cómo podemos elegir una wallet apropiada?, son preguntas que muchos deberíamos hacernos al momento de seleccionar una wallet para almacenar nuestras criptomonedas, ya que hay mucho más que sólo descargar una App o adquirir un hardware wallet. Para responder esta y otras preguntas más nos acompaña en este episodio Leo Wandesrleb, un matemático alemán radicado en Chile. Fundador de Wallet Scrutiny, que se enfoca en examinar el código de las wallets que se suben a Android, además de ser lead Android Developer y Release Manager de Mycelium Bitcoin Wallet. Entramos en detalle también en los sistemas operativos donde funcionan las wallets, ya sea en teléfono móvil como también en computadora. Conocimos su proyecto Wallet Scrutiny y el aporte que le entrega a la comunidad en términos de verificación de códigos de wallets que se suben a Google Play. Lo más importante de todo, es que cada uno de nosotros elija una wallet segura, con la que tenga confianza para poder utilizarla y dejar sus criptomonedas. Es labor de cada uno educarnos para tomar la mejor decisión con la información que tenemos, y este episodio está directamente relacionado a eso. Entregarte más información. Finalmente conversamos sobre el tema de la privacidad en las wallets y cómo ha evolucionado en los últimos años. Si te gustó este episodio, te invitamos a compartirlo en tus redes sociales usando el hashtag #bslPodcast y seguirnos como Blockchain Summit Latam en las diferentes plataformas sociales. Te invitamos también a suscribirte a nuestro canal de YouTube buscándonos como Blockchain Summit Latam donde todas las semanas tenemos contenido de actualidad sobre el mercado y la tecnología. Puedes visitar nuestra página web www.blockchainsummit.la para más información. Ahora, a disfrutar de esta conversación.
Meet: Ash Berlin-Taylor is an active committer and member of the PMC for Apache Airflow and Director of Airflow Engineering team at astronomer.io. Before getting involved with Airflow he spent many years working in (web) infrastructure Kaxil Naik is currently the Committer, PMC Member, and Release Manager of Apache Airflow. He is also the Manager of Airflow Engineering team @ Astronomer. He did his Masters in Data Science & Analytics from Royal Holloway, University of London. What you'll learn: Major features in the upcoming Airflow 2 release Upgrade path and compatibility What the team might be working on in future releases Learn more about the upcoming release: https://www.astronomer.io/blog/introducing-airflow-2-0 If you would like to reach out to Ash or Kaxil about anything they discussed on the podcast, please reach out to them via: https://twitter.com/kaxil https://www.linkedin.com/in/kaxil/ https://twitter.com/ashberlin
In this episode, we talk about Amazon Sidewalk, and SaleForce’s acquisition of Slack. Then we speak with Jerry Gamblin, Manager of Security and Compliance at Kenna Security, about the U.S. Supreme Court hearing arguments this week about the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act, which has major implications for ethical hackers. Finally, we chat with Sara Golemon, Core Developer and Release Manager on the PHP team, about the new release of PHP 8.0. Show Notes DevDiscuss (sponsor) Triplebyte (sponsor) CodeNewbie (sponsor) Vonage (sponsor) Salesforce Signs Definitive Agreement to Acquire Slack Introducing Amazon Sidewalk Computer Fraud and Abuse Act PHP 8.0 Released!
On this episode we were able to sit down with our final guest before the lockdown/quarantine went into full effect. In Episode 10 we were able to chat with Andrew Tram, based out of RTP, NC, US. Andrew is an IBM Developer for z/OS Advisory Software and DevOps Release Engineer. Andrew has spent much of his career with IBM and has been with the mainframe from the start. He has a very technical background, and that gives him a really great perspective when it comes to our continuous delivery releases. In this episode he talks about our release schedule, the overall process, and so much more. We covered such topics as: What a Release Manager is and what do they do? Aqua Products – what are they and where can I learn more? The ECU Jazz Ensemble Band and Saxophones When a developer interacts with the mainframe without even knowing it All about CD releases in Z DevOps If you could go back in time, what “current” Andrew tell “then” Andrew Just as a reminder, we're on all your favorite podcasting platforms now! Enjoy on the go now: Breaker Google Podcasts Overcast PocketCasts Radio Public Spotify iTunes And finally, in case you hadn't seen the news, the State of New Jersey still has their “Tech Talent Call to Serve” page up. Consider dropping your name if you think you can help. Who knows maybe you could save a few lives! Link here. Also consider joining the COBOL conversation over at the Open Mainframe Project forum. Say safe out there folks! And remember to practice good social distancing and take the proper hygiene precautions.
Sponsors React Native Radio iPhreaks Show Ruby Rogues Cachefly Panel Eric Berry Richard Littauer Joined By Special Guest: Bastien Guerry Episode Summary Bastien Guerry is employed by the French Administration in a program named Entrepreneurs d'intérêt général inspired by Presidential Innovation Fellows. He is also the Release Manager of Org Mode, an information management and outlining tool for Emacs. Bastien wrote his first software for his girlfriend to help her with her thesis. He then went onto maintain Org Mode between years 2011 and 2015. Bastien likens open source software maintainers' job to that of stay-at-home mothers' job description, as both are a lot of work and involve a lot of responsibility and stress and both are not compensated financially. The panel then ask about the evolution of Fund The Code Project which supports the free software movement by donations from sponsors. Bastien invites free software maintainers to contact Fund The Code Project for help in finding sponsors. Links Bastien Guerry - EmacsWiki Org mode _DINSIC Etalab Entrepreneurs d'intérêt général Presidential Innovation Fellows https://bzg.fr/en/donating-to-free-software-and-free-culture.html/ https://libraries.io/ https://backyourstack.com/ http://themaintainers.org/ Bastien Guerry (@bzg2) | Twitter Maintainers III: Practice, Policy and Care https://publiccode.net/ https://www.fundthecode.org/ http://openmodels.fr/en/ SOS 005: Trademark Versus Copyright to Sustain OSS with Mehdi Medjaoui Open Source & Software Development | O'Reilly OSCON Picks Eric Berry: Software Freedom Conservancy Richard Littauer: The Internet is a City https://www.amazon.com/Chomsky-Anarchism-Noam/dp/1904859208 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shakespeare_and_Company_(bookstore) Bastien Guerry: https://www.writethedocs.org https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_History_of_Cardenio
Sponsors React Native Radio iPhreaks Show Ruby Rogues Cachefly Panel Eric Berry Richard Littauer Joined By Special Guest: Bastien Guerry Episode Summary Bastien Guerry is employed by the French Administration in a program named Entrepreneurs d'intérêt général inspired by Presidential Innovation Fellows. He is also the Release Manager of Org Mode, an information management and outlining tool for Emacs. Bastien wrote his first software for his girlfriend to help her with her thesis. He then went onto maintain Org Mode between years 2011 and 2015. Bastien likens open source software maintainers' job to that of stay-at-home mothers' job description, as both are a lot of work and involve a lot of responsibility and stress and both are not compensated financially. The panel then ask about the evolution of Fund The Code Project which supports the free software movement by donations from sponsors. Bastien invites free software maintainers to contact Fund The Code Project for help in finding sponsors. Links Bastien Guerry - EmacsWiki Org mode _DINSIC Etalab Entrepreneurs d'intérêt général Presidential Innovation Fellows https://bzg.fr/en/donating-to-free-software-and-free-culture.html/ https://libraries.io/ https://backyourstack.com/ http://themaintainers.org/ Bastien Guerry (@bzg2) | Twitter Maintainers III: Practice, Policy and Care https://publiccode.net/ https://www.fundthecode.org/ http://openmodels.fr/en/ SOS 005: Trademark Versus Copyright to Sustain OSS with Mehdi Medjaoui Open Source & Software Development | O'Reilly OSCON Picks Eric Berry: Software Freedom Conservancy Richard Littauer: The Internet is a City https://www.amazon.com/Chomsky-Anarchism-Noam/dp/1904859208 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shakespeare_and_Company_(bookstore) Bastien Guerry: https://www.writethedocs.org https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_History_of_Cardenio
Sponsors React Native Radio iPhreaks Show Ruby Rogues Cachefly Panel Eric Berry Richard Littauer Joined By Special Guest: Bastien Guerry Episode Summary Bastien Guerry is employed by the French Administration in a program named Entrepreneurs d'intérêt général inspired by Presidential Innovation Fellows. He is also the Release Manager of Org Mode, an information management and outlining tool for Emacs. Bastien wrote his first software for his girlfriend to help her with her thesis. He then went onto maintain Org Mode between years 2011 and 2015. Bastien likens open source software maintainers' job to that of stay-at-home mothers' job description, as both are a lot of work and involve a lot of responsibility and stress and both are not compensated financially. The panel then ask about the evolution of Fund The Code Project which supports the free software movement by donations from sponsors. Bastien invites free software maintainers to contact Fund The Code Project for help in finding sponsors. Links Bastien Guerry - EmacsWiki Org mode _DINSIC Etalab Entrepreneurs d'intérêt général Presidential Innovation Fellows https://bzg.fr/en/donating-to-free-software-and-free-culture.html/ https://libraries.io/ https://backyourstack.com/ http://themaintainers.org/ Bastien Guerry (@bzg2) | Twitter Maintainers III: Practice, Policy and Care https://publiccode.net/ https://www.fundthecode.org/ http://openmodels.fr/en/ SOS 005: Trademark Versus Copyright to Sustain OSS with Mehdi Medjaoui Open Source & Software Development | O'Reilly OSCON Picks Eric Berry: Software Freedom Conservancy Richard Littauer: The Internet is a City https://www.amazon.com/Chomsky-Anarchism-Noam/dp/1904859208 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shakespeare_and_Company_(bookstore) Bastien Guerry: https://www.writethedocs.org https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_History_of_Cardenio Special Guest: Bastien Guerry.
Topics: 2:49 - CD Projeck Red is looking to hire a release manager, suggesting that a release date reveal for Cyberpunk 2077 is not far off + discussion about whether or not CDPR's next game will be a new IP 34:43 - reactions to the Star Wars Episode 9: The Rise of Skywalker teaser trailer 46:50 - Hopeful news: Star Wars Jedi: Fallen Order was made using the Unreal engine rather than EA's Frostbite engine & was supposedly developed with minimal interference from EA Subscribe on YouTube to catch the podcast live ► https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCMWKb-id2icjihQdTL0btuw?sub_confirmation=1 JOIN THE LEAGUE! - Join our Discord community ► https://discord.gg/WDQJTJw - Join the support team ► https://www.patreon.com/TheTripleSLeague CYBERPUNK 2077 STUFF ► https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLBV81U7BXltVLiT_edqOAhs2Kturywc3R FALLOUT 76 STUFF ► https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLBV81U7BXltUSAM5mIa0RjngrX5F0y0Jw Augmented Reality is a video game news, gaming fan & nerd info podcast. Each week, we take a critical and humorous look at the latest in gaming news, technology and nerdy pop culture stuff. See our full video library (game guides, comedy, reviews & more) on YouTube! Podcast theme music: Hellcat (NCS Release - https://youtu.be/JSY6vBPunpY) by Desmeon (http://www.youtube.com/iamdesmeon)
As the software delivery process matures and grows, a variety of teams are forming and becoming part of the everyday testing landscape. These teams may or may not resemble anything that many testers are familiar with. New roles and responsibilities are coming into play, with many software testers taking on roles such as Scrum-master, Release Manager, Product Owner and other positions that would have been seen as out of the ordinary for testers a decade or so ago. The role are blending, the responsibilities are blending, so how does a tester determine what the best course of action is and how to participate in this brave new world? Perze Ababa, Paul Grizzaffi, Matthew Heusser, Michael Larsen, Gerie Owen and Peter Varhol all gather together to consider what makes for good testing teams and good teams in general.
Panel: Jaim Zuber Gui Rambo In today’s episode, the iPhreaks panel talks to Parveen Kaler about iOS architecture at scale. Parveen has been doing mobile development, specifically iOS development, for almost 10 years now, and he previously used to work in the video games industry. They talk about the difference between scale when it comes to dollars and revenue, the pull request process, and what good architecture at scale is. They also touch on creating uniform views, object mappers, and more! In particular, we dive pretty deep on: Parveen Intro Used to work with PSP video game development iOS Architecture At Scale - types of scale His talk at AltConf Is there a difference scale w/ dollars and scale /w customers? What are major differences from coming from a large company? Do you run into issues with many customers? Pull Requests and Release Train Release Manager What is good architecture at scale? Definition of good architecture Three things lead to good architecture What are coding style differences? You want to unify models Unification really matters How do you create uniform views? How do you work when code you want to change is handled by another team? Unified router framework Object Mapper How do you combat long compile times? Does Xcode improve compile times? Does Swift provide advantages vs Objective-C? AB Testing at Scale? And much, much more! Links: His talk at AltConf Xcode parveenkaler.com @kaler Parveen’s GitHub Smartful Studios Sponsors: FreshBooks Loot Crate Picks: Jaim Iron Maiden Pinball Gui Things You Should Never Do, Part I by Joel Spolsky Parveen US Passport
Panel: Jaim Zuber Gui Rambo In today’s episode, the iPhreaks panel talks to Parveen Kaler about iOS architecture at scale. Parveen has been doing mobile development, specifically iOS development, for almost 10 years now, and he previously used to work in the video games industry. They talk about the difference between scale when it comes to dollars and revenue, the pull request process, and what good architecture at scale is. They also touch on creating uniform views, object mappers, and more! In particular, we dive pretty deep on: Parveen Intro Used to work with PSP video game development iOS Architecture At Scale - types of scale His talk at AltConf Is there a difference scale w/ dollars and scale /w customers? What are major differences from coming from a large company? Do you run into issues with many customers? Pull Requests and Release Train Release Manager What is good architecture at scale? Definition of good architecture Three things lead to good architecture What are coding style differences? You want to unify models Unification really matters How do you create uniform views? How do you work when code you want to change is handled by another team? Unified router framework Object Mapper How do you combat long compile times? Does Xcode improve compile times? Does Swift provide advantages vs Objective-C? AB Testing at Scale? And much, much more! Links: His talk at AltConf Xcode parveenkaler.com @kaler Parveen’s GitHub Smartful Studios Sponsors: FreshBooks Loot Crate Picks: Jaim Iron Maiden Pinball Gui Things You Should Never Do, Part I by Joel Spolsky Parveen US Passport
Our Guest On episode 1 of Elevatd Life, we have Morgan Meredith a Senior Release Manager at Jellyvision! This episode really dives in to how careers can take many twists and turns but at the end of the day if you keep working at your craft and constantly apply yourself you can jump and right where you want to be. Morgan went from studying hearing science and sound acoustics to working at Yello in Chicago, IL and now leading the Release Management team at Jellyvision. She gave awesome thoughts around overcoming imposter syndrome and building up her technical skills. Our Highlights How to go from a non-traditional major (Speech Acoustics) to becoming a Release Manager for a team of 2. Ways to "zoom out" in a new role and find pain points you can work to solve, whether that's through new processes or clearer structure and expectations. Where do you go after being a Release Manager? For Morgan, that's developing her programming skills to one day land in a Dev Manager role. It's all about initiative. How 'imposter syndrome' is real pain in the tech industry and ways to overcome it. Find Morgan Blog https://www.morgan-made.com/ Twitter @mo_leigh Links for clicking Stephanie Hurlburt - find her online Lara Hogan for posts on how to organize meetings - find her work online Thoughts on becoming a self-taught engineer by Lexis Hanson - read here Camille Fournier, The Manager’s Path - buy the book here FlatIron School (if you’re interested in programming) - check them out here FlatIron Scholarships to receive aid for tuition - read more here AWS Learning: A cloud guru solution architect course - course here Women in Tech chat - join here Follow Elevatd Life Twitter @elevatdlife Instagram @elevatdlife
Our Guest On episode 1 of Elevatd Life, we have Morgan Meredith a Senior Release Manager at Jellyvision! This episode really dives in to how careers can take many twists and turns but at the end of the day if you keep working at your craft and constantly apply yourself you can jump and right where you want to be. Morgan went from studying hearing science and sound acoustics to working at Yello in Chicago, IL and now leading the Release Management team at Jellyvision. She gave awesome thoughts around overcoming imposter syndrome and building up her technical skills. Our Highlights How to go from a non-traditional major (Speech Acoustics) to becoming a Release Manager for a team of 2. Ways to "zoom out" in a new role and find pain points you can work to solve, whether that's through new processes or clearer structure and expectations. Where do you go after being a Release Manager? For Morgan, that's developing her programming skills to one day land in a Dev Manager role. It's all about initiative. How 'imposter syndrome' is real pain in the tech industry and ways to overcome it. Find Morgan Blog https://www.morgan-made.com/ Twitter @mo_leigh Links for clicking Stephanie Hurlburt - find her online Lara Hogan for posts on how to organize meetings - find her work online Thoughts on becoming a self-taught engineer by Lexis Hanson - read here Camille Fournier, The Manager’s Path - buy the book here FlatIron School (if you’re interested in programming) - check them out here FlatIron Scholarships to receive aid for tuition - read more here AWS Learning: A cloud guru solution architect course - course here Women in Tech chat - join here Follow Elevatd Life Twitter @elevatdlife Instagram @elevatdlife
Julien Pauli nous parle de son rôle de release manager de PHP, de l'écriture du livre php7 avancé et des futurs améliorations et changements de PHP
Chris interviews Thierry Carrez, release manager for the OpenStack project about how he coordinates a large amount of contributors to the project, balancing diverse commercial and cultural differences whilst still maintaining a regular release cycle. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/theweeklysqueak/message
Influence Marketing Podcast: B2B influencer, advocacy, and community marketing
With Great Passion Comes Great Responsibility, featuring the Splunk Trust with Eric Grant— EP003 Eric Grant, Community Manager for Splunk, sits down with us today to discuss how the SplunkTrust started, evolved, and now helps active members of the Splunk community be “geeky in all the right ways.” Giving those who help Splunk great benefits and a positive identity is very important to Eric, and he details exactly how they accomplish that. Today we are talking with Eric Grant, Community Manager for Splunk, who manages the advocacy program SplunkTrust. Eric shares with us the importance of building a team you can count on and trust, and how he was surprised at just how much people would do when asked. Eric gives great advice for those looking to start their own advocacy programs and gives us some behind-the-scenes insight on what makes SplunkTrust members the vivacious, raucous, and fez wearing “ubergeeks” that we know and love. Listen in as he describes how they took a community that was already there, and shaped it to be the SplunkTrust. Eric inspires us as program managers and leaders to have the courage to ask others for help, along with finding the right people, tell them to keep doing what they are doing, and ask them for even more, with providing great benefits and recognition in trade! Key Takeaways [1:20] Today we are talking with Eric Grant, Community Manager for Splunk. [3:30] Eric started in program management and release management. He has been at Splunk for 5½ years. One of the responsibilities he had during that time was running the beta programs for their enterprise product. He enjoyed user perspective on the products — both the praise and critiques of upcoming releases. When an opportunity came up to work on the community end of things, he saw it as a great way to get more involved with customers. [5:04] Being part of the Splunk culture, and knowing the product and the customer base, helped him transition over to the community manager position. [6:46] Their annual conference has been held for 8 or 9 years, which is a great way for customers, partners, and employees to get together. That led to an online community of a large number of these people, who started communicating both professional and informally on an IRC. They have something called “Answers,” where they have over 80,000 questions posted by customers and partners, with a quick turnaround time of answers within 20–30 minutes, and 70% answered by other customers. They have 90 user groups around the world. [8:03] SplunkTrust is an MVP program, grown out of consistent contributors from customers, app developers, etc. This was to thank them for what they were doing, to empower and encourage them to do more. The goal was not to set specific quantitative hard numbers, but just to see what it could do. [10:08] They had some qualitative goals when starting the program, but it’s hard to set up quantitative goals. It’s challenging to get wrapped up into hard ROI before you know the outcome. [10:55] The initial goal was to help with customer success, which is why it was in the support organization, and that stays as one of the top goals of the company. [11:34] For people starting a program, Eric recommends to look for the people that are already passionate and championing your company. The initial membership was picked by an internal team, plus support and sales engineers, product engineers, etc. They looked at who the most helpful people were, in the programs that they already had going. Once they identified those people, they looked at their attitude, availability to participate, and ability to represent Splunk well. [14:42] Some keywords that Eric describes Splunk culture as: snarky, irreverent, geeky. IT admin and implementers are highly represented. The group is geeky people who enjoy hanging out online with other geeky people! [15:39] SplunkTrust is known for their cool T-shirts and swag. Some people say Splunk is a T-shirt company who happens to make software! They wear Fezzes as a unifying symbol along with a pin that signifies the year of the program. [17:41] There are two SplunkTrusters that Splunk hired, and the community still wanted them in even though they now work for the company. The program is split up primarily between professional service consultants and customers. [18:31] This is the second year and there are 30 members which include the two Splunk employees. [22:40] Some of the other benefits of the SplunkTrust program include rewards and ways they can promote themselves and Splunk. Free training and certification through Splunk education courses, free pass to annual user conference— .Conf, Fez, pins and capes. Presentations on products are coming up where they can share their thoughts, and virtual conference sessions where they present to a public audience. [24:45] ROI is difficult to measure, but one way is support case deflection. [30:41] They do want to grow the program, but want to do it slowly, in order maintain the tightness of group identity. If it continues to grow larger, they may start segmenting and subdividing the group into service type categories, or industry vertical categories, rather than just growing it, which fragments and loses cohesion. [35:10] Eric was surprised at how much the group would do, when not even asked. Brainstorm all the possible things program members can get involved with. Then let community members help define the path after that. [35:50] Sometimes it can be difficult balancing the journey of the program and passion of the SplunkTrust members with what is optimal for the company’s long term goals. It’s a delicate balance to satisfy both. [36:42] Eric has been blown away by the strength of the identity and interest level of the program. They expect it to keep growing by 75% in the next year. About our guest, Eric Grant Eric Grant is the Community Manager for Splunk. In that role, he manages Splunk’s local User Groups, the SplunkTrust MVP program, and the realtime chat service. Eric has been at Splunk for five years and previously served as a Program Manager and Release Manager for Platforms, as well as running Beta programs for Platforms. Eric serves on Splunk’s the Open Source Standards committee, sits on the Onboarding Steering committee, and helps guide Splunk’s culture as a Values Ambassador. Eric has spent his professional life melding technology, education, and collaboration. He started life in New York, got some degrees in Information Systems and Political Science from CMU, and then started working in enterprise software, learning and development, and edutainment software in Austin and New York. Then he came to Stanford for a Masters in Learning, Design, and Technology, and fell in love with California. Since then, he has worked in high-tech classrooms, educational foundations, government tech, and several educational startups. Prior to working at Splunk, Eric was about to go to Libya to roll out a citizen participation technology, but then the citizens revolted and he decided to stay here. Eric lives in San Francisco and enjoys motorcycling, camping, skiing, fostering rescue dogs, and eating too much cheese. Eric also volunteers as a first responder at Burning Man just about every year. Mentioned In This Episode John’s Twitter: @jtroyer Kathleen’s Twitter: @DailyKat Eric Grant’s Twitter: @SenatorGrant Splunk Website Splunk Live: SplunkTrust.Conf The Influence Marketing Podcast is brought to you by the Influence Marketing Council, an industry council for B2B brands who innovate in influencer, advocacy, and community marketing. Your hosts, John Mark Troyer and Kathleen Nelson Troyer, are co-founders of the IMC. The Influence Marketing Podcast is part of the research program of the IMC. For more information, go to influencemarketingcouncil.com.
We are happy to announce our newest session for The Library is Open Podcast! Today's session features question and answer with Kyle Hall, Lead Developer or otherwise known as Lord of the Code for ByWater Solutions. Join us as we discuss the 17.05 release for Koha Open Source ILS where Kyle volunteered as Release Manager. Listen to what is on the horizon and what we will see in Koha 17.05. Kyle received his M.S. in Information Technology from Edinboro University of PA. He has been fulfilling the IT needs of librarians for over a decade at the Crawford County Federated Library System, where his department secured sponsorship for the integration of Zebra into Koha. His work not only included enhancing Koha itself, but also authorship of the Koha Offline Circulation tool and the maintenance of the Koha Virtual Appliance. He is also the author of Libki, an Open Source library kiosk management system. You can watch the video version of this conversation on our YouTube channel, listen right here, subscribe to our Library is Open Podcast, or all of the above. Enjoy!
Rick Falkvinge is a Political Evangelist and Founder of the first Pirate Party http://www.piratpartiet.se/english/ and a campaigner for next-generation civil liberties. In particular, he stresses how the copyright industry works with security hawks to erode the parts of Internet that guarantee civil liberties. On this platform, one of privacy and digital rights, his party became the largest in the below-30 demographic in the 2009 European Elections, and his nascent party has now spread to 70 countries. He has been named a Top Global Thinker by Foreign Policy magazine http://foreignpolicy.com and shortlisted as one of the world’s most influential people by TIME Magazine http://content.time.com/time/specials/packages/article/0,28804,2107952_2107953_2110143,00.html . Previously Rick was Head of Development at Cypak and Release Manager et al at Microsoft. He is author of Swarmwise: The tactical manual to changing the world and Co Author of The Case for Copyright Reform http://falkvinge.net/books/
Ich spreche mit Benni Mack - dem Release Manager von TYPO3 6.1. Er erzählt mir was ein Release Manager so tut und worauf wir uns in der neuen Version freuen dürfen.
The final installment of interviews from Microsoft Tech Ed US 2007 in Orlando, Richard and Greg talk to Jeff Sigman, the Release Manager for Network Access Protection (NAP). Jeff digs into exactly what NAP is all about, how it interact with Windows Server 2008, Vista and Windows XP.