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Brian Lovin and Ryan Nystrom are the co-founders of Campsite, a tool for product teams to communicate with increased signal, rich institutional knowledge, and reduced noise. We talked about the lessons they have learned from starting the company, but also about their past lessons and experiences that inform the way they approach building Campsite. We covered a lot of topics that continuously roam around in my mind as I think of how to support my teams in the best way.
Ryan Nystrom is a Director of Engineering at GitHub where he's supporting several teams building mobile and desktop apps. In this episode we discussed a broad range of topics from UI, and GraphQL to custom navigation framework, and responder chain. EPISODE LINKS: Ryan Nystrom https://twitter.com/_ryannystrom GitHawk https://github.com/GitHawkApp/GitHawk GitHub for Mobile https://github.com/mobile GitHub Feedback https://github.com/github/feedback Work at GitHub https://github.com/about/careers Chapters: 00:00 Intro 03:24 Manager writing code 05:05 In-app Navigation 09:33 Responder Chain 10:55 App State & Dependency Injection 15:12 Storyboards vs programmatic UI 19:45 SwiftUI 21:46 Networking 26:18GraphQL 28:14 Cache 32:56 Polling 34:41 iOS 13-Compatible Sidebar 39:51 Catalyst vs Electron 41:42 Web UI 46:29 Roadmap 50:40 Client Analytics 54:22 Dogfooding vs Feature Preview 55:42 Open Source 57:35 Outro
GitHub versus Facebook feedback culture comparison with a breakdown of their key elements and cultural differences. Learn the secrets of a healthy feedback culture both on an organizational and personal level from Ryan Nystrom, Director of Engineering at GitHub. In this interview we're covering: The essential elements of a big company's feedback culture GitHub vs Facebook feedback culture comparison Formal performance reviews at GitHub The benefits of a healthy feedback culture Crucial elements to build a feedback culture Keeping feedback useful Handling strong emotional reactions to feedback A leader's role in a good feedback culture Gathering feedback as an engineering leader When to avoid giving feedback face to face HR's involvement in GitHub's feedback culture Excerpt from the interview: "When I’m encouraging people to share feedback, I tell them to consider their feedback a data point. I used to be nervous about giving critical feedback about others, because I didn’t want to cause trouble for them. As a director, if I hear one thing from one person, but I don’t hear it from anyone else, I consider it a small issue. I’ll look into it and ask around if others are observing the same thing. If I see more corroborating evidence, only then will I consider acting on it. No one is exclusively responsible for the consequences coming from their feedback." Click here to read the full interview! (https://codingsans.com/blog/feedback-culture)
GitHub has been a social network for developers for many years. Most social networks are centered around mobile applications, but GitHub sits squarely in a developer’s browser-based desktop workflow. As a result, the design of a mobile app for GitHub is less straightforward. GitHub did acquire a popular mobile client called GitHawk, which was developed The post GitHub Mobile with Brian Lovin and Ryan Nystrom appeared first on Software Engineering Daily.
GitHub has been a social network for developers for many years. Most social networks are centered around mobile applications, but GitHub sits squarely in a developer’s browser-based desktop workflow. As a result, the design of a mobile app for GitHub is less straightforward. GitHub did acquire a popular mobile client called GitHawk, which was developed The post GitHub Mobile with Brian Lovin and Ryan Nystrom appeared first on Software Engineering Daily.
GitHub has been a social network for developers for many years. Most social networks are centered around mobile applications, but GitHub sits squarely in a developer's browser-based desktop workflow. As a result, the design of a mobile app for GitHub is less straightforward. GitHub did acquire a popular mobile client called GitHawk, which was developed by Ryan Nystrom.Since joining GitHub, Ryan has worked on a new mobile app for GitHub, along with a team of engineers including Brian Lovin. Ryan and Brian both join the show to discuss GitHub mobile, and how they designed, architected, and built the app.There is no company quite like GitHub–a social network combined with a version control system that provides a critical utility. All this made for an interesting episode about a one-of-a-kind mobile product.
GitHub has been a social network for developers for many years. Most social networks are centered around mobile applications, but GitHub sits squarely in a developer’s browser-based desktop workflow. As a result, the design of a mobile app for GitHub is less straightforward. GitHub did acquire a popular mobile client called GitHawk, which was developed The post GitHub Mobile with Brian Lovin and Ryan Nystrom appeared first on Software Engineering Daily.
Ryan Nystrom returns to the show accompanied by designer Brian Lovin, to go behind the scenes of the new GitHub mobile app which the two have been building. Also, creating a design system, building custom controls, and more discussions on how developers and designers can work better together.
John and Gui celebrate the 10 year anniversary of the App Store by talking about how app development and design has changed during the last decade, followed by an in-depth look at the new Shortcuts app and an introduction to Sharecuts. Stacktrace by 9to5Mac is available on iTunes and Apple’s Podcasts app or through our dedicated RSS feed for Overcast and other podcast players. Hosts: Gui on Twitter: @_inside John on Twitter: @johnsundell Topics: Engineer, senior engineer, podcast host? John's Xcode theme Swift by Sundell episode with Ryan Nystrom The Stacktrace Aftershow Aftershow teaser clip NSSpain 10 years of the App Store: The design evolution of the earliest apps 1Password Sharecuts MacStadium
Ryan Nystrom of Instagram joins John to talk about data-driven UI development, working on open source, how to optimize performance, becoming an engineering manager and much more.
Garo Hussenjian, iOS Core Team Lead at Tinder, and I recap of our adventure at Swift Summit as well as a follow up on Garo's talk about DISCOVER, an application architecture created and used at Tinder. LINKS - https://www.swiftsummit.com - Garo on Twitter: https://twitter.com/garohussenjian - Discover Talk Slides: https://www.dropbox.com/s/9kosfhsdahbe8z6/Architecture%20in%20Context.pdf?dl=0 - http://tech.gotinder.com/the-new-swipe-right-with-swift/ - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Palace_of_Fine_Arts - Daniel Steinberg: https://twitter.com/dimsumthinking - Joe Groff: https://twitter.com/jckarter - Brandon Williams: https://twitter.com/mbrandonw - Ryan Nystrom: https://twitter.com/_ryannystrom - Brandon Kase: https://twitter.com/bkase_ - Chris Bailey: https://twitter.com/chris__bailey - David Okun: https://twitter.com/dokun24 - Creator of MVC & DCI: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trygve_Reenskaug - https://www.objc.io/issues/13-architecture/viper/ Listen on iTunes. Support this podcast via Patreon. Questions, comments, or you just wanna say Hi? Contact your host @garricn on Twitter. This episode was recorded using the Cast platform by @JulianLepinski. Wanna start your own podcast? Try Cast!
We're back with Season 4 and an excellent interview with Ryan Nystrom. Ryan is an iOS Engineer at Instagram in New York where he focuses on app infrastructure. He helped build IGListKit alongside Jesse Squires and has been tweeting a lot lately about his personal open source iOS App, GitHawk. This is going to be a great season. Enjoy the premeire! ANNOUNCEMENTS New Patrons: - Mike Garvin - Ronald Sala - Guy Daher The SwiftCoders Network of Podcasts: - Fireside Swift // Steven Berard & Zack Falgout - The Learn Swift Podcast // Steven Sherry LINKS - https://twitter.com/_ryannystrom - https://github.com/Instagram/IGListKit - http://githawk.com - https://www.rwdevcon.com - https://buckbuild.com - https://github.com/AFNetworking/AFNetworking/ - Redwood City - Climate Best by Government Test - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TI-83_series - https://dribbble.com - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Impostor_syndrome - https://github.com/facebookarchive/AsyncDisplayKit - Daniel Jalkut - https://twitter.com/danielpunkass/ - https://fastlane.tools - https://github.com/mdiep/MMMarkdown TIPS - Be Ready to Learn - Take Risks, Seek Out Opportunities, Learn from Mistakes - Foster the Environment You Desire - Its Ok to Be Vulnerable - Foster Inclusive Environment Listen on iTunes. Support this podcast via Patreon. Questions, comments, or you just wanna say Hi? Contact your host @garricn on Twitter. This episode was recorded using the Cast platform by @JulianLepinski. Wanna start your own podcast? Try Cast!
More Than Just Code podcast - iOS and Swift development, news and advice
This week we discuss new MacBook Pro's to be announced in October. We examine an article on Swift vs Objective-C language stats, as well as, Apple's interest in McLaren Applied Technologies. We discuss Ryan Nystrom's talk on Refactoring At Scale from Just Try Swift. We discuss a post by Curtis Herbert on compile time warnings. Jaime discusses Apple's post on JSON. Picks: Swift Protobuf, protips on changes in Storyboards and tableViews, Blocky Hockey, Blocky Football, Blocky Soccer, Blocky Rugby, TD MySpend, Realm Mobile Platform. Sponsored by: Buddy Build Episode 112 Show Notes: Apple Likely Aiming for Late October Launch of Redesigned MacBook Pro AMD ATI Technologies Apple CEO Tim Cook's Feud With BlackBerry Has a Quiet End Apple and Deloitte team up to accelerate business transformation on iPhone and iPad Apple deepens enterprise push with Deloitte partnership Aetna will help cover the cost of customers’ Apple Watches Atlassian Confluence JIRA Swift Job Market Is Bad News For Objective-C Nate Swanner TIOBE the software quality program It’s not McLaren Racing, but McLaren Applied Technologies, that Apple is likely lusting after Refactoring At Scale Ryan Nystrom IGListKit Working with JSON in Swift Marin Todorov Spark from CBC Radio: 328: Disruption in banking, a long view on AI, and more… Fiat Money Episode 112 Picks: About Swift Protobuf Protip: Changes in Storyboards and TableViews Blocky Hockey - Arcade Ice Runner Blocky Football - Endless Arcade Runner Blocky Soccer - Endless Arcade Runner Blocky Rugby - Endless Arcde Runner TD MySpend Realm Mobile Platform
More Than Just Code podcast - iOS and Swift development, news and advice
This week we discuss the shutdown of Parse, Orta Therox's post on finding a job as an iOS developer, the Swift Algorithm Club and working in Objective-C. We're joined by Tammy Coron, who is a developer and all around creative person. We do discuss Star Wars and try not to spoil it. We also touch on developer conferences coming in 2016. Picks: Pomo.tv, Android Study Jams, 360|Andev, X-Files season 10, IndieDevStock and NSNorth. Episode 77 Show Notes: Mason-Dixon Line Parse is shutting down Heroku Azure FireBase Interviewing, applying and getting your first iOS job Cocoa Programming for OS X – The Big Nerd Ranch Guide C4 (conference) CocoaConf RWDevCon Inspiration Talk – Contributing by Ryan Nystrom Swift Algorithm Club RWDevCon Inspiration Talk - Math Isn't Scary by Matthijs Hollemans - Ray Wenderlich Seasonality Go Developer didn't study CS Why I write in Objective C Episode 77 Picks: Pomo.tv Android Study Jams 360|Andev X-Files season 10 IndieDevStock NSNorth
More Than Just Code podcast - iOS and Swift development, news and advice
We follow up on the Apple Watch now that Jaime is back. We discuss the first Apple TV Tech Talk (SuperGirl spoilers) in Toronto. We follow up on Swift Open Source, which actually went live on github. We also discuss the Taxonomy of Developers as seen by Y-Combinators. Wire framing tools are also discussed. Picks: AppCooker, Swift Algorithm News and MacID. Episode 69 Show Notes: the Score Brian Gilham Robin Senior Natasha the Robot Apple plans March Apple Watch 2 event, 4-inch ‘iPhone 6c’ possible Fibit Microsoft Band Pedometer++ 2.3: Embracing the Apple Watch Apple TV Tech Talk Shaan Pruden John Geleynse Josh Tidsbury Apple TV Streaming Content on Hold for now Digital Ad Spending Expected to Soon Surpass TV Welcome to Swift.org Chris Lattner Greg's contribution to Swift Your source for Swift at IBM Introducing the IBM Swift Sandbox docker Source Kitten SourceKit Introduction to Open Source Swift on Linux A Taxonomy of Programmers Y Combinator Sketch iMockUp Interface 3 Briefs Omni Graffle AppTaster RWDevCon Inspiration Talk – Contributing by Ryan Nystrom Episode 69 Picks: AppCooker Swift Algorithms News MacID
More Than Just Code podcast - iOS and Swift development, news and advice
This week we discuss WWDC 2015 and ticket lottery. Jaime and Tim discuss their experiences at NSNorth at the Chateau Montebello. The team discusses the Apple Watch try on experiences at the Apple Store. We also discuss the new Glide Kickstarter campaign. Episode 35 Show Notes: WWDC 2015 NSNorth 2015 Periscope Slack Evan Dekhayser WWDC Student Scholarship Brian Gilham Georgia Dow Jonathan Penn Ash Linquist Ashley Nelson-Hornstein Gord Fontenot JP Simard Rob Rix RWDevCon Inspiration Talk – Contributing by Ryan Nystrom Vanessa Logan - Sago Sago iOS Tech Learning Resources Weekly How to save a Periscope with Quicktime Be My Eyes SupportKit Freshbooks Offer Up Glide on Kickstarter Adobe Digital Publishing Suite Apache Cordova Episode 35 Picks: Unclutter Jump and Shoot Attack Pitch X
More Than Just Code podcast - iOS and Swift development, news and advice
This week we continue the discussion on App marketing. We discuss developer burn-out. April Fools marketing. We discuss Ryan Nystrom's post on Visual Tests on Playgrounds. That leads Aaron to ask Tim, why build game apps when they are likely to get buried on the App Store. Tim describes his imaginary web friends. The phenomenal success of the Pi Day Countdown app. (Phenomenal to us!) We talk about our favorite April Fools posts. We examine Periscope as Tim live reviews it, while broadcasting to Periscope. We discuss the Apple TV SDK and the HBO deal with Apple. Episode 33 Notes: Comment From Darren Baptiste AppCode Reveal Passia Foster 99 Ways to Get Your App Noticed ScreenFlow Charles Perry Niche Market Smappsoft Youtube Channel Rob Rix speaking at NSNorth Samsung Fly-Fi Under the Influence Marketing Innovations Episode Visual Tests with Xcode Playgrounds Pi Day Countdown Preparing Your App Submission for Apple Watch Rocket Podcast Christina Warren com.Google MS-DOS for Smart Phones Overcast Apptentive First Apple Watch apps begin hitting the App Store including Things, Sky Guide, Dark Sky, more MLB At Bat Uber Air Canada the Score Brian Gilham of Chronicons the Working Group Mark Pavlidis Siphon Coffee Facebook Pop Episode 33 Picks: Creating Animations and Interactions with Physical Models Periscope
The Smart Passive Income Online Business and Blogging Podcast
#114: Whether you’re working with a team of your own or going solo, completing BIG projects beyond your normal editorial calendar can be an extremely difficult task. That’s why today I’m so happy to introduce you to the team members behind the production of my new SPI iOS application today: Matt Gartland (the producer), Dustin Tevis (the designer), and Ryan Nystrom (the developer). Podcast show notes available here: https://www.smartpassiveincome.com/session114
The Smart Passive Income Online Business and Blogging Podcast
#114: Whether you’re working with a team of your own or going solo, completing BIG projects beyond your normal editorial calendar can be an extremely difficult task. That’s why today I’m so happy to introduce you to the team members behind the production of my new SPI iOS application today: Matt Gartland (the producer), Dustin Tevis (the designer), and Ryan Nystrom (the developer). Podcast show notes available here: https://www.smartpassiveincome.com/session114
Mark and Gordon discuss their holiday vacations, striving for a good work/life balance, and resolutions for the new year. objc-run Playbook CocoaHeads Boston NSCoder Night Meetup NSNorth Noodle Learn you a haskell Ryan Nystrom's (not Nyquist) iOS 7 Best Practices blog post Functional Reactive Programming by Ash Furrow Model/View/View-Model Gary Bernhardt's Boundaries talk Gary Bernhardt on Giant Robots
Gordon Fontenot and Mark Adams talk about iOS7 aftermath and Airplane! Ash Furrow's posts on teehan+lax Double Encore iOS 7 Articles Ryan Nystrom on live blurring in iOS7 RNFrostedSidebar
Bill (@mavrck) is joined by Matt Gartland (@mattgartland) and Ryan Nystrom (@_ryannystrom) for a discussion about crossover skills in Development and Design jobs.