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Live today, Sara Vieira, developer at axo.dev, joined the pod to talk about how Rust and React can work harmoniously by using Tauri. Links https://iamsaravieira.com https://github.com/SaraVieira https://twitter.com/nikkitaftw We want to hear from you! How did you find us? Did you see us on Twitter? In a newsletter? Or maybe we were recommended by a friend? Let us know by sending an email to our producer, Emily, at emily.kochanekketner@logrocket.com (mailto:emily.kochanekketner@logrocket.com), or tweet at us at PodRocketPod (https://twitter.com/PodRocketpod). Follow us. Get free stickers. Follow us on Apple Podcasts, fill out this form (https://podrocket.logrocket.com/get-podrocket-stickers), and we'll send you free PodRocket stickers! What does LogRocket do? LogRocket combines frontend monitoring, product analytics, and session replay to help software teams deliver the ideal product experience. Try LogRocket for free today. (https://logrocket.com/signup/?pdr) Special Guest: Sara Vieira.
O Pedro esteve recentemente à conversa com a Sara Vieira, mentora de negócios éticos, no âmbito da Semana Aberta de Conversas sobre Coaching. A troca de ideias foi tão boa que quisemos mesmo partilhar também aqui no Podcast. Um diálogo cheio de reflexões fundamentais sobre como podemos fazer negócios (de desenvolvimento pessoal ou quaisquer outros) sem atropelar os nossos valores e sem ceder às ideias pré-concebidas sobre como vender e promover os nossos serviços. Para ouvir, refletir e partilhar! A agenda 2023 de cursos da Mia e do Pedro está em https://www.shor.by/lt2023 O novo livro da Mia e do Pedro está à venda em todo o lado! Para aderires à comunidade Telegram do Podcast IVM, usa este link: https://t.me/podcastivm Para acederes à Escola de Desenvolvimento Pessoal da LIFE Training: escola.lifetraining.com.pt Mikaela Övén : www.mikaelaoven.com | www.facebook.com/miafulness | instagram: @miafulness Pedro Vieira: www.pedrovieira.net | www.facebook.com/pedrovieira.pt | instagram: @pedrovieira.oficial ©️2023 Mikaela Övén e Pedro Vieira . Todos os direitos reservados.
Sara Vieira (@NikkitaFTW) is here to talk TypeScript... and why you shouldn't use it everywhere. We also reminiscence about Angular 1, explain The WordPress Problem...and maybe sing some Linkin Park. Transcript: Coming soon! Show notes: Okay, I say TypeScript weird... Loved this course: https://www.executeprogram.com/courses/typescript Mike North's TS course on Frontend Masters: https://frontendmasters.com/courses/typescript-v2/ Effective TypeScript: https://effectivetypescript.com/ --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/single-threaded/support
Hipólito Lima, activista ambiental membro do programa Tatô, um programa desenvolvido pela ONG são-tomense Marapa para a protecção das espécies marinhas, em particular as tartarugas, foi galardoado há um pouco mais de uma semana com o prémio internacional de Conservação Tusk 2020 concedido pela fundação Príncipe William. Este prémio de mais de 50 mil Euros que reconhece o valor de décadas de trabalho na protecção das tartarugas marinhas em São Tomé e Príncipe, espécie que no passado era alvo de caça para consumo da sua carne, deveria ser dedicado à continuidade da missão de Hipólito Lima e dos seus colegas do programa Tatô com quem travamos conhecimento há dois anos atrás em São Tomé. Passados estes largos meses, entramos novamente em contacto com aquele que chamam de "pai das tartarugas" e com Sara Vieira, coordenadora da Marapa, ONG no seio da qual trabalha Hipólito Lima. Ambos mostraram-se satisfeitos com o percurso já percorrido.
In this podcast episode, Rob and Jake talk to Sara Vieira, author of Opinionated React, developer at Code Sandbox, and organizer of QueerJS and the Women of React Conference. Together, they discuss Sara's book, "Opinionated React," and how it provides value to teams looking for a more prescriptive approach to building React applications or simply looking for clear and persuasive analysis of alternative approaches to selecting third party React libraries. They also discuss the process of writing a book and share advice for aspiring writers, talk about how to build inclusive communities at scale, and also speak about the importance of mental health in the tech world (especially in the age of COVID). Hosts: Rob Ocel - @robocell - Architect, This Dot Labs Jake Dohm - @JakeDohm - Developer, Good Work Guest: Sara Vieira - @NikkitaFTW - Author of "Opinionated React," developer at Code Sandbox, and organizer of QueerJS and the Women of React Conference This episode is sponsored by KendoReact & This Dot Labs.
Andreas Houben unterhält sich mit mir über das Buch "Opinionated React" von Sara Vieira.
The Opinionated Guide to React by Sara VieiraCodeSandboxI'm sorry for the sparse notes this week.Truth is I got admitted to the hospital with my daughter this weekend and have not had a chance to collect them.I'll post them when I return.But, let's be honest, the book link is what matters most :)SponsorsInfinite RedIn over your head with a React or React Native app? Infinite Red can help.They are React Native core contributors who've been designing, building and shipping apps for over 10 years. Head to reactpodcast.infinite.red to learn more.Get involvedBlack Lives MatterPlease join us in donating to the Equal Justice Initiative
Fredrik chats with Sara Vieira about The Opinionated Guide to React - the guide to making all the choices React doesn’t make for you (plus hooks). We talk about the magic train ride from Prague which led to the creation of the book, what the writing and publication process was like, and of course about the surprising and horrific code Sara uses to create the final book files. We also discuss MC:ing conferences, what happens when world events explode all over your writing, finding your voice, and making the most of your Grammarly plan. Thank you Cloudnet for sponsoring our VPS! Comments, questions or tips? We are @kodsnack, @tobiashieta, @oferlund and @bjoreman on Twitter, have a page on Facebook and can be emailed at info@kodsnack.se if you want to write longer. We read everything we receive. If you enjoy Kodsnack we would love a review in iTunes! You can also support the podcast by buying us a coffee (or two!) through Ko-fi. Links Sara Sara on Github Entertaining talk about making good buttons (and more) The Opinionated Guide to React - Sara’s book Codesandbox Codepen Glitch Hooks in React Class components React state management Overmind Christian Alfoni - creator of Overmind Vue Styled components Emotion Reach router React router Preact Ryan Florence Blender Photo of girl giving a police officer flowers and being arrested The Carnation Revolution - the end of the Portugese dictatorship This is fine - the meme and plushie Grammarly Full stack fest Markdown Gatsby Puppeteer - for scraping web pages, and more Pdflib Epub Calibre Mobi files Paddle Gatsby-starter-book Prism VS code theme to Prism theme converter VAT Stripe GDPR Cheerio Product hunt Cypress useMemo Sitges Rust React Amsterdam Titles It’s like sad Spanish I make buttons Goth Glitch I finished something The stress doesn’t end On a train from Prague Also kind of European Apparently I started this on Christmas It depends Why it depends I don’t think that’s an answer Thank you for not calling it “React Best Practises” March never ended I can only write like I speak I’m not school-smart yarn generate book A very dirty Javascript function A different type of terrifying All of a sudden, nothing’s scary anymore “I think this thing has a computer” It was the worst visa
Fredrik chats with Sara Vieira about The Opinionated Guide to React - the guide to making all the choices React doesn’t make for you (plus hooks). We talk about the magic train ride from Prague which led to the creation of the book, what the writing and publication process was like, and of course about the surprising and horrific code Sara uses to create the final book files. We also discuss MC:ing conferences, what happens when world events explode all over your writing, finding your voice, and making the most of your Grammarly plan. Thank you Cloudnet for sponsoring our VPS! Comments, questions or tips? We are @kodsnack, @tobiashieta, @antikristoffer and @bjoreman on Twitter, have a page on Facebook and can be emailed at info@kodsnack.se if you want to write longer. We read everything we receive. If you enjoy Kodsnack we would love a review in iTunes! You can also support the podcast by buying us a coffee (or two!) through Ko-fi. Links Sara Sara on Github Entertaining talk about making good buttons (and more) The Opinionated Guide to React - Sara’s book Codesandbox Codepen Glitch Hooks in React Class components React state management Overmind Christian Alfoni - creator of Overmind Vue Styled components Emotion Reach router React router Preact Ryan Florence Blender * Photo of girl giving a police officer flowers and being arrested The Carnation Revolution - the end of the Portugese dictatorship This is fine - the meme and plushie Grammarly Full stack fest Markdown Gatsby Puppeteer - for scraping web pages, and more Pdflib Epub Calibre Mobi files Paddle Gatsby-starter-book Prism VS code theme to Prism theme converter VAT Stripe GDPR Cheerio Product hunt Cypress useMemo Sitges Rust React Amsterdam Titles It’s like sad Spanish I make buttons Goth Glitch I finished something The stress doesn’t end On a train from Prague Also kind of European Apparently I started this on Christmas It depends Why it depends I don’t think that’s an answer Thank you for not calling it “React Best Practises” March never ended I can only write like I speak I’m not school-smart yarn generate book A very dirty Javascript function A different type of terrifying All of a sudden, nothing’s scary anymore “I think this thing has a computer” It was the worst visa
Sara first told us how she came to learn to code to prove her dad wrong. We then discussed her internships, fast paced environments, shame, learning new domains and doing what you love. We also discussed about React, Angular, Vue and her "Opinionated Guide to React" book. We finally talked about failing and Sara's dream of traveling through Europe (the world?) to teach coding!Here are the links of the show:https://www.twitter.com/NikkitaFTWhttps://iamsaravieira.comhttps://github.com/SaraVieirahttps://opinionatedreact.comhttps://www.developerdrive.comhttps://code.tutsplus.com/tutorialsCreditsMusic Aye by Yung Kartz is licensed CC BY-NC-ND 4.0.Your hostSoftware Developer‘s Journey is hosted and produced by Timothée (Tim) Bourguignon, a crazy frenchman living in Germany, who dedicated his life to helping others learn & grow. More about him at timbourguignon.fr.Gift the podcast a ratingPlease do me and your fellow listeners a favor by spreading the word about this podcast. And please leave a rating on the podcasting platforms. This is the best way to increase the visibility of the podcast. Find all the links here: https://devjourney.info/subscribe.htmlPatreonFinally, if you want to help produce the podcast, support us on Patreon. Every cent you pledge will help pay the hosting billsSupport the show (http://bit.ly/2yBfySB)
No episódio de hoje temos a maravilhosa Sara Vieira, mais conhecida como PazSarinha, 29 anos, é moradora do centro de Sp, fundadora do Poesia de Esquina, sarau que acontece todo último domingo do mês no Ibirapuera. Lançou seu primeiro livro Passarninhos em 2018. É poeta, sonetista, e escreve desde os 9 anos de idade. Já participou de diversos Slam e Sarau, ganhando o Slam Racha Coração em 2020, e participando do Slam Viral. Sua lírica é composta por metáforas, poesias de amor, desamor, fala sobre a natureza, e se inspira em Alberto Caeiro, heterônimo de Fernando Pessoa. Siga ela nas redes sociais: Instagram: @sah_vc / @poesiadeesquina_ Facebook: Sara Vieira Poetisa / Sara Poesia de Esquina
Palestra proferida na Igreja Presbiteriana de Anápolis, por ocasião do evento dedicado aos pais para aprenderem como impor limites e disciplinar filhos desde a infância, 07/11/2019 por Sara Vieira.
Neste episódio, entrevisto a Sara Vieira que nos conta como a sua intuição a levou a criar o seu próprio negócio. A Sara tinha um bom trabalho numa empresa na Alemanha e era apaixonada pelo que fazia, no entanto em determinada altura sentiu dentro de si que algo faltava. Entrou num processo de questionamentos que a fizeram olhar mais para dentro e dar ouvidos à sua intuição. Foi assim que percebeu que queria ajudar empreendedoras a criar impacto e viverem dos seus sonhos. O que a levou a criar um projeto próprio, despedir-se e voltar para Portugal. . Referências do episódio: https://neuzacavalinhos.pt/mudar-de-vida-sara-vieira . Se sentes que o podcast de alguma forma te inspirou, subscreve e partilha. Ajuda-me neste caminho de espalhar inspiração junto de quem quer mudar de vida. Desejo-te um dia mágico. Neuza . Encontra-me em: - https://neuzacavalinhos.pt - https://instagram.com/neuzacavalinhos - https://facebook.com/neuzacavalinhos - neuza@neuzacavalinhos.pt
When something is easy for us, it more than likely is just familiar to us. It's easy to forget how challenging it was to learn what we know. When we tell someone who is still learning that something is easy, it diminishes the accomplishment of learning something new. People who are good at things put in the time and the practice to get where they are, there isn't a shortcut to experience. We can gain experience by building things. But what do you build? In this episode, Sara Vieira talks about how to find ideas for your side projects, and what you can do to make them fun and sustainable. Resources Is There Uber In? Public APIs Sara Vieira Twitter Website Meme Website Github Kent C. Dodds Website Twitter Github Youtube Testing JavaScript
In this episode, Sara Vieira walks us through her journey as a developer, and the importance to give back to the Web. We also talk about airports, different attitudes to programming, and her views on some of the most recent technological developments that promise to change the Web. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Show Description****************We're talking JavaScript land with Sara Vieira - how she got her start coding, Node, GraphQL, Apollo, living and traveling as a coder, what's happening in the JavaScript ecosystem around the world, NuxtJS, design systems, and frameworks. Listen on Website →Links***** Sara on Github Sara on Medium makefrontendshitagain.party GraphQL Apollographql Relay Code Sandbox ShopTalk […]
Sara is a developer on the beloved CodeSandbox app. She's worked for years as a developer advocate, giving brilliant talks across the world, and building some of the wildest sites on the web. Chantastic asks her about succeeding against mental illness, how she achieved meme status, why we should "build dumb shit", and what the heck a developer advocate does. They discuss corporate "change the world" bullshit, casual racism, why you should teach what you know, and the shockingly unglamorous lifestyle of a conference speaker.
Sara Vieira, developer advocate and professional maker of dumb shit, talks through why she does her weird experiments on the internet. Sometimes it is out of need, but honestly a lot of the time it is a random thing that she thinks of or something that someone says that brings up the idea, and she just has to make it. A lot of it is out of boredom, and also procrastination from other projects that she just doesn't want to do. Sara calls herself a lazy developer, but that doesn't mean she isn't working. She finds simpler solutions that involve less coding and also avoids things that aren't necessarily interesting or fun for her to do, like CSS or writing her talk for a conference... A part of being a lazy developer is using the right tool for the job. GraphQL and Redux have an almost cult-like following, but for small apps, their solutions for state management and fetching data are complete overkill.Netlify and Zeit's Now are great for deploying your projects, they allow you to get your unique dumb-shit out there quickly. There was this period where services were all focusing on scalability, but it wasn't easy to just throw your wacky side-projects out on the internet. Sara is organizing the conference ReactJS Girls which will be happening in London on May 3rd, 2019. It started last year while Sara was living in London. She hosted a meetup where all the speakers would be women, but everyone was welcome to attend as a guest. Organizing it this way had multiple benefits, it acted as a filter for the dicks who wouldn't want to learn from women, and it empowered first-time speakers who'd otherwise feel imposter syndrome or fear of judgment. Transcript"Making Dumb Stuff That Makes Strangers on the Internet Smile - with Sara Vieira" TranscriptResources:ReactJS Girls ConferenceReactJS Girls Twittermeme.iamsaravieira.comdan.churchawesometalks.partySara Vieira:TwitterWebsiteGitHubMediumJoel HooksTwitterWebsite
Recording date: 2018-12-13 John Papa @John_Papa Dan Wahlin @danwahlin Sara Vieira @NikkitaFTW / @YLDio Resources: GruntJS GulpJS Tailwind CSS Get Bootstrap React React Styleguidist Someone to follow Cooper Press Publications The Console Log / @_TheConsoleLog Twitter Non-Profits Timejumps 00:43 Guest introduction 03:11 Switching from Angular to React 07:48 Going all Facebook 12:51 How big was the styleguide? 14:44 How did developers access the styleguide? 16:28 Sponsor: Progress 17:07 How do you use CSS with React? 22:27 Writing styleguide for React? 26:23 Flexibility vs stability 29:40 Sponsor: IdeaBlade 30:39 Working with styleguides on a live site 35:39 Bringing new people on with the styleguide 36:40 What lessons have you learned from building apps? 38:50 Someone to follow Sponsored by: NativeScript
Recording date: 2018-10-02 John Papa https://twitter.com/john_papa Ward Bell https://twitter.com/wardbell Dan Wahlin https://twitter.com/danwahlin Filipe Silva https://twitter.com/filipematossilv (0:01:28) Mailbag - Arianna Grande asks Filipe how he copes with people who are not polite about their OSS communications (0:04:21) Dan: Dealing with unpleasant people in open source projects (0:04:45) Dan: Techniques for dealing with github issues that comes in and not trying to read too much into an issue comment (0:05:20) Filipe says you lose a lot in the GitHub issue communication (written form) (0:07:14) John asks "What is the outcome you want for your online interactions?" (0:07:44) John says he likes to look at how people interact online as a basis for how they will work on a team (0:08:55) Dan says the way you interact with issues can leave a fingerprint to future hiring (0:09:49) John asks Filipe how he tries to get to the real problems and how they prioritize? (0:10:10) Filipe says the priorities are "is it working?" first and foremost (0:10:30) Angular CLI github repo https://github.com/angular/angular-cli/ (0:11:50) Filipe says performance issues involve a lot of time and debugging (0:12:00) When you pull up the debugger are you sure you know what you will learn? (0:12:13) Flame Charts https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Tools/Performance/Flame_Chart (0:13:00) Filipe says console.log is still a valid debugging tool (0:16:00) Ward asks what performance tools are available that he recommends (0:17:30) Ward asks what the trigger is that says it is time to go into performance debugging (0:18:00) John asks about how Filipe dealt with a recent issue where building Angular took longer than normal (0:18:50) What tools are built into some OSS software for profiling or helping with debugging (0:19:26) Ward asks about lazy loading. As in, does it really matter? (0:20:00)Filipe talks about bundle sizes and their impact (0:21:10) Dan asks about tools to analyze traffic can help determine which routes to lazy load (0:22:33) Filipe talks about working remotely (0:22:54) Filipe talks about cooking pizza (0:23:03) Filipe discusses how he made his own working hours as a remote worker (0:25:45) Dan: Discussion on working remotely with a distributed team (0:26:00) Filipe talks about how they deal with the high number of issues and contributors to their OSS repository (0:27:30) Filipe discusses how they prioritize issues in github (0:28:08) Filipe talks about "caretaking" duty - triage of issues in github by feature areas. (0:29:00) Ward mentions that Caretaking on the Angular team is a rotating position. (0:29:14) Filipe shares information about "care taking" and how to label and then prioritize issues. (0:30:20) Filipe talks about how they use GitHub labels (0:31:00) John says be careful not to get close to the flames (0:31:39) Filipe talks about GitHub project boards (0:32:21) Angular project's project board https://github.com/angular/angular/projects (0:33:27) Filipe says they use Jira for organizing https://www.atlassian.com/software/jira (0:35:00) Ward says if someone hasn't looked at in months, maybe it's time to close it (0:35:52) Prioritization techniques for projects (relies on severity and frequency) (0:36:25) Severity and frequency are 2 of the biggest things they look for when deciding what issues to focus on (0:36:44) Prioritization techniques for projects (relies on severity and frequency) (0:37:23) Dan mentions techniques for handling burnout in large-scale open source projects (0:37:40) Dan asks Filipe how he handles JavaScript fatigue in the OSS world and what advice he has (0:39:02) Filipe shares his techniques for handling burnout in large-scale open source (0:39:30) Filipe talks about how to be honest with yourself and understand why you are frustrated (if you are) (0:39:40) Filipe says "think, as a maintainer of this project, how can i manage this the best i can?" (0:40:00) Ward says having a community of caretakers is a great way to share the work projects (0:42:00) Someone to follow - Sara Vieira https://twitter.com/NikkitaFTW (0:42:20) Someone to follow - Brendon Burns https://twitter.com/brendandburns , Brendan is huge in the Kubernetes space https://kubernetes.io/ (0:43:30) Someone to follow - Annie Griffiths, National Geographic Photographer, "RippleEffects" https://www.anniegriffiths.com (0:45:20) Axel Rauschmayer https://twitter.com/rauschma http://2ality.com Additional Resources Nice tips for performance in Angular https://medium.com/@spp020/44-quick-tips-to-fine-tune-angular-performance-9f5768f5d945 Flame charts https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Tools/Performance/Flame_Chart Working remotely Tips from Scott Hanselman https://www.hanselman.com/blog/30TipsForSuccessfulCommunicationAsARemoteWorker.aspx Github Projects to organize issues and work in OSS https://help.github.com/articles/about-project-boards/ Sara Vieira's the Dark Side of Conferences https://uxdesign.cc/the-dark-side-of-conferences-4b103143179f Thanks to our sponsor for this week;s episode, NativeScript https://www.nativescript.org/realtalkjs
I met with Sara Vieira, developer advocate at YLD.io, to talk about how many conferences are too much? Sara is well known in the JavaScript world for her exciting and captivating talks, for being a power house on stage and not shy of a joke. Listen to her about how she learned to slow down the hard way, and what she does to keep a good balance between life and work. Links for this episode: - Sara's original article: https://uxdesign.cc/the-dark-side-of-conferences-4b103143179f - Sara on Twitter: https://twitter.com/NikkitaFTW
Sara Vieira is easily one of the most entertaining people we’ve ever had on this show. She has been working with React over the past few years and has recently been traveling around Europe and giving free workshops on React in London and at React Finland.
Sara Vieira is easily one of the most entertaining people we've ever had on this show. She has been working with React over the past few years and has recently been traveling around Europe and giving free workshops on React in London and at React Finland.