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Our first Tea Trail of 2024 is conjured into being by the remarkable Shamanic Medicine Woman Carina Johansson. She follows the path of the Völva and lives in the forest of Söderåsen in the south of Sweden where she teaches Shamanism and Seidr. I first met Carina when I traveled to Sweden many years ago for a training in Shamanic Counselling with SCSS. Despite the deep insights that came through being partnered with her for the work, it is perhaps the laughter and unconditional friendship that I remember most from those times. If you wish to know more about Carina and the individual client work and courses she is offering, please contact her by her email: carina_gillastig@live.se. Join us in the undeniable magic of a healed heart.
In this episode, Dev Chatterji and Lois Lee discuss role the oral-beta lactams may serve in the treatment of Gram-Negative Rod bloodstream infections, the data behind the recommendation and identify the patients who may be ideal candidates for this therapy. The information presented during the podcast reflects solely the opinions of the presenter. The information and materials are not, and are not intended as, a comprehensive source of drug information on this topic. The contents of the podcast have not been reviewed by ASHP, and should neither be interpreted as the official policies of ASHP, nor an endorsement of any product(s), nor should they be considered as a substitute for the professional judgment of the pharmacist or physician.
Human Papillomavirus (HPV) is a common sexually transmitted infection and has been a public health target in the United States for some time. As many as 80%-90% of sexually active adults have contracted HPV and about 50% of infections are at high risk of leading to cancer. Despite the availability of commercial vaccinations for HPV, education of clinicians and patients alike remains less than optimal. Join us for a discussion on the current state of HPV vaccination in the United States and how pharmacists play a critical role. The information presented during the podcast reflects solely the opinions of the presenter. The information and materials are not, and are not intended as, a comprehensive source of drug information on this topic. The contents of the podcast have not been reviewed by ASHP, and should neither be interpreted as the official policies of ASHP, nor an endorsement of any product(s), nor should they be considered as a substitute for the professional judgment of the pharmacist or physician.
Welcome to Episode 96 of the Sports Card Strategy Show with hosts Paul Hickey of NoOffseason.com, the Sports Card Doctor, Chad Guell, of NoOffseason.com, and Kendall "Lefty" McKee of NoOffseason.com, JustBaseball.com and Just Breaks. In this episode we talk about: - L of the Week - W of the Week - Buy of the Week - Sell of the Week - Basketball rankings - Audience Q & A with Conner Barnett Paul L of the week - Cblez sharing content that doesn't have a lot of value. Paul left the stream last week during the Show and Tell show. W of the week - audience participation and Conner Barnett's debut on the show. Arch Manning exclusive card, National VIP Gold Pack. SCSS will be at the Culture Collision Trade Show in January 2024. Buying - Paul is excited about basketball cards. In season tournaments are coming up and planning on making some plays. Looking at Jordan Poole, Tyrese Maxey, Garland, SGA for mid tier and Luka on the higher end. Selling - De'aaron Fox is up 30% in the last 30 days. Strategy of the day - give yourself permission to let go of the card if you have made the profit that you set out to make. Lefty McKee L of the week - Carlos Alcaraz lost to Djokavich. W of the week - Jackson Holliday continues to rise. December is going to be the time to buy him. Buying - Churio is up 7%. Evan Carter is down 40% over the last 90 days, and is a top 10 prospect in baseball. A lot of people are hyped on Evan Carter. Selling - anything that is a PSA 9 that doesn't hold a long term investment. Now may be a good time to sell Messi. Strategy of the day: Lefty would rather look at 10 names rather than 100. Dr. Chad L of the week - not having enough funds to buy more cards for flipping opportunities. W of the week - Erling Haaland SGC 9, cracked it and sent it to PSA and got a 10. Sold for $400. Buying - a few inexpensive plays from each sport. Looking at Silver Prizm and Contender Rookie autos. Brian Robinson Jr. from Washington Commanders, Rashad Batemen, Calvin Ridley, Romeo Dobbs, Elijah Moore. Baseball, Tyler Black Auto, Evan Carter PSA 10 Refractor 3 for $75. Basketball, Johnny Davis, Jaren Jackson, Trey Murphy. Little risk on a limited budget. Selling - Masyn Winn, and soccer cards. Strategy of the day: Spread your net wide enough and diversify your portfolio. The debut of CONNER BARNETT to talk about comments and questions from the audience. Piastri is an incredible investment opportunity right now. Mojo's sell 40-50% higher than base chrome 1st Giddy is the x factor as a player but doesn't translate to cards. Buy for the Olympics in May or June We'd love your questions and comments!
Welcome to the next episode of Sports Card Strategy Show (and Tell), a natural extension of our flagship show, but with a focus on your cards, questions and ability to share the who, what and why about your PC and flipping game. Mike Lakusta kicking off the show with his recent eBay Golf Card purchases. Tiger woods 2022 artifacts Matthew wolfe diamond relic Red Tiger Wood PSA 9 pop #1 Paul Schmitz aka Buckeye Dill Shows off his buckeye bunker 30 card PSA submission 7 Justin Jefferson Silver Prizm 2 PSA 10's 4 PSA 9's 1, PSAn8 Chad Guell aka Dr. Crack Chad teaches how to use Market Movers to find great deals on cards. Using intelligence reports comparing SGC to PSA. Depending on your risk tolerance you can buy an SGC 9 to take chances on it coming back a PSA 10. Marketmoversapp.com get 20% off with code “nooffseason” Farmer Mosaic Joe sharing the plays he made at The National. Leaf Pop Century Auto Kit Harrington 9.5 (making a pop culture play) 2019 Select SGC 10 Silver Prizm Patrick Mahomes 2022 Panini mosaic Swagger 9.5 2022 Mosaic Garrett Wilson Honeycomb Rookie Gem Mint PSA 10 2011 Playoff National Treasure Patrick Peterson Auto Sentry Black 2022 Select Concourse Level Chet Holmgren Color Match Prizm 2022 Mosaic Gold PSA 10 Patrick Mahomes Stay tuned for more content coming from the team and Mosaic Joe on Bowman Chrome University. Ryan Painter Mail day reveal - Ryan likes to flip lower budget cards. Isaiah Hodgins, Garrett Wilson, Mike Evans Rookie, Christian Watson, Cade Otton, Josh Palmer, Jordan Love, and Nick Chubb Kaboom PSA 9. Win of the week was going to the Guardians and White Sox game with the dugout suite seats. Coming soon! New and improved Rankings brought to you by the SCSS team. Ohmyshoes 2023 Draft Odessy Optimchrome numbered out of 3, Nick Smith Jr. Auto JaMarr Chase Rated Rookie Christian Braun Panini Prizm Red Sparkle Christian Braun Panini Prizm Silver Holo Non Prizm Christian Braun Rated Rookie Christian Braun Select Christian Braun Select Blue Sparkle Christian Braun NBA Hoops Arriving Now Check out Monday's show as Paul shares his thoughts on Ohmyshoes Christian Braun plays. We'd love your questions and comments on this one.
Welcome to the next episode of Sports Card Strategy Show (and Tell), a natural extension of our flagship show, but with a focus on your cards, questions and ability to share the who, what and why about your PC and flipping game. We talk to Johnny at The National, an 18 year old who's flipping game is off the charts. He partners with his friend Brady to kill the game. A great interview with a kid that totally gets it! We also share more Show and Tell from The National as well as audience submissions. First up we've got Dr. Chad Guell sharing his latest picks. Jordan Poole Rookie, Desmond Bane Silver Prizm, SGA Silver wave, Albert Pujols, Tyrese Maxey rookie, Jackson Chourio, James wood paper base chrome first, Justin Crawford base first, Caminero, Druw Jones - 7 card lot, Russell Wilson white paper base rookie, Ichiro Suzuki, Cam Thomas optic holo rookie, and Jk Dobbins purple mosaic PSA 10. Rocky Empire Sports Cards shares the love for Nooffseason and the value of using TAG to grade his cards. Brandon Woodruff, Brandon Miller, Judah Mintz, 2 slabs of Michael Jordan. Next up, he shows his TAG submission, Joey Votto, Lewis Hamilton 7.5, Sauce Gardner, Matsui, Fernando Tatis 9, Mariano Rivera 9, Shohei Ohtani 9, Joey Votto 10, and Mike Trout 10. Ryan Painter up next with SPI for kids attempting to tear the cards out of the magazine. Paul steps in to provide best practices when removing the cards from the perforation. Ryan closes out the show by demolishing Natasha Cloud card. Stay tuned for a how-to video on the proper way to remove SI for kids cards from the magazine. From The National at the SCSS booth, Dave shares his personal collection of Topps on demand 3d cards. Great insight from the audience about tabs or no tabs on PSA penny sleeves. Some say it's not okay and others like Nanette from PSA say it's not a problem. Oh My Shoes closes out the show with his Austin Reaves collection. Next up from Mrs. Shoes he shows a Steph Curry gem mint 10. Jr. Shoes, gets a very nice gift from show attendant, Matt. The show attendant brings Jr. Shoes a Josh Allen 2018 Rated Rookie Auto rated a Beckett 10. Then out of no where, gives Jr. Shoes a1962 Topps Willie Mays Auto. We'd love your questions and comments on this one.
Welcome to Episode 90 of the Sports Card Strategy Show with Paul Hickey, Kendall "Lefty" McKee and the Sports Card Doctor, Chad Guell, of NoOffseason.com. Today we are joined by Duke Dodson of Graybo's! Weekend Recap: - NBA summer league make moves on your cards - Wimbledon quick flip opportunities on Carlos Alcaraz - Djokovic is still in it for another year - MLB draft was yesterday, 07/09, deepest draft since 2011. Chad says get in on Crews and Landford. Paul and his son, Max, are getting in on Max Clarke. Everyone is watching Paul Skenes cards. We've got a bet going on at the SCSS and Duke Dodson helps the guys out. Paul says, he bets that the Jets miss the playoffs. Both Chad and Lefty will accept the bet but if they win more than 5 games, Paul has to wear an Aaron Rodgers jersey for the week. If Paul wins, Chad and Lefty have to buy Michigan State Spartan jerseys and wear them on the show. Duke's L of the week: During a show a customer set his cards to trade on a table, one of them being a Jalen Hurts card and the card, along with several others fell over and the card was damaged. Duke did the customer right by purchasing the card at the value before the drop. Chad's L of the week: He bought a Ohtani card for $30 with shipping that was in mint condition. The guy he bought it from sent it in a bubble wrap thinking it was going to be great. The card was completely bent because he didn't ship it correctly. Stay tuned later this week on how to properly package and ship your cards! Paul's L of the week: Don't crack and resubmit PSA grades. Paul didn't get the grade he wanted so he submitted 8 cards and they came back a lower PSA grade then what they were before he sent them. Lessons learned. Duke's W of the week : Great day of sales at a local card show and great day for the Richmond, VA sports card community. Lefty's W of the week: 7 cards sold while he was on vacation so he got his wife involved in the family business of helping to prep and mail. Also Ky Jones got his time in the limelight and cards are up up 2 bucks! Chad's W of the week: Sold the final Jordan Walker Card. Chad had $820 invested in the 20 card play and made out on the other side profiting $400. Paul's W of the week: Chad and Kendall wrote an amazing article; HOW TO MAKE MONEY BUYING 2023 BOWMAN CHROME 1ST PROSPECTS (TOP 16 PROSPECTS TO BUY). Check it out on Nooffseason.com. Paul also bought a SGC 10 Jalen Hurts 2020 optic holo for $246 cracked and got a PSA 10 currently going for $335. Paul is buying - Scottie Scheffler 2017 SI for Kids rookie for $99. It's the only Golf card Paul has ever purchased. Duke is looking to buy as much as they can at the National. Lefty is buying, Chet Holmgren, Alyssa Thompson, Corbin Carroll, and Justin Crawford. Lefty is selling Corbin Carroll and Wembanyama. Chad is buying Miles Bridges. Hoping for a huge comeback. Chad is looking to buy 20 cards total and is hoping for a 7x return if he has a great year. Chad is selling Trey Lance Paul is advising to sell your Elly De La Cruz and Oscar Piastri. Chad predicts that Elly De La Cruz wins Rookie of the year. SCSS is bringing back the segment : The Gauntlet Kendall "Lefty" McKee closes out the show with a big W of the year - he and his wife are having a BABY! Congratulations! We'd love your questions and comments!
This podcast will focus on Pharmacoequity; what it is and ways to address it. The information presented during the podcast reflects solely the opinions of the presenter. The information and materials are not, and are not intended as, a comprehensive source of drug information on this topic. The contents of the podcast have not been reviewed by ASHP, and should neither be interpreted as the official policies of ASHP, nor an endorsement of any product(s), nor should they be considered as a substitute for the professional judgment of the pharmacist or physician.
On this episode of The Breakdown... What's all the fuss about Supreme Court judges? What are the scandals with Danielle Smith and why is the NDP calling for an RCMP investigation? It turns out the Hinshaw memo was REAL! What was behind that survey that made so many people so upset? And we have a chat with Disability Advocate Don Slater who raised concerns about whether or not the province will ensure that C-22 is used to support people on AISH/Disability and that the province doesn't claw back any of the federal funding targeted to lift disabled Canadians out of poverty! You can send an email a to the Minister of Community and Social Services at SCSS.minister@gov.ab.ca with the simple message to ensure there are no clawbacks when C-22 comes into effect in Alberta! All this and a whole lot more! As always, if you appreciate the kind of content that we're trying to produce here at The Breakdown, please consider signing up as a monthly supporter at our Patreon site at www.patreon.com/thebreakdownab. If you're listening to the audio version of our podcast, please consider leaving us a review and a rating, and don't forget to like and follow us on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram.
Hemophilia B, also known as factor IX deficiency, is the second most common type of hemophilia. This podcast will discuss the limitations of current therapeutic options for Hemophilia B and explore the use of the new gene therapy, Hemgenix® (etranacogene dezaprarvovec), the most expensive drug in the world, from both a clinical and cost perspective. The information presented during the podcast reflects solely the opinions of the presenter. The information and materials are not, and are not intended as, a comprehensive source of drug information on this topic. The contents of the podcast have not been reviewed by ASHP, and should neither be interpreted as the official policies of ASHP, nor an endorsement of any product(s), nor should they be considered as a substitute for the professional judgment of the pharmacist or physician.
In this fast-paced feature from the 2022 Midyear Clinical Meeting, content matter experts discuss medication management strategies in difficult or controversial patient populations and clinical scenarios that might not be widely used or published within hematology/oncology pharmacy. The information presented during the podcast reflects solely the opinions of the presenter. The information and materials are not, and are not intended as, a comprehensive source of drug information on this topic. The contents of the podcast have not been reviewed by ASHP, and should neither be interpreted as the official policies of ASHP, nor an endorsement of any product(s), nor should they be considered as a substitute for the professional judgment of the pharmacist or physician.
We're switching it up again - this time with a grab bag where we cover a trio of topics. We start with a listener request and get deep into our feelings on SCSS in 2023. Spoiler alert, it's serious. Then we move on to "Just Simply" and cover all the words you shouldn't use in your technical communication. Finally, we round it out with "Writing Tips for Improving Your Pull Requests" and give our two cents on the importance of crafting a great pull request (with some tips). Links from the show: • Natali Vlatko - Documenting the (Ancient) History of your Project • Dan Abramov's Preact Signals bug report comment As always, head on over to RuntimeRundown.com and let us know what you think of the new episodes with the suggestion box. Music by Hina and Kevin MacLeod
The field of nanomedicine is a complex and rapidly growing scientific domain. Nanomedicine encompasses a large and diverse number of pharmaceutical formulations including liposomes, micelles, nanoparticles and polymer-drug conjugates. In this second podcast on nanomedicines, pharmacists will be provided with examples of nanomedicines, their challenges, formulary considerations, and future. The information presented during the podcast reflects solely the opinions of the presenter. The information and materials are not, and are not intended as, a comprehensive source of drug information on this topic. The contents of the podcast have not been reviewed by ASHP, and should neither be interpreted as the official policies of ASHP, nor an endorsement of any product(s), nor should they be considered as a substitute for the professional judgment of the pharmacist or physician.
This podcast will focus on therapies for HIV management. The primary focus will be on new and emerging pipeline therapies in addition to what pharmacists can do to promote access and adherence. The information presented during the podcast reflects solely the opinions of the presenter. The information and materials are not, and are not intended as, a comprehensive source of drug information on this topic. The contents of the podcast have not been reviewed by ASHP, and should neither be interpreted as the official policies of ASHP, nor an endorsement of any product(s), nor should they be considered as a substitute for the professional judgment of the pharmacist or physician.
2023-01-31 Weekly News - Episode 182Watch the video version on YouTube at https://youtube.com/live/_iPdrW9iVa4Hosts: Gavin Pickin - Senior Developer at Ortus Solutions Daniel Garcia - Senior Developer at Ortus Solutions Thanks to our Sponsor - Ortus SolutionsThe makers of ColdBox, CommandBox, ForgeBox, TestBox and all your favorite box-es out there. A few ways to say thanks back to Ortus Solutions: Like and subscribe to our videos on YouTube. Help ORTUS reach for the Stars - Star and Fork our Repos Star all of your Github Box Dependencies from CommandBox with https://www.forgebox.io/view/commandbox-github Subscribe to our Podcast on your Podcast Apps and leave us a review Sign up for a free or paid account on CFCasts, which is releasing new content every week BOXLife store: https://www.ortussolutions.com/about-us/shop Buy Ortus's Books 102 ColdBox HMVC Quick Tips and Tricks on GumRoad (http://gum.co/coldbox-tips) Learn Modern ColdFusion (CFML) in 100+ Minutes - Free online https://modern-cfml.ortusbooks.com/ or buy an EBook or Paper copy https://www.ortussolutions.com/learn/books/coldfusion-in-100-minutes Patreon Support ( NOBLE )Goal 1 - We have 42 patreons providing 100% of the funding for our Modernize or Die Podcasts via our Patreon site: https://www.patreon.com/ortussolutions. Goal 2 - We are 37% of the way to fully fund the hosting of ForgeBox.io News and AnnouncementsCommandBox settings Sync FeatureA new CommandBox feature has been born to sync your config settings to your ForgeBox account! New commands:config sync pushconfig sync pullconfig sync diffFrom the ticket: CommandBox settings sync – like VSCode settings sync. BUT, I propose we use people's Forgebox account to tie the data to. This encourages people to: have ForgeBox accounts stay logged in everywhere https://ortussolutions.atlassian.net/browse/COMMANDBOX-1434 Ortus Community Forum now has Chat!The Community Forum recently got an update that includes a chat feature. There are notifications you can turn on so you see when people message you.The forum is pretty active these days which is great to see, a lot better content retention and search compared to slack.Give it the community forum a try!https://community.ortussolutions.com/ ICYMI - New updates released for Java 8, 11, 17, and 19 as of Jan 17 2023Here's a heads-up that some will want to hear about: there are new JVM updates released today (Jan 17, 2023) for the current long-term support (LTS) releases of Oracle Java, 8, 11, and 17, as well as the current interim update 19. (Note that prior to Java 9, releases of Java were known technically as 1.x, so 8 is referred to in resources below as 1.8.)https://www.carehart.org/blog/2023/1/17/java_updates_Jan_2023 ICYMI and CLARIFICATION: Beware that latest Oracle JDK installers will REMOVE older JDK installs of that versionHere's something new to beware if you may run the Oracle JDK installer for the recently updated Java 11 or 17, whether on Windows, macOS, or via RPM: the new Oracle jdk installer WILL REMOVE any older previous versions of that JVM version created by previous JDK installers of the same major version. (Note that this issue does not affect those who implement java by extracting it from a compressed file, like a zip or tar.gz.)Fortunately for some, this issue does NOT affect those running Java 8 or below, or Java 19 or abovehttps://www.carehart.org/blog/2023/1/23/beware_latest_oracle_JDK_installers_will_remove_older_JDK_installs Clarification from Charlie regarding the Podcast discussion of this post last week: Brad said that this behavior is “not new”, and I have to say: that's not correct. As the post goes on to clarify, this change IS documented in last week's release notes for the Oracle JVM. I've updated my post with this new paragraph at the top to clarify that point:Since I posted this last night, I've heard some people assert "this is not new behavior: Java's always popped up and offered to remove old versions". Those folks are misunderstanding something: that was true of past JRE installers (like in Java 8 and earlier, which don't exist for Java 11), but it was never the case for Oracle JDK installers (even for Java 8). THAT's what's new about the JDK 11 and 17 installers, and it's DOCUMENTED in the release notes, as I discuss below. But it may surprise those who never saw a JDK installer do that, thus this post. (The rest of this post remains unchanged.)Thanks Charlie for Clarifiying!ICYMI - CBWire Poll about a CFCasts SeriesI'm in the planning stage of developing an ongoing video series for CBWIRE on https://cfcasts.com/. I have several ideas and would like to put it out to the community to vote what you'd like to see most. All series would feature 5-7 minute bit-sized videos posted regularly (probably weekly) until the series is finished.https://community.ortussolutions.com/t/poll-cbwire-cfcasts-com-series/9513 New Releases and UpdatesICYMI - CBSecurity - V 3.0.0 This module will enhance your ColdBox applications by providing out-of-the-box security.Now with a cool Security Visualizer too!!!Change Log is packed - https://www.forgebox.io/view/cbsecurity#changeLog https://www.forgebox.io/view/cbsecurityWebinar / Meetups and WorkshopsOrtus Event Calendar for Googlehttps://calendar.google.com/calendar/u/0?cid=Y181NjJhMWVmNjFjNGIxZTJlNmQ4OGVkNzg0NTcyOGQ1Njg5N2RkNGJiNjhjMTQwZjc3Mzc2ODk1MmIyOTQyMWVkQGdyb3VwLmNhbGVuZGFyLmdvb2dsZS5jb20 Ortus Fridays are back in Full Effect in 2023 ICYMI - Ortus Webinar - Jan 20th 2023 - CBWIRE Coding Session - Let's build an app with CBWIRE with Grant Copley - 11 AM CST https://cfcasts.com/series/ortus-webinars-2023/videos/cbwire-live-coding-session-with-grant-copley Ortus Office Hours - Feb 3rd, 2023 - 11 AM CSTRegistrationhttps://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZYvcO-hrz8iHNS0C3o0aw2x3JMtmBrKwzfA Software Craftsmanship Book Club - Feb 10th, 2023 - 2 PM CST (Patreon exclusive) CFCasts Content Updateshttps://www.cfcasts.comRecent Releases Ortus Webinar - January - CBWIRE Live Coding Session https://cfcasts.com/series/ortus-webinars-2023/videos/cbwire-live-coding-session-with-grant-copley ITB 2022 - All videos released to subscribers - 30+!!!! 10 ish FREE 2023 ForgeBox Module of the Week Series - 1 new Video https://cfcasts.com/series/2023-forgebox-modules-of-the-week 2023 VS Code Hint tip and Trick of the Week Series - 1 new Video https://cfcasts.com/series/2023-vs-code-hint-tip-and-trick-of-the-week Coming Soon Brad with more CommandBox Videos - 27!!! More ForgeBox and VS Code Podcast snippet videos CBWire Series from Grant - Fill out the Poll here https://community.ortussolutions.com/t/poll-cbwire-cfcasts-com-series/9513 ColdBox Elixir from Eric Getting Started with ContentBox from Daniel Box-ifying a 3rd Party Library from Gavin Conferences and TrainingICYMI - CF Summit Online All the webinars, all the speakers from Adobe ColdFusion Summit 2022 – brought right to your screen. All sessions will soon be streamed online, for your convenience. Stay tuned for more! ICYMI - OPPORTUNITIES FOR BLOCKCHAIN TECHNOLOGY AND NFTS IN THE REAL WORLDMasha Edelen and Nick JuntillaJanuary 24 | 14:00 - 15:00pm EST (1 hour)Understanding the value and practical use cases of Non-Fungible Tokens in modern business applications. Learn how to get started using the blockchain and building your Web 3 strategy.https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YAoLDEe49mM Website for CF Summit Onlinehttps://cfsummit-online.meetus.adobeevents.com/ ICYMI - VUE.JS NATION CONFERENCEJanuary 25th & 26th 2023Full Videos online already - Watched it - Very cool stuff!https://vuejsnation.com/ VUEJS AMSTERDAM 20239-10 February 2023, Theater AmsterdamWorld's Most Special and Largest Vue Conferencehttps://vuejs.amsterdam/ VueJS Live MAY 12 & 15, 2023ONLINE + LONDON, UKCODE / CREATE / COMMUNICATE35 SPEAKERS, 10 WORKSHOPS10000+ JOINING ONLINE GLOBALLY300 LUCKIES MEETING IN LONDONhttps://vuejslive.com/ Dev NexusApril 4-6th, 2023 in AtlantaGeorgia World Congress Center285 Andrew Young International Blvd NWAtlanta, GA 30313https://devnexus.com/ No Ortus speakers this year but Charlie Arehart is speaking- Congratulations Charlie!Into the Box 2023 - 10th EditionMay 17-19, 2023 The conference will be held in The Woodlands (Houston), TexasThis year we will continue the tradition of training and offering a pre-conference hands-on training day on May 17th and our live Mariachi Band Party! However, we are back to our Spring schedule and beautiful weather in The Woodlands! Also, this 2023 will mark our 10 year anniversary. So we might have two live bands and much more!!!Still time - call for speakers for the Into The Box Conference for 2023 is open until Jan 31sthttps://www.intothebox.org/blog/into-the-box-2023-call-for-speakers https://itb2023.eventbrite.com/ CFCamp is backJune, 22-23rd 2023Marriott Hotel Munich Airport, FreisingCall for Speakers is now open!https://www.papercall.io/cfcamp2023https://www.cfcamp.org/More conferencesNeed more conferences, this site has a huge list of conferences for almost any language/community.https://confs.tech/https://github.com/scraly/developers-conferences-agenda Blogs, Tweets, and Videos of the Week1/31/23 - Blog - Ben Nadel - A Simple Slide Show Using Hotwire And Lucee CFMLNow that I have my ColdFusion and Hotwire playground up and running, I can start to explore the features of the Hotwire framework. And, one of the most attractive features is the ability to update a portion of the page using a full-page render. This works by scoping DOM (Document Object Model) changes to a given element. To see this in action, I wanted to create a simple slide show using Lucee CFML.https://www.bennadel.com/blog/4398-a-simple-slide-show-using-hotwire-and-lucee-cfml.htm Creation Order: LiveView created for Phoenix's for the Elixir language LiveWire is Laravel for PHP HotWire is Ruby on Rails for Ruby CBWire is our LiveWire implementation for ColdBox for ColdFusion Check our January CBWire Webinar from Grant to see it in action HTMX is another option which has grown over time - mentioned by a few CFMLs like Greg Alexander 1/29/23 - Blog - Ben Nadel - OnRequestStart() / OnRequest() Methods Invoked Even If Requested Template Doesn't Exist In Lucee CFMLWhile setting up my ColdFusion and Hotwire Demos project, I stumbled upon an application behavior that is unique to Lucee CFML (as opposed to Adobe ColdFusion). Historically, with ColdFusion, attempting to request a .cfm file that doesn't exist would result in a "Missing Template" error; or, if defined, would trigger the onMissingTemplate() event handler. This was true regardless of the method defined in your Application.cfc framework component. In Lucee CFML, however, it seems that the onRequestStart() and onRequest() life-cycle method will be invoked even if the requested template doesn't exist. Which is awesome!https://www.bennadel.com/blog/4397-onrequeststart-onrequest-methods-invoked-even-if-requested-template-doesnt-exist-in-lucee-cfml.htm 1/29/23 - Blog - Ben Nadel - Setting Up My ColdFusion + Hotwire Demos PlaygroundA month ago, I started building a ColdFusion and Hotwire application as a learning experience. Only, once I finished the basic ColdFusion CRUD (Create, Read, Update, Delete) features, I didn't really know how to go about applying the Hotwire functionality. I realized that I bit off more than I could chew; and, I needed to go back and start learning some of the Hotwire basics before I could build an app using the "Hotwire way". As such, I've started a new ColdFusion and Hotwire Demos project, where I intended to explore stand-alone aspects of the Hotwire framework.https://www.bennadel.com/blog/4396-setting-up-my-coldfusion-hotwire-demos-playground.htm1/27/23 - Blog - Brad Wood - Improving Lucee's QoQ Support Again- now 200% fasterTwo years ago, I published this post detailing how I had refactored the Query of Query support in Lucee to be much better and also much faster:https://www.codersrevolution.com/blog/improving-lucees-query-of-query-support I removed the single-threaded HSQLDB callback for grouped/aggregate and distinct selects and tuned the performance. QoQ's are a bit of a polarizing feature in CFML. They've suffered in the past from poor support and poor performance which has caused a lot of people to avoid them. There are certainly places where queryMap(), queryFilter(), and queryReduce() are the best approach, but there are also times where you simply can't beat the readability and conciseness of an ordered, aggregated select. I know developers who tell me they never use "reduce" higher order functions because they are too confusing, but I've never met a developer who didn't understand "GROUP BY department"! https://www.codersrevolution.com/blog/improving-lucees-qoq-support-again-now-200-faster 1/26/23 - Blog - Charlie Arehart - Be aware that ColdFusion 2018 end-of-life (and end of updates) is coming July 2023Are you still running ColdFusion 2018? Did you know that its end-of-life is July 13, 2023? That's the date that "core" support ends--meaning, no more updates from Adobe after that, not even security fixes.As for CF2021, it gets updates into 2025, and the currently running pre-release of CF2023 is a great sign for the continued vitality of CF. But this looming deadline for CF2018 is a reminder that as the years roll on, we not only get new versions but we must say good-bye to old ones.Wondering what you can do? or when CF2021 or CF2023 support will end also? And what's the difference between "core" and "extended" support Adobe sells? (The extended support plan does NOT provide updates beyond this coming July.) For more on these, including official Adobe documentation that discusses such things, as well as my thoughts on migration, costs, various options to consider, and more, do read on.https://www.carehart.org/blog/2023/1/26/coldfusion2018_end_of_life_july_2023 CFML JobsSeveral positions available on https://www.getcfmljobs.com/Listing over 48 ColdFusion positions from 29 companies across 23 locations in 5 Countries.2 new jobs listed this weekFull-Time - ColdFusion Developer at India - India Jan 30https://www.getcfmljobs.com/jobs/index.cfm/india/ColdFusion-Developer-at-India/11552 Contract - Adobe ColdFusion Administrator at Alhambra, CA - United States Jan 26https://www.getcfmljobs.com/jobs/index.cfm/united-states/CFAdminstrator-at-CA/11551 Other Job LinksThere is a jobs channel in the CFML slack team, and in the Box team slack now tooBrian Polackoff posted yesterday morning in the cfml-general channel that he is looking for 2-3 advanced CF programmers. Check it out.“Morning everyone; can anyone tell me where to find 2-3 advanced Adobe Coldfusion programmers? Salaries will be in the range of ~125k to 150k USD? I'm open to FT or Contract with FT hours? Preferably in the USA but am open to other areas. Is there anyone on this list, a better list, or even a company that can provide match making services?” ForgeBox Module of the WeekWho.is IP Address lookup APIBy Pixl8 Interactive (Dominic Watson)Who.is IP Lookup API For CFML Application with Coldbox bindingsThis project provides CFML applications with a lightweight abstraction of the who.is IP lookup service https://ipwhois.io/A note on free vs paid-for account: you can use the API without an API key for "free" usage which includes 10,000 IP lookups per-month as of January 2023 - based on source IP and http referrer. Certain features are not available with the free tier and commercial usage is also not allowed. See the website for further details: https://ipwhois.io/.https://www.forgebox.io/view/cbwhois Lightweight means:No caching your application can and should take care of caching resultsNo error handling your application should handle any unexpected errors from the http call to the api. I'm lazy and this utility does the bare minimumVS Code Hint Tips and Tricks of the WeekSCSS EverywhereBy Gencer W. Genç CSS class name completion for the HTML'.class' and '#id' completion for HTML, Svelte, Latte, Slim, Liquid, TSX/JSX, Haml, Elixir, Smarty, PHP, ERB, Javascript, CSS and SCSS. Just declare class in your template or CSS/SCSS and see it in everywhere. (Both directions)Features Gives you autocompletion for CSS class definitions that can be found in your workspace (defined in CSS files or the in the file types listed in the Supported Language Modes section) Supports external stylesheets referenced through link elements in HTML files Command to manually re-cache the class definitions used in the autocompletion User Settings to override which folders and files should be considered or excluded from the caching process Incremental build. You do not need to re-cache everytime. Additional Slim, Haml, Smarty, Eex and Svelte template support Both-way SCSS support Separate class and id support Work in progress. Automatically parse all remote stylesheets from HTML, Svelte, Twig, Slim and ERB files. HTML, SCSS, SASS, CSS, Elixir, PHP, Vue, Slim, Haml, Latte and many more Awesome features FIND USAGES - find what files are using what css class - mind blown. Link to External Files Caching - pretty slick too. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sKrp2d1HUAMhttps://marketplace.visualstudio.com/items?itemName=gencer.html-slim-scss-css-class-completion Thank you to all of our Patreon SupportersThese individuals are personally supporting our open source initiatives to ensure the great toolings like CommandBox, ForgeBox, ColdBox, ContentBox, TestBox and all the other boxes keep getting the continuous development they need, and funds the cloud infrastructure at our community relies on like ForgeBox for our Package Management with CommandBox. You can support us on Patreon here https://www.patreon.com/ortussolutionsDon't forget, we have Annual Memberships, pay for the year and save 10% - great for businesses. Bronze Packages and up, now get a ForgeBox Pro and CFCasts subscriptions as a perk for their Patreon Subscription. All Patreon supporters have a Profile badge on the Community Website All Patreon supporters have their own Private Forum access on the Community Website All Patreon supporters have their own Private Channel access BoxTeam Slack Live Stream Access to streams like “Koding with the Kiwi + Friends” and Ortus Software Craftsmanship Book Club https://community.ortussolutions.com/ Top Patreons ( NOBLE ) John Wilson - Synaptrix Tomorrows Guides Jordan Clark Gary Knight Mario Rodrigues Giancarlo Gomez David Belanger Dan Card Jeffry McGee - Sunstar Media Dean Maunder Nolan Erck Abdul Raheen And many more PatreonsYou can see an up to date list of all sponsors on Ortus Solutions' Websitehttps://ortussolutions.com/about-us/sponsors Homework Gavin Go check out the Community Forum Daniel See you all at the Ortus Office Hours Stay warm and dry everyone!!!Thanks everyone!!! ★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★
This podcast highlights original research published in the November official journal of the American Academy of Otolaryngology—Head and Neck Surgery (AAO-HNS) Foundation. The objectives were to offer pragmatic, evidence-informed advice on administering corticosteroids in otolaryngology during the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic, considering therapeutic efficacy, potential adverse effects, susceptibility to COVID-19, and potential effects on efficacy of vaccination against SARS-CoV-2, which causes COVID-19. In conclusion, systemic corticosteroids (SCSs) reduce long-term morbidity in individuals with SSNHL and Bell's palsy, reduce acute laryngotracheal edema, and have benefit in perioperative management for some procedures. Topical or locally injected corticosteroids are preferable for most other otolaryngologic indications. SCSs have not shown long-term benefit for sinonasal disorders. SCSs are not a contraindication to vaccination with COVID-19 vaccines approved by the US Food and Drug Administration. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention noted that these vaccines are safe for immunocompromised patients. Click here to read the full article.
Please join Brittany Tschaen and Joe Marchiano for a SCSS and NPF collaboration as they speak with New Practitioner Brooke Barlow, PharmD and clinical leader Cassie Bellamy for new perspectives about the unique wellness challenges posed by COVID-19. This podcast will add to the existing COVID-19 resources by showcasing a conversation between a New Practitioner and clinical leader to better understand how members of our profession can come together to maintain wellness. The information presented during the podcast reflects solely the opinions of the presenter. The information and materials are not, and are not intended as, a comprehensive source of drug information on this topic. The contents of the podcast have not been reviewed by ASHP, and should neither be interpreted as the official policies of ASHP, nor an endorsement of any product(s), nor should they be considered as a substitute for the professional judgment of the pharmacist or physician.
tsukkee さんをゲストに、CSS Grid、Custom Properties、CSS Transitionなどについて語っていただいたエピソードです。 話したネタ 最近のフロントエンド開発ってどんな感じ? なぜ、 transpile などの変換が必要なのか? CSS Grid とは? 何が良いのか? もともと昔はどうやってレイアウトしていた? Table から Float へ 阿部 寛のホームページ Flexbox とは XUL Grid と Flexbox の違いは? HTML(意味) と CSS(スタイル) の分離って、実際の開発ではどう? CSSで変数利用って、どう進化してきた? Sass や SCSS Custom Properties Custom Properties のメリットとは? Web Component との関連 この先、SassやSCSSはこの先どうなっていく? CSS Nesting Module CSS Animation / Transition の進化 JSでアニメーション実装をすると、何が難しいのか? Apple Interface Guideline アニメーションの使い時はいつか? アニメーション習いたてで使いたくなっちゃう問題 Animation と SVG との組み合わせが便利 CSS の仕様を、どうやって追っかけているか? web.dev チームでフロントエンド情報をどうやって学習しているか? CSS設計をどうやって決めている? Shadow DOM と スコープ 実際のプロダクト開発では何を使っている? CSS Layer :has() 疑似クラス CSS Houdini Painting API Layout API 採用: ストックマーク社 エンジニア募集中
For his monologue, Boyd looks at the concepts of VUCA and SCSS leadership and what it means to truly possess intellect. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
In this Hasty Treat, Scott and Wes talk about Astro — what it is and why you should check it out! Linode - Sponsor Whether you're working on a personal project or managing enterprise infrastructure, you deserve simple, affordable, and accessible cloud computing solutions that allow you to take your project to the next level. Simplify your cloud infrastructure with Linode's Linux virtual machines and develop, deploy, and scale your modern applications faster and easier. Get started on Linode today with a $100 in free credit for listeners of Syntax. You can find all the details at linode.com/syntax. Linode has 11 global data centers and provides 24/7/365 human support with no tiers or hand-offs regardless of your plan size. In addition to shared and dedicated compute instances, you can use your $100 in credit on S3-compatible object storage, Managed Kubernetes, and more. Visit linode.com/syntax and click on the “Create Free Account” button to get started. Sentry - Sponsor If you want to know what's happening with your code, track errors and monitor performance with Sentry. Sentry's Application Monitoring platform helps developers see performance issues, fix errors faster, and optimize their code health. Cut your time on error resolution from hours to minutes. It works with any language and integrates with dozens of other services. Syntax listeners new to Sentry can get two months for free by visiting Sentry.io and using the coupon code TASTYTREAT during sign up. Show Notes 03:08 - What is it, what does it do? Framework for server-first static apps Use any front-end framework Does not ship JS unless you explicitly define a component to ship JS 05:20 - The syntax .astro files is a mash-up of Svelte and React Frontmatter for server-side JS Template syntax is basically JSX TS baked in 07:48 - State management In client-side JS only, no state in .astro files 10:50 - CSS Svelte style Local, scoped tags SCSS baked in 11:16 - Data fetching Fetch in frontmatter via fetch() 12:06 - Vs React? Vs Next? Vs Gatsby? Vs Svelte? 15:24 - Tooling There is a Syntax highlighter Uses Snowpack under the hood Tweet us your tasty treats! Scott's Instagram LevelUpTutorials Instagram Wes' Instagram Wes' Twitter Wes' Facebook Scott's Twitter Make sure to include @SyntaxFM in your tweets
Join us for a Wellness Wednesday conversation for our second installation of the financial wellness series featuring members of the Section of Clinical Specialist and Scientists (SCSS) and the New Practitioner's Forum (NPF). This podcast will share insights into things to begin thinking about for retirement including savings, differences between retirement plans, and how different types of employment can lead to different strategies. The information presented during the podcast reflects solely the opinions of the presenter. The information and materials are not, and are not intended as, a comprehensive source of drug information on this topic. The contents of the podcast have not been reviewed by ASHP, and should neither be interpreted as the official policies of ASHP, nor an endorsement of any product(s), nor should they be considered as a substitute for the professional judgment of the pharmacist or physician.
Video content can be found here: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC0BAd8tPlDqFvDYBemHcQPQ/
En esta ocasión tenemos un podcast diferente. Junto a Rubén analizaremos qué son los preprocesadores de CSS, tales como SASS y SCSS. Por otra parte analizaremos cómo podemos trabajar con los themes que podemos comprar en webs como themforest.
In this episode, James and Amy discuss the tech behind jamesqquick.com. This site was built on top of Gatsby and Sanity. They discuss the decisions James made along the way and the things he might do differently.SPONSORSPathwire / Mailgun / MailjetPathwire is a powerful email API and intuitive email marketing solution that delivers over 250 billion emails a year for 400,000 companies around the world.You can sign up now and try Mailgun or Mailjet for free today. Mailjet offers a trial that allows you to send 6,000 emails per month for free, forever. Mailgun offers a 3 month trial for 5,000 emails per month after which you only pay for what you send.For more information, simply visit Pathwire.comVercelVercel combines the best developer experience with an obsessive focus on end-user performance. Their platform enables frontend teams to do their best work. It is the best place to deploy any frontend app. Start by deploying with zero configuration to their global edge network. Scale dynamically to millions of pages without breaking a sweat.For more information, visit Vercel.comZEAL is hiring!Zeal is a computer software agency that delivers “the world's most zealous” and custom solutions. The company plans and develops web and mobile applications that consistently help clients draw in customers, foster engagement, scale technologies, and ensure delivery.Zeal believes that a business is “only as strong as” its team and cares about culture, values, a transparent process, leveling up, giving back, and providing excellent equipment. The company has staffers distributed throughout the United States, and as it continues to grow, Coding Zeal looks for collaborative, object-oriented, and organized individuals to apply for open roles.For more information visit their site.Show Notes0:00 Intro3:05 Context in building jamesqquick.com4:46 Deciding to rebuild the site on GatsbyGatsby - https://www.gatsbyjs.com/6:29 Upgrades and improvements from moving off WordPress8:28 The Gatsby Plugin Ecosystem9:03 Sending your RSS feed to Dev.to for cross-postingTutorial: Publishing a Post Pulled in via an RSS Feed12:18 Hosting13:00 Sponsor: Vercel13:49 Moving from Markdown to Sanity21:35 Email MarketingMailChimpConvertKitPodia22:25 Serverless Functions23:14 Sponsor: PathwireMailGun - http://mailgun.comMailJet - http://mailjet.com25:18 React Ecosystem26:12 React Awesome Reveal26:37 Font Awesome for Icons27:14 For styling, using ScssDifference between Scss and Sass30:45 Sponsor: ZEAL31:19 Things you'd do differentlyStyled ComponentsTailwind CSSNext.js35:14 Grab Bag Question #1: If you are the only updating Sanity, can you host it locally or does it need to be accessible online?36:12 Grab Bag Question #2: When will you migrate your site to Next.js?36:24 Grab Bag Question #3: How do you like Sanity as an authoring experience?37:29 Picks and Plugs37:40 James's Pick: Tripod with a Selfie Light38:34 James's Plug: James Q Quick on YouTube38:55 Amy's Pick: Hunt a Killer (30% off)40:30 Amy's Plug: SelfTeach.me on YouTube
Bad For Education - Coding Tips For The Junior Developer & Beyond
Today we discuss CSS, and the preprocessors + variations such as SCSS, SASS, CSS Modules, and Styled Components.CSS (Cascading Style Sheets) is a declarative language that controls how webpages look in the browser. The browser applies CSS style declarations to selected elements to display them properly. A style declaration contains the properties and their values, which determine how a webpage looks.A CSS preprocessor is a program that lets you generate CSS from the preprocessor's own unique syntax. There are many CSS preprocessors to choose from, however most CSS preprocessors will add some features that don't exist in pure CSS, such as mixin, nesting selector, inheritance selector, and so on. These features make the CSS structure more readable and easier to maintain. SASS, SCSS, and LESS are examples of theseA CSS Module is a CSS file in which all class names and animation names are scoped locally by default. The key words here are scoped locally. With CSS Modules, your CSS class names become similar to local variables in JavaScript. By the way, a 'CSS Module' is just a .css file. You call it a 'CSS Module' if you plan on using it with a CSS Modules compiler.Styled Components are tagged template literals combined with the power of CSS, which allows you to write actual CSS code to style your components. It also removes the mapping between components and styles – using components as a low-level styling construct could not be easier!ResourcesCSS PreprocessorsSASS vs SCSS vs LESSCSS ModulesStyled ComponentsConnect With Us!Instagram: @badforeducationpodcastTwitter: @badforedupodEmail: badforeducationpodcast@gmail.comSend us questions! Or say hello to us via email!Want a free $20 Amazon gift card and to start your own podcast with Buzzsprout?It's as simple as one click in our link below. Get started today, and have access to their extensive network and assistance. Podcasting isn't hard when you have the right partners!Click our link here
In this Hasty Treat, Scott and Wes talk about the new Level Up Tutorials website — some of the new tech powering the site, behind-the-scenes decisions, previous iterations, and more! Freshbooks - Sponsor Get a 30 day free trial of Freshbooks at freshbooks.com/syntax and put SYNTAX in the “How did you hear about us?” section. Sentry - Sponsor If you want to know what’s happening with your errors, track them with Sentry. Sentry is open-source error tracking that helps developers monitor and fix crashes in real time. Cut your time on error resolution from five hours to five minutes. It works with any language and integrates with dozens of other services. Syntax listeners can get two months for free by visiting Sentry.io and using the coupon code “tastytreat”. Show Notes 02:55 - Previous iterations Originally on Drupal 7 Full re-write to Meteor + Blaze Two sites — store.leveluptutorials.com and leveluptutorials.com Meteor + React Meteor + Apollo Combine store and site Move to TypeScript NOW 05:30 - Big choices No Babel up and down the stack UI Mostly unchanged — React + Styled Components + SCSS Moving more to SCSS, CSS vars Build and dev done via Snowpack 50ms hot reloadin’ Mega fast development workflow has been a huge plus Errors in the UI via Snowpack Wrote a custom GraphQL importer plugin API ESBuild Insane speeds Wrote a custom GraphQL importer plugin Mercurious / Fastify Codegen GraphQL code gen to create everything we need for a fully typed codebase Auto-generated React Hooks Hosting render.com for both CLI Custom avalanche CLI that removes the guesswork and makes bulk operations easy Caddy server for easy leveluptutorials.dev in local environments Testing Jest → API Cypress → UI Links Digital Ocean app platform https://beta.leveluptutorials.com/ Tweet us your tasty treats! Scott’s Instagram LevelUpTutorials Instagram Wes’ Instagram Wes’ Twitter Wes’ Facebook Scott’s Twitter Make sure to include @SyntaxFM in your tweets
OT for Inclusive Occupations: Stories of Not Just Being Invited to the Party but Dancing
In this episode, we are honored to have Deborah Schwind, DHSc, BCP, SCSS, OTR/L, a school based occupational therapy guru, share her stories. Debbie has extensively contributed to school based OT practice through her many publications and presentations nationally. Authentic inclusion ( a true sense of belonging) is often a two way process. First, a community that is conducive to inclusion and next, individuals who find purpose and value in that community. Debbie shares how she created real job opportunities for students, often educated in self contained classrooms to find a place of value and belonging in their school community. Students' abilities and successes were the the focus in this approach, thus nurturing an authentically inclusive community. A video of Community Based Education at Cedar Lane Elementary- https://vimeo.com/161837834 Deborah Schwind's contributions are so many that I decided to share a link to her work here: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1dqETTPjkn1DjI21vPba6E375EHhkXzoi2VfNQ8X_XV4/edit?usp=sharing Article by Seruya and Garfinkle- Seruya, Article mentioned in the podcast: F. M., & Garfinkel, M. (2020). Caseload and Workload: Current Trends in School-Based Practice Across the United States. American Journal of Occupational Therapy, 74(5), 7405205090p1-7405205090p8. https://doi.org/10.5014/ajot.2020.039818. Article about workplace morale/productivity improvement - https://msutoday.msu.edu/news/2020/how-disability-diversity-in-the-workplace-can-improve-productivity?fbclid=IwAR2SK2aLOAcEB6dp95i9a1LNHG5bfyC9Fvva6jcO1BMH6jTQiN1dCGZLtNw --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/inclusiveoccupations/message
David and Momma Sanchez talk about how serving people who stutter has shaped their own experiences with stuttering and parenting. David speaks to how service can be a great avenue for people who stutter to experience the “stuttering community” for the first time, and Momma Sanchez provides insight on how this can be a bittersweet experience for parents who wish they could have provided these experiences for their child earlier in life. The Sanchez duo also debut “Ask Us Anything” to answer your questions, this time talking about the “do’s and don’ts” when speaking with people who stutter.Nathan and Padma Mallipeddi join the Sanchezes for the second half of the show to talk about Nathan’s experience founding and leading the Southern California Stuttering Service--a nonprofit organization providing people who stutter access to high-quality access stuttering therapy--and his mom’s journey in supporting Nathan and his speech. Nathan shocks his mom in a hilarious game of 2 Truths and a Lie to wrap up the show.-----Nathan is a 22-year old person who stutters and a recent graduate of UCLA (BS, Biology, BA, Political Science) . He is pursuing a career in medicine and public health and enjoys developing public service initiatives that help persons who stutter around the world. Padma is a proud mother of two and a physician. She specializes in Urogynecology, and in her free time, enjoys helping to assist Nathan with his nonprofit activities for persons who stutter. -----SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA STUTTERING SERVICEInstagram:https://www.instagram.com/stutteringservice/Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/StutteringServiceTwitter: https://twitter.com/SouthernScss?fbclid=IwAR3u0Myxcsjet4W3rSAElV3cVXlp1v9uRQzM-fKbPMuQkJvji20LCOm0MKoWebsite: stutteringservice.orgYoutube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCqAz1NCRrQ8r_o7BigT_NEQThe best way to reach SCSS is to email stutteringservice@gmail.com or to send a message through the CONTACT US tab on their website! -----“Ask Us Anything” Do’s and Don’ts for ListenersDON’T nervously laugh or look uncomfortableDO act normal!DON’T interrupt or try to finish their sentencesDO give them space to speak, perhaps even waiting a second or two between conversational turns to make sure they are done speakingDON’T give advice like “slow down” or “take a breath”DO ask how they would like you to respond if you are unsureDON’T underestimate themDO know your speaker, and be mindful of communicative demands being placed on them-----Please RATE, REVIEW, and SUBSCRIBE on iTunes, Spotify, or your preferred podcast app! Tell your friends and family about the podcast via word of mouth or social media! www.stutterpodcastrepeat.com www.facebook.com/stutterpodcastrepeatwww.instagram.com/stutterpodcastrepeat Have feedback for the show? We want to hear from you! Drop us a line via our contact form.www.stutterpodcastrepeat.com/contact [New Episodes Bi-Weekly, Mondays]
Let's admit it - sometimes CSS can be difficult. Seasoned veterans of web development even struggle with CSS. It's this magical thing that makes our applications look and work with beauty. But, it can also be a challenge, especially as our applications and teams grow and evolve. Most Angular developers spend their day writing TypeScript, HTML, and CSS, or potentially use a preprocessor for CSS such as SCSS or LESS. This episode of The Angular Show focuses on the latter.The panelists are joined by Nicole Oliver, a senior software engineer at Narwhal, who teaches about styling applications in Angular as she shares her experience working with large organizations to reign in the beast that is CSS.The group dives into topics such as block-element-modifier (BEM), Scalable and Modular Architecture for CSS (SMACSS), Object-oriented CSS (OOCSS), and utility-first methodologies. They also chat about using SCSS variables, CSS custom variables, and other approaches for consistent styling of Angular applications.Nicole Oliver @nixalloverJennifer Wadella @likeOMGitsFEDAYBrian Love @brian_loveAaron Frost@aaronfrostShow Notes:Material.iohttps://material.io/design/material-studies/fortnightly.html#product-architecture
En este podcast analizaremos junto a Pedro (un alumno), qué es SASS/SCSS, cómo podemos aprenderlo y cómo introducirnos en el mundo de los themes.
En este podcast analizaremos junto a Pedro (un alumno), qué es SASS/SCSS, cómo podemos aprenderlo y cómo introducirnos en el mundo de los themes.
Join Mike as he gives you his picks on the week 8 slate of the Nfl games! --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/mike-bernier/support
Join Mike as he makes his week 5 picks against the nfl spread!!! --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/mike-bernier/support
Join mike as he gives you his week 4 picks against the spread! --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/mike-bernier/support
Join mike on a solo mission as he gives you his week 2 picks against the spread! --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/mike-bernier/support
Join mike as he gets you ready for week 1 of the NFL season! Joe will be here next week (hopefully)! --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/mike-bernier/support
It’s another potluck! In this episode, Scott and Wes answer your questions about custom hooks, static site generators, code management, CSS, and more! Sentry - Sponsor If you want to know what’s happening with your errors, track them with Sentry. Sentry is open-source error tracking that helps developers monitor and fix crashes in real time. Cut your time on error resolution from five hours to five minutes. It works with any language and integrates with dozens of other services. Syntax listeners can get two months for free by visiting Sentry.io and using the coupon code “tastytreat”. Freshbooks - Sponsor Get a 30 day free trial of Freshbooks at freshbooks.com/syntax and put SYNTAX in the “How did you hear about us?” section. Show Notes 04:02 - Q: Could you do a quick overview of how to effectively use a platform like Cloudinary? I have a Gatsby site with a lot of images and want to use something like Cloudinary to help with optimization, but the docs aren’t completely clear to me how to get the most out of their service. 10:58 - Q: What kind of CSS pre/post-processor you usually use? What are the pros and cons of pre-processor (SASS, SCSS, LESS) and post-processor (PostCSS)? 16:22 - Q: What is the most effective way to share a project with the internet and get feedback? I’m in a phase right now where I’m building loads of new web things with React and JavaScript, but the only place I can think to share them is my Twitter, where only like 3 people will see them. 18:35 - Q: What are your thoughts on classes in JavaScript? Do we still need them in 2020, or has the functional programming paradigm made them largely unnecessary? Does the answer change based on the size of the project and/or team? 23:56 - Q: Does ES2020 have var? Also, is ES2020 a real spec or just a term people are using? 27:37 - Q: Have you tried gqless, a graphql client alternative to something like Apollo client? Very interesting idea for clean and maintainable code. 29:15 - Q: What are the main differences in working for a software agency and a software product company? Pros and cons of each? 33:53 - Q: Advice for having static blog with minimal moving parts? I used to have a static blog but I eventually got sick of touching it because instead of writing content I often got stuck keeping up with all the dependencies involved. 38:18 - Q: Micro Frontends—is it the solution to rewriting legacy components? 42:16 - Q: I am relatively new to web development and I feel like it is very difficult to “catch up” with JavaScript. It seems like whenever I try to contribute an open source, I can’t figure out the code because they’re using newer (and presumably better) ways of doing things. How can I get up to date with everything that’s going on in the JavaScript world? Also, at what point should I start learning a front-end framework? 46:56 - Q: My team and I are starting to write pretty complicated custom hooks gathering data from a number of different endpoints and/or polling certain endpoints on a continuous interval timer before returning it to the component that needs the data. Since this is the case some hooks have gotten fairly large with multiple functions inside of them getting called to get/manipulate all the data, or multiple hooks using those same functions to get slightly different data. Is it a best practice to keep all those hooks together in one file if they support all the hooks? Or should we break the hooks into separate files and move the helper functions into another file and just have one hook per file? 51:10 - Q: Any tips for navigating projects with bad project managers? Working with non-technical agency project managers makes it pretty difficult to effectively plan and allocate time to ensure that all of the projects are done on time, on budget, and done well. It’s important to me to maintain an optimistic attitude in the organization, but sometimes I’d love to just hit 'em with the 'ol “Peace out” and go smoke some pork butt. Wondering if you guys have any good experience managing these types of projects? 55:45 - Q: I’m committing often and early, but this means that I end up writing the same vague git commit message over and over again. I know the solution to the problem is to just be more verbose, but it’s a difficult habit to break. Any advice? Links imgIX Netlify Sass Less Bootstrap Stylus PostCSS WordPress Reddit StaticGen Gridsom Vue Laravel Hugo ××× SIIIIICK ××× PIIIICKS ××× Scott: Jelle’s Marble Runs Wes: Hyundai HHC2GNK Vertical Style Electric Air Compressor Shameless Plugs Scott: Level Up Tutorials Pro - Sign up for the year and save 25%! Wes: All Courses - Use the coupon code ‘Syntax’ for $10 off! Tweet us your tasty treats! Scott’s Instagram LevelUpTutorials Instagram Wes’ Instagram Wes’ Twitter Wes’ Facebook Scott’s Twitter Make sure to include @SyntaxFM in your tweets
Darüber haben wir geplaudert: Leistung; Barometer; enkrateia (Activity tracker data analysis for Android and iOS); Google Street View verpixeln lassen; MyMail App und mail.ru; Yubico Yubikey; Security-Token; FIDO2; Windows Hello; Python FastAPI, Virtualenv, Pipenv, Anaconda; BrowserStack; NVD3; Webpack; Angular; Phoenix LiveView; Ruby Volt; Source Maps; Sass und SCSS; CSS-in-Vienna Meetup; Vue.js; Svelte; React; CodePen; Visual Studio Code; NoMachine; 5G Dinge; LoRaWAN; VoLTE; Feinstaub-Sensor; Android TV; Obsoleszenz; Chromebook; Linux Desktop; Remote Desktop; Intel Clear Linux; A gscheiter Rechner; #covfefe Gäste: Bernhard, Stefan, Ulrich
It’s another potluck! In this episode, Scott and Wes answer your questions about Gastby vs everything, Next, Vue, Rails, working with agencies, CSS, and more! LogRocket - Sponsor LogRocket lets you replay what users do on your site, helping you reproduce bugs and fix issues faster. It’s an exception tracker, a session re-player and a performance monitor. Get 14 days free at logrocket.com/syntax. Kyle Prinsloo Freelancing - Sponsor Kyle Prinsloo teaches you everything you need to know about freelancing, including how to quit your job, earn a side-income and start taking control of your life. Check it out at studywebdevelopment.com/freelaning. Use the coupon “SYNTAX” and get 25%. Show Notes 1:39 - This may be a crazy question but I need to build a similar system to Level Up Tutorials where people can access content based on a monthly subscription. Any recommendations where to start with either Next.js or Gastby.js? How do I check to see if a person is up-to-date with payment? 4:14 - What's your favorite new tab page? 6:19: CSS vs SCSS vs Styled Components? When you are developing a React or Next.js application which styling method do you guys use and why? Which one is “best practice”, or a more efficient way of going about it? 11:14 - What do you think of lit-html? 15:25 - I’m relatively new to React, and primarily learning the create-react-app way. When do you go for the create-react-app approach when building an application, and when do you customize the config? I’m uncertain when it’s time to escape the ‘create-react-app’ approach. Also, when escaping it, which main configurations are you grabbing? 18:19 - Is there a reason hasty treat intros are 2.5x the length of normal episodes? Now that Overcast has intro skipping it’d be nice if the intros were uniform in length. 21:23 - I see Kyle Matthews coming out with a lot of input on how Gatsby can be used for web applications as well. After listening to several of your podcasts, where you talk about Gatsby, it doesn’t seem like you agree, and would go for Next.js instead. In your opinion is the development at Gatsby really heading in the direction of SSG and web application? 27:17 - I’ve hopped on the Vue train from jQuery land, and am loving both Nuxt and Gridsome. However, I keep hearing all these good things about Gatsby. Would you guys say that it is worth it to learn Gatsby (and the whole react ecosystem for that matter) over Gridsome? This is mostly for small-medium-ish side-project web sites that connect to a headless CMS. 30:04 - What are your thoughts on CSS pre-processors nowadays? With all the advance and new features from CSS, do you guys really think that it is still worthy to use it those? 32:11 - Scott, can you talk a bit about why you decided to switch back to Meteor after putting in all the effort to convert LUT to Next.js? I am about to start a new fullstack project and was considering Next until I heard you switched back. Maybe I should consider Meteor instead? 40:21 - I’ve recently started an internship at one of my favorite tech companies where I’m using EmberJS and Ruby on Rails. I love the team I’m on (the people are so nice) but I’m not super passionate about the tech stack. I’d much rather be using something like React and NodeJS/Express in my day-to-day coding. Do you think it’s worth staying in a position (if I were to try and get a full-time gig in this role) if you don’t like the tech stack, but really like the people? 40:51 - I’m thinking of doing a bootcamp that teaches Ruby on Rails for backend. I hear a lot that Ruby is a dying language, but at the same time, I know it’s used for a lot of big-timers, such as Airbnb and Shopify. Could you please explain the relevance that Ruby/Ruby on Rails will have in 2020 forward, as well as if it’s worth learning for newer web developers at this point? 45:15 - What is the deal with CMSs/headless CMSs? I hear you guys talk about them all the time (Sanity, Keystone, Prisma?) but I’m not sure what they are good for. To me, they just seem like a UI to my database, but isn’t that what my application is? It just seems like it would be easier to have my frontend talk to my backend talk to my database instead of learning how each CMS wants things to be done and programming for that? Am I missing the point? 48:11 - What does Svelte needs for each of you to use it instead of React in personal and future developments? 50:38 - I freelance on the side as well as have a 9-5. The other dev I work with mentioned he’d help if I ever needed/wanted help on a client project. What are your thoughts on doing freelance work with someone who you also work with at your job? 52:01 - My team is currently in the design phase for a rewrite of our biggest product. We are switching from perl backend (y i k e s) to node (yay) but for some reason, our tech lead decided on hapi for the node framework. I have spent a little time with hapi and it seems cool but I am not sure about its longevity when compared to more established frameworks like express. How do you feel about hapi and should I push for a different framework? 54:29 - I’m a lead dev that recently joined an agency for the first time. What
The Senior Citizens Saving Scheme (SCSS) is a social security scheme offered by the central government. Anyone over 60 can open an SCSS account and make the most of the lucrative interest rate. We tell you all you need to know about opening an SCSS account.
As Alberta's UCP government reviews supervised consumption sites, we look at what these places mean for the people who live in and around them. Full transcript at www.sprawlcalgary.com.
Jordan Scales is a Software Engineer at Stripe and notorious Twitter memelord. He joins us on The Undefined to talk about dank memes, his origin story, and Stripe's React component library and frontend developer experience. Featuring Jordan Scales - Twitter, Github, Website Ken Wheeler – Twitter, GitHub, Website Jared Palmer – Twitter, GitHub, Website Links @fat (creator of Twitter Bootstrap) 3Blue1Brown YouTube Video: "This one time at Bandcamp" from American Pie (1999) Animate Plus by Benjamin De Cock (Twitter, Github) Aphrodite BEM (i.e. "Block Element Modifier" CSS naming convention) PostCSS is a tool for transforming CSS with JavaScript Palantir Blueprint Segment Evergreen A Life in Parts by Bryan Cranston Three Body Problem by Liu Cixin Yoshi's Crafted World for Switch Dog Blood (Skrillex & Boys Noize) - Turn Off The Lights Billie Eilish Picks Rome toolchain (Twitter Thread, Undefined Episode 1 with Seb) Casamigos Miller Lite Malika Favre Patagonia Vests! (Article, React Amsterdam Video) Keystone Light Keystalope
Check out this podcast which looks at web design tools such as Brackets, SCSS and Figma. Our guest is Michael Andreuzza; a self taught web developer. Michael's contact details: Website: https://www.michaelandreuzza.com Dribbble: https://dribbble.com/MichaelAndreuzza Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/michael/
Hey folks, this is our next to last RTO of the year! Sorry it’s a little late this week, but as always, we think it’ll be worth the wait. This week, we start off with...
Does the phrase “functional CSS” mean nothing to you? Do you assume that any CSS that makes something look a certain way must be “functional?” Have you heard about things like CSS BEM or Tachyons,...
E3 starts today, Sunday! goto youtube and watch it LIVE Links to topics below... Be sure to subscribe and follow on social! IG: tech_uncensored Twitter: tech_uncensored FB:... Tech News for the Software Developer
Please follow Tech_Uncensored:IG: tech_uncensoredTwitter: tech_uncensoredFB: /techuncensoredNow ONE new episode every week! Topics in this week's episode (copy/paste links) Microsoft buys... Tech News for the Software Developer
This weeks episode dives in to Webpack 4 release, how EASY it is, and what you can do to get started. https://github.com/webpack/webpack example: const path = require('path')const webpack =... Tech News for the Software Developer
Gary Vee aquires 50% stake http://www.latimes.com/style/la-marijuana-updates-20170822-gary-vaynerchuk-acquires-50-stake-in-1526426489-htmlstory.html Youtube... Tech News for the Software Developer
Gary Vee BOOK GIVEAWAY : https://www.instagram.com/p/Bim6cqfB_iN/?taken-by=nicholasjkaufmann http://bit.ly/technewspodcast-5-10 Nick talks about the difference between domain name extensions... Tech News for the Software Developer
Tech News for May 9th COPY AND PASTE LINKS IF NEEDED! ENJOY! Google... Tech News for the Software Developer
Show Notes: Virtlet: https://www.mirantis.com/blog/virtlet-run-vms-as-kubernetes-pods/ growing up... Tech News for the Software Developer
Face Book news by TRUST? Facebook CLEAR HISTORY (Post at bottom) Facebook Dating APP? Youtube getting $$ for ads that promote kids to cheat in school?? Jupyter receives ACM award! Jupyter... Tech News for the Software Developer
idempotent? how Will Purse build a garage door opener with wemos Longest straight path on water and land Salsify Cali Supreme court employee public domain infusioin part 2 public domaion... Tech News for the Software Developer
France.com seized by...FRANCE DIY microchip story GOOGLE co-founder warns of AI Google median pay 200k?? HOw to get better sleep? Lessons from building static analyisis tools at... Tech News for the Software Developer
NPR RETRACTED ARTICLE TESLA MODEL-3 stripped Seattle city laws and the guy who is fighting how you can change world by learning algo's Movie Pass drowning restrictions Java Eclipse... Tech News for the Software Developer
Belgium declares LOOT BOXES GAMBLING/Illegal EC2 T2 explained Bubble Drew Cloud === PHONY Traffic and WAZE DRUPAL exploit MICROSOFT repair cds === JAIL Tech News for the Software Developer
Medicare will require hospitals to post prices online TC39 PROPSAL for pattern matching Go statement considered harmful Felon seeking help? NySQL Release 8.0 FREE public courses for AI from... Tech News for the Software Developer
NODE.JS 10.x released google geolocating FREE WeWork buying JUNK BONDS Javascript V8 improved code-caching Jenkins for Kubernetes Tech News for the Software Developer
Links from the show: Stripe Billing Spectrum.chat Payment Request API for Apple Pay Facebook QandA JSONBIN.io why one click checkouts are here please subsacribe to us on google play music... Tech News for the Software Developer
This is a podcast that fills the mistake I made when setting up this podcast. Paul and Nick are 2 software devs that talk about tech news for software developers. Hope you enjoy. Tech News for the Software Developer
View this episode HERE Tech_News Tech_Uncensored News about tech and software dewvelopment en-us http://techuncensoredpodcast.blogspot.com/2018/02/episode-1.html ... Tech News for the Software Developer
Tech News from Tech_Uncensored http://sample.com/podcasts/unknown/index.html en-us ℗ 2018 Tech_Uncensored Going through technology news in a few minutes News for the software developers... Tech News for the Software Developer
Panel: Charles Max Wood Erik Hanchett Chris Fritz In this episode of Views on Vue, the panelists discuss Vue enterprise development with Chris Fritz. Chris is the curator for documentation on the Vue core team, works on a lot of tooling to help support Vue developers, and develops resources such as the Style Guide. They compare his Vue Enterprise Boilerplate to Nuxt and discuss the pros and cons to using each. Chris also discusses why he decided to create this boilerplate and how it has allowed him to skip to the interesting part of his job. In particular, we dive pretty deep on: Chris intro Vue Documentation Cookbooks Different “recipes” in the cookbook What is enterprise development? Provides flexibility Vue Enterprise Boilerplate vs Nuxt Vue CLI Where to start? The boilerplate can be used as a study guide in a way How do you pick the tools to create this? CSS vs SCSS Why he built the boilerplate Vue Resource Jest Vue Test Utils What should people think about when using the boilerplate? Tries to encourage what he’s seen work well What do you think of TypeScript support? And much, much more! Links: Vue Vue Style Guide Documentation Cookbooks Vue Enterprise Boilerplate Nuxt Vue CLI CSS SCSS Vue Resource Jest Vue Test Utils TypeScript Support Chris’s Patreon @ChrisVFritz Chris’s GitHub Picks: Charles Google Play Store for Podcast JavaScript Dev Summit to come soon Wheel of Time by Robert Jordan Ready Player One by Ernest Cline Chuck@Devchat.tv @CMaxW Suggest Topics Erik Vue VS Code Extension Pack Chris Vue Conf US The Three-Body Problem by Cixin Liu Into the Breach Vue Vixens
Panel: Charles Max Wood Erik Hanchett Chris Fritz In this episode of Views on Vue, the panelists discuss Vue enterprise development with Chris Fritz. Chris is the curator for documentation on the Vue core team, works on a lot of tooling to help support Vue developers, and develops resources such as the Style Guide. They compare his Vue Enterprise Boilerplate to Nuxt and discuss the pros and cons to using each. Chris also discusses why he decided to create this boilerplate and how it has allowed him to skip to the interesting part of his job. In particular, we dive pretty deep on: Chris intro Vue Documentation Cookbooks Different “recipes” in the cookbook What is enterprise development? Provides flexibility Vue Enterprise Boilerplate vs Nuxt Vue CLI Where to start? The boilerplate can be used as a study guide in a way How do you pick the tools to create this? CSS vs SCSS Why he built the boilerplate Vue Resource Jest Vue Test Utils What should people think about when using the boilerplate? Tries to encourage what he’s seen work well What do you think of TypeScript support? And much, much more! Links: Vue Vue Style Guide Documentation Cookbooks Vue Enterprise Boilerplate Nuxt Vue CLI CSS SCSS Vue Resource Jest Vue Test Utils TypeScript Support Chris’s Patreon @ChrisVFritz Chris’s GitHub Picks: Charles Google Play Store for Podcast JavaScript Dev Summit to come soon Wheel of Time by Robert Jordan Ready Player One by Ernest Cline Chuck@Devchat.tv @CMaxW Suggest Topics Erik Vue VS Code Extension Pack Chris Vue Conf US The Three-Body Problem by Cixin Liu Into the Breach Vue Vixens
Brian joins Kyle again this week to talk CSS, pre-compilers, and the greatest in front-end design. We talk Boostrap, SCSS, asset pipeline, and how far we've come on the front-end in the last few years.
Brian joins Kyle again this week to talk CSS, pre-compilers, and the greatest in front-end design. We talk Boostrap, SCSS, asset pipeline, and how far we've come on the front-end in the last few years.
What is SASS? Considered an extension of CSS. I consider it a streamlined version of CSS. How it works Set up on your personal system – I use Koala to compile my code Done locally then uploaded to the server via Filezilla Create a .SCSS file Write ANY CSS code as you normally would Add […] The post Eps 30: SASS Basics – Talking HTML appeared first on Schaffen Creative - Make. Manage. Achieve..
What is SASS? Considered an extension of CSS. I consider it a streamlined version of CSS. How it works Set up on your personal system – I use Koala to compile my code Done locally then uploaded to the server via Filezilla Create a .SCSS file Write ANY CSS code as you normally would Add […] The post Eps 30: SASS Basics – Talking HTML appeared first on Schaffen Creative - Make. Manage. Achieve..
Avery Swartz (@AverySwartz) joins Prescott to discuss the possibilities for the next version of BusyCreator.com. Together, the two discuss the capabilities of WordPress, best practices which Prescott is adopting (and should start), and the shortcomings of WordPress themes and plugins.
В этом году мы записываем серию подкастов со спикерами конференции RailsClub 2016. 22 октября, Москва, подробности и регистрация на сайте конференции. Первое интервью было с Лешей Тактаровым Ссылки These Guys Code Hipsters - Ироничные новости фронтенд-разработки глазами бьюти-кодеров Rollup - Next-generation ES6 module bundler Webpack – A bundler for javascript and friends Foreman – Manage Procfile-based applications Hivemind – The mind to rule processes of your development environment Статья Равиля Brunch – A Front end build system CODE. The Hidden Language of Computer Hardware and Software - Код. Тайный язык информатики The Nature of code Being A Developer After 40 – Каково это — быть разработчиком, когда тебе сорок перевод Расшифровка эпизода, опубликованная на Habrahabr Как ты пришел к Ruby ? Моя история знакомства с этими технологиями довольно нетипичная. Я начинал свою карьеру как человек, который делает системные тулзы. Я и с фронтендом тогда не встречался, просто занимался нативными интерфейсами для Windows. Какое-то время потратил на то, чтобы делать программы, которые работают с большим количеством потоков, которые работают с concurrency и так далее. А затем как-то плавно перешел во фронтенд, тогда как раз появился хайп. С Ruby и рельсами я начал работать уже после этого, и для меня это было небольшим откровением, потому что не все вещи, которые там работают, работают так как я привык. Лучший пример: в некоторых средах, где ты всегда должен следить за ресурсами, если ты что-то взял в одном потоке и работаешь, то должен быть уверен, что в другом потоке не будет проблем с этим - в ruby все эти проблемы обходили стороной. Я столкнулся с совершенно другими концепциями. И это было клево! Если говорить конкретно - я пришел на проект как фронтендер, делал только фронтенд задачи. А потом у нас не стало бэкендера :) Он ушел, некому было решать его задачи, и я решил попробовать. Было необычно: обсудить было не с кем, человек который мне помогал был этаким мудрецом. Я приходил к нему раз в неделю, он говорил какие-то магические слова о том, что мне делать. Потом я уходил, вздыхал, думал: “О боже, что происходит”. Через какое-то время мне вроде удалось постичь эту мудрость, хотя наверное не всю. Ту часть, которая заложена во фреймворке и языке, я почувствовал этот вкус. Где и чем ты сейчас занимаешься? Из личного - готовлюсь к свадьбе. Работаю над своим проектом, который еще слишком сырой, чтобы про него рассказывать. А еще работаю с партнером в команде, которая называется These Guys. Мы специализируемся на быстрой разработке MVP. Стараюсь по-максимум применить тот опыт, который я получил работая со Злыми марсианами, и с другими командами. Но сейчас я больше ориентируюсь сейчас не на решение технических задач, а на решение бизнес задач, продумываю как оптимально все построить для клиента. То есть ты сейчас открыл свою компанию? Да. Хотя сказать об этом вслух мне сейчас очень страшно, почему-то :) Что тебе не нравится в текущей реализации рельсов с точки зрения фронтенда? Мне кажется, что произошла такая ситуация: два или три года назад фронтенд резко скакнул и понесся вперед со скоростью локомотива, сметая все на своем пути. Ребята из других сообществ на это смотрели, кто-то скептически относился, кто-то воодушевленно. Но надо признать, что ускакал он очень далеко. В этом плане мир рельс остался без изменений. Есть мнение, что рельса должна перестать быть инструментом, у которой есть и фронт, и бэк, сосредоточиться только на бэке. Потому что фронтенд часть в самой рельсе сейчас явно не успевает. Приходится рельсы использовать как серверную часть, а фронтовая стоит отдельно, там отдельные инструменты, отдельная команда, отдельная история. Какой позиции ты придерживаешься насчет этого? Я всегда пытаюсь смотреть шире. Когда я вижу хайп вокруг фронтенда, я всегда пытаюсь найти и хорошие, и плохие стороны. Хорошо, что все развивается и движется, много идей, много что можно сделать такого, что поможет следующему поколению разработчиков. Но на это нужно смотреть с опаской, смотреть на то, действительно ли все так, как кажется? Это касается и компаний: какой они выбирают стек, как они общаются со своими разработчиками. Например, разработчики брали какой-то популярный сейчас стек, а потом все разваливалось. Компания переставала работать, потому что технология была сырая. У вас было такое? Я стараюсь придерживаться золотой середины. Недавно прочитал статью Равиля Байрамгалина из марсиан про новый рендерер. В ней интересна даже не сама реализация, а то, что идет в начале статьи: у DHH нет большого количества времени, чтобы уделять его разработке, но он записывает и рассказывает много идей, которые могут подхватить другие разработчики, чтобы успешно развивать фреймворк. Мне кажется, это здорово. Круто, когда есть видение, когда DHH понимает куда идти. Возможно будут разногласия, где-то это будет не совсем правильный путь. Но мне нравится, когда есть понимание общей миссии. В рельсах такое видение есть, нужно пережить хайп и двигаться дальше. Мне кажется у нас все получится, моя позиция вполне позитивная :) Если говорить про хайп во фронте. Что сейчас является хайпом, а чем реально можно пользоваться? На что, по твоему мнению, стоит обратить внимание? И что будет интересно дальше? Какое-то время назад мы с друзьями организовали в Ростове небольшую тусовочку, которая называется Code Hipsters. Это, в основном, лента новостей во вконтакте и в Телеграмме, мы пишем про всякие модные штуки во фронтенде (это и пытаемся обыграть в названии). Сейчас я немного отошел от дел, всем занимается мой друг Витя. У него прекрасный стиль, мне очень нравится как он пишет. Иногда мы собираемся и понимаем, что мы не читали за прошедшую неделю ничего нового :) Видимо, немного устали. Последнее, о чем я слышал - это Rollup. На мой взгляд, там нет ничего революционного, но посмотреть интересно. Движение в сторону умных бандлеров, правильной сборки зависимостей я считаю очень важным, это хорошее направление. Хотя нельзя сказать, что это rocket science. Во-вторых, компонентный подход. Он пришел давно, все его приняли, и это здорово. В-третьих, FRP. В этом вопросе есть большая пропасть между теорией и практикой. Наверняка что-то появится, чтобы ее преодолеть. Возвращаясь к вопросу о рельсе как фреймворке и к фронту. Что бы ты добавил а рельсу или убрал из нее, с точки зрения фронтенд разработки? Может вообще убрал бы фронт из рельсы? Я бы не убирал фронт. Мне кажется, решение которые есть сейчас, позволит нам выжить в 80% проектов, по крайне мере таких, которые есть на рынке. Ингода очень удобно иметь такой функционал. Даже когда мы говорим о сборке файлов, которая на самом деле не сборка, а просто конкатенация в правильном порядке. Я считаю, что это плохо. Я слышал, что не любят турболинкс, хотя я к ним отношусь вполне нормально, использую их в некоторых проектах. Да, иногда приходится потратить много времени на то, чтобы сообразить, как все правильно делать. Но это приучает к порядку. Мне было проще: я не писал скрипты, я сразу начал писать single page applications. Приходилось думать о том, как выделять ресурсы, как их правильно тушить, о сервисах, о жизненном цикле приложения, о том, что оно может работать продолжительно время. Когда ты делаешь простой мультистраничный сайт с вкраплением скриптов, ты об этом не задумываешься. Но иногда проект требует того, чтобы все это учитывалось, заставляет держать в голове паттерны, которым нас научил правильный фронтенд. Не знаю, что я бы добавил прямо в рельсы. Есть тенденция выкидывать все ненужное, облегчать, оставлять рельсы только для API. Правильно? Там есть отдельная ветка, связанные именно с Rails API разработкой, отключением ненужных вещей. Да, это касается и сборки. Если ты запускаешь рельсовый проект, наверное было бы здорово уметь как-то управлять процессами, которые запускаются. Сейчас это не просто rails сервер, или какой-нибудь Sidekiq. Было бы клево уметь мониторить процессы, которые запускаются для сборки, которые Node.js-процессы запускаются. Было бы круто что-то такое придумать. Хотя и здесь можно в принципе предложить решения вроде Foreman или Hivemind. Раз мы начали говорить про инструменты: за какими ты сейчас следишь? Какие проекты тебе нравятся, на какие стоит обратить внимание? В некоторых случаях я пользуюсь Webpack, меня он вполне устраивает. Я понимаю весь юмор, который стоит за тем, что у него сложная конфигурация. Мне кажется главной концепция, что модули это клево. Я долго пользовался сборщиком Brunch. Его всегда обходили стороной, он оставался в тени. Но для меня это идеальный инструмент, когда нужно что-то очень быстро накидать, когда нужны просто модули в стиле common js, когда нужна очень быстрая сборка. Потому что он действительно работает очень быстро. Меня поразило, что многие ребята, которые делают фреймворки, начинают лепить boilerplate и command line tools, например Ember CLI, или штука для React, которая появилась недавно. В случае с Ember меня поразило то, что ты очень жестко привязан к сборщику, ты не можешь выбрать другой сборщик кроме Broccoli (который я тогда вообще не смог настроить, и он собирал все ну очень долго). По крайней мере, на моей машине это работало вечность. У меня был опыт работы с Ember, мы проект свой до конца собирали на Brunch. Даже учитывая то, что пришлось очень много портировать под себя, потому что все комьюнити перешло на Ember CLI и , мы все равно пользовались Бранчем, терпели. В нашем случае, мы пожертвовали удобством в пользу скорости и быстрой сборки, потому что у нас было много файлов и мы не могли себе позволить ждать вечность. Ты не пытался влиться в open source историю и начать помогать каким-то проектам? Если да, то куда ты коммитил? Да, у меня есть коммиты. Я бы не назвал себя активным контрибьютором. Коммитил во фронтендовые проекты на уровне мелких пулреквестов. У меня есть несколько своих open source проектов (если можно так сказать). Возможно, они не очень интересны, не получили много звездочек на гитхабе, но все же. Я писал враппер для работы с принтерами под Node.js, для одного из моих хобби-проектов. Я делал что-то вроде распределенной печати фотографий из Инстаграма, нашел прикольный маленький принтер для фотографий и подключил его к Raspberry. Благо на Raspberry работал Node.js, пришлось его собирать. Написал что-то вроде агентной системы (не знаю, правильный это термин или нет). Идея была в том, чтобы подключать такие принтеры-устройства и потом печатать фотографии на произвольной станции. Все это легло в основу моего дипломного проекта, который я полностью выложил на гитхаб, я этим в какой-то степени горжусь. Иметь гитхаб это здорово, и использовать его для образования тоже. Вообще дипломный проект получился довольно прикольный. Где ты берешь информацию о фронте: ресурсы, твиттер-аккаунты, за которыми ты следишь, новостные сайты? Про Ruby мы все знаем куда смотреть, на что подписаться, а с фронтовой частью лично у меня с ходу ничего не приходит на ум На первом месте для меня стоит Code Hipsters. Даже если если я не читаю статьи, не ищу их, я все равно пользуюсь телеграмом и читаю канал Code Hipsters c огромным удовольствием. Конечно, я немного по-другому его воспринимаю, потому что это мои друзья. Еще? Твиттер, особенно англоязычный помогает. Не назову какие-то конкретные аккаунты, это накопившийся за долгие годы слой информации. Иногда ты можешь листать ленту, и если произошло что-то действительно трендовое во фронтенде - ты это сразу увидишь, все лента будет заполнена этим. Еще мне нравятся подкасты. Я слушаю Вебстандарты. Кстати, в недавнем выпуске они спрашивали, кто какие подкасты слушает - оказалось, что никто ничего не слушает :). FrontFlip, наверное? Нет, не пошло, вообще не получается слушать русскоязычные подкасты. Я слушаю The Changelog, еще мне нравится подкаст от Thougtbot. Еще Giant Robots, мне очень нравится стиль, атмосфера. Обычно это два спикера, и создается впечатление, что они просто встречаются на выходных, обсуждают, что у них произошло, забывают что есть тема для подкаста. Но это все равно интересно слушать. Это даже два подкаста, один скорее про бизнес (это подкаст от одного из создателей foreign key и еще какой-то платформы. А про разработку это подкаст парня который тоже будет на RailsClub, который поддерживает Phoenix для Elixir. А про фронтенд это The Changelog. О чем ты будешь рассказывать на RailsClub нам, бэкенд разработчикам? О том, что фронтенд ускакал далеко и фреймворк за этим не поспевает. Я буду рассказывать о том, как собирать фронтенд в окружении рельс, какие есть решения, какие есть проблемы. И почему это на самом деле нужно. Буду стараться опираться на свой личный опыт. Как я понимаю, ты не был раньше на RailsClub. Что ты ждешь от конференции? Много интересных знакомств. Я бы хотел увидеть много ребят с горящими глазами. Да и вообще ребят, которые готовы пообщаться, не только на тему конференции. Конференции интересны людьми. У меня была интересная ситуация: в прошлом году мы поехали на Frontend Union Conf, она была в прошлом августе в Москве, в этом где-то в Прибалтике. Мы приехали всей тусовкой, но так устали с дороги, что очень сложно было поймать волну докладов, мы слушали одним ухом. Драйв начался на афтепати. Мы познакомились с парнем из SoundCloud Jan Monschke. Я не помню, какой у него был доклад, но общение после конференции запомнилось. Он клевый чувак, рассказал нам про свои проекты. Речь зашла о Brunch, сборщике о котором я уже говорил. И выяснилось, что он был одним из чуваков, которые начали этот проект. Да ладно!? Это именно то, для чего нужно ехать на конференции: общение. Ну и доклады тоже :) Помимо разработки, чем ты увлекаешься? Читаешь, поешь, играешь на чем-то, ходишь в горы? Сode Hopsters, хотя это скорее связано с работой. Я могу сказать, что меня вдохновляют (и в работе, и в жизни) многие вещи, которые я узнал когда был ребенком. В детстве мне нравились всякие штуки, механизмы. У меня была небольшая мастерская, в которой я делал из дерева всякие луки, арбалеты. К сожалению, у меня не было наставника, который показал бы как можно подключить все это к электричеству, как делать более продвинутые штуки. Когда-то я наткнулся на книгу, которая называется Код, ее написал Charles Petzold. Книга была интересна тем, что рассказывала о детстве: представьте себе, что у вас есть друг, вы живете в домах напротив. И вы захотели общаться, подавая друг другу тайные знаки. Вы достаете фонарик, начинаете рисовать на стене его дома буквы. Потом он плавно переходит к кодам и азбуке Морза, азбуке Брайля, рассказывает про телеграф. Если ты хочешь делать телеграфную связь, то тебе нужен повторитель, а повторитель можно сделать на основе реле… И тут начинается самое интересное. По книге можно сделать всякие logiс gate и тд. Спойлер: книга заканчивается тем, что он показывает как на ассемблере писать прототип операционной системы. Эта книга - идеальное описание того, что меня вдохновляет, вот такие мысленные эксперименты. Еще мне нравится, когда код как-то переплетается с дизайном. Могу посоветовать книгу “ The Nature of Code”, она написана обычным языком, но показывает как писать processing, как моделировать натуральные системы, типа стаи птиц и так далее. Такие вещи меня сильно вдохновляют. Я думаю, это в какой-то степени определяет то, какой я разработчик, то, как я работаю и живу. Сколько у тебя проектов и какой ты сейчас используешь фронтенд стек? Говорить про текущее время сложно: у меня этап, когда я пытаюсь все закрыть. Могу рассказать про то, чем я пользуюсь в реальной жизни. Все зависит от задач, я пытаюсь быть максимально гибким, на благо команды, с которой работаю, и на благо клиента. Если я понимаю, что проект с большим количеством состояний, не требует сильной интерфейсной логики, то почему бы не сделать его multipage, почему бы не сделать его на рельсах, в них все для этого есть. Если вдаваться в подробности, то я пользуюсь Slim, пишу на SCSS. Я заметил, что когда долго пишешь single page приложения, фронтенд меняет тебя. У нас был сложный проект: отдельный бэкенд и много single page приложений. Все они были написаны на ember.js. Вообще у ember интересный путь, от момента как созрела идея, до момента когда вокруг него начало появляться комьюнити и он начал тягаться с react по производительности. Я очень доволен этим фреймворком, в нем все есть для быстрого старта. Какие-то вещи смущают, особенно это касается Convention Over Configuration. Ребята, которые делали Ember (Ехуда Кац из Rails Core Team), вдохновлялись рельсами и постарались перенести много принципов. Мне кажется, что не все получилось здорово. Convention Over Configuration во фронтенд проектах, на мой взгляд, - это очень сомнительно. Мне проще написать больше фронтового кода, чем полагаться на какие-то вещи, которые встроены во фреймворк. С другой стороны, очень много удобных help'еров, можно быстро стартовать проект и так далее. Возвращаясь к теме multipage. Я заметил за собой, что на рельсовых проектах, которые не используют внешний сборщик, а полностью полагаются на assets pipeline, я начинаю организовывать свои фронтендные файлы в какую-то структуру, писать сервисы, организовывать все в некое подобие view. Хотя это просто чистые ES6 классы, которые получают в конструкторе рутовую ноду, от которой можно работать. Такой облегченный backbone view, но только без всего, просто для изоляции. Я думаю, что это хорошая тенденция. Это позволяет и кодовую базу держать в хорошем состоянии, и избегать эффектов, которые часто вылезают при ее разрастании. Сейчас идет какое-то противоборство Angular и React. Ты на чьей стороне, на темной или на светлой? И что есть темная, а что есть светлая? С Angular я практически не работал. Понимаю, к чему ты клонишь, но об этом сложно рассуждать. Я считаю, что эти споры лишены смысла. Не нужно искать кто главный, кто прав, кто нет. Нужно понимать, кто в какой ситуации хорош, где что лучше использовать. Если будет приложение, в котором я буду видеть четкую структуру, переходы, роуты, авторизацию, загрузки и так далее - я, наверное, положился бы на Angular. Хотя в глаза его никогда не видел, но я предполагаю, что там очень много поддержки для таких вещей. Если бы нужно было писать какой-то виджет, встраиваемую часть, какое-то простое приложение, с небольшим количеством состояний, в этом случае, наверное, выберу React. Я не стал бы ориентироваться на измерения производительности и какие-то фичи типа серверсайд рендеринга. Я считаю, что эти вопросы слишком много обсуждают, серверсайд рендеринг того не стоит. В реальности это нужно в 10% случаев, по крайней мере, мне так кажется. Поэтому я бы смотрел на те вещи, которые фреймворк предлагает: на то, что будет полезно для команды, для всего проекта, для компании. То есть ты занимаешь в этой войне нейтралитет? Да! Если бы меня попросили посоветовать что-то следующему поколению, я бы посоветовал прочитать интересную статью про то, каково быть 40-летним разработчиком. Автор очень интересно рассказывает про всю свою жизнь, чему его научила работа больше чем в 10 компаниях. Он говорит очень важную мысль: не полагайтесь на хайп, это ложное чувство, старайтесь смотреть на все трезвым взглядом. Оценивайте, не полагаясь на кратковременные чувства. Я считаю, это очень мудро. Я бы тоже хотел придерживаться такой позиции. Мы выражаем огромную благодарность Лене Могильниковой за помощь с организацией этого выпуска.
If you have questions of your own, you can tweet us at @immutablefm, email us at questions@immutable.fm, or join our Slack team! Sponsor: Linode Topic 1: Should you start to learn design by designing websites or products? i.e.; focus on learning to design screens for iOS/Android apps or start with designing websites? Apple's Human Interface Guidelines Google's Material Design Guidelines 8-Point Grid Topic 2: How do you go about launching an Open Source project? Just throw it up on Github? fastlane.tools Felix Krause Anthony Collurafici Nudg.it Topic 3: What's your git workflow and tools? I know you mentioned you're the only iOS dev at Canvas, so does that make it easier to manage? And do you use GitHub/GitLab, any extra tools like GitTower or do you like going from the command line whenever possible? GitHub for Mac kDiff3 Kaleidoscope GitLab Canvas Sam's dotfiles Topic 4: What do you do when you join a project as a designer, but the project lacks the kind of structure that normally enables you to work efficiently and produce good work? (…pt grids, typographic scales, clear rules for where certain SCSS code goes). Do you just accept the mess that (in your opinion) are parts of the project, or try to change everything even though that might be really resource intensive? Matt Leonard Brian Lovin 8-Point Grid Sketch Figma Venmo Seesaw Topic 5: How do you balance between using 3rd party plugins/frameworks/icons/etc and just making/designing all the things on your own? Louie Mantia Primaries Nucleo oAuth Passport DoorKeeper Privatize Cheddar Roon
In episode 26 of Does Not Compute, Sean and Paul talk about the new headless CMS fad, dealing with insecurities as a new lead developer, and Octopus' new SCSS utilities for building sites with Functional/Atomic CSS.
“Mechanized doom” —For Whom The Bell Tolls by Ernest Hemingway. / My Grunt & GulpJS screencasts: compiling Bootstrap 4 SCSS into CSS and more. / “This b—-.” / “Pizza phone!” / “Birdman inkster.” Listen: download the mp3. 🔔
In this episode, Adam talks with David Heinemeier Hansson, partner at Basecamp and creator of Ruby on Rails. They talk about the pursuit of "purity", Domain Driven Design, ActiveRecord vs DataMapper, and developing an eye for "good code". DHH's Blog "Writing Software" keynote DHH's 5 most influential programming books Transitioning to SCSS at Etsy Jason Fried on Rebuilding Basecamp The Big Rewrite, revisited
Fakultät für Physik - Digitale Hochschulschriften der LMU - Teil 04/05
In the work for this thesis, a split-mirror-setup was designed and build, which was used to split the XUV laser-pulse of FELs (Free Electron Laser) into two identical pulses from which one can be delayed. With this setup the laser pulses of FLASH, Hamburg and SCSS, Harima(Japan) where characterized temporally, to determine the temporal pulse-structure for subsequent experiments. The intermolecular dynamics of the homonuclear diatomic molecules nitrogen and oxygen were examined and the experimental results were reproduced by classical simulations. In the measurement with oxygen for an energy band of the coincident singly charged ions, an ionization probability was found that depends on the delay between the two XUV-pulses. This can most probably be explained by the autoionization of an excited singly charged molecular state. Subsequently the investigation of the two photon double ionization (TPDI) of deuterium is presented. In the single pulse experiments simulations within the Born-Oppenheimer approximation made it possible to distinguish between the direct and sequential TPDI. In the pump-probe experiments light was shed onto the dynamics of the TPDI. In addition, experiments with strong few-cycle near-infrared (NIR) pulses are presented that examined the carrier envelope phase (CEP) dependence of the non-sequential double ionization of argon. Implementing single-shot CEP-tagging in conjunction with coincidence spectroscopy allowed to achieve unprecedented accuracy in measuring correlated electron dynamics.
Southern California School of the Supernatural 2011
Assets in Rails before version 3.1 were kept in the /public folder. In Rails 3.1 they've been moved to /app/assets and function in a slightly different way. Here are some of the highlights: Javascript assets written in Coffeescript will now be compiled to Javascript. CSS assets written in SASS or SCSS will now be compiled to CSS Other templating languages like ERB can be used in assets JQuery is now the default Javascript framework in Rails 3.1 You can combine Javascript files with the new directives Pre-compiled assets When compiling from SASS, SCSS, CoffeeScript, or ERB, you simply add the appropriate extension to your .js or .css file. (.sass, .scss, .coffee, or .erb respectively) To combine several Javascript files into one file, (for example application.js) just do something like this. //= require jquery //= require jquery_ujs //= require_tree . //= require_directory tooltips For several CSS files, it's the same commands, just *= instead of //= and wrapped in /* ... */. Here's a quick example: /* *= require reset *= require base *= require_tree . *= require_directory tooltips */ require pulls in a file. require_tree gets everything in the specified path. require_directory pulls in all the files in a given directory (no nesting). You can precompile your assets by running bundle exec rake assets:precompile (For example, if your server doesn't have a Javascript runtime on it capable of compiling Coffeescript.) Here are some resources for CoffeeScript: The Coffeescript Website CoffeeScript Basics (video) CoffeeScript: The Cool Parts (video)
Sass extends CSS with variables, nesting, mixins and more. Here I show how to convert plain CSS to SCSS in a Rails 3.1 app.
Sass extends CSS with variables, nesting, mixins and more. Here I show how to convert plain CSS to SCSS in a Rails 3.1 app.