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Send me a Text Message hereFULL SHOW NOTES https://podcast.nz365guy.com/631 Discover how the Microsoft Power Platform is revolutionizing the tech landscape with insights from Andrew Butenko, a seasoned Solution Technical Architect and Microsoft MVP, who joins us to share his journey and current innovative projects at Excellent Solutions. You'll learn how Andrew's personal efforts to support Ukraine during the ongoing conflict highlight the country's technological advancements, such as the use of FPV drones in modern warfare. Reflecting on the exceptional skills of Ukrainian professionals, we'll explore the Power Platform's significant implications for both citizen and pro developers, emphasizing its untapped potential.Our conversation unpacks the evolution of Power Platform development, spotlighting key components like PCF controls, plugins, and custom connectors. Reminisce with us about the early days of Telerik controls and our anticipation of a similar market for PCF controls that has yet to materialize. We'll discuss the emerging capabilities of PowerFX plugins and examine the critical responsibilities of pro developers in creating flexible custom connectors and ensuring robust UI validation. We'll also address the challenges of aligning real business needs with system implementations, sharing insights into effective data capture practices to enhance user experience and prevent system errors.In 2024, we celebrated seven years of the Microsoft Business Applications podcast. Now, we step into 2025 with a fresh new name. Welcome to the Microsoft Innovation podcast! Our new name reflects a broader vision, exploring the intersection of people, business, technology, and AI. 90 Day Mentoring ChallengeMicrosoft Business Applications Career Mentor for the Power Platform and Dynamics 365 Justin WelshJustin Welsh's LinkedIn Operating System—the guide to finding your voice on LinkedIn.Support the showIf you want to get in touch with me, you can message me here on Linkedin.Thanks for listening
EPISODE 100! In this milestone episode, Patrick and Ciprian are thrilled to welcome back Richard Campbell for a fascinating discussion that dives deep into the world of quantum advancements and scientific exploration. Together, they explore the mysterious Majorana Fermion, the allure of Cold Fusion, the lessons from refuted papers, and the solutions and innovations that have reshaped the industry. Join us as we celebrate 100 episodes of thought-provoking insights and look ahead to the future of quantum technology! Richard Campbell wrote his first line of code in 1977. His career has spanned the computing industry both on the hardware and software sides, development and operations. He was a co-founder of Strangeloop Networks, acquired by Radware in 2013, and was on the board of directors of Telerik that was acquired by Progress Software in 2014. Today he is a consultant and advisor to several successful technology firms and is the founder and chairman of Humanitarian Toolbox (www.htbox.org), a public charity that builds open-source software for disaster relief. Richard is the host of two podcasts: .NET Rocks! (www.dotnetrocks.com) the Internet Audio Talkshow for .NET developers and RunAs Radio (www.runasradio.com), a weekly show for IT Professionals. He also produces the DevIntersection (www.devintersection.com) series of conferences.
Dopo esser diventato matto per trovare un FileManager che funzionasse perfettamente in Blazor, ho deciso di parlare nuovamente dei componenti di UI di terze parti, affrontando alcune criticità di questi.
Attackers target GitHub repos once again in Ransom-lite extortion.Windows will finally depreciate NTLM, providing transition advice.PoC chaining two flaws for Telerik report released.
Richard Campbell wrote his first line of code in 1977. His career has spanned the computing industry on both the hardware and software sides, development, and operations. He was a co-founder of Strangeloop Networks, acquired by Radware in 2013, and was on the board of directors of Telerik, which was acquired by Progress Software in 2014. Today, he is a consultant and advisor to a number of successful technology firms and is the founder and chairman of Humanitarian Toolbox (www.htbox.org), a public charity that builds open-source software for disaster relief. Richard also hosts three podcasts: .NET Rocks! (www.dotnetrocks.com) for .NET developers, RunAs Radio (www.runasradio.com) for IT Professionals, and Windows Weekly (https://twit.tv/shows/windows-weekly). Topics of Discussion: [2:24] Richard's podcasting career over 20 years and his advice for new podcasters. [6:30] The common topics that Richard talks about. [11:32] Adaptive cruise control and limitations of current AI. [13:34] Potential for autonomous trucks and freight trains. [16:12] Improving software user experience with machine learning. [17:32] How AI may change (and not change) 10 years from now. [19:32] How the voice interface has gotten better. [22:21] The impact of automation on software development jobs. [28:19] The appropriate uses of low-code platforms. [33:29] Habits vs. wisdom. [37:25] The future of augmented reality. [39:15] Importance of experimenting with different tools. [42:43] How augmented reality may disrupt smartphones. [43:49] Jamming out on your tools, much like a musician experimenting. Mentioned in this Episode: Clear Measure Way Architect Forum Software Engineer Forum Programming with Palermo — New Video Podcast! Email us at programming@palermo.net. Clear Measure, Inc. (Sponsor) .NET DevOps for Azure: A Developer's Guide to DevOps Architecture the Right Way, by Jeffrey Palermo — Available on Amazon! Jeffrey Palermo's Twitter — Follow to stay informed about future events! “Richard Campbell on the History of .NET - Episode 133” Want to Learn More? Visit AzureDevOps.Show for show notes and additional episodes.
Today's guest is Hristo Borisov, cofounder and CEO at Payhawk, a financial system that combines credit cards, payments, expenses, and cash into one integrated experience. Hristo has raised over $236 million with Payhawk from Lightspeed Ventures, Greenoaks, QED investors, and many more. Today, Payhawk is valued at US$1 billion, making it the first Bulgarian startup to achieve Unicorn status. Prior to founding Payhawk, Hristo worked at Telerik as software engineer and a product manager. In this episode, we talk about his founding of Payhawk, the challenges he encountered as an entrepreneur, lessons learned from scaling Payhawk into 32 countries, and much more.
In this episode, host Bidemi Ologunde talked about a March 2023 incident where a U.S. federal agency was targeted by multiple attackers, including a Vietnamese espionage group, in a cyberespionage campaign between November 2022 and January 2023. The threat actors used a vulnerability in the agency's Microsoft Internet Information Services (IIS) server to install malware.Support the show
INTRO “Richard Campbell spanned the computing industry both on the hardware and software sides, development, and operations. He was a co-founder of Strangeloop Networks and was on the board of directors of Telerik. Now he is the founder and chairman of Humanitarian Toolbox, Richard is also the host of two podcasts: .NET Rocks! and RunAs […]
The US Government discloses exploitations of MOVEit vulnerabilities, and the Department of Energy is targeted by the Cl0p gang. CISA releases an updated advisory for Telerik vulnerabilities affecting Government servers. Shampoo malware emerges with multiple persistence mechanisms. How the IT Army of Ukraine can exemplify a cyber auxiliary. Russophone gamers are being targeted with ransomware. An alleged LockBit operator has been arrested. The FBI's Deputy Assistant Director for cyber Cynthia Kaiser joins us with cybercriminal trends and recent successes. Our guest is Will Markow from Lightcast, speaking with Simone Petrella about data-driven strategic workforce decisions. And a federal grand jury indicts the alleged Discord Papers leaker. For links to all of today's stories check out our CyberWire daily news briefing: https://thecyberwire.com/newsletters/daily-briefing/12/116 Selected reading. US government hit by Russia's Clop in MOVEit mass attack (The Register) Energy Department among ‘several' federal agencies hit by MOVEit breach (Federal News Network) Threat Actors Exploit Progress Telerik Vulnerabilities in Multiple U.S. Government IIS Servers (CISA) CVE-2019-18935 Detail (NIST) CVE-2017-9248 Detail (NIST) Cryptographic Weakness (Telerik) Shampoo: A New ChromeLoader Campaign (HP) Cyber attacks on Rotterdam and Groningen websites (World Cargo News) The Dynamics of the Ukrainian IT Army's Campaign in Russia (Lawfare) Watch: Why early failures in Ukraine's counter-offensive aren't Russian victories (The Telegraph) Russian War Report: Anti-Ukrainian counteroffensive narratives fail to go viral (Atlantic Council) Threat Actor Targets Russian Gaming Community With WannaCry-Imitator (Cyble) Hackers infect Russian-speaking gamers with fake WannaCry ransomware (The Record) Russian national arrested in Arizona, charged for alleged role in LockBit ransomware attacks (CyberScoop) Suspected LockBit ransomware affiliate arrested, charged in US (BleepingComputer) Russian national arrested in US for deploying LockBit ransomware (The Record) Guardsman indicted on charges of disclosing classified national defense information (AP News) Charges Against Alleged Pentagon Leaker Jack Teixeira Explained (Newsweek) Jack Teixeira, Pentagon leaks suspect, indicted by federal grand jury (The Guardian)
In this episode of Storm Watch, the hosts discuss a variety of cybersecurity topics, including a new CDE (202327997) related to a Fortinet RCE vulnerability in SSL VPNs. The vulnerability was discovered by a French research group and is currently being tracked. Fortinet has already issued patches, so the hosts advise upgrading Fortinet devices as soon as possible. The hosts also discuss the recent issues with Barracuda appliances, advising users to consider replacing them due to security concerns. They mention that Barracuda devices may be falling out of fashion in favor of alternatives like Proofpoint. Reddit's recent API changes and the potential impact on public internet communities are also discussed. The hosts express concern about the loss of open information sharing, especially in the cybersecurity industry, as private communities become more prevalent. They encourage listeners to join GreyNoise's community Slack for information sharing and collaboration. Lastly, the hosts touch on new tags added to GreyNoise, including one related to an older internet scanner that has recently become open source. They also mention the Telerik platform, which has a history of vulnerabilities and is frequently targeted. The hosts emphasize the importance of staying vigilant and keeping an eye on emerging threats. Join our Community Slack >> Learn more about GreyNoise >>
US Government IIS server breached via Telerik software flaw Critical Microsoft Outlook bug PoC shows how easy it is to exploit LockBit threatens release of thousands of SpaceX blueprints Brought to you by the CISO Series. For the stories behind the headlines, head to CISOseries.com.
Telerik exploited, for carding (probably) and other purposes. Cloud storage re-up attacks. Cybercriminals use new measures to avoid detection of phishing campaigns. "Winter Vivern" seems aligned with Russian objectives. Microsoft warns of a possible surge in Russian cyber operations. Boss Sandworm. Johannes Ullrich from SANS talking about malware spread through Google Ads. Our guest is David Anteliz from Skybox Security with thoughts on federal government cybersecurity directives. And don't fear the Reaper. For links to all of today's stories check out our CyberWire daily news briefing: https://thecyberwire.com/newsletters/daily-briefing/12/51 Selected reading. Threat Actors Exploited Progress Telerik Vulnerability in U.S. Government IIS Server (Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency CISA) Threat Actors Exploit Progress Telerik Vulnerability in U.S. Government IIS Server | CISA (Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency CISA) CISA: Federal civilian agency hacked by nation-state and criminal hacking groups (CyberScoop) US govt web server attacked by 'multiple' criminal gangs (Register) The Cloud Storage Re-Up Attack (Avanan) Threat Spotlight: 3 novel phishing tactics (Barracuda) Winter Vivern | Uncovering a Wave of Global Espionage (SentinelOne) Is Russia regrouping for renewed cyberwar? (Microsoft On the Issues) A year of Russian hybrid warfare in Ukraine (Microsoft Threat Intelligence) Russian hackers preparing new cyber assault against Ukraine - Microsoft report (Reuters) Microsoft Warns Russia May Plan More Ransomware Attacks Beyond Ukraine (Bloomberg) This Is the New Leader of Russia's Infamous Sandworm Hacking Unit (WIRED) What's known and not about US drone-Russian jet encounter (AP NEWS) Russia tries to retrieve downed US drone in Black Sea (The Telegraph) Downed U.S. drone points to cyber vulnerabilities (Washington Post)
CISA, FBI, and the Multi-State Information Sharing and Analysis Center are releasing this joint Cybersecurity Advisory to provide IT infrastructure defenders with TTPs, IOCs, and methods to detect and protect against recent exploitation against Microsoft Internet Information Services web servers. AA23-074A Alert, Technical Details, and Mitigations AA23-074A STIX XML MAR-10413062-1.v1 Telerik Vulnerability in U.S. Government IIS Server Telerik: Exploiting .NET JavaScriptSerializer Deserialization (CVE-2019-18935) ACSC Advisory 2020-004 Bishop Fox CVE-2019-18935: Remote Code Execution via Insecure Deserialization in Telerik UI Volexity Threat Research: XE Group GitHub: Proof-of-Concept Exploit for CVE-2019-18935 Microsoft: Configure Logging in IIS GitHub: CVE-2019-18935 No-cost cyber hygiene services: Cyber Hygiene Services and Ransomware Readiness Assessment. See CISA Insights Mitigations and Hardening Guidance for MSPs and Small- and Mid-sized Businesses for guidance on hardening MSP and customer infrastructure. U.S. DIB sector organizations may consider signing up for the NSA Cybersecurity Collaboration Center's DIB Cybersecurity Service Offerings, including Protective Domain Name System services, vulnerability scanning, and threat intelligence collaboration for eligible organizations. For more information on how to enroll in these services, email dib_defense@cyber.nsa.gov To report incidents and anomalous activity or to request incident response resources or technical assistance related to these threats, contact CISA at report@cisa.gov, or call (888) 282-0870, or report incidents to your local FBI field office.
CISA, FBI, and the Multi-State Information Sharing and Analysis Center are releasing this joint Cybersecurity Advisory to provide IT infrastructure defenders with TTPs, IOCs, and methods to detect and protect against recent exploitation against Microsoft Internet Information Services web servers. AA23-074A Alert, Technical Details, and Mitigations AA23-074A STIX XML MAR-10413062-1.v1 Telerik Vulnerability in U.S. Government IIS Server Telerik: Exploiting .NET JavaScriptSerializer Deserialization (CVE-2019-18935) ACSC Advisory 2020-004 Bishop Fox CVE-2019-18935: Remote Code Execution via Insecure Deserialization in Telerik UI Volexity Threat Research: XE Group GitHub: Proof-of-Concept Exploit for CVE-2019-18935 Microsoft: Configure Logging in IIS GitHub: CVE-2019-18935 No-cost cyber hygiene services: Cyber Hygiene Services and Ransomware Readiness Assessment. See CISA Insights Mitigations and Hardening Guidance for MSPs and Small- and Mid-sized Businesses for guidance on hardening MSP and customer infrastructure. U.S. DIB sector organizations may consider signing up for the NSA Cybersecurity Collaboration Center's DIB Cybersecurity Service Offerings, including Protective Domain Name System services, vulnerability scanning, and threat intelligence collaboration for eligible organizations. For more information on how to enroll in these services, email dib_defense@cyber.nsa.gov To report incidents and anomalous activity or to request incident response resources or technical assistance related to these threats, contact CISA at report@cisa.gov, or call (888) 282-0870, or report incidents to your local FBI field office.
Lex interviews Hristo Borisov, CEO and co-founder of Payhawk, a leader in B2B payments and expense management. Together, they discuss the evolution of product development, from mobile apps to platforms that solve customer problems. Touching on the 2017 trend of chatbots and the practical uses of this technology today via ChatGPT. Additionally, Hristo expands on the company he founded in 2018 - Payhawk, a Fintech company that automates financial functions for businesses, highlighting the importance of understanding customer problems and iterating solutions to validate and prototype them. MENTIONED IN THE CONVERSATION Payhawk's website: https://bit.ly/3ZjfCRMHristo's Linkedin profile: https://bit.ly/3ETjWiv Topics: fintech, payments, credit, ERP, SaaS, cloud, AI, platform, API, financial ecosystem, chatbots Companies: Payhawk, Telerik, Progress Software, DarwinAI, Progress NativeChat, Brex, Ramp, ChatGPT ABOUT THE FINTECH BLUEPRINT
This week's episode features the Co-Founder and CEO of Payhawk, Bulgaria's first ever Unicorn. We discuss what Hristo learned from his previous journey running product at Telerik (now part of Progress), as well as what's been their secret sauce scaling Payhawk to more than a billion dollar valuation. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/uncharted1/support
Clark is a community builder, living somewhere along the IL/WI border. He is married to his best friend, amazing wife, business partner, and they share the joys of raising two kids. He is a historically trained software developer, architect, product manager, and has managed to fool companies such as Allstate, Microsoft, Telerik to let this crazy passionate, entrepreneurial, see no boundaries of a person work for them. He and his wife have founded two companies THAT Conference and Unspecified. He fell backward into software development because computers help people scale. It's his love for people, his love for helping one another, that's led him to a life of building products that build communities. It's his mission to create software that connects people in a more profound and meaningful way. Today, THAT Conference is one of the largest Family Friendly Technology Conferences. During the pandemic, they created a SAAS platform to connect geeks across the globe. Unspecified is their boutique software development company. They take their extensive enterprise application skills and help small businesses build software to better their business. Regardless of titles, he will always call himself a practitioner. You can follow Clark on Social Media https://twitter.com/csell5 https://unspecified.io/ https://that.us/ PLEASE SUBSCRIBE TO THE PODCAST - Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/6ddVKXbZGtMz3y66D9QD0e - Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/coffee-and-open-source/id1589875016 - Google Podcasts: hhttps://podcasts.google.com/feed/aHR0cHM6Ly9hbmNob3IuZm0vcy82Mzk4MmY3MC9wb2RjYXN0L3Jzcw - RSS: http://isaacl.dev/podcast-rss You can check out more episodes of Coffee and Open Source on https://www.coffeeandopensource.com/. Coffee and Open Source is hosted by Isaac Levin (https://twitter.com/isaacrlevin). --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/coffeandopensource/support
This week, Jeffrey is joined by Jimmy Engström, a Senior Developer, author, and speaker. Since he was 7 years old and got his first computer, Jimmy has been on the cutting edge of technology, always developing, and trying new things. When he got wind of Blazor, he immediately realized the potential and adopted it when it was only in beta. Since then, he has been running Blazor in production since it was launched by Microsoft. Jimmy's passion for the .NET industry and community has taken him all around the world and has even earned him the Microsoft Most Valuable Professional award for the last 8 years in a row. Additionally, Jimmy is the author of Web Development with Blazor and the co-host of Coding After Work; a podcast and stream. In this episode, Jimmy shares what he thinks every developer should know when it comes to Blazor, his favorite Blazor components, insights regarding integrating Blazor into a DevOps environment, his career journey in Blazor, and about his book, Web Development with Blazor, A hands-on guide for .NET developers to build interactive UIs with C#. Topics of Discussion: [:36] About The Azure DevOps Podcast, Clear Measure; the new video podcast Architect Tips; and Jeffrey's offer to speak at virtual user groups. [1:15] About today's episode with Jimmy Engström. [2:20] Jeffrey welcomes Jimmy to the show and congratulates him on his book on Blazor. [2:50] Jimmy shares his career background and his professional body of work. [6:55] When did Jimmy become interested and invested in Blazor? What led him to writing a book about it? [11:29] What should every developer know about Blazor? [18:44] A word from Azure DevOps Podcast's sponsor: Clear Measure. [19:16] Jimmy talks Blazor architecture and APIs. [21:59] Blazor components that Jimmy and his team especially love using. [25:15] Jimmy's opinions on Radzen and Telerik. [26:25] Jimmy shares when he first adopted Blazor and the big changes he has noticed as he's moved from .NET 5 to .NET 6. [29:36] Jimmy's insights regarding integrating Blazor into a DevOps environment. [32:50] Where to find Jimmy online. [35:09] Jeffrey thanks Aaron Stannard for joining the podcast. Mentioned in this Episode: Architect Tips — New video podcast! Azure DevOps Clear Measure (Sponsor) .NET DevOps for Azure: A Developer's Guide to DevOps Architecture the Right Way, by Jeffrey Palermo — Available on Amazon! bit.ly/dotnetdevopsebook — Click here to download the .NET DevOps for Azure ebook! Jeffrey Palermo's YouTube Jeffrey Palermo's Twitter — Follow to stay informed about future events! Jimmy Engström's Microsoft Profile Jimmy Engström's Twitter @EngstromJimmy EngstromJimmy.com Jimmy Engström's LinkedIn Web Development with Blazor, A hands-on guide for .NET developers to build interactive UIs with C#, by Jimmy Engström (on PacktHub) Web Development with Blazor: A hands-on guide for .NET developers to build interactive UIs with C#, by Jimmy Engström (on Amazon) Jimmy Engström on Sessionize CodingAfterWork.com Blazor SignalR Blazm.net Infragistics Telerik Radzen Want to Learn More? Visit AzureDevOps.Show for show notes and additional episodes.
Highlights: - How to prepare your company for an exit- When is the right time to exit your business- If you're being acquired how not to sell your business too low- VC role may not be a good fit to you - reasons whyAbout StephenStephen is a managing partner at Fresco Capital. He was Chief Strategy Officer of Telerik, a leading vendor of developer and team productivity tools which got acquired in 2014. And he's also an avid mountain climber, and leads an annual charity fundraising trek in the Mt. Everest region.
This episode of the Angular Show features Sara Faatz, who leads the Telerik and KenoUI Developer Relations team at Progress, and Alyssa Nicoll, an Angular Developer Advocate & Google Developers Expert in Angular. Sara and Alyssa share with the panelists their respective journeys into the dev industry and how they ended up together on the Developer Relations team at Progress.You have likely heard of DevRel. It's the elite special forces coders that fly around the world and speak at conferences, have platinum Delta status, and sip on Champagne in the hallway track, right? Not exactly.Developer Relations is a relatively new career that has evolved over time into what it is today. Sara and Alyssa teach us about what DevRel is _really_ about, how much they love it, but also some of the pain points and challenges. Sara and Alyssa are part of an amazing team at Progress and enjoy sharing their passion for the web and KenoUI with front-end developers. In the end, Sara and Alyssa believe in the "human side of development"; sitting down with developers to understand what they need, the tools they use, and what can help improve their careers and lives.
Technical debt is one of those things that can really bite your ass when you're not taking care of it. Tech debt sneaks in and before you know it, you're spending more time repaying that debt rather than delivering actual value. But not all tech debt is wrong. And not everything that is perceived as tech debt is actually that. What about undone work? And what can we do to prevent this from accumulating? To what extent do we need to be transparent about it? Steve Porter, Scrum.org's Professional Series Manager and developer at heart, joins us in this episode of Mastering Agility to discuss this.What you'll discover in this show:- Introducing tech debt might be a good thing- There is a difference between tech debt and work that is just not done- Estimation of effort is still needed. Also discussing what has been done to remove it could be good to do during Sprint Reviews Speakers:Steve PorterSupporting the Professional Scrum Trainer communitySteve Porter works with the Scrum.org team of experts and its wider trainer community to create and maintain its Professional Series of courses and assessments. Steve guides this collaborative process to ensure training is current and meets the needs of the professional Scrum community. Before joining Scrum.org, Steve was the product owner for TeamPulse, Telerik's agile project management tool. He has also provided application lifecycle management (ALM) consulting services for organizations around the globe. At his core, Steve is still a developer. He taught himself how to code at an early age and has spent years turning ephemeral ideas into functioning software. It's the joy of this craft that Steve brings to all his interactions at Scrum.org. Contact Steve Porter:https://www.scrum.org/resources/blog?uid=119https://twitter.com/stevevrporterhttps://www.linkedin.com/in/stevevrporter/ Sander Dur (host)Scrum Master, Agile Coach, trainer, and podcast host for ‘Mastering Agility”Sander Dur is a business agility enthusiast, with a passion for people. Whether it's healthy product development, agile leadership, measurement, or psychological safety, Sander has the drive to enable organizations to the best of their abilities. He is an avid article writer, working on a book about Scrum Mastery from the Trenches, and is connecting listeners with the most influential people in the industry. https://www.linkedin.com/in/sanderdur/ https://agilitymasters.com/en https://sander-dur.medium.com/ Additional resources: Support the show
In this episode, Jimmy and Jessica talk to Carl Franklin about Blazor, Podcasting, and his love for Music. https://www.youtube.com/user/carlfranklin https://www.dotnetrocks.com/ https://blazortrain.com/ Support us by testing Telerik amazing UI for Blazor https://www.telerik.com/campaigns/blazor/free-trial-1?utm_source=jimmyengstrom&utm_medium=cpm&utm_campaign=blazor-trial-codingafterwork-podcast
Support us by testing Telerik amazing UI for Blazor https://www.telerik.com/campaigns/blazor/free-trial-1?utm_source=jimmyengstrom&utm_medium=cpm&utm_campaign=blazor-trial-codingafterwork-podcast In this episode, Jimmy and Jessica talk to Carl Rippon about his book on React and .NET 5, they talk about React and also how to compare it to Blazor. https://www.carlrippon.com/ https://www.amazon.com/ASP-NET-Core-React-Full-stack-development/dp/180020616X
Support us by testing Telerik amazing UI for Blazor https://www.telerik.com/campaigns/blazor/free-trial-1?utm_source=jimmyengstrom&utm_medium=cpm&utm_campaign=blazor-trial-codingafterwork-podcast In this episode, Jimmy and Jessica talk to Jérôme Laban about the Uno platform, why AOT is awesome, and toast https://twitter.com/jlaban https://twitch.tv/jeromelaban https://jaylee.org/ https://platform.uno/ https://twitter.com/nventive https://twitter.com/unoplatform
Between the SolarWinds hack, Microsoft releasing a working document detailing the problems with the .NET ecosystem, and a bouncy castle crypto vulnerability, it's been a busy week. Let's dive in and see what happened, shall we?
In this episode: Stephen Forte, Managing Partner at Fresco Capital, an early stage VC investor. He was also a board member of the Scrum Alliance, Chief Strategy Officer at Telerik and CTO at Zagat Survey and many other ventures. He started his career as a developer.Let us know who you want to hear sharing on this podcast. Thanks to Mizuho Hong Kong for being the venue sponsor for this episode and thanks to Kohpy Ventures for making this series possible.Contact me @jebbery
Говорим си за образование в България и за това какво трябва да се промени в образователната ни система. Гости са ни двама от най-изявените представители в сектора, а именно Теодосий Теодосиев (Тео) - учителят по физика, чиито ученици са спечелили 10 от общо 14 златни медала от Международни Олимпиади по Физика, и Светозар Георгиев, основател на Telerik, Campus X и Telerik Academy, с която се занимава активно в момента. В разговора засегнахме въпроси като: - Сравнение между предишната и сегашната образователна система - Дисциплината в училище и авторитета на учителите - За отличниците на света - Финландия и Южна Корея - Може ли Европа и нейните либерални концепции да се противопостави на дисциплината от Далечния Изток? Сравнение между двата типа образование. - За сегрегацията на учениците, или трябва ли слабите ученици да се оставят "зад борда" или е по-добре по-силните да помагат на по-слабите, за да има по-добър баланс - Бизнес моделът на образователната система и Телерик Академията - Мнението на гости и ученици за дистанционното обучение - Как едни учители успяват да преподадат даден материал за 4 часа с лекота, а на други и 20 часа не са им достатъчни? - Може ли да се стане добър програмист за 6 месеца? - Как качествените учители да станат повече? - Ако днес сте на 18 години и трябва да избирате специалност в университета, коя бихте избрали? - И разбира се любимият ни въпрос "Ако сте Министър на Образованието, кои са мигновените промени, които бихте направили в образователната ни система?" Водещи отново са Георги Иванов (Founder & CEO @Noble Hire), Борис Симандов (General Manager @Via Engineering Bulgaria) и Росен Генчев (Founder & CEO @BioSeek). По традиция подбрахме и няколко активни отворени позиции от платформата на Noble Hire: - Ruby on Rails Developer @ Checkout X (remote): https://bit.ly/36ISkw6 - Software Engineer - Payment Processing @ Paysafe: https://bit.ly/2GqUu93 - Junior Project Manager @ B EYE: https://bit.ly/36ISHqu - Lead/Senior Java Developer @ MentorMate: https://bit.ly/3noJ5ai - Full-Stack Developer - Tech Lead @ Bizportal: https://bit.ly/30JXRi5 - Technology Developer @ Wacom: https://bit.ly/36NxMCR - PHP Back-end Developer @ SMSBump: https://bit.ly/34DuJds
La app de seguimiento y prevención de contagio del gobierno Indio se vuelve código abierto El malware se disfraza de FedEx, UPS, DHL y más servicios de mensajería para hacer phishing Turla, el Grupo APT controla su malware a través de la interfaz web de GMAIL Tu servidor ASP.net con el framework Telerik podría estar infectado ¿Puede detectar la inteligencia artificial a un criminal solo por su rostro? Animal Político sufre su quinto ataque informático en este mes. ¿Ataque dirigido o solo un ataque de Carding por su falta de seguridad?
Blue mockingbird, o el grupo Sinsajo azul, está minando critpomonedas en servidores Windows. Y no, no es parte de la saga de los juegos del hambre. Un ataque que se cree activo desde diciembre del 2019, ha sido descubierto por la firma de seguridad Red Canary. Los investigadores advierten que están atacando servidor corriendo ASP.net con framework de interface gráfica Telerik. Los atacantes explotan la vulnerabilidad CVE-2019-18935 de servidores que se encuentren expuestos de manera pública en Internet. La meta inicial es que el malware se cargue solito cuando el sistema reinicie a través de la técnica de Juicy Potato (escalación de privilegios locales). Luego instalan un software llamado XMRRig que se encarga de minar la criptodivisa Monero. Además, si el servidor cuenta con accesos RDPs o Samba, los atacantes los usan para llegar a las redes internas y propagar su ataque. Red Canary comenta que no conoce la magnitud del ataque pero que sospechan que la botnet puede contar con ma? de 1,000 infecciones. La remediación consiste en realizar una actualización de software o bien, si no te encuentras en la posibilidad de relizarla, se puede optar por una prevención desde el mismo firewall. ¡Actualicen o corran con su amigo de seguridad de confianza para que les ayude a reparar los daños!
Sponsors CacheFly Panel Shawn Clabough Caleb Wells Joined by Special Guest: Daniel Roth Summary Daniel Roth, from Microsoft, the ASP .NET team, joins the panel to discuss Blazor. Daniel starts by introducing Web Assembly and how this changed web development. Blazor allows full-stack development through .NET with C#. The panel asks Dan about Blazor's capabilities and future. Dan shares Blazor’s origin story. The panel compares Blazor to Silverlight and Dan compares the two and explains how Blazor is superior to Silverlight. Dan explains why developers are so excited for Blazor. The panel discusses the runtime Blazor uses and whether it is core only. The panel asks Dan about how to adopt Blazor into specific projects and how Blazor works under the hood. Links https://blazor.net NDC Oslo 2019: Blazor, a new framework for browser-based .NET apps - Steve Sanderson Telerik DevExpress Syncfusion Radzen https://github.com/AdrienTorris/awesome-blazor https://gitter.im/aspnet/blazor https://github.com/aspnet/AspNetCore/tree/master/src/Components ASP.NET Core and Blazor updates in .NET Core 3.0 Preview 7 Blazor now in official preview! https://aka.ms/blazorworkshop https://devblogs.microsoft.com/aspnet/ https://github.com/AdrienTorris/awesome-blazor Blazor, a new framework for browser-based .NET apps - Steve Sanderson https://gitter.im/aspnet/blazor https://github.com/danroth27 https://twitter.com/danroth27?lang=en https://www.facebook.com/Adventures-in-NET-373059030062837/ https://twitter.com/adventures_net Picks Shawn Clabough: Merlin Caleb Wells: Muse 2 headband Daniel Roth: Roblox
Sponsors CacheFly Panel Shawn Clabough Caleb Wells Joined by Special Guest: Daniel Roth Summary Daniel Roth, from Microsoft, the ASP .NET team, joins the panel to discuss Blazor. Daniel starts by introducing Web Assembly and how this changed web development. Blazor allows full-stack development through .NET with C#. The panel asks Dan about Blazor's capabilities and future. Dan shares Blazor’s origin story. The panel compares Blazor to Silverlight and Dan compares the two and explains how Blazor is superior to Silverlight. Dan explains why developers are so excited for Blazor. The panel discusses the runtime Blazor uses and whether it is core only. The panel asks Dan about how to adopt Blazor into specific projects and how Blazor works under the hood. Links https://blazor.net NDC Oslo 2019: Blazor, a new framework for browser-based .NET apps - Steve Sanderson Telerik DevExpress Syncfusion Radzen https://github.com/AdrienTorris/awesome-blazor https://gitter.im/aspnet/blazor https://github.com/aspnet/AspNetCore/tree/master/src/Components ASP.NET Core and Blazor updates in .NET Core 3.0 Preview 7 Blazor now in official preview! https://aka.ms/blazorworkshop https://devblogs.microsoft.com/aspnet/ https://github.com/AdrienTorris/awesome-blazor Blazor, a new framework for browser-based .NET apps - Steve Sanderson https://gitter.im/aspnet/blazor https://github.com/danroth27 https://twitter.com/danroth27?lang=en https://www.facebook.com/Adventures-in-NET-373059030062837/ https://twitter.com/adventures_net Picks Shawn Clabough: Merlin Caleb Wells: Muse 2 headband Daniel Roth: Roblox
Today’s guest is Richard Campbell! Richard’s career has spanned the computing industry — both on the hardware and the software side; development and operations. He was a co-founder of Strangeloop Networks, which was acquired by Radware in 2013 and spent five years on the Board of Directors of Telerik (which was acquired by Progress Software in 2014). He has also founded Humanitarian Toolbox, an organization design to let developers around the world donate their skills to disaster relief organizations by building open source software. Today he is a consultant and advisor for a number of successful technology firms as well as the co-owner and content planner of the DevIntersection group of conferences. On top of all that, you may also recognize Richard as a co-host on two podcasts: .NET Rocks! and RunAs Radio! In this week’s fun episode, Jeffrey and Richard discuss software perspectives and shipping software without all the trendy buzzwords. Richard shares what he has learned over his time shipping software, his thoughts on Dev and Ops and how they can better come together, his recommendations on how to structure logs and what to log, the challenges with an independently running application or service, his predictions on what user interface types and application types will be the next big trend, and his best pick as far as all of the UI and application types available today. He also gives a bit of a sneak preview of the book he is currently working on about .NET! Topics of Discussion: [:40] Be sure to visit AzureDevOps.Show for past episodes and show notes! [:48] Where to get a hold of Jeffrey’s new book, .NET DevOps for Azure. [1:35] About today’s episode and guest. [2:50] Jeffrey welcomes Richard to the show! [4:09] Back when Richard wrote his first line of code in 1977, was there a division between Dev and Ops? [5:41] Jeffrey and Richard discuss shipping software, what Richard has learned over his time doing it, about the history of .NET book Richard is working on, and other key lessons from his various positions in the industry. [11:28] Richard gives his recommendations on how to structure logs and what to log. [14:51] The best thing you can do when you’re trying to work across teams. [16:02] There are a lot of developers… but where are the architects? And how does a developer become an architect? [19:40] A word from Azure DevOps sponsor: Clear Measure. [20:05] On the topic of ‘buzzwords…’ How would Richard classify a microservice? [22:41] One of the challenges with an independently running application or service: the state/data. [27:16] Richard gives his predictions on what user interface types and application types are going to be the next trend and his thoughts on what developers should be investing their skills in. [28:21] What would be Richard’s best pick as far as all of the UI and application types available today? [31:50] Is the language less important than the platform? [33:49] What're the best mechanisms for somebody getting into the platform today? [36:52] When is Richard’s .NET book coming out? And what will it be about? Mentioned in this Episode: Azure DevOps Clear Measure (Sponsor) — Reach out to Jeffrey @JeffreyPalermo on Twitter if you have a user group or conference and would like some free copies of .NET DevOps for Azure! .NET DevOps for Azure, by Jeffrey Palermo bit.ly/dotnetdevopsproject Humanitarian Toolbox .NET Rocks! Podcast RunAs Radio Podcast DevIntersection Progress Software’s acquisition of Telerik Microsoft Secrets: How the World's Most Powerful Software Company Creates Technology, Shapes Markets and Manages People, by Michael A. Cusumano Want to Learn More? Visit AzureDevOps.Show for show notes and additional episodes.
Panel: Charles Max Wood Guest: Sam Julien This week on My Angular Story, Charles speaks with Sam Julien. Sam’s course Upgrading Angular JS is a comprehensive video course to help people tackle the transition from Angular JS to Angular which was born out of his own pain and suffering from that process. He first got into programming when he was 8 or 9 and his robotics engineer uncle got him into old Mac computers and he would then hack around on them. They talk about what brought him back to programming, what made him want to specialize in Angular, and more! In particular, We dive pretty deep on: Adventures in Angular Episode 186 Upgrading Angular JS course Angular JS to Angular How did you first get into programming? Uncle gave him his old Mac computers Reverse engineering of computers Basic and ResEdit Taught himself HTML at 12 years old HTML was the thing that allowed him to actually create things CSS and JavaScript in college What was it like when you were first developing things? Didn’t understand JavaScript in the beginning Degree in Religion What brought you back to programming? Worked for a brokerage originally Started mostly with C# and jQuery and then moved on to Angular What was it about Angular made you want to specialize in it? Fascinated by Angular and took the Code School course on it Loved how straightforward Angular was Making the most of the opportunities you’re given The welcoming aspect of the Angular community Are there contributions to the community that you are really proud of? Writing for Scotch.io and Telerik Runs Angular Portland groups Talking at Angular Denver and AngularMix What made you want to make your course? And much, much more! Links: Adventures in Angular Episode 186 Upgrading Angular JS Angular JS Angular JavaScript jQuery Code School Sam’s Scotch.io page Sam’s Telerik blog Angular Portland groups Angular Denver AngularMix @samjulien samjulien.com Sam’s GitHub Sponsors: FreshBooks Loot Crate Picks: Charles Anti-pick: HOAs Home Depot tool rental Utah Backyard Homesteading Facebook group Sam Learn Docker Course NgColombia Artemis by Andy Weir on Audible
Panel: Charles Max Wood Guest: Sam Julien This week on My Angular Story, Charles speaks with Sam Julien. Sam’s course Upgrading Angular JS is a comprehensive video course to help people tackle the transition from Angular JS to Angular which was born out of his own pain and suffering from that process. He first got into programming when he was 8 or 9 and his robotics engineer uncle got him into old Mac computers and he would then hack around on them. They talk about what brought him back to programming, what made him want to specialize in Angular, and more! In particular, We dive pretty deep on: Adventures in Angular Episode 186 Upgrading Angular JS course Angular JS to Angular How did you first get into programming? Uncle gave him his old Mac computers Reverse engineering of computers Basic and ResEdit Taught himself HTML at 12 years old HTML was the thing that allowed him to actually create things CSS and JavaScript in college What was it like when you were first developing things? Didn’t understand JavaScript in the beginning Degree in Religion What brought you back to programming? Worked for a brokerage originally Started mostly with C# and jQuery and then moved on to Angular What was it about Angular made you want to specialize in it? Fascinated by Angular and took the Code School course on it Loved how straightforward Angular was Making the most of the opportunities you’re given The welcoming aspect of the Angular community Are there contributions to the community that you are really proud of? Writing for Scotch.io and Telerik Runs Angular Portland groups Talking at Angular Denver and AngularMix What made you want to make your course? And much, much more! Links: Adventures in Angular Episode 186 Upgrading Angular JS Angular JS Angular JavaScript jQuery Code School Sam’s Scotch.io page Sam’s Telerik blog Angular Portland groups Angular Denver AngularMix @samjulien samjulien.com Sam’s GitHub Sponsors: FreshBooks Loot Crate Picks: Charles Anti-pick: HOAs Home Depot tool rental Utah Backyard Homesteading Facebook group Sam Learn Docker Course NgColombia Artemis by Andy Weir on Audible
Panel: Charles Max Wood Guest: Sam Julien This week on My Angular Story, Charles speaks with Sam Julien. Sam’s course Upgrading Angular JS is a comprehensive video course to help people tackle the transition from Angular JS to Angular which was born out of his own pain and suffering from that process. He first got into programming when he was 8 or 9 and his robotics engineer uncle got him into old Mac computers and he would then hack around on them. They talk about what brought him back to programming, what made him want to specialize in Angular, and more! In particular, We dive pretty deep on: Adventures in Angular Episode 186 Upgrading Angular JS course Angular JS to Angular How did you first get into programming? Uncle gave him his old Mac computers Reverse engineering of computers Basic and ResEdit Taught himself HTML at 12 years old HTML was the thing that allowed him to actually create things CSS and JavaScript in college What was it like when you were first developing things? Didn’t understand JavaScript in the beginning Degree in Religion What brought you back to programming? Worked for a brokerage originally Started mostly with C# and jQuery and then moved on to Angular What was it about Angular made you want to specialize in it? Fascinated by Angular and took the Code School course on it Loved how straightforward Angular was Making the most of the opportunities you’re given The welcoming aspect of the Angular community Are there contributions to the community that you are really proud of? Writing for Scotch.io and Telerik Runs Angular Portland groups Talking at Angular Denver and AngularMix What made you want to make your course? And much, much more! Links: Adventures in Angular Episode 186 Upgrading Angular JS Angular JS Angular JavaScript jQuery Code School Sam’s Scotch.io page Sam’s Telerik blog Angular Portland groups Angular Denver AngularMix @samjulien samjulien.com Sam’s GitHub Sponsors: FreshBooks Loot Crate Picks: Charles Anti-pick: HOAs Home Depot tool rental Utah Backyard Homesteading Facebook group Sam Learn Docker Course NgColombia Artemis by Andy Weir on Audible
QualityHeroes - der Podcast über Softwarequalität für agile Köpfe
Freunde der Qualität, wir begrüßen Euch zu unserer 6. Podcast-Ausgabe! Passend zur Google I/O und dem Android P Beta Release unterhalten sich Daniel und Ron über das Thema „Mobile Test Automation Tools“. Während Daniel immer noch ein Verfechter des manuellen Testens auf echten Devices ist, wird bei XING SE ein hoher Automationsgrad auf Emulatoren erreicht, da diese sich stetig verbessert haben. Ist die uralte Diskussion Emualtor/Simulator vs. echte Devices inzwischen passé? Hört selber rein, wenn Ron und Daniel sich über Erfahrungen mit Tools, über Tipps für gutes Testarrangement und die Pitfalls der Automation unterhalten. Viel Spaß mit dieser Folge! Sprecher: Ron Werner: https://www.xing.com/profile/Ron_Werner Twitter: https://twitter.com/ron_werner Daniel Knott: https://www.xing.com/profile/Daniel_Knott Twitter: https://twitter.com/dnlkntt Ressourcen online: Daniels Mobile Test Pyramide: http://adventuresinqa.com/2015/10/19/mobile-test-pyramid/ Calabash Launcher: https://github.com/xing/calabash-launcher Eigene Device Cloud: http://adventuresinqa.com/2016/06/06/build-android-device-cloud/ OpenSTF für Android: https://openstf.io Monkey Test Tool: https://developer.android.com/studio/test/monkey Tools (Open Source): Espresso, UIAutomator, Robotium, Robolectric (Android) XCUI Test, EarlGrey, UIAutomation, KIF (iOS) Appium, Calabash (Android & iOS) Tools (Kommerziell): Ranorex, Perfecto Mobile, Telerik, Seetest, Applitools Eyes und viele mehr... Über QualityMinds: www.qualityminds.de https://twitter.com/qualitymindsde Feedback & Themenwünsche an: christian.brandes@qualityminds.de
This is a special crossover episode of Cross Cutting Concerns with the Eat Sleep Code podcast, hosted by Ed Charbeneau (Microsoft MVP). This was recorded at the Stir Trek conference. Show Notes: Eric Brewer: One of his recent blog posts was about Cloud Spanner and the CAP Theorum Check out the blogs at Telerik, and check out Ed on Telerik's developer portal Couchcase: Github repo, blog posts Ed's website, EdCharbeneau.com Machine Learning for Developers This episode was published to Microsoft's Channel 9 and also Telerik's Develper Portal Ed Charbeneau is on Twitter Want to be on the next episode? You can! All you need is the willingness to talk about something technical. Theme music is "Crosscutting Concerns" by The Dirty Truckers, check out their music on Amazon or iTunes.
Today, we have TJ Vantoll from Telerik on the show. We’re going to continue to talk about the role of the developer advocate and some of the experiences he’s had at Telerik as a developer advocate and some of the important points of being a developer advocate.
Hello Tech People. Today I’m joined by Jen Looper. Jen is a Developer Advocate at Telerik. Telerik by Progress writes tools to make developers lives easier. We are honored and please to have Jen with us today.
On this episode of Eat Sleep Code, guest Julie Lerman talks about the Software Developer mindset. How do developers operate in an atmosphere of constantly changing technology while still maintaining legacy code, learning, teaching, striving to be an expert and shipping product? Julie shares her experiences with work-life-balance, travel, and mentoring. We discuss tooling and tech including: Mac vs. PC, FoxPro to Aurelia, and much, much, more. http://developer.telerik.com/content-types/podcast/software-developer-mindset/ 00:51 EC: Hello, and welcome to Eat Sleep Code, the official Telerik podcast. I’m your host, Ed Charbeneau, and with me today is Julie Lerman. Hi, Julie. 01:00 Julie Lerman: Hi, Ed. 01:01 EC: And today, we’re gonna talk about the mental processes of a software developer. So we’ve got a little bit of a soft skills talk lined up. But first, let me introduce Julie. Julie is a Pluralsight author, you may know her from the Entity Framework or data part of software development. She’s an author of several Microsoft books on that topic. And she is also the author of the Data Points column on MSDN magazine. You will frequently see her at many conferences. I personally had the honor of seeing her do a keynote at CodeStock a couple of years ago, and really enjoyed that. And you can find her website at thedatafarm.com. And she’s also newly the Microsoft regional director. So with that said, Julie, did I miss anything? Would you like to add anything to that? Find the full transcript on Telerik Developer Network http://developer.telerik.com/content-types/podcast/software-developer-mindset/
Ed and Sam Basu cover the latest news in the development community including: Angular 2, NativeScript snacks, ASP.NET Core RTM, and Windows CLI. http://developer.telerik.com/content-types/podcast/developer-digest-6/ 00:01 Ed Charbeneau: This podcast is part of the Telerik Developer Network. Telerik, by Progress. [music] 00:18 EC: Hello and welcome to Eat Sleep Code, the official Telerik podcast. I’m your host, Ed Charbeneau, and today my co-host for the Telerik Developer Digest episode will be Sam Basu. Hey, Sam. 00:32 Sam Basu: Hey, Ed. How you’re doing? 00:35 EC: Good. We have a busy week with the Telerik Developer relations. Brian is out, so thanks for filling in for him. 00:43 SB: No problem. 00:46 EC: So, I’m gonna kick things off a little differently this time. We have a really cool program going, called All Your Snacks Are Belong to Us. This is a NativeScript DevRel initiative. So, the NativeScriptSnacks website is this really cool place where you can go get these five minute or less videos on how to do something really awesome in NativeScript. So there’s a campaign going to get people out there and submit some videos of your own, and we have some cool sunglasses and stuff that we’re giving away. So I asked Jen Looper, who is in charge of this really cool contest, or whatever you wanna call it, to just kinda give us a little info on what the contest is all about and how to get involved. So I’m gonna hand it over to Jen, and then we’ll get back to the show in a moment. 01:53 Jen Looper: Hi, everyone. This is Jen from Developer Relations and I’m happy to announce a fun summer program that we’ve launched on the NativeScript community Slack channel. First of all, if you aren’t on that channel, you can join by visiting NativeScript.org, clicking Community, and then Slack Channel and requesting an invitation. And we have a lot of fun times on that channel, I’ll tell you. Second, we’ve launched a bounty program from within that Slack channel which involves submitting any short video tutorials or code snippets for NativeScript apps. So this summer, if you submit a snack, what I call a snack, to NativeScriptSnacks.com, I will personally ship you a pair of NativeScript sunglasses. And these are really nice, comfortable, good-looking glasses. You’re gonna need them during the dog days of summer. So please, visit NativeScriptSnacks.com, submit a snack and tell us all about it on Slack. Thanks a lot. 02:43 EC: Okay, Sam, we’re back with the next topic at hand. We had an article by Peter Filipov this week, and the title of the article is “Every ASP.NET web developer can be a mobile developer”. So Peter’s discussing the similarities between ASP.NET web forms and NativeScript. So, Sam, what’s your take on this comparison? Is this something that’s really similar, or how were those similarities broke down, what do you think? 03:21 SB: Yes, I think so. But before we get into it, just maybe a quick introduction. Peter Filipov is actually our colleague on the Developer Relations team. He comes from a very technical background. He used to be one of the PMs in our ASP.NET developer tools division for Telerik, and he has come over from Sofia and now he is a PM and a DevRel for Sitefinity, so he really comes from a very diverse and technical background. And I think what he’s doing, and he’s got a couple of articles this week, he’s trying to draw some parallels between the world that he comes from of ASP.NET and Sitefinity, and bringing that experience over to NativeScript, which is our cross-platform way of making Native mobile apps. And I think he makes some very convincing points. Find the full transcript on Telerik Developer Network http://developer.telerik.com/content-types/podcast/developer-digest-6/
Are you running Three Amigos conversations for each work item/user story your team does? If not, start now. Seriously. Jim Holmes shares his advice on using the Three Amigos approach. http://developer.telerik.com/featured/all-in-with-the-three-amigos/ 00:01 Ed Charbeneau: This podcast is part of the Telerik Developer Network. Telerik, by Progress. [music] 00:08 EC: Hi. This is Ed Charbeneau with Eat Sleep Code and I just wanted to let you guys know that we are trying to make the show better. So we've set up a survey at developer.telerik.com/survey and we're collecting feedback from listeners to see what we can do to make the show better for you. So please stop by developer.telerik.com/survey and fill it out. We'd appreciate it. We've also got 10 licenses to Telerik products and T-shirts that we'll be giving away to 10 lucky winners. Thanks for your help. [music] 00:53 EC: Hello and welcome to Eat Sleep Code, the official Telerik podcast. I'm your host Ed Charbeneau and with me today is Jim Holmes. How you doing, Jim? 01:01 Jim Holmes: I'm doing very well. 01:04 EC: And today, we're gonna be talking about going "All In With The Three Amigos." We'll explain that in a moment. Let's start with a little bit about you, Jim. Tell us a little bit about yourself. 01:19 JH: So let's see. I will avoid going back to the dawn of time when I was born. I've been around various corners of software delivery coming up on 30 years now, so I'm an old fart. But I've done a lot of different roles, PM, developer, have been customer relations, I've done support. My focus really for kind of the last 10 or 15 years has been diving deeper and deeper into getting good quality out of software delivery teams, and have really been focusing a lot on kind of a human communication and how we get all of the hardest stuff, which is not the technology, but communication, collaboration, clarity, and what we're really trying to build and how to do it well. 02:15 JH: I'm currently an executive consultant with Pillar Technologies. That's a midwest consulting firm, although we've got offices around other places. I've got a side company, Guidepost Systems, that lets me also do different types of engagements. Used to work for Telerik. Was there about three and a half years working with the awesome folks on Test Studio. I was both the evangelist for all of that time and then for about a year, a year and a half, I also was director of engineering for that, and got to work with the teams in Austin and Sophia. So, Telerik is near and dear to my heart even after the merger with Progress, I still fondly think of... Gosh, I guess it's been about a 10-year association with Telerik. So, that's it for me. 03:11 EC: Well, thanks for sharing that with us, Jim. We appreciate the Telerik love, definitely appreciate your input on the Test Studio Project over the years. It's quite the useful tool that... I don't get enough chance myself to get involved and talk about. Really wish we still had one of the Test Studio evangelist spots in our team of evangelist folks. 03:44 JH: Right, right. It's a wonderful tool and I was lucky. They made the evangelist spot for me. When I started talking with Telerik years ago about coming on board, it was because I'd seen Test Studio. And it's not the perfect tool for everybody, but the thing was, it solved so many problems that I was struggling with on a regular basis. I fell in love with it and was doing the right sorts of things. You can have tools that kinda lead you off down a very bad path, and a few months after you've dived into this tool, it turns out that all of a sudden you're in the midst of a whole bunch of pain because it wasn't doing maintainable solutions, and... Find the full transcript on Telerik Developer Network http://developer.telerik.com/featured/all-in-with-the-three-amigos/
Brian and Ed cover the latest news in the development community including: Bots-bots-bots, .NET Core RC2, Project.json, and NativeScript. http://developer.telerik.com/content-types/podcast/developer-digest-4/ E: Hello and welcome to Eat Sleep Code, the official Telerik podcast. I’m your host, Ed Charbeneau, and with me today is my co-host, Brian Rinaldi. Brian, how’s it going? B: Hello, it’s going great. E: And today’s another Developer Digest episode, and we have some great articles that we collected from the web to share with you guys, and we post those on our Telerik Developer Network, and we’re gonna give you our commentary on those and then you’re welcome to go find those on our website, and read them or sign up for the newsletter. So, let’s kick things off with our first article by the always amazing Jen Looper. And she’s got an article called bots! bots! bots! And it’s pretty much about bots. So, like Microsoft, and Google, and Facebook, at their big keynotes this year, have all come out with their own bot frameworks. And it seems like 2016 is the year of the bot, right? B: Absolutely, in fact, I talked to somebody… This was a PhoneGap Day earlier in the year. They were telling me before things had really taken off, they were like, “Bots are gonna be the thing.” I guess they were right. So, it just really seems like it’s taken off. Every company is releasing a bot platform, people are writing bots left and right. I think it’s really cool. I think the reason probably is it’s easy to interact with. It’s just natural to interact with a bot if it’s done well, right? E: Yeah. In my opinion, I think some of the relativeness of bots and why they’re kind of making a comeback, and I say making a comeback, ’cause we’ve had bots in other chat platforms for years, but those things were always command driven, right? You always had to slash some command and then some parameters for that command and the bot may throw an emoji out or something. But now, we’ve got this machine learning from all the big software manufactures and it’s a lot easier to parse through natural language and figure out what people are talking about, what they’re discussing, and less reliance on the specific keywords to make a bot do something. You can kind of glean what the conversation’s about or what the question was, and the big companies like Microsoft, Google and Facebook, are making APIs to help facilitate that stuff. B: Yeah, totally. And on that note, all of this blends together with not just bots that you type to, but also ones you speak to. Things like Amazon Echo or Google have their Google… I forgot what they called their one that they released at I/O, or announced there anyway [editor’s note: Google Home]. So, I actually have an article coming up about writing for the Echo. In that case, the commands are spoken. In the end, there’s really not a lot of difference because the commands are spoken but then translated into text that I then parse and respond to. And then I send back text and that text is just spoken. So, it’s effectively the same kind of thing as these bots, but I think you’ve noticed companies starting to add those voice assistants into just about every device that they have, and people like to use them. So, it’s one of those things that I’m always kind of skeptical of the next big thing, like wearables and VR and things like that. I’m a little skeptical that those are really gonna be quick to catch on. Wearables is obviously a market but it’s somewhat small. And VR still hasn’t proven that it’s necessarily useful to me. But this one, I think it’s so simple to interact with, and the ability to either just naturally type or naturally speak makes it just a no brainer. Find the full transcript on Telerik Developer Network http://developer.telerik.com/content-types/podcast/developer-digest-4/
Where is the .NET community going? Carl and Richard talk to Sam Basu and John Bristowe of Telerik about the data they've gathered in their 2016 Developer Report. The conversation explores what languages and tools developers visiting the Telerik site are using, with lots of exploration around the evolution of mobile development. Desktop development plays a role as well - and lots of folks are still building WinForms apps! The latest news out of Microsoft has piqued folks interest in open source and cross-platform development, but how important is it to developers right now? Grab a copy of the report and follow along with the analysis!Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/net-rocks/donations
Where is the .NET community going? Carl and Richard talk to Sam Basu and John Bristowe of Telerik about the data they've gathered in their 2016 Developer Report. The conversation explores what languages and tools developers visiting the Telerik site are using, with lots of exploration around the evolution of mobile development. Desktop development plays a role as well - and lots of folks are still building WinForms apps! The latest news out of Microsoft has piqued folks interest in open source and cross-platform development, but how important is it to developers right now? Grab a copy of the report and follow along with the analysis!Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/net-rocks/donations
On this episode of Eat Sleep Code, Jeff Fritz from Microsoft talks about the .NET Core RC2 release. Changes in the CLI, package.json, and the Standard Library are discussed. http://developer.telerik.com/featured/net-core-goes-rc2/ 0:00:00 Ed Charbeneau: This podcast is part of the Telerik Developer Network. Telerik, a progress company. [music] 0:00:11 EC: Hello, and welcome to Eat Sleep Code, the official Telerik podcast. I’m your host, Ed Charbeneau, and with me today is Sam Basu and Jeff Fritz. Morning guys. It’s Friday the 13th, how you doing? 0:00:24 Sam Basu: Morning. 0:00:25 Jeffrey Fritz: I’m terrified. What’s gonna go wrong today? Look out. [laughter] 0:00:31 EC: Now, I’ve got Sam here from Telerik. Sam, why don’t you give yourself a brief introduction for folks, let everybody know what you do? 0:00:40 SB: Sure thing. So just like Ed, I’m a developer advocate with Telerik. Advocates are evangelists, we really don’t do anything, we just talk about stuff and try to shy away from the really hard stuff. No, I’m just kidding. We try to stay on top of technology and especially on the Microsoft stacks, so I think it’s great to have Jeff on with us today, I think we’ve got some big changes coming and it’s exciting. So that’s me. 0:01:06 EC: And Jeff Fritz, you’re working with Microsoft now, why don’t you give everybody a quick intro as well. 0:01:12 JF: Yeah, hey there. I’m Jeff Fritz, I do work for Microsoft, I’m part of the ASP dot NET Developer Outreach Team. It’s our job to put together some of the content, manage some of the social interactions, the blog posts, the videos that you’re gonna see and use to learn more about ASP dot NET core dot NET Core. And I also manage the ASP dot NET web forums team. So I do a little bit of everything there for Microsoft. 0:01:41 EC: It sounds like you’re a really busy guy over at Microsoft these days especially with all of the new things happening with ASP dot NET and dot NET Core, so we wanted to have you on the show today to talk about those huge changes and the big release coming up. So why don’t we go ahead and start things off with just an overview, I guess, of what’s happening in dot NET land. Find the full transcript on Telerik Developer Network http://developer.telerik.com/featured/net-core-goes-rc2/
In this episode I'm joined by TJ VanToll, Developer Advocate at Telerik, where we discuss the cross platform mobile development framework NativeScript. We cover everything from what is NativeScript, what do you need to start developing NativeScript applications, and how it differs or why you should use it versus native development or development with a different hybrid mobile framework. TJ talks about where things are headed when it comes to mobile development, who is using Telerik NativeScript to develop apps, and how Angular 2 fits into the framework. This is the most exciting episode yet on The Polyglot Developer Podcast and I recommend listening to it if you're interested in mobile application development, whether it be for personal or for your business. A writeup to this episode can be found via https://www.thepolyglotdeveloper.com/2016/05/tpdp-episode-5-developing-mobile-apps-telerik-nativescript/ on my blog. If you have questions that you'd like answered in the next episode, visit https://www.thepolyglotdeveloper.com/podcast-questions and fill out the form.
01:56 - TJ VanToll Introduction Twitter GitHub Blog Telerik 03:08 - Code Sharing Adventures in Angular Episode #74: NativeScript with Burke Holland and TJ VanToll 06:35 - Components and Directives 13:09 - NativeScript and Electron 15:02 - Business Model 16:07 - Compatability; Multi/Cross-Platform Capability 17:31 - Why Use NativeScript? 26:41 - Performance and Usability; Hybrid and Native 30:21 - iOS Concerns; Xamarin 37:23 - Where is NativeScript heading? (Future Visions and Plans) 38:21 - Getting Started with NativeScript Getting Started Guide Building Apps with NativeScript and Angular 2 Angular for NativeScript Picks Things Organized Neatly (Jules) House of Cards: A Tale of Hubris and Wretched Excess on Wall Street by William D. Cohan (Ward) AngularFire - Firebase (Joe) Zootopia (Joe) Rogue One Star Wars Trailer (John) HoloLens (Chuck) .NET Rocks! (Chuck) MicroConf (Chuck) Build a Raspberry Pi-Powered DIY Amazon Echo (Chuck) The 5th Wave Book Series (TJ) Red Rising Series (TJ)
01:56 - TJ VanToll Introduction Twitter GitHub Blog Telerik 03:08 - Code Sharing Adventures in Angular Episode #74: NativeScript with Burke Holland and TJ VanToll 06:35 - Components and Directives 13:09 - NativeScript and Electron 15:02 - Business Model 16:07 - Compatability; Multi/Cross-Platform Capability 17:31 - Why Use NativeScript? 26:41 - Performance and Usability; Hybrid and Native 30:21 - iOS Concerns; Xamarin 37:23 - Where is NativeScript heading? (Future Visions and Plans) 38:21 - Getting Started with NativeScript Getting Started Guide Building Apps with NativeScript and Angular 2 Angular for NativeScript Picks Things Organized Neatly (Jules) House of Cards: A Tale of Hubris and Wretched Excess on Wall Street by William D. Cohan (Ward) AngularFire - Firebase (Joe) Zootopia (Joe) Rogue One Star Wars Trailer (John) HoloLens (Chuck) .NET Rocks! (Chuck) MicroConf (Chuck) Build a Raspberry Pi-Powered DIY Amazon Echo (Chuck) The 5th Wave Book Series (TJ) Red Rising Series (TJ)
01:56 - TJ VanToll Introduction Twitter GitHub Blog Telerik 03:08 - Code Sharing Adventures in Angular Episode #74: NativeScript with Burke Holland and TJ VanToll 06:35 - Components and Directives 13:09 - NativeScript and Electron 15:02 - Business Model 16:07 - Compatability; Multi/Cross-Platform Capability 17:31 - Why Use NativeScript? 26:41 - Performance and Usability; Hybrid and Native 30:21 - iOS Concerns; Xamarin 37:23 - Where is NativeScript heading? (Future Visions and Plans) 38:21 - Getting Started with NativeScript Getting Started Guide Building Apps with NativeScript and Angular 2 Angular for NativeScript Picks Things Organized Neatly (Jules) House of Cards: A Tale of Hubris and Wretched Excess on Wall Street by William D. Cohan (Ward) AngularFire - Firebase (Joe) Zootopia (Joe) Rogue One Star Wars Trailer (John) HoloLens (Chuck) .NET Rocks! (Chuck) MicroConf (Chuck) Build a Raspberry Pi-Powered DIY Amazon Echo (Chuck) The 5th Wave Book Series (TJ) Red Rising Series (TJ)
On this episode of Eat Sleep Code, guests Brad Green and Todd Motto talk about Angular 2. Brad Green, Engineering director on the Angular 2 project shares what's in the Angular 2 road map including the new Angular 2 CLI. Performance improvements, model change technologies and web workers are discussed. Cross platform development with Angular 2 including desktop and mobile using NativeScript are also included in the discussion. http://developer.telerik.com/content-types/podcast/engineering-angular-2-brad-green/ Brad Green: Hey, good morning. EC: And Todd Motto is also joining us. Hey, Todd. Todd Motto: Hey, good evening. EC: I've brought these folks on the show today to talk about Angular 2. Brad Green is here from Google. Brad, why don't you go ahead and let folks know what you do at Google and what you work on with Angular 2? BG: Yeah. So I am an Engineering Director here at Google, and I've been working the Angular project for the past, almost six years now, and was one of the project originators along with Misko Hevery and some other folks. And we're excited to roll out Angular 2. We're in beta now and we're getting towards final not too long. EC: And we also have Todd with us. Todd, give us a quick intro. We just had you on the show last week, but folks tuning in for the first time might not know who you are. TM: So I am a recent addition to the Telerik team. I'm a developer advocate near London, in England, hence the accent. So I cover the European side of things. EC: And today, we're gonna discuss Angular 2 in detail. And we're gonna kick things off with some of the tools that you use to build Angular 2. Because things are changing in that regard, especially with the introduction of TypeScript and some of the CLI and whatnot. Brad, you wanna give us some info on what the new tooling is like? Find the full transcript on Telerik Developer Network http://developer.telerik.com/content-types/podcast/engineering-angular-2-brad-green/
On this episode of Eat Sleep Code, guest Todd Motto talks about overcoming JavaScript fatigue. With dozens of new JavaScript frameworks, tools, package managers, and task runners in the ecosystem, how do developers decide on a framework and move forward with a project. Find the full transcript on Telerik Developer Network http://developer.telerik.com/content-types/podcast/overcoming-javascript-fatigue/ Ed Charbeneau: Hello, and welcome to Eat Sleep Code, the official Telerik podcast, I'm your host Ed Charbeneau and with me today is Todd Motto. Hi Todd. Todd Motto: Hey Ed. 00:22 EC: Today we're gonna be talking about JavaScript fatigue. Todd, I brought you on the show today because you are a new team member for Telerik and you're working with JavaScript and Kendo UI, and I thought it'd be a great time to talk about overcoming JavaScript fatigue. And let's talk about that in a moment, but first let's do some introductions, tell us a little bit about yourself and what you do. 00:51 TM: Cool. Yeah, thanks for having me on the show. I'm a new member to the team as you mentioned. I'm over in England, I cover the developer advocate scene in the UK, and parts of Europe and hopefully a little bit further across the pond and over in the US. So yeah, I'm working on the Kendo UI side of things, we'll be diving into the NativeScript as well. There's also the React stuff, and Angular 1 and Angular 2 integrations, so I'll be heavily involved with. So, it's gonna be an exciting year. 02:12 EC: Yeah. Alright man, so we wanted to talk about JavaScript fatigue today. Let's kick it off by explaining what JavaScript fatigue even is. 02:26 TM: Yes. So I think… Well, at the moment, there's this JavaScript fatigue you could probably do a search for it on a Twitter search and get new tweets on it every minute. I think we're just in this JavaScript boom at the moment where there's so many frameworks, and so many new features and tooling, and libraries, and all this stuff that's happening daily and everybody is sort of recommending new things to do. The day before yesterday I was… I'd recently switched over from using Sublime Text to using Atom, and obviously everyone has their own favorite text editor, but everyone's sort of like, "Why don't you try this, why don't you try this, why don't you try this editor instead?" And it's the exact same thing that happens with the JavaScript scene. You might say, "Oh, I've just built this on Angular." And somebody will go, "Why didn't you do in this, why didn't you do it in React? Why didn't you do this? Why didn't you use Flux?" Do you know what I mean? It gives a developer, especially a new developer, to the community like somebody who's come from a jQuery background that builds website to then joining like a software engineering team that builds software in a browser, so web application side of things, to make a jump. 03:37 TM: And then there's this kind of "Which way do I go down?" The path used to be quite clear a couple of years ago, there used to be a couple of frameworks that were sort of the industry leaders and then everybody kinda got a bit smarter and said, "Oh, you know what? I'm actually going to create my own framework or my own version of this framework, and I'm gonna make it 100 times smaller, that's my aim." And then React came out, and then Angular 2 is on its way, and there's all the tooling associated with it. I think instead of just maybe five paths that we had a couple of years ago, we have got 500 paths, and then we've got all the tooling around it. So that's my nutshell definition of JavaScript fatigue, is which way do you go, then when you choose a path, you then go another 500 paths so you can choose either with build tools and back-ends, and web servers, and all this kind of thing. http://developer.telerik.com/content-types/podcast/overcoming-javascript-fatigue/
Check out Freelance Remote Conf! And while you’re there take a look at all of this year’s conferences! 02:42 - Angular 2 Beta and Projected Release Talk ng-conf ?? 06:52 - Payload Size 07:56 - Preparing For Angular 2 13:31 - Application Capability 17:06 - Language Dart TypeScript 17:33 - Releasing Angular 1 vs 2 Syntax New A2 Syntax Tooling 27:10 - angular-cli 28:31 - The Designer Story Inline Templates UI Components 34:57 - Promises and Observables 40:55 - The Router Lazy Loading 48:43 - Angular 2 Myths: Busted 53:22 - React, React Native Telerik NativeScript React Native Radio 55:37 - Angular Guidance; OO-Style or Functional App Architecture? Victor Savkin’s Blog Made with Angular 01:01:19 - Angular 1 => 2 Migration ng-upgrade ng-forward 01:04:17 - The Angular Community and Upcoming Conferences and Announcements Jules Kremer That Conference Picks a2-in-memory-web-api (John) John Papa’s Upcoming Angular 2 Pluralsight Course (John) Julia Gillard (Ward) Bryce Canyon National Park (Joe) Stockpile (Joe) ngrx (Lukas) The Revenant (Brian) ServiceWorker: Revolution of the Web Platform (Brian) The Architecture of Open Source Applications (Igor) iPad Pro (Igor) Apple Pencil (Igor) Paper & Pencil by FiftyThree (Igor) Mandy Moore (Chuck) Federico Iachetti (Chuck)
Check out Freelance Remote Conf! And while you’re there take a look at all of this year’s conferences! 02:42 - Angular 2 Beta and Projected Release Talk ng-conf ?? 06:52 - Payload Size 07:56 - Preparing For Angular 2 13:31 - Application Capability 17:06 - Language Dart TypeScript 17:33 - Releasing Angular 1 vs 2 Syntax New A2 Syntax Tooling 27:10 - angular-cli 28:31 - The Designer Story Inline Templates UI Components 34:57 - Promises and Observables 40:55 - The Router Lazy Loading 48:43 - Angular 2 Myths: Busted 53:22 - React, React Native Telerik NativeScript React Native Radio 55:37 - Angular Guidance; OO-Style or Functional App Architecture? Victor Savkin’s Blog Made with Angular 01:01:19 - Angular 1 => 2 Migration ng-upgrade ng-forward 01:04:17 - The Angular Community and Upcoming Conferences and Announcements Jules Kremer That Conference Picks a2-in-memory-web-api (John) John Papa’s Upcoming Angular 2 Pluralsight Course (John) Julia Gillard (Ward) Bryce Canyon National Park (Joe) Stockpile (Joe) ngrx (Lukas) The Revenant (Brian) ServiceWorker: Revolution of the Web Platform (Brian) The Architecture of Open Source Applications (Igor) iPad Pro (Igor) Apple Pencil (Igor) Paper & Pencil by FiftyThree (Igor) Mandy Moore (Chuck) Federico Iachetti (Chuck)
Check out Freelance Remote Conf! And while you’re there take a look at all of this year’s conferences! 02:42 - Angular 2 Beta and Projected Release Talk ng-conf ?? 06:52 - Payload Size 07:56 - Preparing For Angular 2 13:31 - Application Capability 17:06 - Language Dart TypeScript 17:33 - Releasing Angular 1 vs 2 Syntax New A2 Syntax Tooling 27:10 - angular-cli 28:31 - The Designer Story Inline Templates UI Components 34:57 - Promises and Observables 40:55 - The Router Lazy Loading 48:43 - Angular 2 Myths: Busted 53:22 - React, React Native Telerik NativeScript React Native Radio 55:37 - Angular Guidance; OO-Style or Functional App Architecture? Victor Savkin’s Blog Made with Angular 01:01:19 - Angular 1 => 2 Migration ng-upgrade ng-forward 01:04:17 - The Angular Community and Upcoming Conferences and Announcements Jules Kremer That Conference Picks a2-in-memory-web-api (John) John Papa’s Upcoming Angular 2 Pluralsight Course (John) Julia Gillard (Ward) Bryce Canyon National Park (Joe) Stockpile (Joe) ngrx (Lukas) The Revenant (Brian) ServiceWorker: Revolution of the Web Platform (Brian) The Architecture of Open Source Applications (Igor) iPad Pro (Igor) Apple Pencil (Igor) Paper & Pencil by FiftyThree (Igor) Mandy Moore (Chuck) Federico Iachetti (Chuck)
Episode 101 “Wedgie Of A Lifetime” 3:18 And We’re Live! Today the EntreProgrammers welcome Larry from TrackAbout. Larry wants to talks about Skydiving today! Derick mentions the prior episode’s talk about getting over fears and skydiving. 6:00 John shares some memories of his time at TrackAbout, and was afraid to fly anywhere on business trips. John explains a panic attack he experienced, and how he was able to conquer the fear by facing the adversity head-on. 8:45 Derick shares his approach to conquering his fear of feeling pain when getting tattoos, by focusing on the pain itself. 10:00 Larry shares an adventure story of mountain biking and stumbling upon a skydiving festival. Larry talks about different types of skydiving such as: static line jump, tandem jump, accelerated free fall. Larry tells the story about taking the 101 course of skydiving, and describes the details of learning to jump out of a plane. 14:30 Larry shares his intense experience of leaving the ground on a plane and getting ready to jump. Larry talks about forgetting all the steps of the skydiving training and finally getting the signal to pull his parachute. Larry trying to recall how to brake and land with his parachute. Then he remembered after crash landing, the Jump Master forgot to teach him about landing. 23:00 Larry explains that he did not have the responsibly of children and marriage to notice the real risk involved of skydiving. Derick talks about his father’s experience with a motorcycle purchase and realizing the risk involved in riding. 26:40 John talks about a woman that survived a fall out of a plane at 20,000 feet. Josh asks how this changes his plans to skydive. John still thinks the tandem jump is still on his list. 28:00 Larry mentions that some peoples worst fear is public speaking. Derick shares his thoughts about himself when public speaking. John talks about getting energy when speaking publicly. Larry shares his time when playing in a band, and being nervous when his did not practice. 32:00 John talks about the certainty and the quality of life that Tony Robbins teaches. Larry talks about the punctuated moments in life, and getting older, and noticing time going by faster. 35:50 John, again mentions possibly creating a course on over coming fears. Josh talks about the time he found out John was afraid of flying, and how it was taboo to talk about at TrackAbout. John talks about choosing to over come fear on your own, verses being coached. 39:00 Derick talks about his fear of spiders after getting bit by a brown recluse. Chuck shares his thoughts on fears, and what he considers his worst fear. 42:00 John talks about an exercise of making eye contact with people and not smiling. Derick speaks about social norm violations. Josh mentions Tim Ferris’ stunt of laying down in the middle of the floor of a restaurant or store, for no reason. Derick mentions that you should look at your behavior when you are around people, and notice what society has ingrained in you about how to behave in public. 50:00 John mentions that there was a period of time when the EntreProgrammers did not talk about Josh’s job at TrackAbout. John asks when Larry noticed that Josh was about to quit his job at TrackAbout. Derick shares his experience when leaving TrackAbout, and feeling like he was letting people down for leaving. 55:00 Derick, Josh and John talk about when they started the EntreProgrammers. Larry mentions he did not have an idea they were in a mastermind together. Larry talks about what the podcast industry needs as far as stats and analytics. Larry says he needs the accelerated playback for listening to podcasts. 59:00 John mentions the real reason they started the EntreProgrammers was to shared their entrepreneurial journey. Dericks talks about the transparency in the jobs that they are doing. Josh and Derick shares their thoughts about the culture at TrackAbout. 1:13:33 John shares how he had quit his job at TrackAbout, and how he was afraid of Larry as well. Larry says “It’s about time!” Josh mentions the famous MacBook that once belonged to Derick, and how everyone who used it after he had left, also doesn't work there anymore. 1:20:00 Josh talks about the bookkeeper situation with Simple Programmer, and how the bookkeeper needs to be familiar with this kind of business to understand how it works. Here is a discussion about hiring and firing people for varies reasons. 1:25:00 Josh asks Larry about what TrackAbout is doing about Code Challenges. John talks about liking the real world situation, and how some new hires question the challenges. 1:32:00 Larry talks about the liability of leaks in companies if they permit their developers run blogs or some sort of entrepreneurial outlet. 1:37:50 Josh shares feeling guilty at a job before TrackAbout, and how he decided to leave after a bunch of paid training. Derick shares his experience of leaving his Telerik job and having nothing to do in the last few weeks. 1:38:00 EntreProgrammers share their stories of quitting their old jobs and the irony and inexperience the witness looking back. 1:47:00 Larry mentions that Chuck needs to take a spin at TrackAbout to get in on the stories. Larry shares some of what TrackAbout is up to these days. 1:53:00 A small interjection of had bad Apple is doing. Thoughts of the Week! John - The happiness in your life is directly proportion to the amount of uncertainty you are comfortable to live with… Derick - Embrace your fear! Josh - Systems and habits, and rhythms Chuck - Being ready of opportunity.. Resources Mentioned In The Episode https://corp.trackabout.com
Get your JS Remote Conf tickets! 02:20 - Burke Holland Introduction Twitter GitHub Blog Telerik 02:40 - TJ VanToll Introduction Twitter GitHub Blog Telerik 03:04 - NativeScript + Angular; The DOM @nativescript Sebastian Witalec: Building native mobile apps with Angular 2 0 and NativeScript @ AngularConnect 2015 JavaScript Jabber Episode #186: NativeScript with TJ VanToll and Burke Holland 07:04 - Getting Started/Setting Up a New Application NativeScript Getting Started Guide Plugins and npm modules plugins.telerik.com Power Features: Skill Reuse 10:34 - Code Reuse Data Models Components 17:00 - Platform Specific Customization 22:12 - Plugins (Cont’d) Telerik's Verified Plugin Marketplace Podfile 27:36 - Doing Things with Angular + NativeScript Animation ngAnimate TypeScript IDEs 34:14 - Testing github.com/NativeScript/NativeScript/tree/master/apps/tests Appium 37:08 - What’s coming down the pipeline? Documentation, Samples 39:19 - Comparing Angular + NativeScript to React Native The iPhreaks Show Episode #128: JavaScriptCore with Cesare Rocchi 42:31 - UI for NativeScript Picks Pebble Time Steel (Chuck) Fathead (Chuck) Apple Photos (TJ) Michigan State (TJ) Buy albums you love to support music artists (Burke)
Get your JS Remote Conf tickets! 02:20 - Burke Holland Introduction Twitter GitHub Blog Telerik 02:40 - TJ VanToll Introduction Twitter GitHub Blog Telerik 03:04 - NativeScript + Angular; The DOM @nativescript Sebastian Witalec: Building native mobile apps with Angular 2 0 and NativeScript @ AngularConnect 2015 JavaScript Jabber Episode #186: NativeScript with TJ VanToll and Burke Holland 07:04 - Getting Started/Setting Up a New Application NativeScript Getting Started Guide Plugins and npm modules plugins.telerik.com Power Features: Skill Reuse 10:34 - Code Reuse Data Models Components 17:00 - Platform Specific Customization 22:12 - Plugins (Cont’d) Telerik's Verified Plugin Marketplace Podfile 27:36 - Doing Things with Angular + NativeScript Animation ngAnimate TypeScript IDEs 34:14 - Testing github.com/NativeScript/NativeScript/tree/master/apps/tests Appium 37:08 - What’s coming down the pipeline? Documentation, Samples 39:19 - Comparing Angular + NativeScript to React Native The iPhreaks Show Episode #128: JavaScriptCore with Cesare Rocchi 42:31 - UI for NativeScript Picks Pebble Time Steel (Chuck) Fathead (Chuck) Apple Photos (TJ) Michigan State (TJ) Buy albums you love to support music artists (Burke)
Get your JS Remote Conf tickets! 02:20 - Burke Holland Introduction Twitter GitHub Blog Telerik 02:40 - TJ VanToll Introduction Twitter GitHub Blog Telerik 03:04 - NativeScript + Angular; The DOM @nativescript Sebastian Witalec: Building native mobile apps with Angular 2 0 and NativeScript @ AngularConnect 2015 JavaScript Jabber Episode #186: NativeScript with TJ VanToll and Burke Holland 07:04 - Getting Started/Setting Up a New Application NativeScript Getting Started Guide Plugins and npm modules plugins.telerik.com Power Features: Skill Reuse 10:34 - Code Reuse Data Models Components 17:00 - Platform Specific Customization 22:12 - Plugins (Cont’d) Telerik's Verified Plugin Marketplace Podfile 27:36 - Doing Things with Angular + NativeScript Animation ngAnimate TypeScript IDEs 34:14 - Testing github.com/NativeScript/NativeScript/tree/master/apps/tests Appium 37:08 - What’s coming down the pipeline? Documentation, Samples 39:19 - Comparing Angular + NativeScript to React Native The iPhreaks Show Episode #128: JavaScriptCore with Cesare Rocchi 42:31 - UI for NativeScript Picks Pebble Time Steel (Chuck) Fathead (Chuck) Apple Photos (TJ) Michigan State (TJ) Buy albums you love to support music artists (Burke)
On this show, we talk to the famous podcaster, Richard Campbell (LinkedIn | Twitter). Richard is the co-host of the .NET Rocks podcast, host of the RunAs Radio podcasts, and a long-time technology consultant and business owner. We talk to him about Devops, the Microsoft data platform, the cloud and podcasting. Among other topics, we cover: What is DevOps, and how the database fits in this kind of strategy The state of the Microsoft data platform and the new versions of SQL Server How Microsoft Azure competes with Amazon and Google Cloud Will you lose your job to the cloud? What was the original purpose of the relational model The history of the .NET Rocks podcast and how its done today Items mentioned in the show: .NET Rocks Podcast RunAs Radio Podcast Goldman Sachs on Microsoft: 'We Were Wrong' Serial Podcast .NET Rocks Show 1220 - Next Generation Airliners Geek Out About Richard: Richard Campbell wrote his first line of code in 1977. His career has spanned the computing industry both on the hardware and software sides, development and operations. He was a co-founder of Strangeloop Networks, acquired by Radware in 2013 and spent five years on the board of directors of Telerik which was acquired by Progress Software in 2014. Today he is a consultant and advisor to a number of successful technology firms as well as the founder and chairman of Humanitarian Toolbox (www.htbox.org), a public charity that builds open source software for disaster relief. Richard is the co-owner and content planner of the DevIntersection (www.devintersection.com) group of conferences. He is also the host of two podcasts: .NET Rocks! (www.dotnetrocks.com) which publishes three shows a week to .NET developers and RunAs Radio (www.runasradio.com) which is a weekly show for IT Professionals. You can reach Richard at richard@pwop.com.
Check out JS Remote Conf! Buy a ticket! Submit a CFP! 03:07 - Burke Holland Introduction Twitter GitHub Blog 04:01 - TJ Van Toll Introduction Twitter GitHub Blog 04:33 - Telerik Telerik Platform 04:57 - NativeScript JavaScriptCore JavaScript Jabber #128: JavaScriptCore with Cesare Rocchi React Native 07:41 - The Views 10:07 - Customizability, Styling, and Standardization 16:19 - React Native vs NativeScript 18:37 - APIs CocoaPods 21:17 - How NativeScript Works 23:04 - Edgecases? Message Passing Marshalling (Mapping) 26:12 - Memory Management 27:06 - UITableView 29:59 - NativeScript and Angular AngularConnect Talks on YouTube Sebastian Witalec: Building native mobile apps with Angular 2 0 and NativeScript 33:22 - Adding NativeScript to Existing Projects 33:51 - Building for Wearables and AppleTV Burke Holland: Apple Watch and the Cross-Platform Crisis 35:59 - Building Universal Applications 37:14 - Creating NativeScript Kendo UI 39:42 - Use Cases nativescript.org/app-samples-with-code 41:01 - Are there specific things NativeScript isn’t good for? npmjs.com search: nativescript 42:54 - Testing and Debugging 48:35 - Data Storage Picks Caddy (AJ) OC ReMix #505: Top Gear 'Track 1 (Final Nitro Mix)' by Rayza (AJ) Jamie Talbot: What are Bloom filters? A tale of code, dinner, and a favour with unexpected consequences (Aimee) Mike Gehard (@mikegehard) (Aimee) Joe Eames: Becoming Betazoid: How to Listen and Empathize with Others in the Workplace @ AngularConnect 2015 (Dave) Exercise (Chuck) Sleep (Chuck) electron (Aaron) The Synchronicity War Series by Dietmar Wehr (Aaron) PAUSE (Burke) Outlander (TJ)
Check out JS Remote Conf! Buy a ticket! Submit a CFP! 03:07 - Burke Holland Introduction Twitter GitHub Blog 04:01 - TJ Van Toll Introduction Twitter GitHub Blog 04:33 - Telerik Telerik Platform 04:57 - NativeScript JavaScriptCore JavaScript Jabber #128: JavaScriptCore with Cesare Rocchi React Native 07:41 - The Views 10:07 - Customizability, Styling, and Standardization 16:19 - React Native vs NativeScript 18:37 - APIs CocoaPods 21:17 - How NativeScript Works 23:04 - Edgecases? Message Passing Marshalling (Mapping) 26:12 - Memory Management 27:06 - UITableView 29:59 - NativeScript and Angular AngularConnect Talks on YouTube Sebastian Witalec: Building native mobile apps with Angular 2 0 and NativeScript 33:22 - Adding NativeScript to Existing Projects 33:51 - Building for Wearables and AppleTV Burke Holland: Apple Watch and the Cross-Platform Crisis 35:59 - Building Universal Applications 37:14 - Creating NativeScript Kendo UI 39:42 - Use Cases nativescript.org/app-samples-with-code 41:01 - Are there specific things NativeScript isn’t good for? npmjs.com search: nativescript 42:54 - Testing and Debugging 48:35 - Data Storage Picks Caddy (AJ) OC ReMix #505: Top Gear 'Track 1 (Final Nitro Mix)' by Rayza (AJ) Jamie Talbot: What are Bloom filters? A tale of code, dinner, and a favour with unexpected consequences (Aimee) Mike Gehard (@mikegehard) (Aimee) Joe Eames: Becoming Betazoid: How to Listen and Empathize with Others in the Workplace @ AngularConnect 2015 (Dave) Exercise (Chuck) Sleep (Chuck) electron (Aaron) The Synchronicity War Series by Dietmar Wehr (Aaron) PAUSE (Burke) Outlander (TJ)
Check out JS Remote Conf! Buy a ticket! Submit a CFP! 03:07 - Burke Holland Introduction Twitter GitHub Blog 04:01 - TJ Van Toll Introduction Twitter GitHub Blog 04:33 - Telerik Telerik Platform 04:57 - NativeScript JavaScriptCore JavaScript Jabber #128: JavaScriptCore with Cesare Rocchi React Native 07:41 - The Views 10:07 - Customizability, Styling, and Standardization 16:19 - React Native vs NativeScript 18:37 - APIs CocoaPods 21:17 - How NativeScript Works 23:04 - Edgecases? Message Passing Marshalling (Mapping) 26:12 - Memory Management 27:06 - UITableView 29:59 - NativeScript and Angular AngularConnect Talks on YouTube Sebastian Witalec: Building native mobile apps with Angular 2 0 and NativeScript 33:22 - Adding NativeScript to Existing Projects 33:51 - Building for Wearables and AppleTV Burke Holland: Apple Watch and the Cross-Platform Crisis 35:59 - Building Universal Applications 37:14 - Creating NativeScript Kendo UI 39:42 - Use Cases nativescript.org/app-samples-with-code 41:01 - Are there specific things NativeScript isn’t good for? npmjs.com search: nativescript 42:54 - Testing and Debugging 48:35 - Data Storage Picks Caddy (AJ) OC ReMix #505: Top Gear 'Track 1 (Final Nitro Mix)' by Rayza (AJ) Jamie Talbot: What are Bloom filters? A tale of code, dinner, and a favour with unexpected consequences (Aimee) Mike Gehard (@mikegehard) (Aimee) Joe Eames: Becoming Betazoid: How to Listen and Empathize with Others in the Workplace @ AngularConnect 2015 (Dave) Exercise (Chuck) Sleep (Chuck) electron (Aaron) The Synchronicity War Series by Dietmar Wehr (Aaron) PAUSE (Burke) Outlander (TJ)
On this episode of Eat Sleep Code, guest TJ VanToll talks about the inner-workings of NativeScript. NativeScript is an open source project that allows developers to write native iOS and Android applications using JavaScript, XML and CSS. http://developer.telerik.com/featured/nativescript-inside-the-black-box/ Ed Charbeneau: Hello, and welcome to Eat Sleep Code, the official Telerik podcast. I'm your host, Ed Charbeneau, and with me today is TJ Van Toll. TJ Van Toll: Hey, Ed. EC: And today, we'll be talking about NativeScript. What's inside the black box? TJ is a developer advocate on the DevRel team with Telerik. TJ, you work primarily with the NativeScript team and the engineers to discuss what's going on with NativeScript, and bring NativeScript to the masses. TT: Yeah, that's more or less right. I've been with Telerik for a bit over two years. And I've been involved with a few different Telerik products. So Kendo UI, the Telerik Platform. And I've been working with the NativeScript team for basically the greater part of this year. EC: And NativeScript is a way of developing native applications using JavaScript as the primary development language. Correct? TT: Yeah. I'd like to think of it basically as a way that you can build iOS and Android apps, and Windows Phone, Windows Universal apps, probably some time later this year or early next year. And it's a way of doing it, as you said, with JavaScript, but also some other technologies that developers, and particularly web developers with some languages and technology skill sets that these people may already have. So JavaScript, CSS, optionally typed script. There is a lightweight XML language that's very XAML like for building your actual UIs, NPM for package management. And even when it comes over to the native site, you can use things like CocoaPods for existing iOS frameworks, existing iOS dot framework files, Android frameworks or things like jars. So we try to bring in the most amount of skills that people may already have. And allow people to leverage as many existing tools as you can, all while building iOS and Android apps that a lot of people are looking to do today. 02:22 EC: So what's nice about this is we're building actual native applications from this product. We're not putting this in a web view like, let's say, Apache Cordova or something like that. 02:33 TT: Yes. So that the real single biggest differentiator between NativeScript and something like Cordova and some of these other technologies out there is that you are building a truly native app. And that means that you have a truly native user interface, which means the UI controls are gonna be the same thing that you would have available in iOS app that you built in Xcode or an Android app that you built in Visual Studio. And as such, you're basically gonna have native-like performance because you're using those native controls. Your app is gonna not only look like a native app, but also really perform like a native app as well. Find the full transcript on Telerik Developer Network http://developer.telerik.com/featured/nativescript-inside-the-black-box/
On this episode of Eat Sleep Code, guest Dave Fancher talk about Functional Programming. We discuss how functional programming has made its way back into modern development, clean coding, and more. http://developer.telerik.com/content-types/podcast/better-code-with-functional-programming/ Ed Charbeneau** :** Hello and welcome to Eat Sleep Code, the official Telerik podcast. I'm your host, Ed Charbeneau, and with me today is Dave Fancher. Dave Fancher** :** Hello! EC: And today Dave and I will be talking about functional programming in .NET. Dave is author of, The book of F#, from No Starch Press and a Microsoft MVP for .NET and also the owner of Achiiv Solutions. Dave is a Pluralsight author, and he's done a course called, "Building F# Type Providers" and he's working on a new course about functional programming with C#. So Dave what is functional programming? DF: So ask ten different programmers what functional programming is, and you'll likely get ten different answers. But in general, they tend to boil down to three main characteristics. The first one is that functional programming is about controlling side effects, side effects are anything that changes the external state of the system. It could be as benign as writing to a log file, or it could be more nefarious like changing some shared data across the system. Under functional programming, we wanna control that as much as possible, also under functional programming, we tend to focus on expressions rather than statements, so C# tends to be statement-based. There are some expressions in there, but for the most part it's statement based, your if statements, your using statements, and so on, versus a functional language tends to be focused on expressions, rather than executing something for its effect we wanna execute something for its result. And then finally, functional programming is really centered on the idea of mathematical functions. And so functional languages want to treat functions as data. So you can pass around functions just as you would an integer or a string and that gives way to higher order functions, which is where most of the power of functional programming comes from. EC: So you're controlling the mutability of the data in the application. Find the full transcript on Telerik Developer Network http://developer.telerik.com/content-types/podcast/better-code-with-functional-programming/
Heard of NativeScript? Carl and Richard talk to Sam Basu from Telerik about NativeScript, a dev stack using JavaScript to build native mobile applications. Sam describes how NativeScript is different from Cordova, since it doesn't use HTML or a runtime that essentially hosts a browser - instead it has a custom UI markup language that is rather similar to XAML and compiles into native code on iOS and Android (Windows Phone coming soon). So if you like working in Javascript but want native performance, you should take a look at NativeScript!Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/net-rocks/donations
Heard of NativeScript? Carl and Richard talk to Sam Basu from Telerik about NativeScript, a dev stack using JavaScript to build native mobile applications. Sam describes how NativeScript is different from Cordova, since it doesn't use HTML or a runtime that essentially hosts a browser - instead it has a custom UI markup language that is rather similar to XAML and compiles into native code on iOS and Android (Windows Phone coming soon). So if you like working in Javascript but want native performance, you should take a look at NativeScript!Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/net-rocks/donations
On this episode of Eat Sleep Code, guest Jimmy Bogard technical architect with Headspring, shares his experience with running a successful open source project. Later, Sam Basu and Michael Crump join the show to talk about Apple, Microsoft and Telerik open source initiatives.
What do developers like on their calendars? Carl and Richard talk to Steve Smith and Brendan Enrick about the making of the new 2016 developer calendar. They have been the team behind the NimblePros and later Telerik developer anti-pattern calendars for years. But there was no calendar in 2015 for a variety of reasons, leading to an outcry. In an effort to bring back the calendar, Steve and Brendan have launched a kickstarter campaign to raise enough funds to make the calendar, and a feathub site to take suggestions for the various pictures and ideas of each month. Check them out!Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/net-rocks/donations
What do developers like on their calendars? Carl and Richard talk to Steve Smith and Brendan Enrick about the making of the new 2016 developer calendar. They have been the team behind the NimblePros and later Telerik developer anti-pattern calendars for years. But there was no calendar in 2015 for a variety of reasons, leading to an outcry. In an effort to bring back the calendar, Steve and Brendan have launched a kickstarter campaign to raise enough funds to make the calendar, and a feathub site to take suggestions for the various pictures and ideas of each month. Check them out!Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/net-rocks/donations
Episode 53 "Its All Megabytes Man!"02:46 Derick decides to torcher us with more acapella singing "For the first time in forever!"13 reviews for EntreProgrammers, up 2 reviews since the last.04:11John expresses his dislike with Apple's review process, and their denying the problems with the 2012 Macbook Pro screen. Own It and Fix It!7:14So what is going on in the world of the EntreProgrammers?Derick is swapped with preparing a talk and work on batch processes scheduling with new developed software. 9:30Healthy Diet? Eating One Meal A Day?John describes his gorging on a foot and a half long sub and cheesecake. As, Derick tries not to think of the “Brisket Nachos” from the previous night. So in between work, family and kids, and paying “Uncle Sam” these programmers struggle with grazing in the green pastures. Grass Fed Programmers? 18:33 Express.js talk!Derick talks about his Drip Campaign for launching the Express.js screen cast series. 20:45This is going to be a valuable series, showing how to do things right with Express.js; routes, middleware, and cleaning up code. Watch out, 4 pro tips by Derick!26:17 Java script pitch Free videos and working and are gaining followers! Praise to guess Jake from episode 51, his advice is help Derick’s YouTube videos. 29:54 John spoke with Dan Martell, who shares advice on how distinct his production and marketing strategies impact his product. https://clarity.fm/danmartell 32:42Derick “toots his horn” about his RabitMQ series vidoes. No, idea what he’s talking about? But, a bunch of cool programmer jargon. This guy needs to solve world hunger…42:20Sponsors, Telerik and Drip, Merci Beaucoup!43:30 Drips Been Kill’n It!Josh raves about the new features Drip offers. Lead Scoring rocks! 44:40Pruning!John trims his list 1500 and improves his opening rates. 46:27John shares the success with his course on How To Market Yourself, the success is attributed to his email course. 47:28 Blog Post on Life Hacker! Evergreen Traffic John submits the Joel Test for Programmers! http://www.joelonsoftware.com/articles/fog0000000043.htmlhttp://simpleprogrammer.com/2015/02/16/joel-test-programmers-simple-programmer-test/55:18Best Selling author Ryan Holiday John get advice for Ryan, possible re-launch of Soft Skills. Also, having a huge mailing list +8,000 could help with acquiring guess post. Again, focus on “Leverage.”1:00:06John is going to make an appearance on McMethod podcast- http://www.themcmethod.com/facebook-marketing-master-derek/1:04:30John did an interview with Paul Mooney, who did a show on- http://www.dotnetrocks.comJohn mentions he has growth of 30%, currently has 3100 subscribers on YouTube. He can seem drop some things due to the exciting growth of projects. 1:09:00 Josh Takes the Floor with Advertisement CampaignsJosh is updating his Google AdWords site, cleaning out the cobwebs. He is gearing up to do a webinar with 200 signups, next week. Johns suggest that Josh ways to scale up, his advertisements and increase the stream, using Reddit. 1:27:10 A Thugz Life!Josh is apart of a copyright project for dog performance enhancement. This is a much see section a josh explains is challenge. Sublime TextJosh talks about his projects with Sublime Text. http://www.sublimetext.com1:35:54 Millionaire Fastlane by MJ DeMarcoJohn mentions he is reading Millionaire Fastlane. He expresses his thoughts on the takeaway of the book. “Become the franchise owner” Good reads!1:42:45John reaches Pat Flynn’s executive assistant. A possible future interview, maybe?1:45:09Thought for the DayAs John searches for deep meaning in life, he suggests signing off with a thought for the day. Derick steals John’s “It’s about the process, not perfection.”
The EntreProgrammers Episode 50 Sponsors! Nice! Nice!One day, you will look back and say, “I knew The EntreProgrammers when…”You are the fly on the wall. Get comfy because you’re not going anywhere. This fiercely heated debate has captured you in the EntreProgrammers arena.Well, we screwed-up again – thinking to divide each episode into 2 parts, really – but you unscrewed our twisted minds and so we fixed it; episodes of The EntreProgrammers Podcast will not be divided into 2 parts beginning with Episode 50 Sponsors! Nice! Nice!Once again, The EntreProgrammers saved by you.All EntreProgrammers’ minds - twisted at birth – do greatly appreciate your guiding comments. Otherwise, how would we show you to be the greatest of spammer-scammers if we couldn’t spamm-scamm your ideas (to make them look like ours)?Don’t answer that. Quick, what’s next?Oh yes, 2 sponsors, now – Cool! Keep it here for more Drip and Telerik! Learn from industry giants who fear not failure……because there is no such thing as failure. It simply does not exist. A Portland, OR radio producer once advised a promising radio student to get radio gigs in small markets and “make a lot of mistakes.” Say what?Mistakes are merely golden nuggets of knowledge used to grow the human experience, sometimes necessary to dig a little deeper to find them. So it was for the radio personality, one mistake after another, the golden journey of knowledge. A good entrepreneur does not brag of knowledge wealth - be it, give it. Appreciate the positive energy in others and they will in return appreciate the positive energy in you.Then, do a spammer-scammer digital marketing strategy like The EntreProgrammers do and sell ‘em all your stuff – “teach me how to program my friends with code tutorial.” Nice! Nice!And so it goes for The EntreProgrammers, analyzing, resolving, to become totally transparent on the front lines in a fiercely competitive marketing entrepreneurial arena mining for those golden nuggets which are then passed on to you. (Get your boots on; it’s a little deep in here.)Your entrepreneurial financing is critical, of course; the more known about the subject, the better and The EntreProgrammers show you the way in this episode. The EntreGenius tackled the Derick money crisis, quite recently; in 3 weeks Derick went from $25,000 in debt to just under $5,000 in debt. You’ll hear the details on how he did it mid-way through this episode.However, the Derick stress level in not declining – to accomplish this, more is to be done as his awareness does fortunately guide The EntreProgrammer down the path of resolution. Derick continues to explain that his journey to debt freedom is not quite over.Good money management eliminates the potential for experiencing extreme financial stress. A stress that is so powerful, it can literally ruin your entire life. Get it under control.Chuck suddenly takes center stage attempting to start another argument when asking Josh, “So, Josh, what’s your next product?” This leads The EntreProgrammers into a debate about which is better to offer: the product or the consulting. Many wrestle with this issue, now.The 4 toss this, sometimes agonizing concern, around to make sense of it all. And, apparently, not all are in agreement – independent entrepreneurial spammer scammers. Is this you? So, what do you think it should be: product or consulting?Jump on in; leave a comment. The EntreProgrammers must know your take on this subject.If now confronted with this issue, you most definitely want to hear this debate in depth. Where and how should you invest your money? Where and how should you invest your time?We are talking huge lifestyle issues and developments, here. Join in. Grow yourself. It appears that these 4 bare it all just so you can make your life a little better.Book your podcast at http://Signalleaf.com.
Steve is an entrepreneur and software developer with a passion for building quality software as effectively as possible. He is currently the Chief Technology Officer of Falafel Software. Steve has published several courses on Pluralsight, covering DDD, SOLID, design patterns, and software architecture. He's a Microsoft Regional Director and MVP, a frequent speaker at developer conferences, an author, and a trainer. Along with his wife and business partner, Michelle Smith, Steve was also the founder of Lake Quincy Media (acquired by The Code Project) and NimblePros (acquired by Telerik). Steve's an ex-Army Engineer officer and Iraq veteran who enjoys playing games and spending time outdoors.
Stephen Forte is the Chief Strategy Officer of the venture backed company, Telerik, a leading vendor of developer and team productivity tools. He is the founder and executive director of Mach5, a Silicon Valley based startup accelerator and co-founder of AcceleratorHK, Hong Kong's first startup accelerator. As well as the founder or co-founder if severl a successful companies. Stephen is also a Certified Scrum Master, Certified Scrum Professional, PMP, and also speaks regularly at industry conferences around the world. He has written several books on application and database development. Stephen has an MBA from the City University of New York. Stephen is also a board member of the Scrum Alliance. An avid mountain climber, Stephen leads a trek in the Mt. Everest region every fall to raise money for charity. After several years as an ex-pat in Hong Kong, Stephen now lives in Silicon Valley with his wife.
Chicago Camps interviews Brandon Satrom, Director of Product Management for Telerik in Austin, TX. Brandon is presenting at Prototype Camp on September 13th, 2014 about how proper prototyping can be used to eliminate design specs.
This week we talk to Clark Sell about his new job at Telerik, "That Conference", Google is killing your laptop battery, Microsoft kills off some Nokia phones, and more!
Carl and Richard talk to Burke Holland about building mobile apps. But the conversation starts out with an announcement - Telerik's KendoUI is going open source! Burke talks a bit about the history of KendoUI and how it has evolved over the years, including a KendoUI Mobile (which is also open source). That leads to a discussion about mobile development as a whole, including his preferred tools and styles for building apps across different mobile platforms, comparing native, hybrid and web development on the smartphone and where tablets fit into this story.Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/net-rocks/donations
Carl and Richard talk to Burke Holland about building mobile apps. But the conversation starts out with an announcement - Telerik's KendoUI is going open source! Burke talks a bit about the history of KendoUI and how it has evolved over the years, including a KendoUI Mobile (which is also open source). That leads to a discussion about mobile development as a whole, including his preferred tools and styles for building apps across different mobile platforms, comparing native, hybrid and web development on the smartphone and where tablets fit into this story.Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/net-rocks/donations
Jesse Liberty is a Master Consultant for Falafel Software, a Microsoft MVP, a Telerik MVP, an author, and he creates courses for Pluralsight. Liberty hosts the popular Yet Another Podcast and his blog is considered required reading. He was a Senior Evangelist for Microsoft, a XAML Evangelist for Telerik, a Distinguished Software Engineer at AT&T; Software Architect for PBS and Vice President of Information Technology at Citibank. Jesse can be followed on twitter at @JesseLiberty
Carl and Richard chat with Steve Smith about the latest Software Craftsmanship Calendar put out by Steve's team at Telerik. Steve runs through many of the anti-patterns in the calendar - lots of laughs about the silly things we've done over the years trying to build software. Pre-order a copy today!Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/net-rocks/donations
Carl and Richard chat with Steve Smith about the latest Software Craftsmanship Calendar put out by Steve's team at Telerik. Steve runs through many of the anti-patterns in the calendar - lots of laughs about the silly things we've done over the years trying to build software. Pre-order a copy today!Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/net-rocks/donations
Carl and Richard talk to Todd Anglin from Telerik about cross-platform development for mobile. The conversation focuses on Telerik's Icenium hybrid mobile development solution. Todd announces that Icenium now has a Visual Studio plug-in so that you can do your development in the environment of your choice. This leads to interesting possibilities with KendoUI, another library from Telerik that lets you build mobile web apps with native look-and-feel on different phone platforms - now you can turn them into hybrid apps!Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/net-rocks/donations
Carl and Richard talk to Todd Anglin from Telerik about cross-platform development for mobile. The conversation focuses on Telerik's Icenium hybrid mobile development solution. Todd announces that Icenium now has a Visual Studio plug-in so that you can do your development in the environment of your choice. This leads to interesting possibilities with KendoUI, another library from Telerik that lets you build mobile web apps with native look-and-feel on different phone platforms - now you can turn them into hybrid apps!Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/net-rocks/donations
Carl and Richard talk to Chris Sells about his experimentation with TypeScript. The conversation starts out with a discussion about the pervasiveness of C# and how the Mono Project brought .NET to a wider audience than just Windows. From there, Chris talks about a variety of languages beyond JavaScript, including TypeScript and others (check out the links). Ultimately the conversation circles back to JavaScript and mobile development, talking about the use of WinJS and the Cordova-derived web-based development solutions including Telerik's Icenium. Great thoughts from one of the best in the industry! Don't forget to activate your MSDN Azure account and be automatically entered to win an Aston Martin V8 Vantage!Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/net-rocks/donations
Carl and Richard talk to Chris Sells about his experimentation with TypeScript. The conversation starts out with a discussion about the pervasiveness of C# and how the Mono Project brought .NET to a wider audience than just Windows. From there, Chris talks about a variety of languages beyond JavaScript, including TypeScript and others (check out the links). Ultimately the conversation circles back to JavaScript and mobile development, talking about the use of WinJS and the Cordova-derived web-based development solutions including Telerik's Icenium. Great thoughts from one of the best in the industry! Don't forget to activate your MSDN Azure account and be automatically entered to win an Aston Martin V8 Vantage!Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/net-rocks/donations
Carl and Richard talk to Todd Anglin about building mobile applications in HTML 5. Todd starts out the conversation with the state of mobile today - a diverse set of form factors, operating systems and development environments. HTML is the only thing that works across them all, but it's not a write-once-run-everywhere solution, you have to work at it! Todd talks about the advantages and disadvantages of responsive web design, as opposed to creating separate solutions for different form factors. The discussion also digs into KendoUI, an HTML product that Todd works on at Telerik.
Richard Campbell, host of .NET Rocks, and Tim Huckaby discuss the “new paradigm of productivity” Windows 8 brings to enterprise. Richard refers to Windows 8 as a major milestone that allows for more natural and efficient collaboration – a total game changer. After the video, grab Windows 8 tools to begin building apps. Ready to Get Started?Visit the Windows Developer Center for a myriad of sample, docs and guidelines Join the GenerationApp program and get a jumpstart building your Windows Store app. About RichardRichard Campbell has been involved with microcomputers and software since 1977. His career has spanned the industry both on the hardware and software sides, from manufacturing to sales, service, game development, line-of-business software and large scale systems. Today Richard is on the board of directors for Telerik (www.telerik.com), a leading vendor of development, team productivity, automated testing tools, UI components and content management solutions in the Microsoft space. He is one of the co-founders of Strangeloop Networks (www.strangeloopnetworks.com), developing an appliance for web site performance. He's a partner in PWOP Productions, creating a variety of multimedia programs including '.NET Rocks!, the Internet Audio Talk Show for .NET Developers' (www.dotnetrocks.com) a podcast produced twice a week for more than 150,000 listeners in 120 countries. In addition he's the host of 'RunAs Radio' (www.runasradio.com), a podcast for the IT Professional using Microsoft technologies. In the fall of 2011, he helped launch a third podcast called 'The Tablet Show' (www.thetabletshow.com), focused on the emerging tablet and mobile market. Richard is also a Microsoft Regional Director, MVP and speaks at conferences around the world.About TimTim Huckaby is focused on the Natural User Interface (NUI) in Rich Client and Rich Internet Application (RIA) Technologies like Silverlight & WPF on the computer, the Surface, and Windows Phone 7. He has been called a "Pioneer of the Smart Client Revolution" by the press.Tim has been awarded multiple times for the highest rated Keynote and technical presentations for Microsoft and numerous other technology conferences around the world by Microsoft Corporation. Tim has done presentations on Microsoft technologies at technology events like Microsoft Tech Ed, Product Launch events, Dev Days, MEC, World Wide Partner Conference, MGB, MGX, and the PDC, along with 3rd party technology conferences all over the world is consistently rated in the top 10% of all speakers at these events. Tim was selected by Microsoft as a speaker for the International .NET Association and speaks at events world-wide on Microsoft's behalf. Tim has done keynote demos at big Microsoft events and product launches for numerous Microsoft executives including Bill Gates and Steve Ballmer.Tim founded InterKnowlogy, experts in Microsoft .NET and Microsoft Platforms, and Actus Interactive Software, and has 25+ years experience including serving on a Microsoft product team as a development lead on an architecture team. Tim is a Microsoft Regional Director, an MVP and serves on multiple Microsoft councils and boards like the Microsoft .NET Partner Advisory Council.Resources we recommend you check outDownload the Tools for Windows 8 App Development Download Visual Studio Express 2012 for Windows 8 Start building your own Apps for Windows 8
According to Richard Campbell, there are big changes in the development world on the horizon, and while potentially scary, change is a great opportunity for developers. Hear about the history of how we got here and why the things you know now will stay valuable when you add a bit more in. Plus: Richard shares his advice on embracing change to propel you forward.Richard Campbell Richard Campbell has been involved with microcomputers and software since 1977. His career has spanned the industry both on the hardware and software sides, from manufacturing to sales, service, game development, line-of-business software and large scale systems. He's been deeply involved in creating new businesses around software, hardware, services and products in a huge range of roles, including technical, management and financing. During the halcyon days of the DotComBoom he was a consultant to venture capital firms providing technical due diligence and architectural direction.Today Richard is on the board of directors for Telerik, a leading vendor of development, team productivity, automated testing tools, UI components and content management solutions in the Microsoft space. He is one of the co-founders of Strangeloop Networks, developing an appliance for web site performance. He's a partner in PWOP Productions, creating a variety of multimedia programs including ".NET Rocks!, the Internet Audio Talk Show for .NET Developers," a podcast produced twice a week for more than 150,000 listeners in 120 countries and The Tablet Show, a podcast focused on tablet and mobile development across all platforms. In addition he's the host of RunAs Radio, a podcast for the IT Professional using Microsoft technologies. Richard also serves as a technical director for Penton Media, planning the content of magazines and conferences that engage technology professionals all over the world.D³: LIVE & INTERACTiVE Developers, Developers, Developers: LIVE & INTERACTIVE (D³) is a monthly show hosted by Jonathan Rozenblit. The show airs live every first Wednesday of the month at 12:00 PM ET and features the latest updates on what's new and exciting in the world of development; featured presentations; and guests. LIVE and INTERACTIVE means that you'll be part of the show – You're invited to interact with us; ask questions and get them answered; and share your thoughts and opinions. Join the Canadian Developer Connection LinkedIn group Follow @devsdevdevs Like D³ on Facebook Subscribe to podcasts via iTunes, Zune, or RSS Download the Canadian Developer Connection Windows Phone appMore D³: LIVE & INTERACTIVE >>
Read the full post >>MVPs Joel Semeniuk and David Wesst share what they're excited about in the new version of Visual Studio.Questions? Comments? Share them with myself, the team, and the larger Canadian developer community – start a conversation in the Canadian Developer Connection group on LinkedIn.Joel SemeniukJoel is a founder of Imaginet and also services as the Executive VP at Telerik in charge of the Agile Project Management division. He is also a Microsoft Regional Director and MVP Microsoft ALM and has a degree in Computer Science. With over 18 years of experience, Joel specializes in helping organizations around the world realize their potential through maturing their software development and information technology practices. Joel is passionate about Application Lifecycle Management tooling, techniques, and mindsets and regularly speaks at conferences around the world on a wide range of ALM topics. Joel is also the co-author of "Managing Projects with Microsoft Visual Studio Team System" published by Microsoft Press as well as dozens of other articles for popular trade magazines.David Wesst David Wesst has been working with web and user experience development for the past 5 years and currently works for Imaginet as a User Experience Consultant in Winnipeg, Manitoba. After finishing university, David has continued to follow his passion about the future of web development, experience design, technology, and game development both in and outside of the workplace. David has spoken at a number of conferences across Canada about HTML5 development and recently received his MVP award in the area of Internet Explorer.D³: LIVE & INTERACTiVE In case you haven't heard about the show, Developers, Developers, Developers: LIVE & INTERACTIVE (D³) is a monthly show hosted by Jonathan Rozenblit. The show airs live every first Wednesday of the month at 12:00 PM ET and features the latest updates on what's new and exciting in the world of development; featured presentations; and guests. LIVE and INTERACTIVE means that you'll be part of the show – You're invited to interact with us; ask questions and get them answered; and share your thoughts and opinions. Join the Canadian Developer Connection LinkedIn group Follow @devsdevdevs Like D³ on Facebook Subscribe to podcasts via iTunes, Zune, or RSSMore D³: LIVE & INTERACTIVE >>
Episode 26 - JavaScript UI Widget Libraries Subscribe on iTunes Subscribe to RSS Download MP3 Show notes hosted by Jared Brown Brandon Corbin joined by Edward Rudd JS Widget Libs for Desktop and then Mobile Questions: What do people look for in each lib? How do you choose one over another? Desktop: Great for Intranet software, enterprise, engineering and scientific web apps Mobile: Progressive (mobile site) vs native-feeling app (typically wrapped in something like PhoneGap)? Actively developed or stale? JS Widget LibrariesLarge screenjQuery UIGrid coming to v2.1 Movement to clean up the API Lots of dev momentum lately Kendo UI by TelerikUses jQuery Recently out of beta Free for GPL Compatible open source projects $399 per developer (sounds like M$ style licensing.. inherited from the “.NET” background) Mention DataViz and Mobile Has custom theme builder for it’s widgets (not jquery UI’s builder) Doesn’t support IE6 Native UI on each device wijmoBased on jQuery UI (in fact, some of the team works on jQuery UI) Uses jQuery UI themes native has a cdn for access. Free version includes 18 OpenSource widgets Commercial versionIncludes 40+ widgets $299+ (per developer) (or $499 w/ support) Ext JSby SenchaMention Sencha Touch (free) $329 - one developer license (no support) MobilejQuery Mobile - jQuery70 kb http://codiqa.com/ (web GUI prototyping tool) Open source Broad device support Degrades Gracefully (progressive?) yes Has a theme builder (jQuery UI style) Kendo Mobile - TelerikNo pricing yet (in beta) Ready for PhoneGap Sencha Touch - SenchaHow is it diff from jQTouch?Much more programmatic to work with jQTouch is more web dev friendly Support for tables while jQTouch doesn’t http://9-bits.com/post/723711597/jqtouch-and-sencha-touch Free for non-OEMs Touch charts Looks like Android & iOS styling is a more manual thing to do jQTouch(problems with Android?) - SenchaWorks with Zepto or jQueryZepto is a minimal, jQuery syntax compatible lib SASS-based theming In beta Progressive Free ~20 kb Others to consider (both free, open source)JoNot easy to see which UI widgets it offers Looks to have less popularity GWT MobileFrom Google (but code is on GitHub) PhoneGap wrapper Great for pure client-side Java devs PhoneGap + XUI.jsOpen source Zirb Twitter Bootstrap Notes: Kendo UI Licensing. Kendo is dual-licensed under GPLv3/commercial license, jQuery UI is MIT/GPLv2. Support. Purchasing a Kendo commercial license entitles you to support (options here). Professional jQuery UI support is offered by appendTo and the filament group. Feature set. Kendo has some components that are missing in jQuery UI (Grid, Chart, TreeView, Upload, Templates, and soon - MVVM). You might need to stitch plug-ins by different authors if you want to use such functionality alongside jQuery UI. Roadmap. Kendo has a fixed release cycle (3 releases per year), with a fixed roadmap for the next release. The jQuery roadmap does not guarantee when the features will be included. Openness. You can browse the latest jQuery UI source at all times. With Kendo, you get only the source code for major releases when you don’t have a commercial license. If you purchase one, you get all the latest source code. http://jqueryuivskendoui.com/ Discuss comparison table Sencha Touch Aaron Weyenberg on Quora - “Sencha Touch takes much much longer to learn and become comfortable with, but it’s more robust. Sencha Touch documentation and examples, however, are quite unrefined in my opinion. There’s almost no MVC architecture support docs, so be prepared to do a lot of reverse engineering. jQuery Mobile can get you up and running in a day, but it’s not as feature rich, and seems not quite as smooth in terms of transitions and effects.” http://www.quora.com/Were-deciding-between-jQuery-Mobile-and-Sencha-Touch-What-are-the-pros-and-cons-for-each James Pearce, Developer Relations @ Sencha Inc Of course it very much depends on the use-case, your skill set and your desired architecture. If you want an easy, declarative, markup-configured mobile site, then jQuery Mobile’s progressive enhancements is an obvious option. If you want a richer, more standalone (say, MVC) app, built using a programmatic, RIA philosophy, then the Sencha Touch route would probably be better. It’s more likely that you’d take this approach if you were keen to wrap the app up in PhoneGap to deploy in an app store, for example. jQTouch Sencha touch is a little more complicated for those used to web design to use, in that it is almost a purely programmatic model (you don’t design pages in html, you programmatically add elements to a page). It does, however, have a much richer widget model and is a lot more fleshed out than jQTouch (it is also a lot bigger)… http://stackoverflow.com/questions/3446186/sencha-touch-vs-jqtouch Recommendations DEPENDS ON THE USE CASE Desktop jQuery UI Mobile jQuery Mobile
Todd Anglin from Telerik talks about Kendo UI Mobile, their new platform (currently free and in beta) for developing HTML5 apps specific to Android and iOS devices. Todd also talks about the regular web edition of Kendo UI for building web applications that take advantage of different browser features.
Kendo UI is a Web, Mobile and Data Visualization framework that's all HTML5,JS and CSS from Telerik. It's under a open source dual-license. Scott talks to Todd from Telerik about the thinking behind Kendo. Why not jQuery Mobile? How open source is it? Where does Todd see this framework going? Disclosure: Telerik is a sponsor of the show, but this podcast is unrelated.
Carl and Richard start off 2012 remaking a show that was lost at DevConnections, talking to Jim Holmes about testing. After a quick detour to chat about the amazing CodeMash conference that Jim helps run, the conversation dives into why you want to automate your web testing. Jim talks about free tools and pay tools, including Selenium, WatiN and Telerik's Test Automation Studio. Jim mentions a ton of great tools and resources, check out the links!Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/net-rocks/donations
Out of Microsoft and off to Telerik, what will Chris Sells say? Chris starts out talking about his last year at Microsoft, working on Javascript in Windows 8, culminating at Build. Now Chris has moved to Telerik, focusing on building controls for the Windows 8 world that developers will love. The conversation ranges over HTML 5, XAML, XBox, Windows Phone 7, Kinect, tablets and more!Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/net-rocks/donations
While at Tech Ed US in Atlanta, Carl and Richard talked to a variety of folks about the work they're doing in .NET. First up was Geert van de Horrik, talking about the Catel MVVM framework. Then Miguel Castro talked about MVVM. We also caught up with Stephen Rose who discussed Windows InTune. And finally, Tod Anglin from Telerik talked a bit about HTML 5. These are the stories from Tech Ed!Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/net-rocks/donations