Podcasts about terragenesis

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Best podcasts about terragenesis

Latest podcast episodes about terragenesis

ESG Talk
Building a Sustainable Supply Chain

ESG Talk

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 23, 2024 22:40


Jeannie Renné-Malone, vice president of global sustainability for VF Corporation, and Tim Tensen, chief operating officer for Terra Genesis, join co-host Andie Wood to discuss regenerative agriculture and the transformative potential of their partnership in fueling product innovation and creating a sustainable supply chain. Learn how this initiative is paving the way for a more environmentally conscious future in the apparel and footwear industry.

Investing in Regenerative Agriculture
271 Ethan Soloviev - What is regenerative agriculture and why it is the wrong question to ask

Investing in Regenerative Agriculture

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 19, 2023 48:30 Transcription Available


We welcome back on the show Ethan Soloviev, founder of Terra Genesis, now Chief Innovation Officer at HowGood and an advocate for regenerative agriculture. We take a deep dive into the four paradigms of agriculture and how regenerative agriculture is a journey, not a destination. It is not romantic nor naive, it is not anti science nor anti technology. Welcome to a very special episode. This is part of our online education course to accelerate Your Path Forward in Regenerative Food and Agriculture.The course wants to help you accelerate your understanding of the complexities of the current food and an agriculture system and what broad and deep regeneration is so relevant and interesting. We focussing on what your role can be in this transition, what companies need to be build? What investments need to be made, if you are in the position, and what other roles you can play if you work in big food and big ag that are needed to transition?As part of the lesson about what is regenerative agriculture and food, we have Ethan Soloivev joining us for a conversation and we tackle that elephant immediately. We talk about why that is the wrong question to ask, what are the four paradigms of agriculture and, of course, about a lot more.---------------------------------------------------Join our Gumroad community, discover the tiers and benefits on www.gumroad.com/investinginregenag. Support our work:Share itGive a 5-star ratingBuy us a coffee… or a meal! www.Ko-fi.com/regenerativeagriculture----------------------------------------------------More about this episode on https://investinginregenerativeagriculture.com/ethan-soloviev-3.Find our video course on https://investinginregenerativeagriculture.com/course.----------------------------------------------------The above references an opinion and is for information and educational purposes only. It is not intended to be investment advice. Seek a duly licensed professional for investment advice.Support the showFeedback, ideas, suggestions? - Twitter @KoenvanSeijen - Get in touch www.investinginregenerativeagriculture.comJoin our newsletter on www.eepurl.com/cxU33P! Support the showThanks for listening and sharing!

IwEP Network
Stay Doomed 139: Inhumans Part 2

IwEP Network

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 9, 2022 92:46


With each passing minute we get closer and closer to it finally happening... all the characters being in the same room! Noah and Laura finish the last four episodes of Inhumans, the MCU's biggest bellyflop. Does this show develop into something special after going through Terragenesis? Or should it stay silent like Black Bolt and STAY DOOMED? Wanna watch before you listen? Check it out on Disney +. Next week we start Razzie Month! We are watching Diana: The Musical on Netflix. Check out our Patreon and you can vote on what we should watch next! https://www.patreon.com/PlusTwoComedy Have an idea for what Stay Doomed should cover next? Already seen the show and have a question or comment for us to read on the podcast? Have a cocktail idea? Email us at TheStayDoomedShow@Gmail.com or tweet at @StayDoomed or check us out on Facebook! --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/iwepnetwork/message

Plus Two Comedy/Stay Doomed
Stay Doomed 139: Inhumans Part 2

Plus Two Comedy/Stay Doomed

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 8, 2022 92:46


With each passing minute we get closer and closer to it finally happening... all the characters being in the same room! Noah and Laura finish the last four episodes of Inhumans, the MCU's biggest bellyflop. Does this show develop into something special after going through Terragenesis? Or should it stay silent like Black Bolt and STAY DOOMED?   Wanna watch before you listen? Check it out on Disney +. Next week we start Razzie Month! We are watching Diana: The Musical on Netflix. Check out our Patreon and you can vote on what we should watch next! https://www.patreon.com/PlusTwoComedy Have an idea for what Stay Doomed should cover next? Already seen the show and have a question or comment for us to read on the podcast? Have a cocktail idea? Email us at TheStayDoomedShow@Gmail.com or tweet at @StayDoomed or check us out on Facebook!    

The Synthesis
Andy Weir Interview: "PROJECT HAIL MARY" - Season 1 Finale

The Synthesis

Play Episode Listen Later May 21, 2021 50:58


THE Andy Weir, author of "The Martian", joins us to talk about his NEW BOOK, "Project Hail Mary". It's our Season 1 Finale, so like NBD. He tells Lacey she's pretty and Alex that he likes TerraGenesis (!!!). We all try to keep our cool... uhmm sort of. We geek out over books, film and of course, Andy's dog, Coco. Pick up a copy of Andy Weir's new book "Project Hail Mary" today! The creators of TerraGenesis bring you The Synthesis: A show where we discuss how popular entertainment portrays realistic science. CATCH ALL EPISODES OF THE SYNTHESIS: [https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL9Me3d7Pbf0MXoNsYFZA_ocUklKypt4SV]

Kaarin Zoe Lee Presents
Kaarin's EP98 with guest Michael Oakley

Kaarin Zoe Lee Presents

Play Episode Listen Later May 14, 2021


Kaarin connects with Michael Oakley again to talk about his new album Odyssey and life experiences. Artists played: FM Attack, LeBrock, Syst3m Glitch, Laura Dre, ABOBO, Terra Genesis, L'Avenue, Michael Oakley

artists odyssey avenue abobo lebrock terragenesis kaarin fm attack michael oakley
The Synthesis
October Sky: "We didn't start the fiiiree"

The Synthesis

Play Episode Listen Later May 14, 2021 71:48


Lacey and Alex put a telescope up to the film "October Sky" starring Tobey Maguire. Based on a true story, did filmmakers do this tale justice?? Or will we have a lot of heavy sighs this episode? Billy Joel said it best, "we didn't start the fire", no but for real, the rocket boys didn't start the fire. (spoiler?) The creators of Terra Genesis bring you The Synthesis: A show where we discuss how popular entertainment portrays realistic science. CATCH ALL EPISODES OF THE SYNTHESIS: [https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL9Me3d7Pbf0MXoNsYFZA_ocUklKypt4SV]

The Synthesis
Nat Geo's Mars Ep. 4-6: OK,WE GET IT. DRAMA.

The Synthesis

Play Episode Listen Later May 8, 2021 73:50


Lacey and Alex discuss the National Geographic series, MARS, episodes 4-6. A dude obsessed with plants, a giant dust storm, someone killing themselves by opening an airlock, someone being electrocuted, and discovering microbes on Mars. You get the jist, let's have Lace and Alex break. it. DOWN. The creators of TerraGenesis bring you The Synthesis: A show where we discuss how popular entertainment portrays realistic science. CATCH ALL EPISODES OF THE SYNTHESIS: [https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL9Me3d7Pbf0MXoNsYFZA_ocUklKypt4SV]

The Synthesis
Nat Geo's Mars Ep.1-3: WHY SO SERIOUS?!

The Synthesis

Play Episode Listen Later May 7, 2021 68:21


Lacey and Alex discuss the National Geographic series, MARS, episodes 1-3. Why so serious ?! A somber show that clearly Lacey and Alex just LOVE..... ish...   The creators of Terra Genesis bring you The Synthesis: A show where we discuss how popular entertainment portrays realistic science. CATCH ALL EPISODES OF THE SYNTHESIS: [https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL9Me3d7Pbf0MXoNsYFZA_ocUklKypt4SV]

The Synthesis
Ad Astra: More like BRAD Astra, am I right?!

The Synthesis

Play Episode Listen Later May 7, 2021 73:01


This week, "Ad Astra" starring Brad Pitt. Wowie Wow Wow. Space cowboys and Brad's awareness for humans being wasteful. Not too shabby. BUT will Alex point out some major flaws? Will Lacey freak about the abyss of space or the lack of emotional availability!? TUNE IN. The creators of Terra Genesis bring you The Synthesis: A show where we discuss how popular entertainment portrays realistic science. CATCH ALL EPISODES OF THE SYNTHESIS: [https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL9Me3d7Pbf0MXoNsYFZA_ocUklKypt4SV]

The Synthesis
"Interstellar": SPAGHETIFICATION BABAAYY

The Synthesis

Play Episode Listen Later May 2, 2021 68:24


Lacey and Alex explore HOW MUCH THEY LOVE THE MOVIE INTERSTELLAR... or do they?! The creators of TerraGenesis bring you The Synthesis: A show where we discuss how popular entertainment portrays realistic science. Today Lacey and Alex are discussing '"Interstellar" starring Matthew McConnaughey. CATCH ALL EPISODES OF THE SYNTHESIS: [https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL9Me3d7Pbf0MXoNsYFZA_ocUklKypt4SV]

The Synthesis
"The Martian" Starring Matt Damon - Pt. 3

The Synthesis

Play Episode Listen Later May 2, 2021 64:20


Will Lacey and Alexander make it to the Hermes to finally catch a flight back to earth?? Or will they still get incredibly sunburned following Matt Damon through Mars terrain? We really have no clue. The creators of Terra Genesis bring you The Synthesis: A show where we discuss how popular entertainment portrays realistic science. Today Lacey and Alex are discussing "The Martian" starring Matt Damon.   CATCH ALL EPISODES OF THE SYNTHESIS: [https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL9Me3d7Pbf0MXoNsYFZA_ocUklKypt4SV]

The Synthesis
"The Martian" Starring Matt Damon - Pt. 2

The Synthesis

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 30, 2021 64:51


We continue unpacking our spaceship and the Ridley Scott film, "The Martian". Will this film live up to the expectations of Alexander Winn & Lacey Hannan or will they too feel deserted in space as the air escapes their spacesuits, eating potatoes growing from their own poop?! The creators of Terra Genesis bring you The Synthesis: A show where we discuss how popular entertainment portrays realistic science. Today Lacey and Alex are discussing "The Martian" directed by Ridley Scott, adapted from the book written by Andy Weir. CATCH ALL EPISODES OF THE SYNTHESIS: [https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list...​]

Investing in Regenerative Agriculture
114 Christian Shearer on selling 100.000 soil carbon credits to Microsoft on the blockchain

Investing in Regenerative Agriculture

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 27, 2021 51:35


How did Regen Network sell 100,000 soil carbon credits to a giant company like Microsoft? Listen to Christian Shearer, CEO of Regen Network and the Co-Founder of Terra Genesis International.-----------------------------------------------------Join our Gumroad community, discover the tiers and benefits on www.gumroad.com/investinginregenag. Other ways to support our work:- Share the podcast - Give a 5-star rating- Or buy us a coffee… or a meal! www.Ko-fi.com/regenerativeagriculture. ------------------------------------------------------ With Christian we discuss some of the blockchain solutions Regen Network is currently working on as well as the role of remote sensing and blockchains when it comes to selling ecosystem services. More about this episode on https://investinginregenerativeagriculture.com/christian-shearer.Find our video course here:https://investinginregenerativeagriculture.com/course/----------------------------------------------------------- For feedback, ideas, suggestions please contact us through Twitter @KoenvanSeijen, or get in touch through the website www.investinginregenerativeagriculture.com. Join our newsletter on www.eepurl.com/cxU33P. The above references an opinion and is for information and educational purposes only. It is not intended to be investment advice. Seek a duly licensed professional for investment advice.Support the show Support the show (https://www.gumroad.com/investinginregenag)

The Synthesis
The Film: "The Martian" staring Matt Damon Pt. 1

The Synthesis

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 24, 2021 64:03


We finally unpack our spaceship and the Ridley Scott film, "The Martian". Will this film live up to the expectations of Alexander Winn & Lacey Hannan or will they too feel deserted in space as the air escapes their spacesuits, eating potatoes grown from their own poop?! The creators of Terra Genesis bring you The Synthesis: A show where we discuss how popular entertainment portrays realistic science. Today Lacey and Alex are discussing "The Martian" directed by Ridley Scott, adapted from the book written by Andy Weir. CATCH ALL EPISODES OF THE SYNTHESIS: [https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list...​]

The Synthesis
"The Martian" Written by Andy Weir - The Final Chapter

The Synthesis

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 24, 2021 68:36


Strapped to a couch barreling through space. Honestly, what could POSSIBLY go wrong? We dissect the nuance of "The Martian" and look back at 18 months of living on Mars... The creators of Terra Genesis bring you The Synthesis: A show where we discuss how popular entertainment portrays realistic science. Today Lacey and Alex are discussing "The Martian" by Andy Weir Chapter 26 CATCH ALL EPISODES OF THE SYNTHESIS: [https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list...   Music: Vlad Gluschenko - "Forest" License: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/...​

The Synthesis
"The Martian" Written by Andy Weir - Ch. 23-24

The Synthesis

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 23, 2021 65:07


Get locked & loaded as we dissect Mark Watney's slow decent deeper into the depths of Mars. We cruise through the drama of surviving on Mars while Lacey goes off about some pet peeves and Alex succumbs to her witchy charms! The creators of Terra Genesis bring you The Synthesis: A show where we discuss how popular entertainment portrays realistic science. Today Lacey and Alex are discussing "The Martian" by Andy Weir Chapters 23-24 CATCH ALL EPISODES OF THE SYNTHESIS: [https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list...​]   Music: Vlad Gluschenko - "Forest" License: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/...

The Synthesis
"The Martian" Written by Andy Weir - Ch. 20-22

The Synthesis

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 18, 2021 76:21


Lacey and Alex remain captivated as we watch Mark Watney somehow survive on his own on Mars. We are still holding our breath wondering if he'll ever get back to earth as they cover chapters 20-22 of Andy Weir's "The Martian".   The creators of Terra Genesis bring you The Synthesis: A show where we discuss how popular entertainment portrays realistic science. Today Lacey and Alex are discussing "The Martian" by Andy Weir Chapters 20-22 CATCH ALL EPISODES OF THE SYNTHESIS: [https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list...​]

The Synthesis
"Apollo 13" Starring Tom Hanks

The Synthesis

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 2, 2021 74:12


In the inaugural episode of The Synthesis, TerraGenesis creators Alexander Winn and Lacey Hannan discuss the science behind the Apollo 13 movie, how close the Apollo 13 movie got to the real life mission, and how the entire ordeal shaped the future of space travel.   Music by: Vlad Guschenko - "Forest"  License: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3/0.deed.en

Settle the Stars: The Science of Space Exploration
Episode 3: Surface Temperature

Settle the Stars: The Science of Space Exploration

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 19, 2020 8:56


This episodes dives into the first terraforming metric in TerraGenesis - temperature. This metric plays a huge role in whether or not a planet or moon is habitable.

Settle the Stars: The Science of Space Exploration
Episode 2: Welcome to the Solar System

Settle the Stars: The Science of Space Exploration

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 12, 2020 11:02


This episode covers the Solar Systems in TerraGenesis. Alex talks about the features each planet has and the logistics behind setting them up.

Settle the Stars: The Science of Space Exploration
Episode 1: Origin of TerraGenesis

Settle the Stars: The Science of Space Exploration

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 5, 2020 6:14


This episode covers how TerraGenesis came into existence and what inspired Alexander to create TerraGenesis in the first place.

Settle the Stars: The Science of Space Exploration

The first trailer for the upcoming podcast, The Science of TerraGenesis.

science terragenesis
Solarpod podcast
Üstökös-vadász, Tehertaxi a Holdra, TerraGenesis, LSST

Solarpod podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 9, 2019 64:03


Sziasztok! Ismét itt! Intro, zenék: Melodysheep - Life Beyond https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=adulqKEo5dg Stellardrone - http://stellardrone.bandcamp.com Melodysheep - TerraGenesis Ad https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8i2Q87TyAww Cikkek, linkek: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lists_of_exoplanets https://index.hu/techtud/2019/08/11/negy_magyar_bronzerem_a_csillagaszati_diakolimpian/ http://astrobotic.com https://www.lsst.org/about https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ARIEL

lists ism sziasztok holdra lsst terragenesis
The Enthusiast Life
About Terra Genesis, Rocko's Modern Life, Absolute Carnage, and more

The Enthusiast Life

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 13, 2019 68:08


Lot's of great things to discuss on the podcast this wee including Terra Genesis, Rocko's Modern Life: Static Cling, Absolute Carnage, and more! Trust us when we say now would be a great time to start reading comics! The Enthusiast Life on Youtube Gamer Goo - Tired of sweaty hands while gaming? Check out Gamer Goo! Use my code TEL and save yourself 10% off any order! You can also get a free sample so definitely go get yours now! Epic Store/Fortnite Content Creator Code - thelilturks Follow me on Twitter - @MarkTurc Follow the show on Twitter - @TheEnthusLife Email your feedback, future topic suggestions, and questions - theenthuslife@gmail.com

PodCoping
PodCoping Episode 23 (Feat. Alexander Winn)

PodCoping

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 15, 2019 153:17


-Olly's Non-Gaming Topic = Why Are You So Angry at Disney? (00:06:25) -Muse Coping = Entertainment Recommendations (00:32:30) -Special Guest Interview = Alexander Winn (00:58:52) -Duncan's Non-Gaming Topic = Was Game of Thrones Season 8 Really That Bad? (01:44:00) -News Coping = Is Sony Going to Buy More Studios? (02:05:12) -Olly's Gaming Topic = Our Updated Thoughts On VR (02:16:40) -RANDOM SUBSCRIBER SHOUTOUT=??? (02:27:15 Thank you so much to TerraGenesis creator and Edgeworks Entertainment CEO Alex Winn for joining us on the show! Play TerraGenesis NOW!! Find us on YouTube and subscribe for a chance to be our random subscriber next time! www.youtube.com/GameCoping Follow us on Medium and check out our weekly news updates here... www.medium.com/Game-Coping Listen to the Muse Coping Playlist on Spotify... https://open.spotify.com/playlist/3cAmkOHPumvKLxMt4XnjKl?si=7dLJ5SzDQW-RyYdseBz9Ng Get our merch here... www.shop.spreadshirt.co.uk Get in touch with us here... www.facebook.com/GameCoping www.twitter.com/GameCoping www.instagram.com/game_coping gamecoping@gmail.com

Regenerative Skills
Leveraging the block chain and decentralization for environmental regeneration with Gregory Landua of Regen Network: 118

Regenerative Skills

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 28, 2019


Building on the theme of profitable ecosystem regeneration, I spoke to Gregory Landua, CEO and co-founder of the Regen Network. Gregory has worked in ecosystem regeneration for a while. Formerly working as the CEO of Terra Genesis, nova chocolate, the Regrarian's platform and Gaia University. He is also the co-author of the groundbreaking book Regenerative Enterprise: Optimizing for Multi-Capital Abundance, and of The Levels of Regenerative Agriculture, In this interview Gregory gives an overview of what the Regen network is and aims to accomplish. Specifically, we explore the roles of decentralized technology including the emerging potential of the blockchain to create secure networks that facilitate collaboration, consensus, agreements, and community. We also talk about what systemic changes would need to happen to make permaculture type stewardship of the land our default as a culture rather than a fringe practice. Gregory also explains how technology can be leveraged for connecting people to crucial information and to reach communities that have been left behind in the industrialized information age. Though we don't cover the job market in detail in this episode, I'm hoping that this conversation could inspire those of you who have studied or who work in IT and programming to see some ways that you could use your skills and experience to work towards environmental restoration and regeneration. We certainly need everyone's contributions in this effort and gardening and farming are by no means the only ways to help. The exploration of how technology can be harnessed for a global shift in consciousness and renewed cultural priorities is a topic that I'll be increasingly exploring on this podcast and I would love to hear from any of you listening if you have information or ideas on how the incredible power of technology can be used to buck the trend that has been disconnecting us from our natural world and our local communities. Or, if you believe that technology can only facilitate disconnection, what alternative solutions are there to our increasing dependence on digital connectivity that you might propose? You can post comments and feedback on the website or email me directly at info@abundantedge.com. I really hope to continue this exploration with all of you. Resources: Regen Network website Gregory on Facebook Gregory on Twitter Gregory on Linkdin Buy the book Regenerative Enterprise: Optimizing for Multi-capital Abundance info@regen.network

Investing in Regenerative Agriculture
48 Russell Wallack, which trees to plant where? Answering the oldest question in agriculture

Investing in Regenerative Agriculture

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 16, 2019 46:26


Using software to answer the key question when doing agroforestry on a watershed level, which tree to plant where and why? Welcome to Investing in Regenerative Agriculture. Where I interview key players in the field of regenerative agriculture, people who are scaling up the sector by bringing in new money or scaling up the practises on the ground. Join our Gumroad community, discover the tiers and exclusive benefits here: https://gumroad.com/investinginregenag Other ways to support my work: - Share the podcast - Give a 5-star rating (if you podcast app allows it) - Or buy me a coffee… or a meal! www.Ko-fi.com/regenerativeagriculture In this interview with Russell Wallack of Terra Genesis and co founder of Brasa, we cover a lot of ground but try to give (part of the) answer to the key question in agriculture, what to plant where and why? Especially in agroforestry systems this is key, as trees can’t walk to a more optimal spot. - The need for perennial based agriculture systems is huge! - Perennials, especially trees crops have huge value in watersheds - There really aren’t watersheds without perennials - Chestnuts and hazelnuts can play a role as stable crops - Chestnuts are known in French and Italian culture as the bread trees - There is a temperate band wrapping the world where cultures have been using chestnuts as staple crops for thousands of years - What is a GIS: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geographic_information_system - Chestnuts start only producing revenues after 5-10 years, so you better be sure where to plant them - Still recovering from student debt, Russell said out to find the optimum places to plant chestnuts - Russell started looking at the Connecticut river watershed (which is 700k hectares) and start removing the pieces of land not suited for chestnut production - Because of scale they removed all parcel sizes of less than 5 acres - Because of the need for machines they only looked at parcels with high slopes - Regenerative agriculture and agroforestry makes a lot more sense when you look at scale - What questions should you ask to understand of a farm is really contributing to the regeneration of a watershed? - What is the role of elderberries in the coevolution of the Connecticut river watershed, and how can we support that? - Human capacity to think at a watershed level is more limiting than computer power - Most of the support for agroforestry is either at a global level (Drawdown) or at a farm level (farm support), why not look at a bioregional level? - It would be way more valuable for the planet if people wanting to be creating regeneration instead of being ‘regenerative’ Fundamental question to ask as an impact investor interested in Watershed level agroforestry: What are you regenerating? Or what are you investing in to regenerate? Bioregional Agroforestry Suitability Analysis, Brasa http://www.terra-genesis.com/brasa/ https://medium.com/terra-genesis/bioregional-agroforestry-suitability-analysis-brasa-cbfe999a0e48 Interview with Propagate Ventures Harry, Jeremy and Ethan https://soundcloud.com/investinginregenerativeagriculture/interview-jeremy-harry-ethan History of Chestnuts in the US https://www.propagate.org/ag-environment/2017/2/13/there-used-to-be-4-billion-american-chestnut-trees-but-they-all-disappeared?rq=chestnuts Regenesis Group New Mexico https://regenesisgroup.com/ Short article on Technology in Landscape size restoration https://medium.com/@koen_73445/using-ai-for-exponential-landscape-restoration-5d18b75d6442 If you want to receive an email when I upload a new episode, subscribe here eepurl.com/cxU33P The above references an opinion and is for information and educational purposes only. It is not intended to be investment advice. Seek a duly licensed professional for investment advice.

Discount Gaming
S2E10 - The Amazing Alex Winn

Discount Gaming

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 11, 2019 72:11


Whats going on Discounters! In this episode we have the amazing Alex Winn on the show. Hes the creator of the game Terra Genesis and a super smart guy. So come on in and join us on another adventure!!

winn hes terragenesis amazing alex
Devchat.tv Master Feed
VoV 032: “Recursion with Vue” with Kyle Holmberg and Alex Regan

Devchat.tv Master Feed

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 9, 2018 74:25


Panel: Charles Max Wood Chris Fritz Special Guest: Kyle Holmberg & Alex Regan In this episode, the panel talks with two guests Kyle and Alex who work together in opensource. Kyle is a software engineer at AutoGravity interested in full-stack web development, graphic design, integrated systems, data visualizations, and soccer. Alex writes code and works with Parametric Studios, and he also loves puppies. Check out today’s episode where the panel and the two guests talk about the different frameworks and contributing to opensource. Show Topics: 3:03 – We got together because Alex mentioned his project. He was looking for something to get up running nice and easy. Boot Strap 4. That is a nice choice and I was contributing as a core team member at the time. He started with how do I get started with Boot Strap Vue. At the time I asked how do you do this...? And that’s how we got started. 4:03 – Guest continues more with this conversation. 4:30 – Chris: How did you start contributing within your company? 4:44 – Guest: There is a lot of autonomy with the last company I was working with (3 people there). I needed more fine tooth hooks and modals. Someone says X and you try to figure it out. So I was looking at the transitions, and there was a bug there. They hadn’t implemented any hooks, and I thought I could figure this out. From there, if you want a change I can help out. I don’t know if that change got implemented first. I started contributing some things to the library. I really got involved where someone (the creator of the library said you could be a core member. He took a trust in me. I started a lot in test coverage. That might not be the normal path to take. 6:39 – How long have you been developing? 6:42 – Guest: A year and a half. 7:00 – Chris: Any tips to opensource for beginners. 7:10 – Guest: Yes, having a thick skin. Everyone is anonymous on the Internet. People say things that they normally wouldn’t say in person. I figure if you put something out there someone will correct you. How can I get feedback? If you put yourself out there it’s like: failure to success. That process is what makes you better. 8:21 – Chris: Issues and chat like that. There is a lot of context that gets lost. When you just see the text it may seem angry 8:43 – Guest: I have a tendency towards sarcasm, and I have to save that to last. People come from different languages, and I’m not talking about software languages. English isn’t everyone’s first language. Good thing to keep in-mind. 9:14 – Internet is an international community. 9:22 – Guest continues this talk. Opensource is good to work on to get started with contributions. Especially with Operation Code it’s geared towards beginners; less complex. 10:30 – That is a good difference to show. 11:01 – Question. 11:05 – Guest. If you are a person with a lot of skin in their projects – I take pride in my work – I think if you have that mentality that you will want to submit to every request. Find some way to test every request against a...is this my concern or their concern? Figure out the boundaries. You will make mistakes and that’s fine. 11:54 – Panelist. 12:02 – Guest: Coming up with good interface boundaries for your libraries. 12:11 – Chuck: Once we figured out what really mattered than it makes it easier to say: yes or no. 12:26 - Guest: Conventional Commits. 13:06 – So Kyle what did you getting into opensource look like? 13:19 – Alex: Boot Strap. Operation Code. 15:07 – Chuck chimes-in about Aimee Knight and other people. Serving people and their country. You are helping people who have sacrificed. 15:58 – It is totally volunteer-based. 16:05 – Chris: What kind of questions did you ask Alex? How did you decide what to put in an issue? 16:25 – Alex: I tend to go to Stack Overflow. If it is in regards to a library I go to GitHub. Real time texts. Next.js – I just contributed to this this week. 19:21 – Chris: This question is for either one of you. For Questions and Answers – do you have any suggestions on what NOT to do when seeking help? 19:46 – Stay away from only asking a question in one sentence. There is so much information/context that you are leaving out, and that can often lead to more questions. Reasonable amount of contexts can go a long way. Code samples. Please Google the details for the markdown if it is a huge code. Context, context, context! 20:44 – I have an error, please fix it. Maybe that needs more context? 20:53 – Guest: What were you doing? There is a bigger overarching element. The problem they can see in front of them and what is the thing that you are TRYING to solve? 21:44 – More contexts that can help with a helpful answer. 21:53 – Guest: If someone used some learning tool... 22:13 – Chuck chimes-in. Chuck: It is something different that it could do something that you didn’t expect. 22:47 – Alex: Those are great moments. I love it when Kyle sees... That snowflake of your problem can help with documentation caveats. 23:44 – People are probably copying pasting. 24:05 – It can be the difference between understanding the page and not especially What not to do and what to do – any other tips? Can you have too much information? 24:32 – Guest: I am guilty of this sometimes. You can have too much information. The ability to converse in a real-time conversation is better. That’s my route to go. Maybe your problem is documented but documented poorly. Go to a real-time conversation to hash things out. 26:15 – Guest: If you do your homework with the different conversations: questions vs. concerns. Real-time conversation. He talks about GitHub issues and Stack Overflow. 27:48 – Chuck: My password is 123... If they can duplicate... Alex: Yeah too much information isn’t good. Some places mandate recreation like a JS Fiddle. Like Sandbox are cool tools. 29:32 – Is there a way to do the code wrong? 29:38 – Advertisement. 30:25 – Guest chimes-in with his answer. 31:31 – Question. If it’s opensource should they share? 31:33 – Absolutely. The difference that makes it for me is great. I can spot things that the machine can help me find. One small tip is when you provide code samples and GitHub issues use... The further you go out to recreate the problem there is a high payoff because they can get something working. The big difference is that it’s a huge pain to the person trying to convey the issue. If I do the simple version...I think you have to weigh your options. What tools are out there? Generate your data structure – there are costs to recreate the issue. 33:35 – Chris: 500 files, apps within the app – intercommunicating. All you do is download this, install this, it takes you ½ a day and how does this all work? 34:03 – Guest: You have to rein it in. Provide the easiest environment for it to occur. If you are having someone download a table and import it, and use a whole stack – you can try it – but I would advise to work really hard to find... 34:50 – In creating a demo keep it simple? 35:52 – Guests reply. 36:02 – Chuck. 36:07 – Chris: I learned about your experiences coming to opensource. Anything else that you would like to share with new contributors? 36:25 – Guest: Start with something that you have a genuine interest in. Something like a curiosity light bulb is on. It makes it more interesting. It’s a nice way to give back. Something that interests you. I have not found a case yet that I’m not compelled to help someone. Putting yourself out there you might be given a plate you don’t know what to do with. My learning experience is how welcoming opensource is. Maybe things are changing?  38:31 – Chuck: I have seen those communities but generally if they are there people frown down upon it. The newer opensource communities are very friendly. These projects are trying to gain adoptions, which is for the newer users. 39:17 – Guest: Final statements on opensource. Even if you think it is a small contribution it still helps. 40:55 – Guest chimes-in. It is important to have a platter for newcomers. 41:15 – Chris: I am curious to talk to you about how you’ve written React applications among others. Any advice? What resources should they 41:46 – Guest: Yeah. If you are making your new React application (from Vue land) there are many things that are similar and things that are different. As for preparing yourself, I am a huge fan of this one course. I had been coding (plus school) so 5 years, it’s okay to dive-into community courses. Dive-into a tutorial. Understand the huge core differences. He goes into those differences between React, Angular, and Vue. 43:30 – Guest talks about this, too. 45:50 – React doesn’t have an official router. Vue provides (he likes Vue’s mentality) other things. There is a library called One Loader. 46:50 – Guest: I was at a Meetup. One guy was doing C-sharp and game development. His wife had a different background, and I think they were sampling Angular, Vue, and React - all these different frameworks. That was interesting to talk with them. I relayed to them that Vue has free tutorials. Jeffry had an awesome Vue Cast. I think that’s what got me started in Vue. I learned from this tool and so can you! 48:11 – Chris: You aren’t starting from scratch if you know another framework? Do they translate well? 48:33 – Guest: I think so. There are a lot of ways to translate those patterns. 49:34 – Guest: React Rally – I just went to one. 49:50 – Chris chimes-in. Slots is mentioned 50:27 – Guest mentions the different frameworks. Guest: I went into functional components in Vue. I learned about the way... It helps you translate ideas. I don’t recommend it to everyone, but if you want to dig deep then it can help bridge the gap between one frameworks to another. 51:24 – Chris adds to this conversation. 51:36 – Guest: They are translatable. They are totally map-able. 5:46 – Chuck: Say someone was going to be on a Summit where they could meet with the React Core Team. What things would you suggest with them – and say these things are working here and these are working there. 52:12 – Guest: I would love to see... 53:03 – React doesn’t have a reactivity system you’d have to tell it more to... 53:15 – Guest chimes-in. Panel and guests go back-and-forth with this topic. 54:16 – Tooling. 55:38 – Guest: With React coming out with time slicing features how does that map to Vue and what can you say from one team to another. What is there to review? There is a lot of great things you can do with... 56:44 – Conversation continues. 57:59 – React has some partial answers to that, too. Progress. 58:10 – When Vue came onto the scene everyone felt like why do we need another framework? We have Ember, and... But with Vue it felt cohesive. It had an opportunity to learn from all the other frameworks. In terms of progress everyone is on the frontlines and learning from each other. Everyone has a different view on it. How can se learn from this and...? 59:12 – Chris: I am grateful for the different frameworks. Anyone comes out with a new tool then it’s the best. Creating something that is even better than before. 59:38 – Guest. 59:49 – Chuck: There are good frameworks out there why do I need another one. That’s the point. Someone will come along and say: I like what’s out there but I want to make... That’s what Vue was right? In some ways Vue was a leap forward and some ways it wasn’t – that’s how I feel. We need something to make things a bit easier to save 10 hours a week. 1:01:11 – Even Vue’s... 1:02:20 – Guest: In terms of why do we need another framework conversation – I don’t think we need another reason. Go ahead, what if it is groundbreaking it makes everyone do things differently and keep up. I love the idea that JavaScript is saying: what is the new framework today? The tradeoff there is that there are so many different ways to do things. It is hard for beginners. 1:03:88 – Chuck: How to find you online? 1:03:49 – Kyle states his social media profiles, so does Alex, too. 1:04:06 – Chuck: Let’s do some picks! 1:04:10 – Code Badges’ Advertisement Links: JSON Generator Ember.js Vue React Angular JavaScript Udemy One-Loader YouTube Talk: Beyond React 16 by Dan Abramov Badgr Kickstarter: CodeBadge.org Alex Sasha Regan’s Twitter Kyle Holmberg’s Twitter Kyle’s website Dev.to – Alex’s information DevChat TV GitHub Meetup Operation Code Sponsors: Kendo UI Digital Ocean Code Badge Cache Fly Picks: Chris Home decorating shows Charles TerraGenesis GetaCoderJob.com Swag.devchat.tv Codebadge.org Kyle OperationCode Yet Another React vs.Vue Article Hacktoberfest Alex Uplift Standing Desk System 76 Rust

Devchat.tv Master Feed
JSJ 334: “Web Performance API” with Dan Shappir

Devchat.tv Master Feed

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 9, 2018 67:58


Panel: Aimee Knight Charles Max Wood Christopher Ferdinandi (Boston) Special Guests: Dan Shappir (Tel Aviv) In this episode, the panel talks with Dan Shappir who is a computer software developer and performance specialist at Wix.com. As Dan states, his job is to make 100 million websites (hosted on the Wix platform) load and execute faster! Past employment includes working for companies, such as: Ericom, Ericom Software, and BackWeb. He studied at Technion Institute of Management and currently lives in Tel Aviv, Israel. The panel talks about web performance API among other things. Check it out! Show Topics: 1:29 – Charles: Let us know who you are and why you’re famous! 1:39 – “Hello!” from Dan Shappir. 2:25 – Charles: You should say that you go to EACH site EVERY day out of the millions of sites out there. 2:53 – Charles: My mom mentioned Wix to me at first. My mom teaches High School Math. 3:16 – Dan: Yes that is our mission statement. That everyone can get a website without the knowledge of how to build a website. 3:52 – Aimee makes her comments. 3:59 – Dan: On our platform we try to offer people flexibility. There are bounds and limits, but people can do their very own thing, though. To make Wix faster because as we add more features and functionality that is our goal. 4:40 – Chuck: Okay, I know how to make X perform a little bit better. You are looking at a platform that controls TONS of sites, how do you even go about that? 4:58 – Dan: It is more difficult then that. We have millions of users leveraging the platform but there are a lot of developers in Wix who are developing the platform. I don’t think anyone at Wix has a total grasp of the complexity of the platform that we built. We have hundreds of frontend people working on our platform. All of them have pieces to the kingdom. We have processes in place with code reviews and whatnot, but there is so much going on. There is a change every 2 minutes, 24/7. We need to make sure progressing instead of regressing.  6:54 – Aimee: I think it was interesting in one of the links you sent over. Because you know when something is getting worse you consider that a bug. 7:15 – Dan: It is more than a bug because if we see regression in performance then that is a problem. I can literally see any part of the organization and say, “stop” if it will 7:57 – Chuck: We are talking about performance, but what does that mean? What measures are there? 8:15: Dan: We are looking at performance can mean different things in different contents. User sites, for example, most important aspect is load time. How quickly the page loads and gets open to the viewer to that specific site. When they click something they want it instantly and no drag time. It does change in different contexts. 9:58 – Chuck: People do talk about load time. People have different definitions of it. 10:12: Dan: Excellent question. When you look at the different sites through Wix. Different people who build sites – load time can mean something else to everybody. It can mean when you see the MAIN text or the MAIN image. If it’s on an ECON site then how soon can they purchase or on a booking site, how long can the person book X product. I heard someone at a conference say that load time is when: HERO TEXT And HERO IMAGE are displayed. 12:14 – Chuck: What is faster React or Vue? 12:21 – NEW HOST: Not sure. It all depends. 12:34 – Dan: We are big into React. We are one of the big React users outside of Facebook. I joined Wix four years ago, and even back then we were rebuilding our framework using React. One of our main modifications is because we wanted to do server-side rendered. 13:27 – Christopher asks Dan a question. 14:16 – Dan: We are in transition in this regard. Before we were totally client-site rendered, and that was the case until middle of last year. Then we deployed... Dan: We are 100% server-side rendered now. Some things we are still using JavaScript. We have another project going on now and it’s fully CSS, and little JavaScript as possible. What you might want to do with that site is... You might get in a few months every Wix site will be visible even if JavaScript is disabled. 16:26 – Aimee adds in her comments and observations to this topic. 16:55 – Dan: We don’t want things displayed incorrectly before it lays out. We hide the content while it’s downloading then make it visible. They lay-outing are done faster, because... 17:44 – Christopher asks Dan a question. 18:04 – Dan: I got into API... Either you are moving forward or are you moving back. AKA – You are either progressing or regressing. Different stages: 1.) Development stage 2.) Pre-Production (automated tools that check the performance with specific use cases) 3.) Check it out! It’s beneficial to use these APIs. 21:11 – Christopher: What is performance APIs? 21:38 – Dan: There is a working group – Todd from Microsoft and others who are exposing the information (that is available in the browser) out into the browser. When the browser downloads a certain source (image, font, etc.) it can measure the various stages of downloading that feature.  You have these different sages of downloading this resource. The browser can measure each of these stages and then expose them to you. Basically it’s for the browser to expose this information to you and in a way that is coherent and uniform. It essentially maintains this buffer that puts performance entries sequentially. Dan continues explaining this topic in detail. 25:55 – Dan: You have this internal buffer... 28:45 – Advertisement – Sentry – They support opensource. 29:39 – Christopher: everything you are saying seems that I can use this or that tab right now... Why would I prefer the API to something visual, hypothetically? 30:03 – Dan: Three Different Stages. (See above.) This information is very, very helpful during the developmental stage. Say you got a link from someone... Dan mentions: Performance.mark 34:04 – Aimee: When you were talking about resource-ends. Many people don’t know what this is. Can you spend 2-3 minutes about how you guys are using these? Are there people can add for big bang for their buck? 34:41 – Dan: This might want to be a topic for its own podcast show. Dan gives a definition of what a resource-end means. Go back to fonts as an example. Pre-connect for example, too. 39:03 – Dan: Like I said, it’s a huge topic. You have to exercise some care. Bandwidth is limited. Make sure you aren’t blocking other resources that you do need right now. 40:02 – Aimee: Sounds like a lot of great things to tap into. Another question I have is about bundling. 40:27 – Dan: One of the things that we try to do (given that we are depending on the JavaScript we are downloading) we need to download JavaScript content to the client side. It has been shown often that JS is the most impactful resources that you need to download. You really want to be as smart as possible with that. What is even more challenging is the network protocols are changing. Dan continues to go in-depth about this topic. Dan: What we have found is that you want to strive to bundle resources together. 44:10 – Aimee: Makes sense. 44:15 – Dan continues talking about this topic. 45:23 – Chuck asks two questions. (First question is now and second question is at 51:32.) 2 Questions: 1. You gather information from web performance AI - What system is that? 45:42 – Dan: I am not the expert in that. I will try not to give misleading information. Actually let me phrase it different. There are 3rd party tools that you can use leverage in your website. IF you are building for commercial reasons I highly recommend that you use performance-monitoring solution. I am not going to advertise one because there are tons out there. We ended up rolling out our own infrastructure because our use case is different than most. At a conference I talked with a vendor and we talked about... 51:32 – 2nd Question from Charles to Dan: Now you’ve gathered this information now what to you do? What patterns? What do you look for? And how do you decide to optimize things? 54:23 – Chuck: Back to that question, Dan. How should they react to it and what are they looking for 54:41 – Dan: Three main ways: 1.) Generate alerts 2.) See trends over long period of time 3.) Looking at real-time graphs. Frontend developer pro is that likely being woken up in the middle of the night is lower. We might be looking at the real time graph after we deployed... 57:31 – Advertisement – Get a Coder Job! 58:10 – Picks! Links: JavaScript jQuery React Elixir Elm Vue Wix Window Performance Web Performance Terra Genesis Terra Genesis: Space Colony The One Thing DevChat TV – YouTube GitHub: Off Side HBO: Insecure Wix: Engineering JavaScript Riddle JavaScript Riddles for Fun and for Profit Dan Shappir’s Twitter Dan Shappir’s LinkedIn Dan Shappir’s Crunch Base Dan Shappir’s GitHub Dan Shappir’s Talk through Fluent Dan Shappir’s Medium Dan Shappir’s YouTube Talk: JavaScript riddles for fun and profit Sponsors: Code Badges Kendo UI Sentry Digital Ocean Cache Fly   Picks: Aimee: Waking up early! How to Deal with Dirty Side Effects in Your Pure Functional JavaScript Chris: Offside - Toomuchdesign Insecure TV Show Charles: Terraform - Game “The One Thing" Code Badge DevChat on YouTube Dan Wix Engineering JavaScript Riddle

Views on Vue
VoV 032: “Recursion with Vue” with Kyle Holmberg and Alex Regan

Views on Vue

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 9, 2018 74:25


Panel: Charles Max Wood Chris Fritz Special Guest: Kyle Holmberg & Alex Regan In this episode, the panel talks with two guests Kyle and Alex who work together in opensource. Kyle is a software engineer at AutoGravity interested in full-stack web development, graphic design, integrated systems, data visualizations, and soccer. Alex writes code and works with Parametric Studios, and he also loves puppies. Check out today’s episode where the panel and the two guests talk about the different frameworks and contributing to opensource. Show Topics: 3:03 – We got together because Alex mentioned his project. He was looking for something to get up running nice and easy. Boot Strap 4. That is a nice choice and I was contributing as a core team member at the time. He started with how do I get started with Boot Strap Vue. At the time I asked how do you do this...? And that’s how we got started. 4:03 – Guest continues more with this conversation. 4:30 – Chris: How did you start contributing within your company? 4:44 – Guest: There is a lot of autonomy with the last company I was working with (3 people there). I needed more fine tooth hooks and modals. Someone says X and you try to figure it out. So I was looking at the transitions, and there was a bug there. They hadn’t implemented any hooks, and I thought I could figure this out. From there, if you want a change I can help out. I don’t know if that change got implemented first. I started contributing some things to the library. I really got involved where someone (the creator of the library said you could be a core member. He took a trust in me. I started a lot in test coverage. That might not be the normal path to take. 6:39 – How long have you been developing? 6:42 – Guest: A year and a half. 7:00 – Chris: Any tips to opensource for beginners. 7:10 – Guest: Yes, having a thick skin. Everyone is anonymous on the Internet. People say things that they normally wouldn’t say in person. I figure if you put something out there someone will correct you. How can I get feedback? If you put yourself out there it’s like: failure to success. That process is what makes you better. 8:21 – Chris: Issues and chat like that. There is a lot of context that gets lost. When you just see the text it may seem angry 8:43 – Guest: I have a tendency towards sarcasm, and I have to save that to last. People come from different languages, and I’m not talking about software languages. English isn’t everyone’s first language. Good thing to keep in-mind. 9:14 – Internet is an international community. 9:22 – Guest continues this talk. Opensource is good to work on to get started with contributions. Especially with Operation Code it’s geared towards beginners; less complex. 10:30 – That is a good difference to show. 11:01 – Question. 11:05 – Guest. If you are a person with a lot of skin in their projects – I take pride in my work – I think if you have that mentality that you will want to submit to every request. Find some way to test every request against a...is this my concern or their concern? Figure out the boundaries. You will make mistakes and that’s fine. 11:54 – Panelist. 12:02 – Guest: Coming up with good interface boundaries for your libraries. 12:11 – Chuck: Once we figured out what really mattered than it makes it easier to say: yes or no. 12:26 - Guest: Conventional Commits. 13:06 – So Kyle what did you getting into opensource look like? 13:19 – Alex: Boot Strap. Operation Code. 15:07 – Chuck chimes-in about Aimee Knight and other people. Serving people and their country. You are helping people who have sacrificed. 15:58 – It is totally volunteer-based. 16:05 – Chris: What kind of questions did you ask Alex? How did you decide what to put in an issue? 16:25 – Alex: I tend to go to Stack Overflow. If it is in regards to a library I go to GitHub. Real time texts. Next.js – I just contributed to this this week. 19:21 – Chris: This question is for either one of you. For Questions and Answers – do you have any suggestions on what NOT to do when seeking help? 19:46 – Stay away from only asking a question in one sentence. There is so much information/context that you are leaving out, and that can often lead to more questions. Reasonable amount of contexts can go a long way. Code samples. Please Google the details for the markdown if it is a huge code. Context, context, context! 20:44 – I have an error, please fix it. Maybe that needs more context? 20:53 – Guest: What were you doing? There is a bigger overarching element. The problem they can see in front of them and what is the thing that you are TRYING to solve? 21:44 – More contexts that can help with a helpful answer. 21:53 – Guest: If someone used some learning tool... 22:13 – Chuck chimes-in. Chuck: It is something different that it could do something that you didn’t expect. 22:47 – Alex: Those are great moments. I love it when Kyle sees... That snowflake of your problem can help with documentation caveats. 23:44 – People are probably copying pasting. 24:05 – It can be the difference between understanding the page and not especially What not to do and what to do – any other tips? Can you have too much information? 24:32 – Guest: I am guilty of this sometimes. You can have too much information. The ability to converse in a real-time conversation is better. That’s my route to go. Maybe your problem is documented but documented poorly. Go to a real-time conversation to hash things out. 26:15 – Guest: If you do your homework with the different conversations: questions vs. concerns. Real-time conversation. He talks about GitHub issues and Stack Overflow. 27:48 – Chuck: My password is 123... If they can duplicate... Alex: Yeah too much information isn’t good. Some places mandate recreation like a JS Fiddle. Like Sandbox are cool tools. 29:32 – Is there a way to do the code wrong? 29:38 – Advertisement. 30:25 – Guest chimes-in with his answer. 31:31 – Question. If it’s opensource should they share? 31:33 – Absolutely. The difference that makes it for me is great. I can spot things that the machine can help me find. One small tip is when you provide code samples and GitHub issues use... The further you go out to recreate the problem there is a high payoff because they can get something working. The big difference is that it’s a huge pain to the person trying to convey the issue. If I do the simple version...I think you have to weigh your options. What tools are out there? Generate your data structure – there are costs to recreate the issue. 33:35 – Chris: 500 files, apps within the app – intercommunicating. All you do is download this, install this, it takes you ½ a day and how does this all work? 34:03 – Guest: You have to rein it in. Provide the easiest environment for it to occur. If you are having someone download a table and import it, and use a whole stack – you can try it – but I would advise to work really hard to find... 34:50 – In creating a demo keep it simple? 35:52 – Guests reply. 36:02 – Chuck. 36:07 – Chris: I learned about your experiences coming to opensource. Anything else that you would like to share with new contributors? 36:25 – Guest: Start with something that you have a genuine interest in. Something like a curiosity light bulb is on. It makes it more interesting. It’s a nice way to give back. Something that interests you. I have not found a case yet that I’m not compelled to help someone. Putting yourself out there you might be given a plate you don’t know what to do with. My learning experience is how welcoming opensource is. Maybe things are changing?  38:31 – Chuck: I have seen those communities but generally if they are there people frown down upon it. The newer opensource communities are very friendly. These projects are trying to gain adoptions, which is for the newer users. 39:17 – Guest: Final statements on opensource. Even if you think it is a small contribution it still helps. 40:55 – Guest chimes-in. It is important to have a platter for newcomers. 41:15 – Chris: I am curious to talk to you about how you’ve written React applications among others. Any advice? What resources should they 41:46 – Guest: Yeah. If you are making your new React application (from Vue land) there are many things that are similar and things that are different. As for preparing yourself, I am a huge fan of this one course. I had been coding (plus school) so 5 years, it’s okay to dive-into community courses. Dive-into a tutorial. Understand the huge core differences. He goes into those differences between React, Angular, and Vue. 43:30 – Guest talks about this, too. 45:50 – React doesn’t have an official router. Vue provides (he likes Vue’s mentality) other things. There is a library called One Loader. 46:50 – Guest: I was at a Meetup. One guy was doing C-sharp and game development. His wife had a different background, and I think they were sampling Angular, Vue, and React - all these different frameworks. That was interesting to talk with them. I relayed to them that Vue has free tutorials. Jeffry had an awesome Vue Cast. I think that’s what got me started in Vue. I learned from this tool and so can you! 48:11 – Chris: You aren’t starting from scratch if you know another framework? Do they translate well? 48:33 – Guest: I think so. There are a lot of ways to translate those patterns. 49:34 – Guest: React Rally – I just went to one. 49:50 – Chris chimes-in. Slots is mentioned 50:27 – Guest mentions the different frameworks. Guest: I went into functional components in Vue. I learned about the way... It helps you translate ideas. I don’t recommend it to everyone, but if you want to dig deep then it can help bridge the gap between one frameworks to another. 51:24 – Chris adds to this conversation. 51:36 – Guest: They are translatable. They are totally map-able. 5:46 – Chuck: Say someone was going to be on a Summit where they could meet with the React Core Team. What things would you suggest with them – and say these things are working here and these are working there. 52:12 – Guest: I would love to see... 53:03 – React doesn’t have a reactivity system you’d have to tell it more to... 53:15 – Guest chimes-in. Panel and guests go back-and-forth with this topic. 54:16 – Tooling. 55:38 – Guest: With React coming out with time slicing features how does that map to Vue and what can you say from one team to another. What is there to review? There is a lot of great things you can do with... 56:44 – Conversation continues. 57:59 – React has some partial answers to that, too. Progress. 58:10 – When Vue came onto the scene everyone felt like why do we need another framework? We have Ember, and... But with Vue it felt cohesive. It had an opportunity to learn from all the other frameworks. In terms of progress everyone is on the frontlines and learning from each other. Everyone has a different view on it. How can se learn from this and...? 59:12 – Chris: I am grateful for the different frameworks. Anyone comes out with a new tool then it’s the best. Creating something that is even better than before. 59:38 – Guest. 59:49 – Chuck: There are good frameworks out there why do I need another one. That’s the point. Someone will come along and say: I like what’s out there but I want to make... That’s what Vue was right? In some ways Vue was a leap forward and some ways it wasn’t – that’s how I feel. We need something to make things a bit easier to save 10 hours a week. 1:01:11 – Even Vue’s... 1:02:20 – Guest: In terms of why do we need another framework conversation – I don’t think we need another reason. Go ahead, what if it is groundbreaking it makes everyone do things differently and keep up. I love the idea that JavaScript is saying: what is the new framework today? The tradeoff there is that there are so many different ways to do things. It is hard for beginners. 1:03:88 – Chuck: How to find you online? 1:03:49 – Kyle states his social media profiles, so does Alex, too. 1:04:06 – Chuck: Let’s do some picks! 1:04:10 – Code Badges’ Advertisement Links: JSON Generator Ember.js Vue React Angular JavaScript Udemy One-Loader YouTube Talk: Beyond React 16 by Dan Abramov Badgr Kickstarter: CodeBadge.org Alex Sasha Regan’s Twitter Kyle Holmberg’s Twitter Kyle’s website Dev.to – Alex’s information DevChat TV GitHub Meetup Operation Code Sponsors: Kendo UI Digital Ocean Code Badge Cache Fly Picks: Chris Home decorating shows Charles TerraGenesis GetaCoderJob.com Swag.devchat.tv Codebadge.org Kyle OperationCode Yet Another React vs.Vue Article Hacktoberfest Alex Uplift Standing Desk System 76 Rust

JavaScript Jabber
JSJ 334: “Web Performance API” with Dan Shappir

JavaScript Jabber

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 9, 2018 67:58


Panel: Aimee Knight Charles Max Wood Christopher Ferdinandi (Boston) Special Guests: Dan Shappir (Tel Aviv) In this episode, the panel talks with Dan Shappir who is a computer software developer and performance specialist at Wix.com. As Dan states, his job is to make 100 million websites (hosted on the Wix platform) load and execute faster! Past employment includes working for companies, such as: Ericom, Ericom Software, and BackWeb. He studied at Technion Institute of Management and currently lives in Tel Aviv, Israel. The panel talks about web performance API among other things. Check it out! Show Topics: 1:29 – Charles: Let us know who you are and why you’re famous! 1:39 – “Hello!” from Dan Shappir. 2:25 – Charles: You should say that you go to EACH site EVERY day out of the millions of sites out there. 2:53 – Charles: My mom mentioned Wix to me at first. My mom teaches High School Math. 3:16 – Dan: Yes that is our mission statement. That everyone can get a website without the knowledge of how to build a website. 3:52 – Aimee makes her comments. 3:59 – Dan: On our platform we try to offer people flexibility. There are bounds and limits, but people can do their very own thing, though. To make Wix faster because as we add more features and functionality that is our goal. 4:40 – Chuck: Okay, I know how to make X perform a little bit better. You are looking at a platform that controls TONS of sites, how do you even go about that? 4:58 – Dan: It is more difficult then that. We have millions of users leveraging the platform but there are a lot of developers in Wix who are developing the platform. I don’t think anyone at Wix has a total grasp of the complexity of the platform that we built. We have hundreds of frontend people working on our platform. All of them have pieces to the kingdom. We have processes in place with code reviews and whatnot, but there is so much going on. There is a change every 2 minutes, 24/7. We need to make sure progressing instead of regressing.  6:54 – Aimee: I think it was interesting in one of the links you sent over. Because you know when something is getting worse you consider that a bug. 7:15 – Dan: It is more than a bug because if we see regression in performance then that is a problem. I can literally see any part of the organization and say, “stop” if it will 7:57 – Chuck: We are talking about performance, but what does that mean? What measures are there? 8:15: Dan: We are looking at performance can mean different things in different contents. User sites, for example, most important aspect is load time. How quickly the page loads and gets open to the viewer to that specific site. When they click something they want it instantly and no drag time. It does change in different contexts. 9:58 – Chuck: People do talk about load time. People have different definitions of it. 10:12: Dan: Excellent question. When you look at the different sites through Wix. Different people who build sites – load time can mean something else to everybody. It can mean when you see the MAIN text or the MAIN image. If it’s on an ECON site then how soon can they purchase or on a booking site, how long can the person book X product. I heard someone at a conference say that load time is when: HERO TEXT And HERO IMAGE are displayed. 12:14 – Chuck: What is faster React or Vue? 12:21 – NEW HOST: Not sure. It all depends. 12:34 – Dan: We are big into React. We are one of the big React users outside of Facebook. I joined Wix four years ago, and even back then we were rebuilding our framework using React. One of our main modifications is because we wanted to do server-side rendered. 13:27 – Christopher asks Dan a question. 14:16 – Dan: We are in transition in this regard. Before we were totally client-site rendered, and that was the case until middle of last year. Then we deployed... Dan: We are 100% server-side rendered now. Some things we are still using JavaScript. We have another project going on now and it’s fully CSS, and little JavaScript as possible. What you might want to do with that site is... You might get in a few months every Wix site will be visible even if JavaScript is disabled. 16:26 – Aimee adds in her comments and observations to this topic. 16:55 – Dan: We don’t want things displayed incorrectly before it lays out. We hide the content while it’s downloading then make it visible. They lay-outing are done faster, because... 17:44 – Christopher asks Dan a question. 18:04 – Dan: I got into API... Either you are moving forward or are you moving back. AKA – You are either progressing or regressing. Different stages: 1.) Development stage 2.) Pre-Production (automated tools that check the performance with specific use cases) 3.) Check it out! It’s beneficial to use these APIs. 21:11 – Christopher: What is performance APIs? 21:38 – Dan: There is a working group – Todd from Microsoft and others who are exposing the information (that is available in the browser) out into the browser. When the browser downloads a certain source (image, font, etc.) it can measure the various stages of downloading that feature.  You have these different sages of downloading this resource. The browser can measure each of these stages and then expose them to you. Basically it’s for the browser to expose this information to you and in a way that is coherent and uniform. It essentially maintains this buffer that puts performance entries sequentially. Dan continues explaining this topic in detail. 25:55 – Dan: You have this internal buffer... 28:45 – Advertisement – Sentry – They support opensource. 29:39 – Christopher: everything you are saying seems that I can use this or that tab right now... Why would I prefer the API to something visual, hypothetically? 30:03 – Dan: Three Different Stages. (See above.) This information is very, very helpful during the developmental stage. Say you got a link from someone... Dan mentions: Performance.mark 34:04 – Aimee: When you were talking about resource-ends. Many people don’t know what this is. Can you spend 2-3 minutes about how you guys are using these? Are there people can add for big bang for their buck? 34:41 – Dan: This might want to be a topic for its own podcast show. Dan gives a definition of what a resource-end means. Go back to fonts as an example. Pre-connect for example, too. 39:03 – Dan: Like I said, it’s a huge topic. You have to exercise some care. Bandwidth is limited. Make sure you aren’t blocking other resources that you do need right now. 40:02 – Aimee: Sounds like a lot of great things to tap into. Another question I have is about bundling. 40:27 – Dan: One of the things that we try to do (given that we are depending on the JavaScript we are downloading) we need to download JavaScript content to the client side. It has been shown often that JS is the most impactful resources that you need to download. You really want to be as smart as possible with that. What is even more challenging is the network protocols are changing. Dan continues to go in-depth about this topic. Dan: What we have found is that you want to strive to bundle resources together. 44:10 – Aimee: Makes sense. 44:15 – Dan continues talking about this topic. 45:23 – Chuck asks two questions. (First question is now and second question is at 51:32.) 2 Questions: 1. You gather information from web performance AI - What system is that? 45:42 – Dan: I am not the expert in that. I will try not to give misleading information. Actually let me phrase it different. There are 3rd party tools that you can use leverage in your website. IF you are building for commercial reasons I highly recommend that you use performance-monitoring solution. I am not going to advertise one because there are tons out there. We ended up rolling out our own infrastructure because our use case is different than most. At a conference I talked with a vendor and we talked about... 51:32 – 2nd Question from Charles to Dan: Now you’ve gathered this information now what to you do? What patterns? What do you look for? And how do you decide to optimize things? 54:23 – Chuck: Back to that question, Dan. How should they react to it and what are they looking for 54:41 – Dan: Three main ways: 1.) Generate alerts 2.) See trends over long period of time 3.) Looking at real-time graphs. Frontend developer pro is that likely being woken up in the middle of the night is lower. We might be looking at the real time graph after we deployed... 57:31 – Advertisement – Get a Coder Job! 58:10 – Picks! Links: JavaScript jQuery React Elixir Elm Vue Wix Window Performance Web Performance Terra Genesis Terra Genesis: Space Colony The One Thing DevChat TV – YouTube GitHub: Off Side HBO: Insecure Wix: Engineering JavaScript Riddle JavaScript Riddles for Fun and for Profit Dan Shappir’s Twitter Dan Shappir’s LinkedIn Dan Shappir’s Crunch Base Dan Shappir’s GitHub Dan Shappir’s Talk through Fluent Dan Shappir’s Medium Dan Shappir’s YouTube Talk: JavaScript riddles for fun and profit Sponsors: Code Badges Kendo UI Sentry Digital Ocean Cache Fly   Picks: Aimee: Waking up early! How to Deal with Dirty Side Effects in Your Pure Functional JavaScript Chris: Offside - Toomuchdesign Insecure TV Show Charles: Terraform - Game “The One Thing" Code Badge DevChat on YouTube Dan Wix Engineering JavaScript Riddle

All JavaScript Podcasts by Devchat.tv
JSJ 334: “Web Performance API” with Dan Shappir

All JavaScript Podcasts by Devchat.tv

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 9, 2018 67:58


Panel: Aimee Knight Charles Max Wood Christopher Ferdinandi (Boston) Special Guests: Dan Shappir (Tel Aviv) In this episode, the panel talks with Dan Shappir who is a computer software developer and performance specialist at Wix.com. As Dan states, his job is to make 100 million websites (hosted on the Wix platform) load and execute faster! Past employment includes working for companies, such as: Ericom, Ericom Software, and BackWeb. He studied at Technion Institute of Management and currently lives in Tel Aviv, Israel. The panel talks about web performance API among other things. Check it out! Show Topics: 1:29 – Charles: Let us know who you are and why you’re famous! 1:39 – “Hello!” from Dan Shappir. 2:25 – Charles: You should say that you go to EACH site EVERY day out of the millions of sites out there. 2:53 – Charles: My mom mentioned Wix to me at first. My mom teaches High School Math. 3:16 – Dan: Yes that is our mission statement. That everyone can get a website without the knowledge of how to build a website. 3:52 – Aimee makes her comments. 3:59 – Dan: On our platform we try to offer people flexibility. There are bounds and limits, but people can do their very own thing, though. To make Wix faster because as we add more features and functionality that is our goal. 4:40 – Chuck: Okay, I know how to make X perform a little bit better. You are looking at a platform that controls TONS of sites, how do you even go about that? 4:58 – Dan: It is more difficult then that. We have millions of users leveraging the platform but there are a lot of developers in Wix who are developing the platform. I don’t think anyone at Wix has a total grasp of the complexity of the platform that we built. We have hundreds of frontend people working on our platform. All of them have pieces to the kingdom. We have processes in place with code reviews and whatnot, but there is so much going on. There is a change every 2 minutes, 24/7. We need to make sure progressing instead of regressing.  6:54 – Aimee: I think it was interesting in one of the links you sent over. Because you know when something is getting worse you consider that a bug. 7:15 – Dan: It is more than a bug because if we see regression in performance then that is a problem. I can literally see any part of the organization and say, “stop” if it will 7:57 – Chuck: We are talking about performance, but what does that mean? What measures are there? 8:15: Dan: We are looking at performance can mean different things in different contents. User sites, for example, most important aspect is load time. How quickly the page loads and gets open to the viewer to that specific site. When they click something they want it instantly and no drag time. It does change in different contexts. 9:58 – Chuck: People do talk about load time. People have different definitions of it. 10:12: Dan: Excellent question. When you look at the different sites through Wix. Different people who build sites – load time can mean something else to everybody. It can mean when you see the MAIN text or the MAIN image. If it’s on an ECON site then how soon can they purchase or on a booking site, how long can the person book X product. I heard someone at a conference say that load time is when: HERO TEXT And HERO IMAGE are displayed. 12:14 – Chuck: What is faster React or Vue? 12:21 – NEW HOST: Not sure. It all depends. 12:34 – Dan: We are big into React. We are one of the big React users outside of Facebook. I joined Wix four years ago, and even back then we were rebuilding our framework using React. One of our main modifications is because we wanted to do server-side rendered. 13:27 – Christopher asks Dan a question. 14:16 – Dan: We are in transition in this regard. Before we were totally client-site rendered, and that was the case until middle of last year. Then we deployed... Dan: We are 100% server-side rendered now. Some things we are still using JavaScript. We have another project going on now and it’s fully CSS, and little JavaScript as possible. What you might want to do with that site is... You might get in a few months every Wix site will be visible even if JavaScript is disabled. 16:26 – Aimee adds in her comments and observations to this topic. 16:55 – Dan: We don’t want things displayed incorrectly before it lays out. We hide the content while it’s downloading then make it visible. They lay-outing are done faster, because... 17:44 – Christopher asks Dan a question. 18:04 – Dan: I got into API... Either you are moving forward or are you moving back. AKA – You are either progressing or regressing. Different stages: 1.) Development stage 2.) Pre-Production (automated tools that check the performance with specific use cases) 3.) Check it out! It’s beneficial to use these APIs. 21:11 – Christopher: What is performance APIs? 21:38 – Dan: There is a working group – Todd from Microsoft and others who are exposing the information (that is available in the browser) out into the browser. When the browser downloads a certain source (image, font, etc.) it can measure the various stages of downloading that feature.  You have these different sages of downloading this resource. The browser can measure each of these stages and then expose them to you. Basically it’s for the browser to expose this information to you and in a way that is coherent and uniform. It essentially maintains this buffer that puts performance entries sequentially. Dan continues explaining this topic in detail. 25:55 – Dan: You have this internal buffer... 28:45 – Advertisement – Sentry – They support opensource. 29:39 – Christopher: everything you are saying seems that I can use this or that tab right now... Why would I prefer the API to something visual, hypothetically? 30:03 – Dan: Three Different Stages. (See above.) This information is very, very helpful during the developmental stage. Say you got a link from someone... Dan mentions: Performance.mark 34:04 – Aimee: When you were talking about resource-ends. Many people don’t know what this is. Can you spend 2-3 minutes about how you guys are using these? Are there people can add for big bang for their buck? 34:41 – Dan: This might want to be a topic for its own podcast show. Dan gives a definition of what a resource-end means. Go back to fonts as an example. Pre-connect for example, too. 39:03 – Dan: Like I said, it’s a huge topic. You have to exercise some care. Bandwidth is limited. Make sure you aren’t blocking other resources that you do need right now. 40:02 – Aimee: Sounds like a lot of great things to tap into. Another question I have is about bundling. 40:27 – Dan: One of the things that we try to do (given that we are depending on the JavaScript we are downloading) we need to download JavaScript content to the client side. It has been shown often that JS is the most impactful resources that you need to download. You really want to be as smart as possible with that. What is even more challenging is the network protocols are changing. Dan continues to go in-depth about this topic. Dan: What we have found is that you want to strive to bundle resources together. 44:10 – Aimee: Makes sense. 44:15 – Dan continues talking about this topic. 45:23 – Chuck asks two questions. (First question is now and second question is at 51:32.) 2 Questions: 1. You gather information from web performance AI - What system is that? 45:42 – Dan: I am not the expert in that. I will try not to give misleading information. Actually let me phrase it different. There are 3rd party tools that you can use leverage in your website. IF you are building for commercial reasons I highly recommend that you use performance-monitoring solution. I am not going to advertise one because there are tons out there. We ended up rolling out our own infrastructure because our use case is different than most. At a conference I talked with a vendor and we talked about... 51:32 – 2nd Question from Charles to Dan: Now you’ve gathered this information now what to you do? What patterns? What do you look for? And how do you decide to optimize things? 54:23 – Chuck: Back to that question, Dan. How should they react to it and what are they looking for 54:41 – Dan: Three main ways: 1.) Generate alerts 2.) See trends over long period of time 3.) Looking at real-time graphs. Frontend developer pro is that likely being woken up in the middle of the night is lower. We might be looking at the real time graph after we deployed... 57:31 – Advertisement – Get a Coder Job! 58:10 – Picks! Links: JavaScript jQuery React Elixir Elm Vue Wix Window Performance Web Performance Terra Genesis Terra Genesis: Space Colony The One Thing DevChat TV – YouTube GitHub: Off Side HBO: Insecure Wix: Engineering JavaScript Riddle JavaScript Riddles for Fun and for Profit Dan Shappir’s Twitter Dan Shappir’s LinkedIn Dan Shappir’s Crunch Base Dan Shappir’s GitHub Dan Shappir’s Talk through Fluent Dan Shappir’s Medium Dan Shappir’s YouTube Talk: JavaScript riddles for fun and profit Sponsors: Code Badges Kendo UI Sentry Digital Ocean Cache Fly   Picks: Aimee: Waking up early! How to Deal with Dirty Side Effects in Your Pure Functional JavaScript Chris: Offside - Toomuchdesign Insecure TV Show Charles: Terraform - Game “The One Thing" Code Badge DevChat on YouTube Dan Wix Engineering JavaScript Riddle

Healthy INSIDER Podcast
SupplySide West Podcast: Using Blockchain to Drive Positive Change from Farm to Brand

Healthy INSIDER Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 19, 2018 10:41


The supply chain is becoming more connected and technology is driving transparency into the sourcing process. New solutions around blockchain can connect brands with their primary suppliers—even back to the farm—to create tangible, verifiable impacts. Christian Shearer of Regen Network and Terra Genesis discusses the potential.

brand drive farm positive change using blockchain supply side regen network terragenesis supplyside west christian shearer
Ruby Rogues
RR 380: "Deploying Ruby on Rails application using HAProxy Ingress with unicorn/puma and websockets‌" with Rahul Mahale

Ruby Rogues

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 18, 2018 60:55


Panel: Charles Max Wood Dave Kimura Eric Berry Special Guests: Rahul Mahale In this episode of Ruby Rogues, the panel talks to Rahul Mahale. Rahul is a Senior DevOps Engineer at BigBinary in India. He has also worked with SecureDB Inc., Tiny Owl, Winjit Technologies among others. In addition, he attended the University of Pune. The panel and the guest talk about Kubernetes. Show Topics: 1:25 – Swag.com for t-shirts and mugs, etc. for Ruby Rogues / DevChat.tv. 1:49 – Chuck: Why are you famous? 1:57 – Guest’s background. 4:35 – Chuck: Kubernetes – Anyone play with this? 4:49 – Panelist: Yes. Funny situation, I was working with Heroku. Heroku is very costly, but great. The story continues... 6:13 – Panelist: I was so overwhelmed with how difficult it was to launch a simple website. Now, that being said we were using the Amazon EKS, which is the Kubernetes. They don’t have nearly as much good tools, but that’s my experience. 6:48 – Chuck: I haven’t tried Kubernetes. 8:58 – Rahul: I would like to add a few comments. Managing Kubernetes service is not a big deal at the moment, but... 11:19 – Panelist: You wouldn’t recommend people using Kubernetes unless they were well versed? What is that term? 11:40 – Rahul: Not anyone could use the Kubernetes cluster. Let’s offer that complexity to another company that can handle and mange it. 13:02 – The guest continues this conversation. 14:02 – Panelist: I didn’t know that Kubernetes needed different nodes. 14:28 – Rahul continues this topic. 15:05 – What hardware requirements do they need? 15:19 – Rahul: Yes, they do need a good system. Good amount of memory. Good network space. 15:45 – Panelist asks Rahul a question.  16:30 – Rahul: Let’s answer this into two parts. Kubernetes topic is being discussed in detail. 18:41 – Chuck adds comments and asks a question. 18:58 – Rahul talks about companies and programs. Check out this timestamp to hear his thoughts. 20:42 – Another company is mentioned added to this conversation. 21:55 – Additional companies mentioned: Google, Microsoft, IBM, etc. (Rahul) 22:14 – Chuck: It’s interesting how much community plays a role into success stories. Whether or not it’s best technologies it comes down to where there are enough people to help me if I don’t know what to do. 22:43 – Rahul: People, even enterprises, are there. 23:15 – Chuck: At what point (let’s say I docked my app) should they be looking at Kubernetes? Are you waiting on traffic? How do you make that call? 23:56 – Rahul answers the questions. 26:29 – Rahul: If your application is... 27:13 – Announcement – Digital Ocean! 27:51 – Chuck: How does someone get started with Kubernetes? 27:53 – Rahul answers the question. 30:00 – Chuck: It sounds like you have an amateur setup – Dave? 30:21 – Dave: I think the problem is that there is not a Kubernetes for dummies blog post. There has always been some sort of “gottcha!” As much as these documents say that there are solutions here and there, but you will see that there are networking issues. Once you get that up and running, then there are more issues at hand. The other strange thing is that once everything seems to be working okay, and then I started getting connectivity issues. It’s definitely not an afternoon project. It takes researching and googling. At the end, it takes a direction at large that the community is investing into. 32:58 – Chuck makes additional comments. 33:21 – Dave adds more comments. Sorry bad joke – Dave. 33:40 – Topic – Virtualization. 34:32 – Having Swamp is a good idea. 34:44 – Rahul adds his comments. 36:54 – Panelist talks about virtualization and scaling. 37:45 – Rahul adds in comments about the ecosystems. 38:21 – Panelist talks about server-less functions.  39:11 – Rahul: Not every application can... 40:32 – Panelist: I guess the whole downside to... 41:07 – Rahul talks about this. 43:03 – Chuck to Eric: Any problems with Kubernetes for you? 43:05 – Eric: Yes – just spelling it! For me it feels like you are in a jet with all of these different buttons. There are 2 different types of developers. I am of DevOps-minded. That’s why we are getting solutions, and tools like Heroku to help. When I listen to this conversation, I feel quiet only because you guys are talking about spiders and I’m afraid of spiders. 44:44 – Dave to Eric: Having information and knowledge about Kubernetes will help you as a developer. Having some awareness can really help you as a developer. 45:43 – Chuck: There are all these options to know about it – they way he is talking about it sounds like it’s the person on the jet. Don’t touch the red button and don’t’ cut the wrong wire! It feels like with software – it’s a beautiful thing – you erase it and reinstall it! 46:50 – Dave: What? What are all of these crazy words?! What does this exactly mean? The visibility is definitely not there for someone who is just tinkering with it. 47:16 – Rahul: It’s not for someone who is tinkering with it. Definitely. 50:02 – Chuck: We have been talking about benefits of Kubernetes – great. What kinds of processes to setup with Kubernetes to make your life easier? 50:40 Rahul answers the question. 53:54 – Rahul’s Social Media Accounts – check them out under LINKS. 54:29 – Get a Coder Job Course Links: T-Shirts for Ruby Rogues! Get a Coder Job Course Ruby JavaScript Phoenix Heroku Amazon EKS Kubernetes Kubernetes Engine Kubernetes Setup AKS Kubernetes – Creating a single master cluster... Kubernetes GitHub Docker Rancher Learn Kubernetes Using Interactive...by Ben Hall Podcast – All Things Devops Nanobox Cloud 66 Chef Puppet Ansible Salt Stack Orange Computers Rahul Mahale’s Blog Rahul’s Talks and Workshops Rahul Mahale’s LinkedIn Rahul Mahale’s Facebook Rahul Mahale’s Kubernetes Workshop via YouTube Sponsors: Sentry Digital Ocean Get a Coder Job Course Picks: Charles Conference Game – TerraGenesis – Space Colony Book – The One Thing Dave Orange Computers Eric Cloud 66 Nanobox Rahul Podcast – All Things Devops Kubernetes

Devchat.tv Master Feed
RR 380: "Deploying Ruby on Rails application using HAProxy Ingress with unicorn/puma and websockets‌" with Rahul Mahale

Devchat.tv Master Feed

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 18, 2018 60:55


Panel: Charles Max Wood Dave Kimura Eric Berry Special Guests: Rahul Mahale In this episode of Ruby Rogues, the panel talks to Rahul Mahale. Rahul is a Senior DevOps Engineer at BigBinary in India. He has also worked with SecureDB Inc., Tiny Owl, Winjit Technologies among others. In addition, he attended the University of Pune. The panel and the guest talk about Kubernetes. Show Topics: 1:25 – Swag.com for t-shirts and mugs, etc. for Ruby Rogues / DevChat.tv. 1:49 – Chuck: Why are you famous? 1:57 – Guest’s background. 4:35 – Chuck: Kubernetes – Anyone play with this? 4:49 – Panelist: Yes. Funny situation, I was working with Heroku. Heroku is very costly, but great. The story continues... 6:13 – Panelist: I was so overwhelmed with how difficult it was to launch a simple website. Now, that being said we were using the Amazon EKS, which is the Kubernetes. They don’t have nearly as much good tools, but that’s my experience. 6:48 – Chuck: I haven’t tried Kubernetes. 8:58 – Rahul: I would like to add a few comments. Managing Kubernetes service is not a big deal at the moment, but... 11:19 – Panelist: You wouldn’t recommend people using Kubernetes unless they were well versed? What is that term? 11:40 – Rahul: Not anyone could use the Kubernetes cluster. Let’s offer that complexity to another company that can handle and mange it. 13:02 – The guest continues this conversation. 14:02 – Panelist: I didn’t know that Kubernetes needed different nodes. 14:28 – Rahul continues this topic. 15:05 – What hardware requirements do they need? 15:19 – Rahul: Yes, they do need a good system. Good amount of memory. Good network space. 15:45 – Panelist asks Rahul a question.  16:30 – Rahul: Let’s answer this into two parts. Kubernetes topic is being discussed in detail. 18:41 – Chuck adds comments and asks a question. 18:58 – Rahul talks about companies and programs. Check out this timestamp to hear his thoughts. 20:42 – Another company is mentioned added to this conversation. 21:55 – Additional companies mentioned: Google, Microsoft, IBM, etc. (Rahul) 22:14 – Chuck: It’s interesting how much community plays a role into success stories. Whether or not it’s best technologies it comes down to where there are enough people to help me if I don’t know what to do. 22:43 – Rahul: People, even enterprises, are there. 23:15 – Chuck: At what point (let’s say I docked my app) should they be looking at Kubernetes? Are you waiting on traffic? How do you make that call? 23:56 – Rahul answers the questions. 26:29 – Rahul: If your application is... 27:13 – Announcement – Digital Ocean! 27:51 – Chuck: How does someone get started with Kubernetes? 27:53 – Rahul answers the question. 30:00 – Chuck: It sounds like you have an amateur setup – Dave? 30:21 – Dave: I think the problem is that there is not a Kubernetes for dummies blog post. There has always been some sort of “gottcha!” As much as these documents say that there are solutions here and there, but you will see that there are networking issues. Once you get that up and running, then there are more issues at hand. The other strange thing is that once everything seems to be working okay, and then I started getting connectivity issues. It’s definitely not an afternoon project. It takes researching and googling. At the end, it takes a direction at large that the community is investing into. 32:58 – Chuck makes additional comments. 33:21 – Dave adds more comments. Sorry bad joke – Dave. 33:40 – Topic – Virtualization. 34:32 – Having Swamp is a good idea. 34:44 – Rahul adds his comments. 36:54 – Panelist talks about virtualization and scaling. 37:45 – Rahul adds in comments about the ecosystems. 38:21 – Panelist talks about server-less functions.  39:11 – Rahul: Not every application can... 40:32 – Panelist: I guess the whole downside to... 41:07 – Rahul talks about this. 43:03 – Chuck to Eric: Any problems with Kubernetes for you? 43:05 – Eric: Yes – just spelling it! For me it feels like you are in a jet with all of these different buttons. There are 2 different types of developers. I am of DevOps-minded. That’s why we are getting solutions, and tools like Heroku to help. When I listen to this conversation, I feel quiet only because you guys are talking about spiders and I’m afraid of spiders. 44:44 – Dave to Eric: Having information and knowledge about Kubernetes will help you as a developer. Having some awareness can really help you as a developer. 45:43 – Chuck: There are all these options to know about it – they way he is talking about it sounds like it’s the person on the jet. Don’t touch the red button and don’t’ cut the wrong wire! It feels like with software – it’s a beautiful thing – you erase it and reinstall it! 46:50 – Dave: What? What are all of these crazy words?! What does this exactly mean? The visibility is definitely not there for someone who is just tinkering with it. 47:16 – Rahul: It’s not for someone who is tinkering with it. Definitely. 50:02 – Chuck: We have been talking about benefits of Kubernetes – great. What kinds of processes to setup with Kubernetes to make your life easier? 50:40 Rahul answers the question. 53:54 – Rahul’s Social Media Accounts – check them out under LINKS. 54:29 – Get a Coder Job Course Links: T-Shirts for Ruby Rogues! Get a Coder Job Course Ruby JavaScript Phoenix Heroku Amazon EKS Kubernetes Kubernetes Engine Kubernetes Setup AKS Kubernetes – Creating a single master cluster... Kubernetes GitHub Docker Rancher Learn Kubernetes Using Interactive...by Ben Hall Podcast – All Things Devops Nanobox Cloud 66 Chef Puppet Ansible Salt Stack Orange Computers Rahul Mahale’s Blog Rahul’s Talks and Workshops Rahul Mahale’s LinkedIn Rahul Mahale’s Facebook Rahul Mahale’s Kubernetes Workshop via YouTube Sponsors: Sentry Digital Ocean Get a Coder Job Course Picks: Charles Conference Game – TerraGenesis – Space Colony Book – The One Thing Dave Orange Computers Eric Cloud 66 Nanobox Rahul Podcast – All Things Devops Kubernetes

Devchat.tv Master Feed
EMx 019: Brooklyn Zelenka: Elixir I assume Witchcraft, Exceptional, and so on?

Devchat.tv Master Feed

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 18, 2018 60:38


Panel: Charles Max Wood Mark Ericksen Josh Adams Eric Berry Special Guest: Brooklyn Zelenka In this episode of Elixir Mix, the panel talks to Brooklyn Zelenka who lives in Vancouver, Canada. Listen to the panel and the guest talk about various topics, such as: different Elixir libraries, Quark, Witchcraft, Exceptional, ConsenSys, Meetup, among others. Show Topics: 1:33 – Let’s talk about Exceptional for that library? 1:40 – Brooklyn: Sure, it helps with flow. 3:33 – You are making Exceptional more accessible? 3:35 – Brooklyn: Yes, more conceptual. 3:49 – Panelist: What’s the adaptation like? 4:09 – Brooklyn: People seem to like it. 4:33 – Panelist: What were you doing before that? 4:42 – Brooklyn: First language was JavaScript. There is a huge Ruby community. Tons of Ruby refugees looking for help. 5:27 – There seems to be a large migration from Ruby to Elixir. Have you played with Ruby at all? 5:40 – Brooklyn: Yes, I have used Ruby for a couple of years. There is such an interest in Elixir from the Ruby community. They are such different languages. The aesthetic is similar, and the way the languages are set-up is completely different. 6:41 – Panelist: So not having three or four different alien methods? I have been developing Elixr for a while now, but Ruby doesn’t solve modern-day problems. The fact that you have been working with Elixir since 2014 is amazing. 7:24 – Brooklyn: The first library I wrote was Quark. Then that led into Witchcraft. 10:49 – Panelist adds in his comments. 11:06 – Brooklyn: There are a lot of different things I would love to see in the libraries. At what point do we say that this is the default style in Elixir? My keynote was exactly about this at a conference this year. Elixir hits a nice spot in the program place. It’s very accessible. I’ve brought into these concepts because of Elixir. 12:37 – Let’s talk Exceptions. Will it become apart of core? 13:14 – Brooklyn: I wouldn’t mind that it would become apart of core. 15:10 – Any other questions around Exceptional or Exception or other libraries? 15:25 – Panelist: Let’s change topics. 15:30 – Brooklyn has her own company now. 15:52 – Panelist: Good job on Roberts Overload! 16:00 – Panelist: Where does block chain and Elixir meet? 16:08 – Brooklyn answers this question. 17:16 – Brooklyn: Not all block chains are... 19:02 – Brooklyn: Another good fit would be... 19:33 – Panelist: My company is apart of ConsenSys. I hear a lot about the block chain and others. How can Elixir help the block chain? (20:15) You mentioned earlier that Elixir could solve a lot of the issues that bock chain is having. Can you elaborate on this? 20:21 – Brooklyn answers this question – here – check it out! 21:21 – Brooklyn: By bringing in these concepts... 22:16 – Brooklyn makes a huge podcast announcement!! Breaking News! 22:37 – What does that mean – messages on a... 24:06 – Advertisement – Digital Ocean! 24:43 – The mail messages contents does that sit on the ledger or... 25:01 – Brooklyn talks about this topic in detail. 26:00 – Brooklyn: There is a distribution of control. I am going to have to run a program to check when a message comes in – I would like that to be hooked up to my UI, ideally. 26:35 – Panelist: You are a fascinating person! 26:45 – Chuck: You also do Elixir training for people? 26:56 – Yes! We help companies and go to conferences. This is for zero experience with Elixir. Over the course of a couple of days to give people confidence production in Elixir. It won’t give you all of the knowledge, but it helps. This also gives people access to me, and my business partner, to use us for questions and so on. 28:56 – You live in Vancouver. What is the Elixir community – through Meetup – what is the temperature like there for Elixir or Ruby, etc.? What are the trends looking like? 29:31 – Brooklyn: Yes, check us out at Meetup. 35:18 – Panelist: I think that is interesting on your opinions on GO with your background. 35:35 – Brooklyn continues her ideas on this topic. It’s not to say that GO is the worse language ever, but from what I have seen that it’s a nice experience in Elixir that things work. All the libraries integrate nicely. There is a style and flavor that is friendly. You get the friendliness with all of this power. You can scale up very nicely from a single node. 37:47 – Where can Elixir “should” go and could go? 38:21 – Brooklyn answers this question and others. 39:21 – Dialyxir / Elixir. 41:27 – Dialyxir overall is pretty nice and it gets the job done with what Elixir needs it to do. Type system. 42:09 – The pre-existing eco-system isn’t built for it. You don’t know if it’s safe to run? There is no way to know about this. The overhead for the programmer tends to be really high. Why don’t we add things like – adding property checks – to ensure that you know how this thing will behave when it run. Using some other techniques – not just in tests – but integrate it into the core workflow. This is really important 44:22 – Advertisement! 45:03 – Panelist chimes in. 45:21 – Brooklyn: Have you seen Alpaca? I am sure it’s 1.0 now. It runs on the beam. 46:15 – Panelist adds comments. 46:25 – Brooklyn: This is why I brought up RChain earlier in the conversation. 47:01 – Block Chain. 48:17 – Panelist talks. 48:53 – Brooklyn: At the application level – one of my projects is having a language that will run... 51:17 – Chuck: I am still learning Elixir. So this is way beyond from where I am at. Let’s do some picks! Links: Coder Job eBook by Charles Max Wood Elixir Rails GO Quark Witchcraft Type Class Algae Exceptional Phoenix Exceptional Robot Overload Raft Consensus Algorithm Ethereum Status Codes Dialyxir Expede Type Class Alpaca Kaizen Matt Diep House ConsenSys / Ethql Metabase TerraGenesis TerraGenesis – Space Colony Wabi-Sabi RChain Brooklyn’s Medium Brooklyn’s Meetup in Vancouver Brooklyn’s GitHub Brooklyn’s LinkedIn Brooklyn – Lambda Conference 2018 Sponsors: Get a Coder Job Digital Ocean Code Badges Cache Fly Picks: Charles Make some incremental step forward – adding onto Mark’s pick - Kaizen. TerraGenesis TerraGenesis – Space Colony Honest feedback! What can I change? Phoenix Mark Workspace Environment: Kaizen – Change for the Better = Improvement. Josh Article – Value-Oriented Programming Eric Library – ConsenSys / Ethql Metabase Brooklyn Wabi-Sabi – seeing the beauty in things that imperfect.

All Ruby Podcasts by Devchat.tv
RR 380: "Deploying Ruby on Rails application using HAProxy Ingress with unicorn/puma and websockets‌" with Rahul Mahale

All Ruby Podcasts by Devchat.tv

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 18, 2018 60:55


Panel: Charles Max Wood Dave Kimura Eric Berry Special Guests: Rahul Mahale In this episode of Ruby Rogues, the panel talks to Rahul Mahale. Rahul is a Senior DevOps Engineer at BigBinary in India. He has also worked with SecureDB Inc., Tiny Owl, Winjit Technologies among others. In addition, he attended the University of Pune. The panel and the guest talk about Kubernetes. Show Topics: 1:25 – Swag.com for t-shirts and mugs, etc. for Ruby Rogues / DevChat.tv. 1:49 – Chuck: Why are you famous? 1:57 – Guest’s background. 4:35 – Chuck: Kubernetes – Anyone play with this? 4:49 – Panelist: Yes. Funny situation, I was working with Heroku. Heroku is very costly, but great. The story continues... 6:13 – Panelist: I was so overwhelmed with how difficult it was to launch a simple website. Now, that being said we were using the Amazon EKS, which is the Kubernetes. They don’t have nearly as much good tools, but that’s my experience. 6:48 – Chuck: I haven’t tried Kubernetes. 8:58 – Rahul: I would like to add a few comments. Managing Kubernetes service is not a big deal at the moment, but... 11:19 – Panelist: You wouldn’t recommend people using Kubernetes unless they were well versed? What is that term? 11:40 – Rahul: Not anyone could use the Kubernetes cluster. Let’s offer that complexity to another company that can handle and mange it. 13:02 – The guest continues this conversation. 14:02 – Panelist: I didn’t know that Kubernetes needed different nodes. 14:28 – Rahul continues this topic. 15:05 – What hardware requirements do they need? 15:19 – Rahul: Yes, they do need a good system. Good amount of memory. Good network space. 15:45 – Panelist asks Rahul a question.  16:30 – Rahul: Let’s answer this into two parts. Kubernetes topic is being discussed in detail. 18:41 – Chuck adds comments and asks a question. 18:58 – Rahul talks about companies and programs. Check out this timestamp to hear his thoughts. 20:42 – Another company is mentioned added to this conversation. 21:55 – Additional companies mentioned: Google, Microsoft, IBM, etc. (Rahul) 22:14 – Chuck: It’s interesting how much community plays a role into success stories. Whether or not it’s best technologies it comes down to where there are enough people to help me if I don’t know what to do. 22:43 – Rahul: People, even enterprises, are there. 23:15 – Chuck: At what point (let’s say I docked my app) should they be looking at Kubernetes? Are you waiting on traffic? How do you make that call? 23:56 – Rahul answers the questions. 26:29 – Rahul: If your application is... 27:13 – Announcement – Digital Ocean! 27:51 – Chuck: How does someone get started with Kubernetes? 27:53 – Rahul answers the question. 30:00 – Chuck: It sounds like you have an amateur setup – Dave? 30:21 – Dave: I think the problem is that there is not a Kubernetes for dummies blog post. There has always been some sort of “gottcha!” As much as these documents say that there are solutions here and there, but you will see that there are networking issues. Once you get that up and running, then there are more issues at hand. The other strange thing is that once everything seems to be working okay, and then I started getting connectivity issues. It’s definitely not an afternoon project. It takes researching and googling. At the end, it takes a direction at large that the community is investing into. 32:58 – Chuck makes additional comments. 33:21 – Dave adds more comments. Sorry bad joke – Dave. 33:40 – Topic – Virtualization. 34:32 – Having Swamp is a good idea. 34:44 – Rahul adds his comments. 36:54 – Panelist talks about virtualization and scaling. 37:45 – Rahul adds in comments about the ecosystems. 38:21 – Panelist talks about server-less functions.  39:11 – Rahul: Not every application can... 40:32 – Panelist: I guess the whole downside to... 41:07 – Rahul talks about this. 43:03 – Chuck to Eric: Any problems with Kubernetes for you? 43:05 – Eric: Yes – just spelling it! For me it feels like you are in a jet with all of these different buttons. There are 2 different types of developers. I am of DevOps-minded. That’s why we are getting solutions, and tools like Heroku to help. When I listen to this conversation, I feel quiet only because you guys are talking about spiders and I’m afraid of spiders. 44:44 – Dave to Eric: Having information and knowledge about Kubernetes will help you as a developer. Having some awareness can really help you as a developer. 45:43 – Chuck: There are all these options to know about it – they way he is talking about it sounds like it’s the person on the jet. Don’t touch the red button and don’t’ cut the wrong wire! It feels like with software – it’s a beautiful thing – you erase it and reinstall it! 46:50 – Dave: What? What are all of these crazy words?! What does this exactly mean? The visibility is definitely not there for someone who is just tinkering with it. 47:16 – Rahul: It’s not for someone who is tinkering with it. Definitely. 50:02 – Chuck: We have been talking about benefits of Kubernetes – great. What kinds of processes to setup with Kubernetes to make your life easier? 50:40 Rahul answers the question. 53:54 – Rahul’s Social Media Accounts – check them out under LINKS. 54:29 – Get a Coder Job Course Links: T-Shirts for Ruby Rogues! Get a Coder Job Course Ruby JavaScript Phoenix Heroku Amazon EKS Kubernetes Kubernetes Engine Kubernetes Setup AKS Kubernetes – Creating a single master cluster... Kubernetes GitHub Docker Rancher Learn Kubernetes Using Interactive...by Ben Hall Podcast – All Things Devops Nanobox Cloud 66 Chef Puppet Ansible Salt Stack Orange Computers Rahul Mahale’s Blog Rahul’s Talks and Workshops Rahul Mahale’s LinkedIn Rahul Mahale’s Facebook Rahul Mahale’s Kubernetes Workshop via YouTube Sponsors: Sentry Digital Ocean Get a Coder Job Course Picks: Charles Conference Game – TerraGenesis – Space Colony Book – The One Thing Dave Orange Computers Eric Cloud 66 Nanobox Rahul Podcast – All Things Devops Kubernetes

Elixir Mix
EMx 019: Brooklyn Zelenka: Elixir I assume Witchcraft, Exceptional, and so on?

Elixir Mix

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 18, 2018 60:38


Panel: Charles Max Wood Mark Ericksen Josh Adams Eric Berry Special Guest: Brooklyn Zelenka In this episode of Elixir Mix, the panel talks to Brooklyn Zelenka who lives in Vancouver, Canada. Listen to the panel and the guest talk about various topics, such as: different Elixir libraries, Quark, Witchcraft, Exceptional, ConsenSys, Meetup, among others. Show Topics: 1:33 – Let’s talk about Exceptional for that library? 1:40 – Brooklyn: Sure, it helps with flow. 3:33 – You are making Exceptional more accessible? 3:35 – Brooklyn: Yes, more conceptual. 3:49 – Panelist: What’s the adaptation like? 4:09 – Brooklyn: People seem to like it. 4:33 – Panelist: What were you doing before that? 4:42 – Brooklyn: First language was JavaScript. There is a huge Ruby community. Tons of Ruby refugees looking for help. 5:27 – There seems to be a large migration from Ruby to Elixir. Have you played with Ruby at all? 5:40 – Brooklyn: Yes, I have used Ruby for a couple of years. There is such an interest in Elixir from the Ruby community. They are such different languages. The aesthetic is similar, and the way the languages are set-up is completely different. 6:41 – Panelist: So not having three or four different alien methods? I have been developing Elixr for a while now, but Ruby doesn’t solve modern-day problems. The fact that you have been working with Elixir since 2014 is amazing. 7:24 – Brooklyn: The first library I wrote was Quark. Then that led into Witchcraft. 10:49 – Panelist adds in his comments. 11:06 – Brooklyn: There are a lot of different things I would love to see in the libraries. At what point do we say that this is the default style in Elixir? My keynote was exactly about this at a conference this year. Elixir hits a nice spot in the program place. It’s very accessible. I’ve brought into these concepts because of Elixir. 12:37 – Let’s talk Exceptions. Will it become apart of core? 13:14 – Brooklyn: I wouldn’t mind that it would become apart of core. 15:10 – Any other questions around Exceptional or Exception or other libraries? 15:25 – Panelist: Let’s change topics. 15:30 – Brooklyn has her own company now. 15:52 – Panelist: Good job on Roberts Overload! 16:00 – Panelist: Where does block chain and Elixir meet? 16:08 – Brooklyn answers this question. 17:16 – Brooklyn: Not all block chains are... 19:02 – Brooklyn: Another good fit would be... 19:33 – Panelist: My company is apart of ConsenSys. I hear a lot about the block chain and others. How can Elixir help the block chain? (20:15) You mentioned earlier that Elixir could solve a lot of the issues that bock chain is having. Can you elaborate on this? 20:21 – Brooklyn answers this question – here – check it out! 21:21 – Brooklyn: By bringing in these concepts... 22:16 – Brooklyn makes a huge podcast announcement!! Breaking News! 22:37 – What does that mean – messages on a... 24:06 – Advertisement – Digital Ocean! 24:43 – The mail messages contents does that sit on the ledger or... 25:01 – Brooklyn talks about this topic in detail. 26:00 – Brooklyn: There is a distribution of control. I am going to have to run a program to check when a message comes in – I would like that to be hooked up to my UI, ideally. 26:35 – Panelist: You are a fascinating person! 26:45 – Chuck: You also do Elixir training for people? 26:56 – Yes! We help companies and go to conferences. This is for zero experience with Elixir. Over the course of a couple of days to give people confidence production in Elixir. It won’t give you all of the knowledge, but it helps. This also gives people access to me, and my business partner, to use us for questions and so on. 28:56 – You live in Vancouver. What is the Elixir community – through Meetup – what is the temperature like there for Elixir or Ruby, etc.? What are the trends looking like? 29:31 – Brooklyn: Yes, check us out at Meetup. 35:18 – Panelist: I think that is interesting on your opinions on GO with your background. 35:35 – Brooklyn continues her ideas on this topic. It’s not to say that GO is the worse language ever, but from what I have seen that it’s a nice experience in Elixir that things work. All the libraries integrate nicely. There is a style and flavor that is friendly. You get the friendliness with all of this power. You can scale up very nicely from a single node. 37:47 – Where can Elixir “should” go and could go? 38:21 – Brooklyn answers this question and others. 39:21 – Dialyxir / Elixir. 41:27 – Dialyxir overall is pretty nice and it gets the job done with what Elixir needs it to do. Type system. 42:09 – The pre-existing eco-system isn’t built for it. You don’t know if it’s safe to run? There is no way to know about this. The overhead for the programmer tends to be really high. Why don’t we add things like – adding property checks – to ensure that you know how this thing will behave when it run. Using some other techniques – not just in tests – but integrate it into the core workflow. This is really important 44:22 – Advertisement! 45:03 – Panelist chimes in. 45:21 – Brooklyn: Have you seen Alpaca? I am sure it’s 1.0 now. It runs on the beam. 46:15 – Panelist adds comments. 46:25 – Brooklyn: This is why I brought up RChain earlier in the conversation. 47:01 – Block Chain. 48:17 – Panelist talks. 48:53 – Brooklyn: At the application level – one of my projects is having a language that will run... 51:17 – Chuck: I am still learning Elixir. So this is way beyond from where I am at. Let’s do some picks! Links: Coder Job eBook by Charles Max Wood Elixir Rails GO Quark Witchcraft Type Class Algae Exceptional Phoenix Exceptional Robot Overload Raft Consensus Algorithm Ethereum Status Codes Dialyxir Expede Type Class Alpaca Kaizen Matt Diep House ConsenSys / Ethql Metabase TerraGenesis TerraGenesis – Space Colony Wabi-Sabi RChain Brooklyn’s Medium Brooklyn’s Meetup in Vancouver Brooklyn’s GitHub Brooklyn’s LinkedIn Brooklyn – Lambda Conference 2018 Sponsors: Get a Coder Job Digital Ocean Code Badges Cache Fly Picks: Charles Make some incremental step forward – adding onto Mark’s pick - Kaizen. TerraGenesis TerraGenesis – Space Colony Honest feedback! What can I change? Phoenix Mark Workspace Environment: Kaizen – Change for the Better = Improvement. Josh Article – Value-Oriented Programming Eric Library – ConsenSys / Ethql Metabase Brooklyn Wabi-Sabi – seeing the beauty in things that imperfect.

Discount Gaming
Episode 11 - the TerraFormers

Discount Gaming

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 28, 2018 144:03


In this episode, we go over some things that have hit the news recently, and we review the free mobile game Terragenesis. Come on in and join us on our weekly quest of random.

terragenesis
Legends of S.H.I.E.L.D.: An Unofficial Marvel Agents Of S.H.I.E.L.D. Fan Podcast
The Inhumans Havoc In The Hidden Land (A Marvel Comic Universe Podcast) LoS215

Legends of S.H.I.E.L.D.: An Unofficial Marvel Agents Of S.H.I.E.L.D. Fan Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 9, 2017 69:00


The Legends Of S.H.I.E.L.D. Director Stargate Pioneer, Agent Lauren, Agent Haley and Consultant Michelle discuss The Inhumans seventh episode ”Havoc In The Hidden Land.” They also run down the Marvel news roundup and discuss listener feedback. Specific topics include: The Inhumans is a first draft, how the Inhumans get all that great Earth stuff on their hidden moon base, how terrible Black Bolt is at negotiating, how Zyrtec can save the Inhumans' powers, and why the Inhumans will be Carnies.   THIS TIME ON LEGENDS OF S.H.I.E.L.D.:   Inhumans ”Havoc In The Hidden Land” Marvel News Roundup Listener Feedback     THE INHUMANS “HAVOC IN THE HIDDEN LAND” [3:29]   THE INHUMANS “HAVOC IN THE HIDDEN LAND”   ABC aired Marvel’s The Inhumans seventh episode on Friday, November 3rd, 2017 to a rating of 1.96   Directed By: Chris Fisher http://www.imdb.com/name/nm1084723/?ref_=fn_al_nm_1#director 2nd Discussion Appearance on Legends Of S.H.I.E.L.D.! Previous appearances: Episode 207: Inhumans 1x03 "Divide and Conquer" 18 credits starting in 2002 1 x Chuck 8 x Cold Case 2 x Eureka 2 x Hawaii 5-0 10 x Warehouse 13 1 x The Bridge 1 x Supergirl 17 Person Of Interest 5 x The Magicians 2 x Inhumans   Written By: Quinton Peeples http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0670266/?ref_=fn_al_nm_1#writer 3rd Discussion Appearance on Legends Of S.H.I.E.L.D.! Previous appearances: 190: Iron Fist 1x03 "Rolling Thunder Cannon Punch" 201: Iron Fist 1x10 Black Tiger Steals Heart 16 credits since 1993 3 x Flashforward 1 x The Last Ship 3 x 11.22.63 2 x Iron Fist 1 x The Inhumans ALSO: Producers for Flashforward, The Last Ship, 11.22.63, Iron Fist   “HAVOC IN THE HIDDEN LAND”   Meaning of “Havoc In The Hidden Land”   Cold Opening Royal Family running through the forest after Auran, Flora, Declan and others Maximus and Declan’s research exposed Maximus wants to go through terragenesis again   Team Wraps Gorgon In Sheet Under tree Karnak kills Auran   Crystal Travels To The Throne Room via Lockjaw With Team Gorgon is dead Midday Parley   Royal Family Debates Parley is delaying tactic What if…..Parley doesn’t work   Triton Emerges at the beach   Attilan’s Bunker On The Moon Declan’s having trouble keeping up Medusa is having trouble keeping up too Black Bolt lies Insults Medusa Plan: War Preparation   Auran Wakes Questions Maximus’ motivation He did so well….for a human   Karnak Understands Declan’s Process None of us are safe   Maximus Holds Gorgon Memorial   Wind on the moon?   Parley Maximus “Accepts” the terms Maximus gets a terragenesis Maximus reneges - declines the offer after the scientist is transferred Black Bolt vows to kill Maximus   Declan Shows Maximus His Work Maximus wants to choose his powers Terragenesis is….. Second Terragenesis will transform both Inhumans and Humans Utilities are sabotaged   Medusa Consoles Black Bolt First Quiet Room visit Nothing is irredeemable Karnak disagrees Gorgon can be brought back Karnak’s “certainty” has changed   Auran and Karnak Fight In Viewing Room Karnak’s powers - “This is kind of important. Let’s get this right” Karnak needs Auran’s DNA … for Gorgon   Crystal Cares For “Dave”   Gorgon’s Second Terragenesis Auran is afraid of needles Auran’s powers may be changing Karnak’s powers may be changing too Karnak and Auran Flee separately   Terragenesis Camber Is a Phone Booth How does Maximus know what a phone booth looks like? Gorgon’s body is discovered Surveillance is down Alarms   Maximus’ Men Versus Triton - Maximus versus Triton - Brother against Brother - Maximus dies, Attilan’s dome is destroyed   Gorgon the monster reanimates   Main Cast:   Anson Mount as Black Bolt: (Bit parts in Ally McBeal, Sex In The City, Smallville, Lost, & Dollhouse. More Substantive roles in Third Watch, The Mountain, Line Of Fire, Conviction, and Hell On Wheels. Also was cast in the films Boiler Room, The Battle Of Shaker Heights, Non-Stop and Mr. Right among others). http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0609845/?ref_=fn_al_nm_1#actor   Serinda Swan as Medusa: (Bit parts in Blood Ties, Psych, Supernatural, Smallville, Hawaii Five-O, The Tomorrow People, and Chicago Fire. More substantive parts in Breakout Kings, Graceland and Ballers. Also in films TRON: Legacy, Creature, and Sister.) http://www.imdb.com/name/nm2100657/?ref_=fn_al_nm_1   Ken Leung as Karnak: (Featured in Rush Hour, A.I. Artificial Intelligence, Vanilla Sky, X-Men: The Last Stand, Star Wars: The Force Awakens. Also found in TV series Law & Order, Lost, Deception, Person Of Interest, Zero Hour, and The Night Shift.) http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0504962/?ref_=fn_al_nm_1#actor   Eme Ikwuakor as Gorgon: (Seen in other TV series like Silicon Valley, Castle, Hawaii Five-O, We Are Angels, Extant,and Colony). http://www.imdb.com/name/nm2726710/?ref_=fn_al_nm_1   Isabelle Cornish as Crystal: (Also seen in Rescue Special Ops, Dance Academy, Home And Away, Puberty Blues, and Australia Day) http://www.imdb.com/name/nm4498368/?ref_=fn_al_nm_1#actress   Ellen Woglom as Louise: (Bigger Role in Californication and Outlaw. Also seen in The Bernie Mac Show, Criminal Minds, The O.C., Scandal, Chicago Fire, Chicago PD, and Castle ) http://www.imdb.com/name/nm1957978/?ref_=fn_al_nm_1#actress   Iwan Rheon as Maximus: (Game Of Thrones) http://www.imdb.com/name/nm3701064/?ref_=fn_al_nm_1#actor   Lockjaw:   Recurring Sonya Balmores as Auran:   Guest:   Mike Moh as Triton:   Nicola Peltz as a human   Marco Rodriguez as Kitang:   Tom Wright:   Michael Buie as Agon:   Tanya Clarke as Rynda:   Ty Quiamboa as a surfer   Henry Ian Cusick as Evan Declan:   NEWS [41:43]   THOR: RAGNAROK   Cast of Thor: Ragnarok + James Corden perform “Thor: Ragnarok 4D” https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8atgsWFfDOg   Thor: Ragnarok originally had a John Hughes style flashback https://io9.gizmodo.com/thor-ragnarok-originally-had-a-silly-john-hughes-styl-1820157009   BLACK PANTHER & BEYOND   Wolverine vs. Black Panther in fan trailer https://io9.gizmodo.com/black-panther-takes-on-wolverine-in-ambitious-fan-trail-1820157854 -music from Sunshine, 300, Black Panther trailer   FEEDBACK [46:19]   TWITTER   https://twitter.com/adanagirl/status/927217457965789185 Christy‏ @adanagirl FollowingFollowing @adanagirl More I assume this means @MeredthSalenger has reached lanyard status. @pattonoswalt #AgentsofSHIELD @LegendsofSHIELD http://people.com/tv/patton-oswalt-meredith-salenger-married/   10:54 AM - 5 Nov 2017   https://twitter.com/badgerspoon/status/926440388650512384 badgerspoon‏ @badgerspoon FollowFollow @badgerspoon More @LegendsofSHIELD 8:26 AM - 3 Nov 2017 https://www.buzzfeed.com/jamiejirak1/reasons-you-need-to-watch-agents-of-shield-right-now?utm_term=.ayd96L8v2#.nv0mJGADK   https://twitter.com/MrParacletes/status/926502182303789057 Dr. Gnome to you‏ @MrParacletes FollowFollow @MrParacletes More @LegendsofSHIELD May need to redo the podcast intro again. Lol https://moviepilot.com/p/avengers-4-set-photos-tony-stark-shield-suit/4422667?utm_source=fb-stream-post&utm_medium=facebook&utm_campaign=new-avengers-4-set-photos-tease-tony-stark-agent-of-shield   12:31 PM - 3 Nov 2017   OUTRO [52:31]   Haley, Lauren and Stargate Pioneer love to hear back from you about your top 5 Marvel character lists, your science of Marvel questions, who would you pick in an all-female Avenger team, or who’s Marvel abs you would like to see. Call the voicemail line at 1-844-THE-BUS1 or 844-843-2871.                    Join Legends Of S.H.I.E.L.D. next time as the hosts discuss the The Defenders sixth episode “Ashes, Ashes” on Thursday November 9th, 2017. You can listen in live when we record Sunday Afternoons at 1:00 PM Eastern time or Thursday Evenings at 9:00 PM ET at Geeks.live (Also streamed live on Spreaker.com). Contact Info: Please see http://www.legendsofshield.com for all of our contact information or call our voicemail line at 1-844-THE-BUS1 or 844-843-2871   Don’t forget to go check out our spin-off podcast, Legends Of S.H.I.E.L.D..: Longbox Edition for your weekly Marvel comic book release run-down with segments by Black Adam on S.H.I.E.L.D. comics, Lauren on Mutant Comics and Anthony with his Spider-Man web down. Legends Of S.H.I.E.L.D.: Longbox Edition is also available on the GonnaGeek.com podcast network.   Legends Of S.H.I.E.L.D. Is a Proud Member Of The GonnaGeek Network (gonnageek.com).   This podcast was recorded on Sunday November 5th, 2017.   Standby for your S.H.I.E.L.D. debriefing ---   Audio and Video Production by Stargate Pioneer of GonnaGeek.com.

Suplex The Sticks : A Gaming Podcast
Episode 10 : TerraGenesis, Rabbids, Madden, & More!

Suplex The Sticks : A Gaming Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 30, 2017 69:02


This week we interview Alexander, the sole developer of TerraGenesis! We also talk about Davids first impressions of Mario & Rabbids Kingdom, Chris Talks Mario, and we get into the news yo. Stay tuned! TerraGenesis info - twitter.com/settlethestars facebook.com/TerraGenesisGame instagram.com/TerraGenesisGame Suplex The Sticks info - twitter.com/suplexthesticks instagram.com/suplexthesticks facebook.com/suplexthesticks soundcloud.com/suplexthesticks

davids rabbids terragenesis
Indie Insider Podcast - Black Shell Media
Indie Insider #37 – Alexander Winn, TerraGenesis

Indie Insider Podcast - Black Shell Media

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 5, 2017 47:26


  This week’s guest: Alexander Winn, founder of EdgeWorks Entertainment and creator of the hit app, TerraGenesis! Topics discussed: Developing 24 apps before finally hitting it big The constant grind of bug-fixes and audience response Developing and managing a community around your game The pros and cons of developing solo …and much more! ​ Hey […]

Investing in Regenerative Agriculture
13 Gregory Landua, the role of blockchain in regenerative agriculture, and much more

Investing in Regenerative Agriculture

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 4, 2017 43:50


Co-Founder of Terra Genesis and how to bring diversity to the market and much more. ---------------------------------------------------------- Welcome to Investing in Regenerative Agriculture and Food. Join our Gumroad community, discover the tiers and exclusive benefits here: https://gumroad.com/investinginregenag Other ways to support my work: - Share the podcast - Give a 5-star rating - Or buy me a coffee… or a meal! www.Ko-fi.com/regenerativeagriculture ----------------------------------------------------------- This time I interview Gregory Landua founder and CEO of www.terra-genesis.com an international regenerative design consultancy. His goal is to “transfer as much of the agriculture landscape as possible, to draw down carbon and uplift the local communities” To do that we need to look systemically and target the businesses who are making the big purchases and adding value to the ingredients. Then we dived into the difficulties of “The logistics of bringing diversity to the market place”. Everything is build around mono crops, coming from a few immense farms and a few players spread to very diverse customers (us). “If a farmer no longer has to optimise for a single crop in order to sell bulk and have very low margins, but could sell 5 or even 10 different crops of of the same piece of land. And have those crops efficiently distributed to all of the different buyers, in a way that system of supply can aggregate at the appropriate scales and then distribute at the appropriate scales. We would have a system of supply which can meet a healthy ecosystem where it’s at.” A potential solution: software to allow distributed purchases from diverse agri eco systems. That’s why Gregory and his team are working on Agrispecific Blockchains. Tips from Gregory on how to start in impact investing in Regenerative Agriculture: - Where are places where I already have some ideas on the extractive economy looks like. If it’s vegetables, or commodities, te coffee, cosmetics, or real estate. - And then ask yourself the question: “what might a play look like in the new disruptive, distributed, regenerative economy in this place where I’m already excited about?” Feedback, comments? Please share via: www.twitter.com/koenvanseijen If you want to receive an email when I upload a new episode, subscribe here eepurl.com/cxU33P The above references an opinion and is for information purposes only. It is not intended to be investment advice. Seek a duly licensed professional for investment advice.

The Kyle Thiermann Show
#36 Terra Genesis - Ethan Roland

The Kyle Thiermann Show

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 12, 2017 59:29


i tunes stitcher Ethan Roland is a founder of Terra Genesis International and the Regenerative Enterprise Institute. With on-the-ground experience in 34 countries, he has designed more than 3000 acres of Regenerative Agriculture landscapes in every major climate zone in the world.  Ethan is the Executive Vice President of Research at HowGood and the co-author of Regenerative Enterprise and the Levels of Regenerative Agriculture. He designs, writes, and farms on his permaculture orchard in upstate New York. Get full access to Writing by Kyle Thiermann at thiermann.substack.com/subscribe

new york research writing levels regenerative agriculture kyle thiermann terragenesis terra genesis international ethan roland
The Kyle Thiermann Show
#36 Terra Genesis - Ethan Roland

The Kyle Thiermann Show

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 12, 2017 59:29


i tunes stitcher Ethan Roland is a founder of Terra Genesis International and the Regenerative Enterprise Institute. With on-the-ground experience in 34 countries, he has designed more than 3000 acres of Regenerative Agriculture landscapes in every major climate zone in the world.  Ethan is the Executive Vice President of Research at HowGood and the co-author of Regenerative Enterprise and the Levels of Regenerative Agriculture. He designs, writes, and farms on his permaculture orchard in upstate New York.

new york research levels regenerative agriculture terragenesis terra genesis international ethan roland
Permaculture Voices
Designing the Pathway to Regeneration, and Why We can't Do That, The Founder's Story with Gregory Landau

Permaculture Voices

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 15, 2016 49:32


Gregory Landau will be one of the speakers at PV3 in March 2016.Learn more about PV3 at permaculturevoices.com/pv3.If the current current method of business isn't working, then something more regenerative would be better right?Then it's up to us to design it.Only we can't.Because a truly regenerative web is a living whole systems awareness of all of the decision makers.  Something that's a process.  An awareness that grows over time.  It's not something that happens overnight, and it's not something that we can design.We can only start to put the connections in place.  Then it's up to all of the decision makers in the process to take the ball and run with it.  Working together towards a common goal knowing that it isn't instant change, it's a common goal that they are all working towards.But seeding those connections can be tough.  Because sometimes the input producers like farmers, can't get a seat at the table with some of the decision makers who make the end product.   And that's where firms like Terra Genesis and designers like Gregory Landau come in.Gregory has also founded a direct-trade chocolate business to help reforest tropical Latin America through regenerative trading relationships.Today we'll be using his experience with cacao to to talk about Designing the Pathway to Regeneration, and Why We can't Do That.Learn more at permaculturevoices.com/gregory