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Jack Moberger, Head of Sales at DocUnlock, joins us to discuss the evolution of B2B sales, AI-driven automation and the changing landscape of global trade. Jack shares insights from his time at Algolia and how his current role is transforming customs brokerage through digitization.Key Takeaways:(03:22) Why “corporate polycrisis” is a reality for many businesses.(06:02) The challenges of B2B search and discovery for vendors.(08:28) The era of generic B2B messaging is ending.(13:37) Supply chains are now more complex and interconnected.(15:41) How customs brokerage and freight forwarding are becoming more complex.(18:33) What DocUnlock does to automate customs clearance and reduce manual work.(23:37) AI is enabling compliance-heavy industries to scale efficiently.(27:50) AI thrives in workflows with clear, correct answers.(29:38) B2B digitization isn't killing sales — it's evolving it.(35:37) Why eCommerce teams should be involved in sales forecasting.(39:36) Regulatory changes create immediate demand for expert advice.(43:27) Some of the best tech insights come from under-the-radar sources.Resources Mentioned:Jack Moberger -https://www.linkedin.com/in/jmoberger/DocUnlock -https://www.linkedin.com/company/docunlock-ai/World Trade Organization -https://www.wto.org/"The Three-Body Problem" by Cixin Liu -https://www.amazon.com/Three-Body-Problem-Cixin-Liu/dp/0765382032Thanks for listening to the “B2B Commerce UnCut: A Journey Through Change,” powered by Oro. If you enjoyed this episode, leave a review to help get the word out about the show. And be sure to subscribe so you never miss another insightful conversation.#eCommerce #B2BeCommerce #DigitalCommerce
Welcome to The Nonlinear Library, where we use Text-to-Speech software to convert the best writing from the Rationalist and EA communities into audio. This is: Sci-Fi books micro-reviews, published by Yair Halberstadt on June 24, 2024 on LessWrong. I've recently been reading a lot of science fiction. Most won't be original to fans of the genre, but some people might be looking for suggestions, so in lieu of full blown reviews here's super brief ratings on all of them. I might keep this updated over time, if so new books will go to the top. A deepness in the sky (Verner Vinge) scifiosity: 10/10 readability: 8/10 recommended: 10/10 A deepness in the sky excels in its depiction of a spacefaring civilisation using no technologies we know to be impossible, a truly alien civilisation, and it's brilliant treatment of translation and culture. A fire upon the deep (Verner Vinge) scifiosity: 8/10 readability: 9/10 recommended: 9/10 In a fire upon the deep, Vinge allows impossible technologies and essentially goes for a slightly more fantasy theme. But his depiction of alien civilisation remains unsurpassed. Across Realtime (Verner Vinge) scifiosity: 8/10 readability: 8/10 recommended: 5/10 This collection of two books imagines a single exotic technology, and explores how it could be used, whilst building a classic thriller into the plot. It's fine enough, but just doesn't have the same depth or insight as his other works. Children of Time (Adrian Tchaikovsky) scifiosity: 7/10 readability: 5/10 recommended: 5/10 Children of Time was recommended as the sort of thing you'd like if you enjoyed a deepness in the sky. Personally I found it a bit silly - I think because Tchaikovsky had some plot points he wanted to get to and was making up justifications for them, rather than deeply thinking about the consequences of his various assumptions. The Martian (Andy Weir) scifiosity: 10/10 readability: 8/10 recommended: 9/10 This is hard sci-fi on steroids. Using only known or in development technologies, how could an astranaut survive stranded on Mars. It's an enjoyable read, and you'll learn a lot about science, but the characters sometimes feel one dimensional. Project Hail Mary (Andy Weir) scifiosity: 8/10 readability: 8/10 recommended: 7/10 This is more speculative sci-fi than the martian, but still contains plenty of hard science[1]. It focuses more on plot, but that's not really Weir's forte and the sciencey bits suffer as a result. Still enjoyable though. Seveneves (Neil Stephenson) scifiosity: 8/10 readability: 8/10 recommended: 7/10 This is really two books. The first is a hard sci-fi, how do we build things rapidly in space using current technology. The second half is... kinda wierd, but still enjoyable. Stephenson is less good at the science than Weir, but better at plot, if a bit idiosyncratic[2]. Cryptonomicon (Neil Stephenson) scifiosity: 9/10 readability: 7/10 recommended: 8/10 I was recommended this as a book that would incidentally teach you a lot about cryptography. That must have been targeted to complete newbies because I didn't learn much I didn't know already. Still it was enjoyable, if somewhat weird. The Three-Body Problem (Cixin Liu) scifiosity: 4/10 readability: 6/10 recommended: 5/10 This started off really well, but then got steadily sillier as the book progressed. I loved the depictions of decent into madness, the surrealism of the 3 body game, and the glimpses into Chinese culture as seen by Chinese. But the attempts to science-bullshit explanations at the end kind of ruined it for me. Machineries of Empire (Yoon Ha Lee) scifiosity: 4/10 readability: 8/10 recommended: 8/10 I would classify this more as science fantasy than fiction, since the calendrical mechanics seem to be made up according to whatever the plot needs, but it's a brilliantly written series I thoroughly enjoyed, if a bit difficult to follow at times. Stories of Your Life + Exhalation (Ted Chiang) scifiosity: 10/10 readability: 10/10 recommended: 10/10...
Link to original articleWelcome to The Nonlinear Library, where we use Text-to-Speech software to convert the best writing from the Rationalist and EA communities into audio. This is: Sci-Fi books micro-reviews, published by Yair Halberstadt on June 24, 2024 on LessWrong. I've recently been reading a lot of science fiction. Most won't be original to fans of the genre, but some people might be looking for suggestions, so in lieu of full blown reviews here's super brief ratings on all of them. I might keep this updated over time, if so new books will go to the top. A deepness in the sky (Verner Vinge) scifiosity: 10/10 readability: 8/10 recommended: 10/10 A deepness in the sky excels in its depiction of a spacefaring civilisation using no technologies we know to be impossible, a truly alien civilisation, and it's brilliant treatment of translation and culture. A fire upon the deep (Verner Vinge) scifiosity: 8/10 readability: 9/10 recommended: 9/10 In a fire upon the deep, Vinge allows impossible technologies and essentially goes for a slightly more fantasy theme. But his depiction of alien civilisation remains unsurpassed. Across Realtime (Verner Vinge) scifiosity: 8/10 readability: 8/10 recommended: 5/10 This collection of two books imagines a single exotic technology, and explores how it could be used, whilst building a classic thriller into the plot. It's fine enough, but just doesn't have the same depth or insight as his other works. Children of Time (Adrian Tchaikovsky) scifiosity: 7/10 readability: 5/10 recommended: 5/10 Children of Time was recommended as the sort of thing you'd like if you enjoyed a deepness in the sky. Personally I found it a bit silly - I think because Tchaikovsky had some plot points he wanted to get to and was making up justifications for them, rather than deeply thinking about the consequences of his various assumptions. The Martian (Andy Weir) scifiosity: 10/10 readability: 8/10 recommended: 9/10 This is hard sci-fi on steroids. Using only known or in development technologies, how could an astranaut survive stranded on Mars. It's an enjoyable read, and you'll learn a lot about science, but the characters sometimes feel one dimensional. Project Hail Mary (Andy Weir) scifiosity: 8/10 readability: 8/10 recommended: 7/10 This is more speculative sci-fi than the martian, but still contains plenty of hard science[1]. It focuses more on plot, but that's not really Weir's forte and the sciencey bits suffer as a result. Still enjoyable though. Seveneves (Neil Stephenson) scifiosity: 8/10 readability: 8/10 recommended: 7/10 This is really two books. The first is a hard sci-fi, how do we build things rapidly in space using current technology. The second half is... kinda wierd, but still enjoyable. Stephenson is less good at the science than Weir, but better at plot, if a bit idiosyncratic[2]. Cryptonomicon (Neil Stephenson) scifiosity: 9/10 readability: 7/10 recommended: 8/10 I was recommended this as a book that would incidentally teach you a lot about cryptography. That must have been targeted to complete newbies because I didn't learn much I didn't know already. Still it was enjoyable, if somewhat weird. The Three-Body Problem (Cixin Liu) scifiosity: 4/10 readability: 6/10 recommended: 5/10 This started off really well, but then got steadily sillier as the book progressed. I loved the depictions of decent into madness, the surrealism of the 3 body game, and the glimpses into Chinese culture as seen by Chinese. But the attempts to science-bullshit explanations at the end kind of ruined it for me. Machineries of Empire (Yoon Ha Lee) scifiosity: 4/10 readability: 8/10 recommended: 8/10 I would classify this more as science fantasy than fiction, since the calendrical mechanics seem to be made up according to whatever the plot needs, but it's a brilliantly written series I thoroughly enjoyed, if a bit difficult to follow at times. Stories of Your Life + Exhalation (Ted Chiang) scifiosity: 10/10 readability: 10/10 recommended: 10/10...
This is our spoiler-free review for the Netflix series 3 Body Problem. Join us as we discuss David Benioff, D.B. Weiss and Alexander Woo's adaptation of Cixin Liu's original novel The Three Body Problem. We talk about what worked, and where the show could improve if given a second season.3 BODY PROBLEM debuts globally on Netflix on Thursday, March 21st, 2024 Check out Geekcentric onYouTube | Instagram | Twitter | TikTokJoin the Geekcentric Discord HEREJoin Nate on Twitch at - twitch.tv/nateplaysgames
Brought to you by Merge—A single API to add hundreds of integrations into your app | Coda—Meet the evolution of docs | Vanta—Automate compliance. Simplify security.—Camille Hearst is Head of Fan Monetization at Spotify, where she finds new ways for fans to connect and for artists to monetize. Previously she was Head of Product for Creators at Patreon, Product Marketing Manager at YouTube, the second Product Manager at iTunes, and VP of Product at Hailo. She also co-founded a company called Kit, which was acquired by Patreon in 2018. In today's podcast, we discuss:• Advice on building a successful career as a creator• Her take on the future of the creator economy• The best and worst parts of building products for music artists• What Apple product teams do differently• The story of meeting Steve Jobs• Advice for founders going through acquisitions—Find the full transcript at: https://www.lennyspodcast.com/monetizing-passions-scaling-marketplaces-and-stories-from-a-creator-economy-vet-camille-hearst/—Where to find Camille Hearst:• Twitter/X: https://twitter.com/camillionz• LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/chearst/—Where to find Lenny:• Newsletter: https://www.lennysnewsletter.com• Twitter/X: https://twitter.com/lennysan• LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/lennyrachitsky/—In this episode, we cover:(00:00) Camille's background(04:24) Camille's role as Head of Fan Monetization at Spotify(07:40) The best and worst parts of working with artists(14:15) Trends in the content creation world(19:29) Advice on building a successful career as a creator(21:32) The importance of content curators(22:30) Camille's startup, Kit (24:49) Advice on selling your startup(28:28) The supply side of marketplaces(34:37) How Camille became the second PM at iTunes (35:43) The story of meeting Steve Jobs(43:01) Apple's style of product management(45:54) Opportunities on the platform side of content creation(48:34) Camille's early years growing up in a creative tech family(53:45) Favorite frameworks(52:32) Lightning round—Referenced:• Adam Fishman on Lenny's Podcast: https://www.lennyspodcast.com/how-to-build-a-high-performing-growth-team-adam-fishman-patreon-lyft-imperfect-foods/• The Federal Reserve says Taylor Swift's Eras Tour boosted the economy. One market research firm estimates she could add $5 billion: https://www.cbsnews.com/news/taylor-swift-eras-tour-boosted-economy-tourism-federal-reserve-how-much-money-made/• Yelp coins the “Beyoncé bump” for the economic halo created by the pop star's Renaissance Tour: https://fortune.com/2023/07/19/beyonce-renaissance-tour-economic-impact/• Lenny Bot: https://www.lennybot.com/• YouTube streamer faces riot charge after Union Square Park erupts in chaos: https://www.nytimes.com/2023/08/04/nyregion/union-square-kai-cenat-twitch-giveaway.html• Michelle Phan on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/MICHELLEPHA• Rover: https://www.rover.com/• Airbnb's product management shift: the view from product leaders: https://www.mindtheproduct.com/airbnbs-product-management-shift-the-viewpoint-of-product-leaders/#• Hiroki Asai on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/hiroki-asai-a44137110/• The Really Good Podcast: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-really-good-podcast/id1697794816• Nichiren Buddhism: https://www.bbc.co.uk/religion/religions/buddhism/subdivisions/nichiren_1.shtml• What's Love Got to Do with It on Hulu: https://www.hulu.com/movie/whats-love-got-to-do-with-it-f996a307-ee91-4550-8829-3694f55e0189• Marty Cagan on Lenny's Podcast: https://www.lennyspodcast.com/the-nature-of-product-marty-cagan-silicon-valley-product-group/• Why you should eat the frog first: https://asana.com/resources/eat-the-frog• Draw the owl: https://review.firstround.com/draw-the-owl-and-other-company-values-you-didnt-know-you-should-have• The Three-Body Problem: https://www.amazon.com/Three-Body-Problem-Cixin-Liu/dp/0765382032• Kindred: https://www.amazon.com/Kindred-Octavia-Butler/dp/0807083690• A Wrinkle in Time: https://www.amazon.com/Wrinkle-Time-Quintet/dp/0312367546/• Foundation on AppleTV+: https://tv.apple.com/us/show/foundation/umc.cmc.5983fipzqbicvrve6jdfep4x3• Battlestar Galactica on SyFy: https://www.syfy.com/battlestar-galactica• Hijack on AppleTV+: https://tv.apple.com/us/show/hijack/umc.cmc.1dg08zn0g3zx52hs8npoj5qe3• Shadow and Bone on Netflix: https://www.netflix.com/title/80236319• Afrobeats playlist on Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/playlist/37i9dQZF1EQqFPe2ux3rbj• “Calm Down” by Rema on Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/album/37iaWiKMa9YBbEDlw5c3Qh—Production and marketing by https://penname.co/. For inquiries about sponsoring the podcast, email podcast@lennyrachitsky.com.—Lenny may be an investor in the companies discussed. Get full access to Lenny's Newsletter at www.lennysnewsletter.com/subscribe
Brought to you by Microsoft Clarity—See how people actually use your product | Eco—Your most rewarding app | LMNT—Zero-sugar hydration—Ayo Omojola is Chief Product Officer at Carbon Health, one of the fastest-growing and most innovative health tech companies in the world. Previously, he was a PM leader at Cash App, where he co-created the Cash Card and scaled it to a nine-figure revenue line for Square. He's also an angel investor in companies like Mercury, Modern Treasury, Faire, and many others. In this episode, we discuss:• How Cash App broke through the noise and became a consumer app success story• Why small teams are better than big ones• Hard-won lessons on team building and hiring• Why it's “criminal” not to connect people in your network to things that they need• Why you sometimes shouldn't listen to experts• The importance of first-principles thinking• Advice for health tech founders—Find the full transcript at: https://www.lennyspodcast.com/frameworks-for-product-differentiation-team-building-and-thinking-from-first-principles-ayo-omojola-carbon-health-cash-app/#transcript—Where to find Ayo Omojola:• Twitter: https://twitter.com/ay_o• LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/omojola/• Blog: https://kunle.app/—Where to find Lenny:• Newsletter: https://www.lennysnewsletter.com• Twitter: https://twitter.com/lennysan• LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/lennyrachitsky/—In this episode, we cover:(00:00) Ayo's background(04:13) The story of how Ayo used Quora for discoverability (06:44) The scale of Cash App (07:37) What Cash App did well(10:12) Lessons from building consumer apps (13:08) Why it's so important to be different(14:08) What Ayo learned from how Square/Block operates(16:36) How to succeed at building a startup within a startup(19:06) How Ayo transitioned from fintech to health tech(22:51) Why Ayo loves hiring founders (28:32) Team-building strategies(32:12) The importance of going deep and challenging assumptions(36:58) Why you should always ask questions(38:45) Lessons in leadership(41:43) Advice for founders in the health-care space(44:48) What Carbon Health is(46:58) Lightning round—Referenced:• Ayo on Quora: https://www.quora.com/profile/Ayo-Omojola• Carbon Health: https://carbonhealth.com/• Cash App: https://cash.app/• Lob: https://www.lob.com/• Mailform: https://www.mailform.io/• Venmo: https://venmo.com/• PayPal: https://www.paypal.com/us/home• Apple Cash: https://www.apple.com/apple-cash/• Square: https://squareup.com/us/en/home/• Block: https://block.xyz/• Pinwheel: https://www.pinwheelapi.com/• The Three-Body Problem: https://www.amazon.com/Three-Body-Problem-Cixin-Liu/dp/0765382032• Children of Time: https://www.amazon.com/Children-of-Time• Children of Memory: https://www.amazon.com/Children-Memory-Adrian-Tchaikovsky/• Children of Ruin: https://www.amazon.com/Children-Ruin-Time-Adrian-Tchaikovsky/• Stormlight Archive: https://www.amazon.com/Stormlight-Archive-Boxed-Set-Books/• Fire in the Deep: https://www.amazon.com/Fire-Deep-Robert-J-Miller/• War of the Worlds on Amazon Prime: https://www.amazon.com/gp/video/detail/amzn1.dv.gti.49a287c2-44ed-4ffc-afa0-fab86dd0d31d• Succession on HBO Max: https://play.hbomax.com/player/urn:hbo:episode:GWukCJAu0e4uHwwEAAAB5• No Context Succession on Twitter: https://twitter.com/nocontextroyco—Production and marketing by https://penname.co/. For inquiries about sponsoring the podcast, email podcast@lennyrachitsky.com.—Lenny may be an investor in the companies discussed. Get full access to Lenny's Newsletter at www.lennysnewsletter.com/subscribe
Brought to you by Amplitude—Build better products | Miro—A collaborative visual platform where your best work comes to life | Ahrefs—Improve your website's SEO for free—Hila Qu is an Executive in Residence at Reforge as well as a renowned growth advisor, angel investor, and published author (her book about growth was named one of the top 10 business books of 2018 in China). Previously, she served as the Director of Growth at GitLab, where she implemented and scaled their PLG motion, and VP of Growth at Acorns, scaling them from 1 million to 5 million users. In today's episode, we discuss:• The importance of having both a product-led and a sales-led motion for companies of all sizes• A step-by-step process for implementing PLG• Common pitfalls of layering on PLG• How to audit your existing funnel• Conversion, activation, and retention tactics• Structuring your growth organization from day one, and as it scales—Find the full transcript at: https://www.lennyspodcast.com/the-ultimate-guide-to-adding-a-plg-motion-hila-qu-reforge-gitlab/#transcript—Where to find Hila Qu:• Twitter: https://twitter.com/HilaQu• LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/hilaqu/—Where to find Lenny:• Newsletter: https://www.lennysnewsletter.com• Twitter: https://twitter.com/lennysan• LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/lennyrachitsky/—In this episode, we cover:(00:00) Hila's background(03:26) The outcome of writing guest posts for Lenny's Newsletter(05:12) Why companies should have PLG and sales(07:58) What PLG is and why it's so popular(09:41) Zoom, an example of a PLG company(11:24) Common pitfalls in adding a PLG motion(16:06) The spectrum of when PLG makes sense(20:04) What you need to be successful in a product-led growth strategy(24:52) The first step to adding a PLG motion(30:11) What GitLab does and how the sales funnel and PLG funnel work there(34:07) Mapping out the funnel(35:29) Finding leverage and other next steps(38:24) What an aha moment is and conducting an audit(47:30) Activation and conversion (52:17) Why you should start with activation, and who is doing it well(55:24) Retention, the messy part of the funnel(1:00:34) How Hila made an impact on retention at Acorns(1:03:03) The two buckets of data (1:04:56) Tools for implementing a PLG motion(1:08:47) The importance of data (1:10:20) Tips to get started, and why you need to have good data first(1:12:10) How to do a data audit(1:15:04) Building a PLG team(1:22:40) The core growth squad(1:27:51) Lightning round—Referenced:• Hila's guest post on Lenny's Newsletter: https://www.lennysnewsletter.com/p/five-steps-to-starting-your-plg-motion• Ravi Mehta on Lenny's Podcast: https://www.lennyspodcast.com/building-your-product-strategy-stack-ravi-mehta-tinder-facebook-tripadvisor-outpace/• Amplitude: https://amplitude.com/• GitLab: https://about.gitlab.com/• Lauryn Isford on Lenny's Podcast: https://www.lennyspodcast.com/mastering-onboarding-lauryn-isford-head-of-growth-at-airtable/• Acorns: https://signup.acorns.com/• PostHog: https://posthog.com/• Mixpanel: https://mixpanel.com/• Pendo: https://go.pendo.io/• Optimizely: https://www.optimizely.com/• Eppo: https://www.geteppo.com/• HubSpot: https://www.hubspot.com/• Clearbit: https://clearbit.com/• ZoomInfo: https://www.zoominfo.com/• Endgame: https://www.endgame.io/• Pocus: https://www.pocus.com/• Pace: https://www.paceapp.com/• Toplyne: https://www.toplyne.io/• Crystal Widjaja on Lenny's Podcast: https://www.lennyspodcast.com/how-to-scrappily-hire-for-measure-and-unlock-growth-crystal-widjaja-gojek-and-kumu/• Redshift: https://aws.amazon.com/redshift/• The Almanack of Naval Ravikant: A Guide to Wealth and Happiness: https://www.amazon.com/Almanack-Naval-Ravikant-Wealth-Happiness-ebook/dp/B08FF8MTM6• How Women Rise: https://www.amazon.com/How-Women-Rise-Habits-Holding/dp/1847942253/• 硅谷增长黑客实战笔记 (Hila's best-selling book on growth): https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07BZC8L78?ref_=cm_sw_r_cp_ud_dp_ND87BRFMB0CMWBEVB747• The Wandering Earth II: https://wellgousa.com/films/wandering-earth-ii• The Three-Body Problem: https://www.amazon.com/Three-Body-Problem-Cixin-Liu/dp/0765382032• Lululemon yoga pants: https://shop.lululemon.com/c/women-pants/yoga/• ChatGPT: https://chat.openai.com/chat• Someday: https://www.amazon.com/Someday-Alison-McGhee/dp/1416928111—Production and marketing by https://penname.co/. For inquiries about sponsoring the podcast, email podcast@lennyrachitsky.com. Get full access to Lenny's Newsletter at www.lennysnewsletter.com/subscribe
Jordan Kapper, MD (‘Kapper' by his friends) is an ER doctor, real-estate investor, self-storage operator and co-founder of Investing Storage. Founded by two ER doctors, Ben and Jordan, Investing Storage, focuses on value-add self storage opportunities as well as providing investment opportunities for physician investors. Jordan lives in Center Valley, PA along with his wife, Rebecca, who manages their residential properties full-time as well as providing digital marketing services for their self storage facilities. Transitioning from full time physician to full-time in real estate, ‘Kapper' also advises several physician founded startup companies and is passionate about art, digital marketing, cryptocurrency, sales and operations. LINKS FROM THE SHOW Book Recommendations Business Secrets of the Trappist Monks by August Turak: https://www.amazon.com/Business-Secrets-Trappist-Monks-Authenticity/dp/0231160631 The Three-Body Problem by Cixin Liu: https://www.amazon.com/Three-Body-Problem-Cixin-Liu/dp/0765382032 Tech Recommendations Noonlight: https://www.noonlight.com/ Google Drive: https://www.google.com/drive/ LastPass: https://www.lastpass.com/ CONNECT WITH THE GUEST Investing Storage: https://www.investingstorage.com/ Kapper Properties: https://www.kapperproperties.com/ LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jordan-kapper-md-903b1946/ Tribevest founders club: https://app.tribevest.com/vip?grsf=kdvyfs Email jordan@investingstorage.com Simple self-storage social media marketing Rebecca@kapperproperties.com Investing Storage social media Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/investingstorage/ LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/investing-storage/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/investingstor CONNECT WITH THE HOST Connect with Sean Graham to discuss self storage syndication investment opportunities at Maven Equities or to sell your self storage facility without a broker. www.mavenequities.com www.mavenstorage.com linktr.ee/seangraham --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Follow us on social media @the.gentle.art.of.crushing.it Listen, like, subscribe, comment: http://thegentleartofcrushingit.com/
In this episode, I speak with Logan Kilpatrick, Julia Language Developer Community Advocate. We talk about machine learning at NASA and how he discovered Julia as a student, the age-old Julia vs. Python debate, and how to get into a new scientific and technical field. It was absolutely awesome! Check it out. Watch the video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3kgRN8hJIro Join our Discord community: https://discord.gg/tEYvqxwhah Relevant Links: ➡️ Logan Kilpatrick on LinkedIn – https://www.linkedin.com/in/logankilpatrick/ ➡️ Logan Kilpatrick on Twitter – https://twitter.com/OfficialLoganK ➡️ Julia Language on Twitter – https://twitter.com/JuliaLanguage Recommendation Links:
What's up everyone, this is Dariusz Kalbarczyk co-founder of NG Poland, JS Poland, AngularMaster.dev & WorkshopFest.dev. Welcome back to the JavaScript Master Podcast. Today we've got a special guest from Poland: Speaker, Mountain Bike Lover, Senior Software Engineer at JetBrains. Ladies and gentlemen, Piotr Tomiak
Frontier of the Metaverse - Web 3.0, NFT's and Cryptocurrency Tips
In this episode, we talk about marketing in the Web3 space with Amanda Cassatt from Seratonin and Mojito. Amanda is a marketing genius who helped start some of the most well-known projects in web3 she has helped grow Decentraland, PROOF, Moonbirds, gmoney, Ethereum and many more. As we all know, the marketing landscape is changing faster than ever before. Web2 and Web3 are both drastically different and it's hard to keep up! In this episode, we discuss the difference between the two eras, the importance of communities, and what questions you should ask yourself to improve your overall marketing strategy for your Web3 project. The 3 things you will learn: Differences between Web2 and Web3 marketing How to avoid common pitfalls when launching a new Web3 project How to grow your first 1000 community members RESOURCES DISCUSSED: Seratonin | https://serotonin.co/ (Website) Mojito | https://mojito.xyz/ (Website) PROOF | https://www.proof.xyz/ (Website) Moonbirds | https://www.moonbirds.xyz/ (Website) gmoney | https://g.money/ (Website) Ender's Game | https://www.amazon.co.uk/Enders-Game-Ender-Wiggin-Saga/dp/0812550706 (Amazon) Snow Crash | https://www.amazon.co.uk/Snow-Crash-Neal-Stephenson/dp/0241953189/ref=asc_df_0241953189/?tag=googshopuk-21&linkCode=df0&hvadid=310817467131&hvpos=&hvnetw=g&hvrand=12139327398136247610&hvpone=&hvptwo=&hvqmt=&hvdev=c&hvdvcmdl=&hvlocint=&hvlocphy=9046561&hvtargid=pla-524671764479&psc=1&th=1&psc=1 (Amazon) The Three-Body Problem | https://www.amazon.co.uk/Three-Body-Problem-Cixin-Liu/dp/1784971553 (Amazon) Diaspora | https://www.amazon.co.uk/Diaspora-Greg-Egan/dp/0575082097 (Amazon) Nexus by Ramez Naam | https://www.amazon.co.uk/Nexus-Book-1/dp/B00E5LBKR2/ref=sr_1_2?keywords=Ramez+Naam&qid=1664882095&qu=eyJxc2MiOiIzLjA1IiwicXNhIjoiMi43MCIsInFzcCI6IjIuNTcifQ%3D%3D&s=audible&sr=1-2 (Amazon) ConsenSys | https://consensys.net/ (Website) MetaMask | https://metamask.io/ (Website) Infura | https://infura.io/use-cases/nft (Website) Gitcoin | https://gitcoin.co/ (Website) Ujo | https://twitter.com/ujomusic?lang=en (Twitter) Audius | https://audius.co/ (Website) Ethereum | https://ethereum.org/en/ (Website) Truffle | https://trufflesuite.com/ (Website) Polygon | https://polygon.technology/ (Website) Decentraland | https://decentraland.org/ (Website) World of Women | https://www.worldofwomen.art/ (Website) 1,000 True Fans | https://kk.org/thetechnium/1000-true-fans/ (Article) Franklin | https://www.hellofranklin.co/ (Website) Why We Sleep by Matthew Walker | https://www.amazon.co.uk/Why-We-Sleep-Science-Dreams/dp/0141983760 (Amazon) PEOPLE: Howard Kingston | https://twitter.com/howardvk (Twitter) Amanda Cassatt | https://twitter.com/amandacassatt?lang=en (Twitter) P.S. Whenever you are ready, here are 3 ways we can help you become a Metaverse Expert Follow Howard on Twitter for daily tips: https://twitter.com/howardvk (https://twitter.com/howardvk) Be sure to subscribe so that you never miss an episode! https://frontierofthemetaverse.com/listen (https://frontierofthemetaverse.com/listen) Subscribe to our Newsletter for weekly insights: https://www.getrevue.co/profile/howardvk (https://www.getrevue.co/profile/howardvk)
Frontier of the Metaverse - Web 3.0, NFT's and Cryptocurrency Tips
In this episode, we do a DAO deep dive with Fabian Wetekamp from Flamingo DAO, The LAO, CoCo DAO, NEon Dao & Red DAO. DAOs (short for Decentralized Autonomous Organizations) are a new type of organizations born in Web 3. They are changing the way we do everything from investing, running organisations and even governments In this episode, we dive into what DAOs are and give some examples of how they work. We also talk about how you can join one and what to be aware of. We also cover some fun topics like how Fabian went full-time in Web 3 (and his advice on how you can too) as well as some great book recommendations. The 3 things you will learn: What is a DAO How can you be part of a DAO How to change career from Web 2 to Web 3 RESOURCES DISCUSSED: The Lao | https://www.thelao.io/ (Website) Flamingo DAO | https://flamingodao.xyz/ (Website) CryptoPunks | https://www.larvalabs.com/cryptopunks (Website) Bored ape yacht club | https://boredapeyachtclub.com/#/ (Website) Red DAO | https://reddao.xyz/ (Website) Neon DAO | https://neondao.xyz/ (Website) Coco DAO | https://c0c0dao.xyz/ (Website) Discord | https://discord.com/ (Website) Squiggle DAO | https://www.squiggledao.com/ (Website) Tribute Labs | https://mobile.twitter.com/tributelabsxyz (Twitter) The Three-Body Problem | https://www.amazon.co.uk/Three-Body-Problem-Cixin-Liu-ebook/dp/B00S8FCJCQ/ref=tmm_kin_swatch_0?_encoding=UTF8&qid=1661841548&sr=8-1 (Amazon) The Sovereign Individual: Mastering the Transition to the Information Age | https://www.amazon.co.uk/Sovereign-Individual-James-Dale-Davidson/dp/0684832720 (Amazon) PEOPLE: Howard Kingston | https://twitter.com/howardvk (Twitter) Fabian Wetekamp | https://twitter.com/fabian_0x (Twitter) P.S. Whenever you are ready, here are 3 ways we can help you become a Metaverse Expert Follow Howard on Twitter for daily tips:: https://twitter.com/howardvk (https://twitter.com/howardvk) Be sure to subscribe so that you never miss an episode! https://frontierofthemetaverse.com/listen (https://frontierofthemetaverse.com/listen) Subscribe to our Newsletter for weekly insights: https://www.getrevue.co/profile/howardvk (https://www.getrevue.co/profile/howardvk)
In this episode, we talk to Gautier Marin, director of product at Emeris. Emeris is your one-stop portal to a new world of DeFi. Emeris connects the best cross‑chain DeFi protocols, starting with Gravity DEX. It is a future marketplace for all blockchain dapps. Transfer and trade assets. Access a decentralized exchange. Earn competitive yields. Gautier's Twitter (https://twitter.com/gautier_md) We spoke to Gautier about Gravity DEX, Emeris and: Emeris as a future marketplace for dapps How to find a product-market fit What would the ideal platform for dApps look like Cool frontends in the blockchain industry Product intuition & product hype Osmosis vs Emeris The story of Gautier, France and personal motivation How to explain the blockchain financial system What the future will look like IBC UX The projects and people that have been mentioned in this episode: | Tendermint (https://tendermint.com/) | Cosmos (https://cosmos.network/) | Emeris (https://emeris.com/) | Keplr (https://wallet.keplr.app/) | Osmosis (https://app.osmosis.zone/) | Gravity DEX (https://cosmos.network/gravity-dex/) | Ethereum (https://ethereum.org/en/) | Dfinity (https://dfinity.org/) | IBC (https://github.com/cosmos/ibc) | Coinbase (https://www.coinbase.com/) | Epicenter (https://epicenter.tv/) | The Three-Body Problem book (https://www.amazon.com/Three-Body-Problem-Cixin-Liu/dp/0765382032) | Zaki Manian (https://twitter.com/zmanian) | Christopher Goes (https://twitter.com/cwgoes) | If you like what we do at Citizen Cosmos: Stake with Citizen Cosmos validator (https://www.citizencosmos.space/staking) Help support the project via Gitcoin Grants (https://gitcoin.co/grants/1113/citizen-cosmos-podcast) Listen to the YouTube version (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AqOdtceQle8) Read our blog (https://citizen-cosmos.github.io/blog/) Check out our GitHub (https://github.com/citizen-cosmos/Citizen-Cosmos) Join our Telegram (https://t.me/citizen_cosmos) Follow us on Twitter (https://twitter.com/cosmos_voice) Sign up to the RSS feed (https://www.citizencosmos.space/rss)
Ylämuistialan kartanolla ollaan isojen teemojen ääressä kun keskustelemme Risto Siilasmaan kanssa Euroopan kilpailukyvystä, tietoturvan tulevaisuudesta, innovaatioista ja siitä mitä yrityksen johdon pitäisi ymmärtää tietoturvasta. Risto kertoo lisäksi minkä vinkin antaisi itselleen vuonna 1995. Äänijulkaisun lähdeluettelo: Vieras: Risto Siilasmaa https://twitter.com/rsiilasmaa Citrix -haavat https://support.citrix.com/article/CTX276688 F5 Big-IP -haava https://support.f5.com/csp/article/K52145254 Palo Alto GlobalProtect SSL VPN -haava https://security.paloaltonetworks.com/CVE-2020-2021 Windows DNS -haava https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/help/4569509/windows-dns-server-remote-code-execution-vulnerability Twitter -tietomurto https://arstechnica.com/information-technology/2020/07/hackers-obtained-twitter-dms-for-36-high-profile-account-holders/ Tapaus Garmin https://twitter.com/mikko/status/1290318226136731654 Travelex selvitystilaan https://www.infosecurity-magazine.com/news/travelex-forced-administration Blackbaud -tietomurto https://www.welivesecurity.com/2020/08/06/blackbaud-data-breach-what-you-should-know/ No More Ransom https://twitter.com/mikko/status/1288396286006308864 Paranoidi Optimisti (Tammi 2019) https://www.tammi.fi/kirja/risto-siilasmaa/paranoidi-optimisti/9789520403348 OpenAI GPT-3 API https://openai.com/blog/openai-api/ Skenaariosuunnittelu https://www.nbforum.com/newsroom/blog/scenario-planning-tool-for-strategic-planning/ Kirja: The Three-Body Problem / Cixin Liu (刘慈欣) https://www.amazon.com/Three-Body-Problem-Cixin-Liu/dp/0765382032 Hammerspoon https://www.hammerspoon.org/ QuickBasic64 https://www.qb64.org/portal/ Readly https://fi.readly.com/
Audrey Tang joins me to talk about COVID-19, her career path, digital minister's job, forking the government, Sci-Fi and so on. Transcript of this episode is available at rebuild.fm/271 Show Notes Coronavirus: How map hacks and buttocks helped Taiwan fight Covid-19 New Zealand is lifting almost all its coronavirus restrictions, after no active Covid-19 cases reported mask.pdis Exposure Notifications: Helping fight COVID-19 - Google WHO can help? Taiwan Audrey's new avatar Fix language selector label for zh-TW (体 -> 體) by audreyt · tokyo-metropolitan-gov/covid19 零時政府 g0v.tw CC0 - Creative Commons RadicalxChange What Happens Next? COVID-19 Futures, Explained With Playable Simulations perl6/Pugs.hs: Raku User's Golfing System in Haskell Scratch Computational thinking The Three-Body Problem: Liu, Cixin, Liu, Ken Culture Series by Iain M. Banks 三体Ⅱ 黒暗森林(上) | 劉 慈欣 Stories of Your Life and Others: Ted Chiang 息吹 | テッド チャン Nokia 8110 4G mobile Moana | Disney Movies Dos Monos - Civil Rap Song ft. Audrey Tang 唐鳳 Japan's Dos Monos Features Taiwan's Digital Minister Audrey Tang in 'Civil Rap Song' 鳳たんです! - 鳳 The Tao of IETF
Tanmai is one of the founders at Hasura. Hasura gives you instant graphQL APIs on top of a Postgres database. The eventual idea is to make data access secure and easy. Tanmai explains the challenges of doing this in the cloud. He talks about some of the difficulties with the tooling around using GraphQL and its bias towards working well with a monolith. Since GraphQL is basically a shared type system that describes your API, that means all your types need to be in the same code base. This is at odds with the folks who want to do microservices and serverless functions, because since their API is split across multiple services they have different types, and forcing these types to work together defeats the purpose of using microservices. Also, storing state across requests doesn’t work well with serverless and cloud native stuff. In short, learning to live without state is one of the general challenges with going serverless. This is where Hasura comes into play, and Tanmai explains how it works. Hasura is metadata driven, and each instance of the server can leverage multiple calls and exhibit a high amount of concurrency. It’s designed to be a little more CPU bound than memory bound, which means that configuring auto scaling on it is very easy and allows you to utilize the elasticity of cloud native applications. Tanmai clarifies his usage of the word ‘cloud native’, by which he means microservices. He explains that when you have a metadata based engine, this metadata has a language that allows you to bring to bring in types from multiple upstream microservices, and create a coherent graphQL API on top of that. Hasura is a middle man between the microservices and the consumer that converts multiple types into a single coherent graphQL API. Next, Tanmai explains how Hasura handles data fetching and a high volume of requests. They also invented PostgresQL, RLS-like semantics within Hasura. He explains the process for merging your microservices into a single graphQL interface. Back on data fetching, Tanmai explains that when the product is an app, preventing an overabundance of queries becomes easier because during one of the staging processes that they have, they extract all of the queries that the app is actually making, and in the production version it only allows the queries that it has seen before. Hasura is focused on both the public interface and private use cases, though private is slightly better supported. Tanmai talks about the customizations available with Hasura. Hasura supports two layers. One is an aliasing layer that lets you rename tables, columns, etc as exposed by PostgresQL. The other is a computer column, so that you can add computer columns so you can extend the type that you get from a data model, and then you can point that to something that you derive. The panelist discusses the common conception of why it is a bad idea to expose the data models to the frontend folks directly. They discuss the trend of ‘dumbing down’ available tooling to appeal to junior developers, at the cost of making the backend more complicated. They talk about some of the issues that come from this, and the importance of tooling to solve this concern. Finally, Tanmai talks about the reasons to use Hasura over other products. There are 2 technologies that help with integrating arbitrary data sources. First is authorization grammar, their version of RLS that can extend to any system of types and relationships, The second is the data wrapper, part of the compiler that compiles from the graphQL metadata AST to the actual SQL AST. That is a generic interface, so anyone can come in and plug in a Haskell module that has that interface and implement a backend compiler for a native query language. This allows us to plug in other sources and stitch microservices together. The show concludes with Tanmai talking about their choice to use Haskell to make Hasura. Panelists AJ O’Neal Dan Shapir Steve Edwards Charles Max Wood With special guest: Tanmai Gopal Sponsors Adventures in DevOps Sentry use the code “devchat” for 2 months free on Sentry’s small plan The Dev Ed Podcast Links Hasura Haskell Node.js Cloud Native Microservices PostGraphile Postgres PostgresQL RLS Swagger JAMstack Soap Rest Follow DevChatTV on Facebook and Twitter Picks AJ O’Neal: The Economic Singularity Capital Cities GameCube Homebrew Dan Shapir: Romania JSCamp Steve Edwards: Cold Blooded: The Clutter Family Murders Charles Max Wood: Maxcoders.io TripIt St. George Marathon VO2 Max app Tanmai Gopal: Follow Tanmai on Twitter @tanmaigo Broken Earth Trilogy The Three-Body Problem graphQL Asia
Tanmai is one of the founders at Hasura. Hasura gives you instant graphQL APIs on top of a Postgres database. The eventual idea is to make data access secure and easy. Tanmai explains the challenges of doing this in the cloud. He talks about some of the difficulties with the tooling around using GraphQL and its bias towards working well with a monolith. Since GraphQL is basically a shared type system that describes your API, that means all your types need to be in the same code base. This is at odds with the folks who want to do microservices and serverless functions, because since their API is split across multiple services they have different types, and forcing these types to work together defeats the purpose of using microservices. Also, storing state across requests doesn’t work well with serverless and cloud native stuff. In short, learning to live without state is one of the general challenges with going serverless. This is where Hasura comes into play, and Tanmai explains how it works. Hasura is metadata driven, and each instance of the server can leverage multiple calls and exhibit a high amount of concurrency. It’s designed to be a little more CPU bound than memory bound, which means that configuring auto scaling on it is very easy and allows you to utilize the elasticity of cloud native applications. Tanmai clarifies his usage of the word ‘cloud native’, by which he means microservices. He explains that when you have a metadata based engine, this metadata has a language that allows you to bring to bring in types from multiple upstream microservices, and create a coherent graphQL API on top of that. Hasura is a middle man between the microservices and the consumer that converts multiple types into a single coherent graphQL API. Next, Tanmai explains how Hasura handles data fetching and a high volume of requests. They also invented PostgresQL, RLS-like semantics within Hasura. He explains the process for merging your microservices into a single graphQL interface. Back on data fetching, Tanmai explains that when the product is an app, preventing an overabundance of queries becomes easier because during one of the staging processes that they have, they extract all of the queries that the app is actually making, and in the production version it only allows the queries that it has seen before. Hasura is focused on both the public interface and private use cases, though private is slightly better supported. Tanmai talks about the customizations available with Hasura. Hasura supports two layers. One is an aliasing layer that lets you rename tables, columns, etc as exposed by PostgresQL. The other is a computer column, so that you can add computer columns so you can extend the type that you get from a data model, and then you can point that to something that you derive. The panelist discusses the common conception of why it is a bad idea to expose the data models to the frontend folks directly. They discuss the trend of ‘dumbing down’ available tooling to appeal to junior developers, at the cost of making the backend more complicated. They talk about some of the issues that come from this, and the importance of tooling to solve this concern. Finally, Tanmai talks about the reasons to use Hasura over other products. There are 2 technologies that help with integrating arbitrary data sources. First is authorization grammar, their version of RLS that can extend to any system of types and relationships, The second is the data wrapper, part of the compiler that compiles from the graphQL metadata AST to the actual SQL AST. That is a generic interface, so anyone can come in and plug in a Haskell module that has that interface and implement a backend compiler for a native query language. This allows us to plug in other sources and stitch microservices together. The show concludes with Tanmai talking about their choice to use Haskell to make Hasura. Panelists AJ O’Neal Dan Shapir Steve Edwards Charles Max Wood With special guest: Tanmai Gopal Sponsors Adventures in DevOps Sentry use the code “devchat” for 2 months free on Sentry’s small plan The Dev Ed Podcast Links Hasura Haskell Node.js Cloud Native Microservices PostGraphile Postgres PostgresQL RLS Swagger JAMstack Soap Rest Follow DevChatTV on Facebook and Twitter Picks AJ O’Neal: The Economic Singularity Capital Cities GameCube Homebrew Dan Shapir: Romania JSCamp Steve Edwards: Cold Blooded: The Clutter Family Murders Charles Max Wood: Maxcoders.io TripIt St. George Marathon VO2 Max app Tanmai Gopal: Follow Tanmai on Twitter @tanmaigo Broken Earth Trilogy The Three-Body Problem graphQL Asia
Tanmai is one of the founders at Hasura. Hasura gives you instant graphQL APIs on top of a Postgres database. The eventual idea is to make data access secure and easy. Tanmai explains the challenges of doing this in the cloud. He talks about some of the difficulties with the tooling around using GraphQL and its bias towards working well with a monolith. Since GraphQL is basically a shared type system that describes your API, that means all your types need to be in the same code base. This is at odds with the folks who want to do microservices and serverless functions, because since their API is split across multiple services they have different types, and forcing these types to work together defeats the purpose of using microservices. Also, storing state across requests doesn’t work well with serverless and cloud native stuff. In short, learning to live without state is one of the general challenges with going serverless. This is where Hasura comes into play, and Tanmai explains how it works. Hasura is metadata driven, and each instance of the server can leverage multiple calls and exhibit a high amount of concurrency. It’s designed to be a little more CPU bound than memory bound, which means that configuring auto scaling on it is very easy and allows you to utilize the elasticity of cloud native applications. Tanmai clarifies his usage of the word ‘cloud native’, by which he means microservices. He explains that when you have a metadata based engine, this metadata has a language that allows you to bring to bring in types from multiple upstream microservices, and create a coherent graphQL API on top of that. Hasura is a middle man between the microservices and the consumer that converts multiple types into a single coherent graphQL API. Next, Tanmai explains how Hasura handles data fetching and a high volume of requests. They also invented PostgresQL, RLS-like semantics within Hasura. He explains the process for merging your microservices into a single graphQL interface. Back on data fetching, Tanmai explains that when the product is an app, preventing an overabundance of queries becomes easier because during one of the staging processes that they have, they extract all of the queries that the app is actually making, and in the production version it only allows the queries that it has seen before. Hasura is focused on both the public interface and private use cases, though private is slightly better supported. Tanmai talks about the customizations available with Hasura. Hasura supports two layers. One is an aliasing layer that lets you rename tables, columns, etc as exposed by PostgresQL. The other is a computer column, so that you can add computer columns so you can extend the type that you get from a data model, and then you can point that to something that you derive. The panelist discusses the common conception of why it is a bad idea to expose the data models to the frontend folks directly. They discuss the trend of ‘dumbing down’ available tooling to appeal to junior developers, at the cost of making the backend more complicated. They talk about some of the issues that come from this, and the importance of tooling to solve this concern. Finally, Tanmai talks about the reasons to use Hasura over other products. There are 2 technologies that help with integrating arbitrary data sources. First is authorization grammar, their version of RLS that can extend to any system of types and relationships, The second is the data wrapper, part of the compiler that compiles from the graphQL metadata AST to the actual SQL AST. That is a generic interface, so anyone can come in and plug in a Haskell module that has that interface and implement a backend compiler for a native query language. This allows us to plug in other sources and stitch microservices together. The show concludes with Tanmai talking about their choice to use Haskell to make Hasura. Panelists AJ O’Neal Dan Shapir Steve Edwards Charles Max Wood With special guest: Tanmai Gopal Sponsors Adventures in DevOps Sentry use the code “devchat” for 2 months free on Sentry’s small plan The Dev Ed Podcast Links Hasura Haskell Node.js Cloud Native Microservices PostGraphile Postgres PostgresQL RLS Swagger JAMstack Soap Rest Follow DevChatTV on Facebook and Twitter Picks AJ O’Neal: The Economic Singularity Capital Cities GameCube Homebrew Dan Shapir: Romania JSCamp Steve Edwards: Cold Blooded: The Clutter Family Murders Charles Max Wood: Maxcoders.io TripIt St. George Marathon VO2 Max app Tanmai Gopal: Follow Tanmai on Twitter @tanmaigo Broken Earth Trilogy The Three-Body Problem graphQL Asia
Panel: Charles Max Wood Guest: Georgi Parlakov This week on My Angular Story, Charles speaks with Georgi Parlakov who is an R&D Developer at Petrotechnical Data Systems who resides in Bulgaria. Chuck and Georgi talk about his background, past and current projects, and so much more! In particular, we dive pretty deep on: 0:15 – Advertisement: Get A Coder Job! 0:49 – Chuck: Hello! 0:53 – Georgi: Hi! 1:00 – Chuck: Introduce yourself, please! 1:08 – Georgi: I have been an Angular developer and love it every step of the way. 1:20 – Chuck: I stared talking to past guests of Angular, and I find that ½ the people are in the U.S. and the other places, too. Different places but what is your experience as being a developer in the other parts of the world are similar. 2:12 – Georgi: I got into programming but I didn’t want to be at a desk all day. I had some friends in the software industry and I liked what they had. In Bulgaria the people in the software industry they have a 2x or 3x standard of living. I really wanted to begin to try to get into software engineering. I didn’t have any technical background. I went to some interviews and I saw that I needed a lot of knowledge to gain. I learned about the Telerik Academy is doing. They have a large academy and that year I learned a lot and I jumped to this opportunity b/c it seemed like magic. Someone is going to teach me how to be a developer and not charge me? I got into it and it was fun, challenging, and rewarding for me. I dropped my current gig and I went to being a developer. 5:14 – How long is the program at the Telerik Academy. 5:20 – Georgi: It’s about a year. Evenings and then you need to go fulltime. 5:45 – Do they teach you JavaScript? 5:50 – Georgi: Yes. Also, DotNet. Java was mentioned in 2011. 6:17 – Kendo UI have widgets for DotNet. 6:28 – Georgi. 6:35 – Chuck: What got you into JavaScript? 6:44 – Georgi: The previous job I had they used Angular. At that time I was doing...which is a service site rendered HTML. We were using some jQuery and Knock Out, I was learning about Angular and was interested. It was an Angular job and it was technically interesting. They talked about 3D rendering. At least that’s what I got from the conversation. Doing the job we got a few new hires, and they started a project in Angular. We learned from each other, and inspired by people like YOU, and from the Angular talks at conferences. I was inspired. 8:21 – You get into Java and Angular did you get into API? 8:31 – Georgi: Yes. 8:38 – I like how Microsoft names stuff. 8:47 – Georgi: I am listening to...if you have a cool project alias then the project name becomes WCF or something long and tedious. 9:09 – I love those guys. 9:15 – Georgi: I am listening to them b/c someone recommended them. They put the bar really high with their mood and content. 9:40 – Chuck: Carl owns a production company. They do a great job. 9:52 – Chuck: What was it about Angular that got you excited? 10:05 – Georgi: It’s similar to the backend stuff and people get into Angular g/c it’s similar to NVC. I got a lot of the documentation b/c it’s written well. At that time my daughter was 6 months old and I was reading her the Angular documentation. I really enjoyed that. Angular was brand new at that point and I didn’t have a mentor at that time. The learning experience was great, and the flow was fun for me b/c it was challenging. 11:33 – Chuck: The experience is good. 11:42 – How did you get your first programming job? 11:45 – Georgi: Basically out of the academy – 2 months out. The people believed in me and I am thankful. I was only 28 years old and I wasn’t the normal person. 12:22 – I got my first job at 27. 12:30 – A lot of people are transitioning. I did an episode with Tina from South Africa. She moved to England and then to the U.S. She has a Ph.D. in Physics and she transitioned into programming in her 50’s. People think: I am “old”, and it really doesn’t matter. 13:27 – Georgi: People complain while they are sitting down on their butts. I want people to know that you can do it. No matter your age or your experience. The coding knowledge will give you a lot of freedom in the future, because it’s doing magic. Everyone should learn how to code as a hobby in addition to your normal job. 14:55 – Chuck: It might be things like AI and how we interact on our devices. It will be a life skill what we consider to be mundane jobs at this point. 15:18 – Georgi: People say AI could take my job, but also AI will create jobs. 15:36 – Chuck: People theorize about this. Every time people advance in technology it does create more jobs. I worry about the psychology of here is money as a handout. 16:29 – Georgi: We get our self-respect b/c of what we accomplish in the job. Most of us work 8 hours with these certain people and these problems. It’s good to like and even love what you do. 17:00 – Chuck: What have you done with Angular that you are proud of? 17:05 – Georgi: Learning from scratch and learning the basics; eventually advancing my knowledge. Lately I have been going to Meetups and do a presentation there. The theme was... I wanted to contribute back to Angular, and my computer at home is PC. I had troubles with... I am an Angular contributor and I am proud of that. I am not a docker nor was I expert angular person, but here I am. 20:25 – Chuck: That’s what peoples mindsets are: I am not this___, I am not that____, etc. If you want a job and you are 90 years old – got for it. You don’t have to be a genius, but you can find something to contribute to the community. 21:17 – Georgi: We have a lot of Angular from my work, I wanted to give back some. Also, and make a name for myself. Again, it was fun and challenging and nice to do it. 21:44 – Chuck: Now that doesn’t hurt b/c you can put on your CV. 21:55 – Georgi: It only shows the top 100. I am not there, but oh well. 22:09 – Chuck: Every little piece helps. You know, it’s a good way to get involved and so much more. What are you working on now? 22:28 – Georgi: The project I am working on is not using Angular. Besides that I am doing a video course on functional C# and it’s a work in progress. 23:10 – Chuck: Anywhere people can find your course? 23:15 – Georgi: It’s less than 50% done, so no. 23:30 – Chuck: What’s it like being a developer in Bulgaria? 23:35 – Georgi: Bulgaria, has a higher living standard for the software industry. 24:55 – Chuck: Is most of the documentation for computers out there in English in Bulgaria? 24:58 – Georgi: No, not the general population speaks English. It does make it a tad harder to transition if you don’t know English. But some of the academies do 25:50 – Chuck: I was a missionary for LDDS in Italy and so my experience as the younger generation speaks English but not the older generation. 26:39 - Georgi: English is 2nd language in Amsterdam. 27:11 – (Chuck talks about international community and developers.) 27:38 – Our team was ½ and ½ out here in Bulgaria. We did meetings in English most of the time. 28:07 – Chuck: Are you located in Sofia? Georgi: Yes. 28:15 – Chuck: When you get outside of the city is there a programming community? 28:20 – Georgi: Yes, definitely. Again, though, it does change. When they graduate from the Telerik Academy... 29:27 – Chuck: I live in Utah and we are between NV and WY and CO. There is an area (North of Salt Lake City) that has a healthy tech scene. It depends on where you are in UT for a strong/weak teach center. 30:31 – Georgi: I would think the younger kids would like to do it and they need to do it here in the bigger cities. That is not unusual. 31:00 – Chuck: Yes, people pick up the skills and get hired and then they go and work remotely. Do you have a Medium account? 31:20 - Georgi: Yes, through Twitter and Medium. 32:20 – Picks! Links: jQuery Angular JavaScript Vue C++ C# Georgi’s LinkedIn Georgi’s Medium Georgi’s Medium Article Georgi’s Twitter Georgi’s GitHub Georgi’s Stack Overflow Georgi’s Blog Sponsors: Get A Coder Job Fresh Books Cache Fly Picks: Georgi Find your thing and take a leap of faith – it’s never too late. Angular BrowserModule Book: The Three-Body Problem by Cixin Liu Book: Getting to Yes by Roger Fisher Charles The Diabetes Code by Dr. Jason Fung Audible Book: Ultramarathon Man by Dean Karnazes 2 Keto Dudes Walk or Run a 5K everyday (3.1 miles)
Panel: Charles Max Wood Guest: Georgi Parlakov This week on My Angular Story, Charles speaks with Georgi Parlakov who is an R&D Developer at Petrotechnical Data Systems who resides in Bulgaria. Chuck and Georgi talk about his background, past and current projects, and so much more! In particular, we dive pretty deep on: 0:15 – Advertisement: Get A Coder Job! 0:49 – Chuck: Hello! 0:53 – Georgi: Hi! 1:00 – Chuck: Introduce yourself, please! 1:08 – Georgi: I have been an Angular developer and love it every step of the way. 1:20 – Chuck: I stared talking to past guests of Angular, and I find that ½ the people are in the U.S. and the other places, too. Different places but what is your experience as being a developer in the other parts of the world are similar. 2:12 – Georgi: I got into programming but I didn’t want to be at a desk all day. I had some friends in the software industry and I liked what they had. In Bulgaria the people in the software industry they have a 2x or 3x standard of living. I really wanted to begin to try to get into software engineering. I didn’t have any technical background. I went to some interviews and I saw that I needed a lot of knowledge to gain. I learned about the Telerik Academy is doing. They have a large academy and that year I learned a lot and I jumped to this opportunity b/c it seemed like magic. Someone is going to teach me how to be a developer and not charge me? I got into it and it was fun, challenging, and rewarding for me. I dropped my current gig and I went to being a developer. 5:14 – How long is the program at the Telerik Academy. 5:20 – Georgi: It’s about a year. Evenings and then you need to go fulltime. 5:45 – Do they teach you JavaScript? 5:50 – Georgi: Yes. Also, DotNet. Java was mentioned in 2011. 6:17 – Kendo UI have widgets for DotNet. 6:28 – Georgi. 6:35 – Chuck: What got you into JavaScript? 6:44 – Georgi: The previous job I had they used Angular. At that time I was doing...which is a service site rendered HTML. We were using some jQuery and Knock Out, I was learning about Angular and was interested. It was an Angular job and it was technically interesting. They talked about 3D rendering. At least that’s what I got from the conversation. Doing the job we got a few new hires, and they started a project in Angular. We learned from each other, and inspired by people like YOU, and from the Angular talks at conferences. I was inspired. 8:21 – You get into Java and Angular did you get into API? 8:31 – Georgi: Yes. 8:38 – I like how Microsoft names stuff. 8:47 – Georgi: I am listening to...if you have a cool project alias then the project name becomes WCF or something long and tedious. 9:09 – I love those guys. 9:15 – Georgi: I am listening to them b/c someone recommended them. They put the bar really high with their mood and content. 9:40 – Chuck: Carl owns a production company. They do a great job. 9:52 – Chuck: What was it about Angular that got you excited? 10:05 – Georgi: It’s similar to the backend stuff and people get into Angular g/c it’s similar to NVC. I got a lot of the documentation b/c it’s written well. At that time my daughter was 6 months old and I was reading her the Angular documentation. I really enjoyed that. Angular was brand new at that point and I didn’t have a mentor at that time. The learning experience was great, and the flow was fun for me b/c it was challenging. 11:33 – Chuck: The experience is good. 11:42 – How did you get your first programming job? 11:45 – Georgi: Basically out of the academy – 2 months out. The people believed in me and I am thankful. I was only 28 years old and I wasn’t the normal person. 12:22 – I got my first job at 27. 12:30 – A lot of people are transitioning. I did an episode with Tina from South Africa. She moved to England and then to the U.S. She has a Ph.D. in Physics and she transitioned into programming in her 50’s. People think: I am “old”, and it really doesn’t matter. 13:27 – Georgi: People complain while they are sitting down on their butts. I want people to know that you can do it. No matter your age or your experience. The coding knowledge will give you a lot of freedom in the future, because it’s doing magic. Everyone should learn how to code as a hobby in addition to your normal job. 14:55 – Chuck: It might be things like AI and how we interact on our devices. It will be a life skill what we consider to be mundane jobs at this point. 15:18 – Georgi: People say AI could take my job, but also AI will create jobs. 15:36 – Chuck: People theorize about this. Every time people advance in technology it does create more jobs. I worry about the psychology of here is money as a handout. 16:29 – Georgi: We get our self-respect b/c of what we accomplish in the job. Most of us work 8 hours with these certain people and these problems. It’s good to like and even love what you do. 17:00 – Chuck: What have you done with Angular that you are proud of? 17:05 – Georgi: Learning from scratch and learning the basics; eventually advancing my knowledge. Lately I have been going to Meetups and do a presentation there. The theme was... I wanted to contribute back to Angular, and my computer at home is PC. I had troubles with... I am an Angular contributor and I am proud of that. I am not a docker nor was I expert angular person, but here I am. 20:25 – Chuck: That’s what peoples mindsets are: I am not this___, I am not that____, etc. If you want a job and you are 90 years old – got for it. You don’t have to be a genius, but you can find something to contribute to the community. 21:17 – Georgi: We have a lot of Angular from my work, I wanted to give back some. Also, and make a name for myself. Again, it was fun and challenging and nice to do it. 21:44 – Chuck: Now that doesn’t hurt b/c you can put on your CV. 21:55 – Georgi: It only shows the top 100. I am not there, but oh well. 22:09 – Chuck: Every little piece helps. You know, it’s a good way to get involved and so much more. What are you working on now? 22:28 – Georgi: The project I am working on is not using Angular. Besides that I am doing a video course on functional C# and it’s a work in progress. 23:10 – Chuck: Anywhere people can find your course? 23:15 – Georgi: It’s less than 50% done, so no. 23:30 – Chuck: What’s it like being a developer in Bulgaria? 23:35 – Georgi: Bulgaria, has a higher living standard for the software industry. 24:55 – Chuck: Is most of the documentation for computers out there in English in Bulgaria? 24:58 – Georgi: No, not the general population speaks English. It does make it a tad harder to transition if you don’t know English. But some of the academies do 25:50 – Chuck: I was a missionary for LDDS in Italy and so my experience as the younger generation speaks English but not the older generation. 26:39 - Georgi: English is 2nd language in Amsterdam. 27:11 – (Chuck talks about international community and developers.) 27:38 – Our team was ½ and ½ out here in Bulgaria. We did meetings in English most of the time. 28:07 – Chuck: Are you located in Sofia? Georgi: Yes. 28:15 – Chuck: When you get outside of the city is there a programming community? 28:20 – Georgi: Yes, definitely. Again, though, it does change. When they graduate from the Telerik Academy... 29:27 – Chuck: I live in Utah and we are between NV and WY and CO. There is an area (North of Salt Lake City) that has a healthy tech scene. It depends on where you are in UT for a strong/weak teach center. 30:31 – Georgi: I would think the younger kids would like to do it and they need to do it here in the bigger cities. That is not unusual. 31:00 – Chuck: Yes, people pick up the skills and get hired and then they go and work remotely. Do you have a Medium account? 31:20 - Georgi: Yes, through Twitter and Medium. 32:20 – Picks! Links: jQuery Angular JavaScript Vue C++ C# Georgi’s LinkedIn Georgi’s Medium Georgi’s Medium Article Georgi’s Twitter Georgi’s GitHub Georgi’s Stack Overflow Georgi’s Blog Sponsors: Get A Coder Job Fresh Books Cache Fly Picks: Georgi Find your thing and take a leap of faith – it’s never too late. Angular BrowserModule Book: The Three-Body Problem by Cixin Liu Book: Getting to Yes by Roger Fisher Charles The Diabetes Code by Dr. Jason Fung Audible Book: Ultramarathon Man by Dean Karnazes 2 Keto Dudes Walk or Run a 5K everyday (3.1 miles)
Panel: Charles Max Wood Guest: Georgi Parlakov This week on My Angular Story, Charles speaks with Georgi Parlakov who is an R&D Developer at Petrotechnical Data Systems who resides in Bulgaria. Chuck and Georgi talk about his background, past and current projects, and so much more! In particular, we dive pretty deep on: 0:15 – Advertisement: Get A Coder Job! 0:49 – Chuck: Hello! 0:53 – Georgi: Hi! 1:00 – Chuck: Introduce yourself, please! 1:08 – Georgi: I have been an Angular developer and love it every step of the way. 1:20 – Chuck: I stared talking to past guests of Angular, and I find that ½ the people are in the U.S. and the other places, too. Different places but what is your experience as being a developer in the other parts of the world are similar. 2:12 – Georgi: I got into programming but I didn’t want to be at a desk all day. I had some friends in the software industry and I liked what they had. In Bulgaria the people in the software industry they have a 2x or 3x standard of living. I really wanted to begin to try to get into software engineering. I didn’t have any technical background. I went to some interviews and I saw that I needed a lot of knowledge to gain. I learned about the Telerik Academy is doing. They have a large academy and that year I learned a lot and I jumped to this opportunity b/c it seemed like magic. Someone is going to teach me how to be a developer and not charge me? I got into it and it was fun, challenging, and rewarding for me. I dropped my current gig and I went to being a developer. 5:14 – How long is the program at the Telerik Academy. 5:20 – Georgi: It’s about a year. Evenings and then you need to go fulltime. 5:45 – Do they teach you JavaScript? 5:50 – Georgi: Yes. Also, DotNet. Java was mentioned in 2011. 6:17 – Kendo UI have widgets for DotNet. 6:28 – Georgi. 6:35 – Chuck: What got you into JavaScript? 6:44 – Georgi: The previous job I had they used Angular. At that time I was doing...which is a service site rendered HTML. We were using some jQuery and Knock Out, I was learning about Angular and was interested. It was an Angular job and it was technically interesting. They talked about 3D rendering. At least that’s what I got from the conversation. Doing the job we got a few new hires, and they started a project in Angular. We learned from each other, and inspired by people like YOU, and from the Angular talks at conferences. I was inspired. 8:21 – You get into Java and Angular did you get into API? 8:31 – Georgi: Yes. 8:38 – I like how Microsoft names stuff. 8:47 – Georgi: I am listening to...if you have a cool project alias then the project name becomes WCF or something long and tedious. 9:09 – I love those guys. 9:15 – Georgi: I am listening to them b/c someone recommended them. They put the bar really high with their mood and content. 9:40 – Chuck: Carl owns a production company. They do a great job. 9:52 – Chuck: What was it about Angular that got you excited? 10:05 – Georgi: It’s similar to the backend stuff and people get into Angular g/c it’s similar to NVC. I got a lot of the documentation b/c it’s written well. At that time my daughter was 6 months old and I was reading her the Angular documentation. I really enjoyed that. Angular was brand new at that point and I didn’t have a mentor at that time. The learning experience was great, and the flow was fun for me b/c it was challenging. 11:33 – Chuck: The experience is good. 11:42 – How did you get your first programming job? 11:45 – Georgi: Basically out of the academy – 2 months out. The people believed in me and I am thankful. I was only 28 years old and I wasn’t the normal person. 12:22 – I got my first job at 27. 12:30 – A lot of people are transitioning. I did an episode with Tina from South Africa. She moved to England and then to the U.S. She has a Ph.D. in Physics and she transitioned into programming in her 50’s. People think: I am “old”, and it really doesn’t matter. 13:27 – Georgi: People complain while they are sitting down on their butts. I want people to know that you can do it. No matter your age or your experience. The coding knowledge will give you a lot of freedom in the future, because it’s doing magic. Everyone should learn how to code as a hobby in addition to your normal job. 14:55 – Chuck: It might be things like AI and how we interact on our devices. It will be a life skill what we consider to be mundane jobs at this point. 15:18 – Georgi: People say AI could take my job, but also AI will create jobs. 15:36 – Chuck: People theorize about this. Every time people advance in technology it does create more jobs. I worry about the psychology of here is money as a handout. 16:29 – Georgi: We get our self-respect b/c of what we accomplish in the job. Most of us work 8 hours with these certain people and these problems. It’s good to like and even love what you do. 17:00 – Chuck: What have you done with Angular that you are proud of? 17:05 – Georgi: Learning from scratch and learning the basics; eventually advancing my knowledge. Lately I have been going to Meetups and do a presentation there. The theme was... I wanted to contribute back to Angular, and my computer at home is PC. I had troubles with... I am an Angular contributor and I am proud of that. I am not a docker nor was I expert angular person, but here I am. 20:25 – Chuck: That’s what peoples mindsets are: I am not this___, I am not that____, etc. If you want a job and you are 90 years old – got for it. You don’t have to be a genius, but you can find something to contribute to the community. 21:17 – Georgi: We have a lot of Angular from my work, I wanted to give back some. Also, and make a name for myself. Again, it was fun and challenging and nice to do it. 21:44 – Chuck: Now that doesn’t hurt b/c you can put on your CV. 21:55 – Georgi: It only shows the top 100. I am not there, but oh well. 22:09 – Chuck: Every little piece helps. You know, it’s a good way to get involved and so much more. What are you working on now? 22:28 – Georgi: The project I am working on is not using Angular. Besides that I am doing a video course on functional C# and it’s a work in progress. 23:10 – Chuck: Anywhere people can find your course? 23:15 – Georgi: It’s less than 50% done, so no. 23:30 – Chuck: What’s it like being a developer in Bulgaria? 23:35 – Georgi: Bulgaria, has a higher living standard for the software industry. 24:55 – Chuck: Is most of the documentation for computers out there in English in Bulgaria? 24:58 – Georgi: No, not the general population speaks English. It does make it a tad harder to transition if you don’t know English. But some of the academies do 25:50 – Chuck: I was a missionary for LDDS in Italy and so my experience as the younger generation speaks English but not the older generation. 26:39 - Georgi: English is 2nd language in Amsterdam. 27:11 – (Chuck talks about international community and developers.) 27:38 – Our team was ½ and ½ out here in Bulgaria. We did meetings in English most of the time. 28:07 – Chuck: Are you located in Sofia? Georgi: Yes. 28:15 – Chuck: When you get outside of the city is there a programming community? 28:20 – Georgi: Yes, definitely. Again, though, it does change. When they graduate from the Telerik Academy... 29:27 – Chuck: I live in Utah and we are between NV and WY and CO. There is an area (North of Salt Lake City) that has a healthy tech scene. It depends on where you are in UT for a strong/weak teach center. 30:31 – Georgi: I would think the younger kids would like to do it and they need to do it here in the bigger cities. That is not unusual. 31:00 – Chuck: Yes, people pick up the skills and get hired and then they go and work remotely. Do you have a Medium account? 31:20 - Georgi: Yes, through Twitter and Medium. 32:20 – Picks! Links: jQuery Angular JavaScript Vue C++ C# Georgi’s LinkedIn Georgi’s Medium Georgi’s Medium Article Georgi’s Twitter Georgi’s GitHub Georgi’s Stack Overflow Georgi’s Blog Sponsors: Get A Coder Job Fresh Books Cache Fly Picks: Georgi Find your thing and take a leap of faith – it’s never too late. Angular BrowserModule Book: The Three-Body Problem by Cixin Liu Book: Getting to Yes by Roger Fisher Charles The Diabetes Code by Dr. Jason Fung Audible Book: Ultramarathon Man by Dean Karnazes 2 Keto Dudes Walk or Run a 5K everyday (3.1 miles)
Panel: Charles Max Wood AJ ONeal Special Guests: Kurt Mackey In this episode, the JavaScript Jabber panel talks to Kurt Mackey about Fly.io. At Fly.io, they are "building a JavaScript platform that gives you the power to build your own CDN." They talk about how Fly.io came to fruition, how CDN caching works, and what happens when you deploy a Fly app. They also touch on resizing images with Fly, how you actually build JavaScript platforms using Fly, and more! In particular, we dive pretty deep on: Fly.io Building a programmable CDN High level overview of Fly.io How did this project come together? CDNs didn’t work with dynamic applications Has been working on this since 2008 Extend application logic to the “edge” Putting burden of JavaScript “nastiest” onto the web server Fly is the proxy layer Getting things closer to visitors and users CDN caching Cache APIs Writing logic to improve your lighthouse score Have you built in resizing images into Fly? Managing assets closer to the user Can you modify your own JavaScript files? What happens when you deploy a Fly app Having more application logic DOM within the proxy Ghost React and Gatsby Intelligently loading client JavaScript How do you build the JavaScript platform? And much, much more! Links: Fly.io JavaScript Ghost Gatsby React @flydotio @mrkurt Kurt at ARS Technica Kurt’s GitHub Sponsors Kendo UI Sentry Digital Ocean Picks: Charles GitLab AJ Gitea Black Panther Kurt Packet.net The Three-Body Problem by Cixin Liu
Panel: Charles Max Wood AJ ONeal Special Guests: Kurt Mackey In this episode, the JavaScript Jabber panel talks to Kurt Mackey about Fly.io. At Fly.io, they are "building a JavaScript platform that gives you the power to build your own CDN." They talk about how Fly.io came to fruition, how CDN caching works, and what happens when you deploy a Fly app. They also touch on resizing images with Fly, how you actually build JavaScript platforms using Fly, and more! In particular, we dive pretty deep on: Fly.io Building a programmable CDN High level overview of Fly.io How did this project come together? CDNs didn’t work with dynamic applications Has been working on this since 2008 Extend application logic to the “edge” Putting burden of JavaScript “nastiest” onto the web server Fly is the proxy layer Getting things closer to visitors and users CDN caching Cache APIs Writing logic to improve your lighthouse score Have you built in resizing images into Fly? Managing assets closer to the user Can you modify your own JavaScript files? What happens when you deploy a Fly app Having more application logic DOM within the proxy Ghost React and Gatsby Intelligently loading client JavaScript How do you build the JavaScript platform? And much, much more! Links: Fly.io JavaScript Ghost Gatsby React @flydotio @mrkurt Kurt at ARS Technica Kurt’s GitHub Sponsors Kendo UI Sentry Digital Ocean Picks: Charles GitLab AJ Gitea Black Panther Kurt Packet.net The Three-Body Problem by Cixin Liu
Panel: Charles Max Wood AJ ONeal Special Guests: Kurt Mackey In this episode, the JavaScript Jabber panel talks to Kurt Mackey about Fly.io. At Fly.io, they are "building a JavaScript platform that gives you the power to build your own CDN." They talk about how Fly.io came to fruition, how CDN caching works, and what happens when you deploy a Fly app. They also touch on resizing images with Fly, how you actually build JavaScript platforms using Fly, and more! In particular, we dive pretty deep on: Fly.io Building a programmable CDN High level overview of Fly.io How did this project come together? CDNs didn’t work with dynamic applications Has been working on this since 2008 Extend application logic to the “edge” Putting burden of JavaScript “nastiest” onto the web server Fly is the proxy layer Getting things closer to visitors and users CDN caching Cache APIs Writing logic to improve your lighthouse score Have you built in resizing images into Fly? Managing assets closer to the user Can you modify your own JavaScript files? What happens when you deploy a Fly app Having more application logic DOM within the proxy Ghost React and Gatsby Intelligently loading client JavaScript How do you build the JavaScript platform? And much, much more! Links: Fly.io JavaScript Ghost Gatsby React @flydotio @mrkurt Kurt at ARS Technica Kurt’s GitHub Sponsors Kendo UI Sentry Digital Ocean Picks: Charles GitLab AJ Gitea Black Panther Kurt Packet.net The Three-Body Problem by Cixin Liu
Panel: Charles Max Wood Erik Hanchett Divya Sasidharan Chris Fritz Joe Eames Special Guests: Filipa Lacerda In this episode of Views on Vue, the panelists discuss building modal component with Filipa Lacerda. Filipa is a senior frontend engineer at GitLab and works with Vue daily. She wrote an article recently on creating reusable components that you can use multiple times in your application without having to rewrite your code. She stresses the fact that components should be simple and not too complex, that way they can be more accessible and reusable in the future. In particular, we dive pretty deep on: Divya intro Filipa intro Vue and GitLab What makes a component reusable? Main focus What do you see that people do wrong in components? Makes your reusable components as simple as possible Accessible components Planning components Steps to writing reusable components Testing Are there types of accessibility that aren’t handles by area? Seizures Rachel Nabors VueConf Talk How do you refine this for reusability and accessibility? Focus on the code itself How do you know if the component is too complex? GitLab style guide The need to be on the same page with code Do you have any tips how to discuss style? And much, much more! Links: GitLab Vue Filipa article Rachel Nabors VueConf Talk @FilipaLacerda Filipa’s GitHub Framework Summit Filipa’s Alligator Profile Filipa’s GitLab Picks: Charles Stimulus Framework Ethereum Block Chain Udemy Blockchain Course Erik Deception Roseanne Joe Exploring Zero Configuration With Vue by Andrew Thauer 7 Secret Patterns Vue Consultants Don’t Want You to Know talk by Chris Fritz Chris The Fifth Season by N K Jemisin Flash Forward Podcast Vue CLI 3 UI Divya Proxy Article The Three-Body Problem Book Series by Cixin Liu React 16.3 Filipa Remote Work Podcast
Panel: Charles Max Wood Erik Hanchett Divya Sasidharan Chris Fritz Joe Eames Special Guests: Filipa Lacerda In this episode of Views on Vue, the panelists discuss building modal component with Filipa Lacerda. Filipa is a senior frontend engineer at GitLab and works with Vue daily. She wrote an article recently on creating reusable components that you can use multiple times in your application without having to rewrite your code. She stresses the fact that components should be simple and not too complex, that way they can be more accessible and reusable in the future. In particular, we dive pretty deep on: Divya intro Filipa intro Vue and GitLab What makes a component reusable? Main focus What do you see that people do wrong in components? Makes your reusable components as simple as possible Accessible components Planning components Steps to writing reusable components Testing Are there types of accessibility that aren’t handles by area? Seizures Rachel Nabors VueConf Talk How do you refine this for reusability and accessibility? Focus on the code itself How do you know if the component is too complex? GitLab style guide The need to be on the same page with code Do you have any tips how to discuss style? And much, much more! Links: GitLab Vue Filipa article Rachel Nabors VueConf Talk @FilipaLacerda Filipa’s GitHub Framework Summit Filipa’s Alligator Profile Filipa’s GitLab Picks: Charles Stimulus Framework Ethereum Block Chain Udemy Blockchain Course Erik Deception Roseanne Joe Exploring Zero Configuration With Vue by Andrew Thauer 7 Secret Patterns Vue Consultants Don’t Want You to Know talk by Chris Fritz Chris The Fifth Season by N K Jemisin Flash Forward Podcast Vue CLI 3 UI Divya Proxy Article The Three-Body Problem Book Series by Cixin Liu React 16.3 Filipa Remote Work Podcast
Panel: Charles Max Wood Erik Hanchett Chris Fritz In this episode of Views on Vue, the panelists discuss Vue enterprise development with Chris Fritz. Chris is the curator for documentation on the Vue core team, works on a lot of tooling to help support Vue developers, and develops resources such as the Style Guide. They compare his Vue Enterprise Boilerplate to Nuxt and discuss the pros and cons to using each. Chris also discusses why he decided to create this boilerplate and how it has allowed him to skip to the interesting part of his job. In particular, we dive pretty deep on: Chris intro Vue Documentation Cookbooks Different “recipes” in the cookbook What is enterprise development? Provides flexibility Vue Enterprise Boilerplate vs Nuxt Vue CLI Where to start? The boilerplate can be used as a study guide in a way How do you pick the tools to create this? CSS vs SCSS Why he built the boilerplate Vue Resource Jest Vue Test Utils What should people think about when using the boilerplate? Tries to encourage what he’s seen work well What do you think of TypeScript support? And much, much more! Links: Vue Vue Style Guide Documentation Cookbooks Vue Enterprise Boilerplate Nuxt Vue CLI CSS SCSS Vue Resource Jest Vue Test Utils TypeScript Support Chris’s Patreon @ChrisVFritz Chris’s GitHub Picks: Charles Google Play Store for Podcast JavaScript Dev Summit to come soon Wheel of Time by Robert Jordan Ready Player One by Ernest Cline Chuck@Devchat.tv @CMaxW Suggest Topics Erik Vue VS Code Extension Pack Chris Vue Conf US The Three-Body Problem by Cixin Liu Into the Breach Vue Vixens
Panel: Charles Max Wood Erik Hanchett Chris Fritz In this episode of Views on Vue, the panelists discuss Vue enterprise development with Chris Fritz. Chris is the curator for documentation on the Vue core team, works on a lot of tooling to help support Vue developers, and develops resources such as the Style Guide. They compare his Vue Enterprise Boilerplate to Nuxt and discuss the pros and cons to using each. Chris also discusses why he decided to create this boilerplate and how it has allowed him to skip to the interesting part of his job. In particular, we dive pretty deep on: Chris intro Vue Documentation Cookbooks Different “recipes” in the cookbook What is enterprise development? Provides flexibility Vue Enterprise Boilerplate vs Nuxt Vue CLI Where to start? The boilerplate can be used as a study guide in a way How do you pick the tools to create this? CSS vs SCSS Why he built the boilerplate Vue Resource Jest Vue Test Utils What should people think about when using the boilerplate? Tries to encourage what he’s seen work well What do you think of TypeScript support? And much, much more! Links: Vue Vue Style Guide Documentation Cookbooks Vue Enterprise Boilerplate Nuxt Vue CLI CSS SCSS Vue Resource Jest Vue Test Utils TypeScript Support Chris’s Patreon @ChrisVFritz Chris’s GitHub Picks: Charles Google Play Store for Podcast JavaScript Dev Summit to come soon Wheel of Time by Robert Jordan Ready Player One by Ernest Cline Chuck@Devchat.tv @CMaxW Suggest Topics Erik Vue VS Code Extension Pack Chris Vue Conf US The Three-Body Problem by Cixin Liu Into the Breach Vue Vixens
00:16 – Welcome to “The Tale of Space Cat Burritos” …we mean, “Greater Than Code!” 02:26 – Space Technology and the Cultural Portrayal of Science NASA Explorers Program (https://explorers.gsfc.nasa.gov/) 08:24 – The Influence of Science Fiction on the Current Developments in Science NASA Innovative Advanced Concepts Program (NIAC) (https://www.nasa.gov/directorates/spacetech/niac/index.html) The Comet Hitchhiker (https://www.nasa.gov/content/comet-hitchhiker-harvesting-kinetic-energy-from-small-bodies-to-enable-fast-and-low-cost) Supernatural Horror in Literature By H. P. Lovecraft 14:47 – What is sci-fi telling us about the world we live in now? The Three-Body Problem by Cixin Liu (https://www.amazon.com/Three-Body-Problem-Cixin-Liu/dp/0765382032) The Expanse Series (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Expanse_(novel_series)) 18:34 – “Hard” vs “Soft” Science Fiction; “Hard” Conference Talks vs “Soft” Talks Coraline Ada Ehmke: Metaphors Are Similes. Similes Are Like Metaphors @ Rubyfuza 2017 (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=czvgHSYKkNU) 24:43 – Understanding How People Work to Build Better Technology; Fighting for Accessibility in Science Henrietta Lacks (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henrietta_Lacks) The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks (http://rebeccaskloot.com/the-immortal-life/) 33:11 – Machine Learning “Your scientists were so preoccupied with whether or not they could, they didn’t stop to think if they should.” – Jeff Goldblum as Dr. Ian Malcolm in Jurassic Park 37:52 – Scarcity and Exploitation: Looking at Power Dynamics and Relationships Between Groups and People Conway’s Law (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conway%27s_law) 41:34 – Reasons We Prefer to Focus on Technology; Siloing and Specialization 50:16 – Control: Who is the manager? Treating People Equally 52:46 – Congruency and Being Congruent: It’s a People Problem! Gerald Weinberg (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gerald_Weinberg) [The Secrets of Consulting: A Guide to Giving and Getting Advice Successfully by Gerald M. Weinberg]((https://www.amazon.com/Secrets-Consulting-Giving-Getting-Successfully/dp/0932633013) “Emotions are valid inputs to every thought process.” – Coraline Ada Ehmke The Heart of Whiteness: Ijeoma Oluo Interviews Rachel Dolezal, the White Woman Who Identifies as Black (https://www.thestranger.com/features/2017/04/19/25082450/the-heart-of-whiteness-ijeoma-oluo-interviews-rachel-dolezal-the-white-woman-who-identifies-as-black) Ashe’s Tweets (https://twitter.com/ashedryden/status/854707674403012609) 01:01:44 – How do we know we are right? The Orange Juice Test (https://www.intercom.com/blog/the-orange-juice-test/) The Art of Negotiating the Best Deal by Seth Freeman (https://www.audible.com/pd/The-Art-of-Negotiating-the-Best-Deal-Audiobook/B00JLJI8AK) Reflections: Rein: These issues go straight up to the top in terms of the philosophical ladder we’re trying to climb of what do we value? How do we get other people to share our values? It doesn’t get easier by ignoring that the problem is that difficult and pretending that it’s just technical. Coraline: It’s the responsibility of technologists to think about the social impact of the technical solutions they are making, whether that means by being better informed and striving to be generalists, or by making sure we are being inclusive and giving voice to people with different perspectives and levels of expertise on our teams to make sure we are addressing problems deeply and not just from one particular silo. Ashe: Understanding how we are looking at a problem ethically, how we’re looking at it technically, and how we’re looking at it from a human point of view? What are the potential effects? Brad: The laws of nature still exist in the absence of humans. Humans are the reason things are messy and complicated. This episode was brought to you by @therubyrep (https://twitter.com/therubyrep) of DevReps, LLC (http://www.devreps.com/). To pledge your support and to join our awesome Slack community, visit patreon.com/greaterthancode (https://www.patreon.com/greaterthancode). To make a one-time donation so that we can continue to bring you more content and transcripts like this, please do so at paypal.me/devreps (https://www.paypal.me/devreps). You will also get an invitation to our Slack community this way as well. Amazon links may be affiliate links, which means you’re supporting the show when you purchase our recommendations. Thanks! Special Guests: Ariel Waldman, Ashe Dryden, and Brad Grzesiak.
Intro / Outro The last ones by Jahzzar http://freemusicarchive.org/music/Jahzzar/Smoke_Factory/The_last_ones 00:01:00 UISGCON12. Afterworlds. https://12.uisgcon.org/ https://www.facebook.com/rekun.photo/photos/?tab=album&album_id=730563853779312 Видео докладов https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL0YHqSi934_5fPXaoNxqx42PI7PrCC2xI 00:01:54 No Name Podcast https://nonamepodcast.podbean.com/ 00:02:14 Интервью с Сергеем Смитиенко. 00:12:34 Hundreds of thousands of TalkTalk and Post Office broadband users are knocked off the internet by cyber-attack that seizes control of their routers http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3991714/Hundreds-thousands-TalkTalk-Post-Office-broadband-users-knocked-internet-cyber-attack-seizes-control-routers.html 00:16:43 Six seconds to hack a credit card http://www.ncl.ac.uk/press/news/2016/12/cyberattack/ Does The Online Card Payment Landscape Unwittingly Facilitate Fraud? (pdf) http://eprint.ncl.ac.uk/file_store/production/230123/19180242-D02E-47AC-BDB3-73C22D6E1FDB.pdf How it takes just six seconds to hack a credit card (video) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uwvjZGKwKvY 00:34:23 Хакери атакували українське казначейство http://znaj.ua/news/regions/80081/hakeri-atakuvali-ukrayinske-kaznachejstvo.html 00:43:52 Утверждена Доктрина информационной безопасности России http://kremlin.ru/acts/news/53418 00:51:54 Связаться с Сергеем можно через facebook https://www.facebook.com/sergey.smitienko 00:53:34 Полтавський суд відпустив кіберзлочинця, якого 4 роки шукали правоохоронці 30 країн світу http://poltava.to/news/40979/ 00:56:04 СМИ сообщили о краже 2 млрд руб. со счетов в ЦБ http://www.rbc.ru/finances/03/12/2016/584238709a7947256285e2ff 00:56:59 The UK now wields unprecedented surveillance powers — here’s what it means http://www.theverge.com/2016/11/23/13718768/uk-surveillance-laws-explained-investigatory-powers-bill 00:58:06 FBI’s New Hacking Powers Take Effect This Week http://fortune.com/2016/11/30/rule-41/ 01:01:06 [tor-talk] Javascript exploit https://lists.torproject.org/pipermail/tor-talk/2016-November/042639.html Security vulnerabilities fixed in Firefox 50.0.1 https://www.mozilla.org/en-US/security/advisories/mfsa2016-91/ 01:03:03 Standards body warned SMS 2FA is insecure and nobody listened http://www.theregister.co.uk/2016/12/06/2fa_missed_warning/ 01:04:02 Android, Qualcomm move on insecure GPS almanac downloads http://www.theregister.co.uk/2016/12/07/android_qualcomm_move_on_insecure_gps_almanac_downloads/ 01:08:11 Six seconds to hack a credit card http://www.ncl.ac.uk/press/news/2016/12/cyberattack/ (повторение мать заикания) 01:09:16 Clarkson stung after bank prank http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/7174760.stm 01:12:28 Printer security is so bad HP Inc will sell you services to fix it http://www.theregister.co.uk/2016/12/06/printer_security_sucks_so_bad_hp_has_opened_a_pain_outsourcing_unit/ Книги: Donald E. Knuth The Art of Computer Programming https://www.amazon.com/Computer-Programming-Volumes-1-4A-Boxed/dp/0321751043 Peter Watts Blindsight https://www.amazon.com/Blindsight-Peter-Watts/dp/0765319640/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1483619160&sr=1-1&keywords=Blindsight Cixin Liu The Three-Body Problem https://www.amazon.com/Three-Body-Problem-Cixin-Liu/dp/0765382032/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1483619237&sr=1-1&keywords=The+Three-Body+Problem Neal Stephenson Cryptonomicon https://www.amazon.com/Cryptonomicon-Neal-Stephenson/dp/0060512806/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1483619337&sr=1-1&keywords=Cryptonomicon