Podcasts about treeview

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Best podcasts about treeview

Latest podcast episodes about treeview

VR in Education
Episode 120-Mixed Reality for Learning with Newton's Room

VR in Education

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 18, 2024 43:56


Hello everyone.  Welcome to another exciting episode of VR in Education, where we dive deep into virtual reality for teaching and learning.  Today we have the pleasure of talking to Horacio Torrendell, the visionary CEO and Founder of Treeview VR/AR.  We are excited to have him today to explore the innovative world of Newton's Room, Treeview's latest mixed-reality app designed to transform how we learn physics. This cutting-edge platform invites users to engage with immersive physics puzzles that dynamically adapt to their physical surroundings, employing Newton's laws of physics in challenging and interactive ways.

The Strawberry Blonde
#03 La computación espacial: una nueva era tecnológica con Horacio Torrendell de Treeview

The Strawberry Blonde

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 5, 2023 64:53


El anuncio oficial del lanzamiento de Apple Vision Pro definió la gran temática del año entrante: la computación espacial. En este episodio junto a Horacio Torrendell, fundador y CEO de Treeview -la empresa líder en América Latina en el desarrollo de realidad virtual y aumentada- te contamos todo acerca de la nueva era tecnológica en la que estamos a punto de sumergirnos como humanidad. ¡Dale play a este episodio y prepárate para volar!No dejes de leer el artículo de Horacio: What is Spatial Computing? MasterClass {La moda ante una nueva generación tecnológica}¡Llevá tu negocio al próximo nivel con Tryolabs!

Make That Song Now
Episode 56: Christmas Treeview? Preview? Re-Preview?

Make That Song Now

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 29, 2022 39:04


Last year we gave you a sneak peak at a song off of each Mark and Drew's work-in-progress Xmas albums, and guess what? Well, we maybe kinda forgot to actually keep working, and now we may very possibly be scrambling to get them done in time for this year's holiday shenanigans. Luckily, this here episode contains another sneak peak at new songs from those very albums of which I have been typing about!

christmas treeview
SOLABS QM Insights
Episode 52: Searching Efficiently in QM10

SOLABS QM Insights

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 13, 2022 12:37


In this episode of the QM Insights podcast show, Etienne and Gretchen discuss how to search efficiently in QM10. This includes custom searches, common search queries in the search bar, the recent items list, and much more!   Key Takeaways 01:05 Common ways to search within QM10 03:05 What types of custom searches can be set? 05:22 Using the Treeview for search purposes 06:54 Using common search queries in the search bar 09:12 Can we restrict external users from searching? 11:48 Thanks to Gretchen and to our listeners   Contact us at solabs-podcast@solabs.com

The Strawberry Blonde
NFTs, el Metaverso y el futuro de la moda con Horacio Torrendell de Treeview Studio

The Strawberry Blonde

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 12, 2022 93:03


Nunca me costó TANTO convencer a un invitado para participar en mi podcast. Es que nadie en verdad, explica mejor lo que es un NFT o el Metaverso que él. Fue cuando le hice entender la relevancia del tema cuando hablamos del futuro de la moda, que aceptó la invitación. En el podcast de hoy converso con el fundador de Treeview, Horacio Torrendell. Treeview es un estudio de desarrollo de software especializado en tecnologías inmersivas con la misión de servir a la próxima revolución tecnológica, ofreciendo soluciones a través de la realidad virtual y la realidad aumentada. Dicho esto, hagan que todo este esfuerzo por convencerlo valga la pena y escuchen este podcast, ya disponible a través del link en mi perfil. No se requieren conocimientos previos en tecnología para escucharlo.Recomendaciones del episodio: The Metaverse is Underhyped Why Would Anyone Buy an NFT?Why I left the Bored Ape Yacht Club The Tim Ferriss Show #506: Balaji Srinivasan on The Future of Bitcoin and Ethereum, How to Become Noncancelable, the Path to Personal Freedom and Wealth in a New World, the Changing Landscape of Warfare, and MoreA Pomp LetterTechCrunchConoce más sobre Magma FuturaSigue a Magma Futura en Instagram

SOLABS QM Insights
Document Management in QM10, Part 3: Document Administration

SOLABS QM Insights

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 21, 2021 15:36


The QM Insights podcast show is back on its mission to help SOLABS' clients to learn from experience. Today's episode is Part 3 of our series on how QM10 helps our clients with document management.  In this episode, we focus on the tools available to Document Administrators to assist with their document administration needs.   00:41 Introducing today's guests: Gretchen Dixson and Philippe Gaudreau 01:04 Find previous episodes from this series here: QM Insights Podcast – SOLABS 01:35 Philippe provides a sneak peek of our 10.9 release 04:50 Our support team is currently scheduling the upgrades to the latest version of QM10. 05:34 Gretchen details the tools available for document administrators – Document Types, Document Workflow Templates and PDF Rendering Templates ??       Document Types help you create default “electronic templates” for your various documents 07:01 Document Workflow Templates can be used to easily assign document review/approval tasks if they are often assigned to the same person 07:48 What are the options in terms of default settings for Document Types? 08:51 You can set date fields to allow entry of past dates or only current/future dates depending on your needs 10:28 Clients usually set default folder locations to ensure that their documents are automatically placed in the correct Treeview folder location 12:51 We like to help our clients with initial configuration and ongoing review. Learn more about our Client Success Agreements here: Client Success Assistance - Service Level Agreement – SOLABS 14 :37 Etienne thanks today's guests & listeners   Find our User Guide Index here: User Guides Index – SOLABS Contact us at solabs-podcast@solabs.com #solabs #qm10 #qualitymanagement

Devchat.tv Master Feed
032 JSJ Angular.js

Devchat.tv Master Feed

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 19, 2012 50:47


Panel Misko Hevery (twitter github blog) Igor Minar (twitter github blog) Jamison Dance (twitter github blog) Joe Eames (twitter github blog) Tim Caswell (twitter github howtonode.org) AJ O’Neal (twitter github blog) Discussion 01:33 - Angular.js (twitter github blog) 02:33 - Angular.js compared to other frameworks 04:03 - How does it work? 05:22 - Cost 06:06 - HTML Compiler 07:02 - Directives 10:31 - Working with browsers in the future 12:07 - Dependency injection 16:50 - Main method 18:48 - Using require.js 20:53 - How would you build a TreeView widget in Angular? 24:07 - Where data is stored 24:42 - Scope 29:47 - Syncing to servers RESTClient 31:34 - Testability & Services in Angular 39:04 - Benefits of Angular Dependency injection Directives Picks The Arrow (Joe) Font Awesome (Tim) Testacular (Igor) Plunker (Igor) The Better Angels of our Nature: Steven Pinker (Misko) XCOM (Jamison) The Foundation Series: Isaac Asimov (Jamison) Influencer: The Power to Change Anything (AJ) Transcript [This episode is sponsored by ComponentOne, makers of Wijmo. If you need stunning UI elements or awesome graphs and charts, then go to wijmo.com and check them out.] [Hosting and bandwidth provided by the Blue Box Group. Check them out at bluebox.net] JAMISON: Hi everybody and welcome to episode 32 of the JavaScript Jabber podcast. I'm not your host Charles Max Wood, I'm Jamison Dance. Chuck is at a conference this week. So, he is not here. We have with us Joe Eames. JOE: Hey everybody! JAMISON: Tim Caswell. TIM: Hello. JAMISON: And we have two special guests. I'm going to mangle your names, so I'm sorry. It’s Misko Hevery. MISKO: Misko Hevery. Yeah, thank you. JAMISON: Misko Hevery and Igor Minar? IGOR: Minar. Yeah. JAMISON: Great. You guys wanna introduce yourself really quick? MISKO: Sure. So, this is Misko Hevery, original creator of Angular.js. IGOR: Hi everybody! I'm Igor. I joined Misko about 2 years ago on this venture of creating better browser and better environment for creating client-side applications. JAMISON: And if you can’t tell, we are going to talk about Angular.js this week. So, I know it is kind of a Google project now. Did it start out that way? MISKO: It started out with something I was working on and eventually I've open sourced it at a product with Google internal application and just gotten such a rave reviews and new features that people actually says, “Hey why don’t you work on this full time and turn in on to a real product?” So, that's how it’s started. JAMISON: Oh, wow. So, there’s actually a team in Google who are working on Angular as their job? MISKO: Yeah. IGOR: Yes. JAMISON: That's awesome. IGOR: It’s just two of us here now, but we have a bunch of other people working full time on Angular.js and also main contributors-- JAMISON: Oh, go ahead sorry. IGOR: There is a team behind Angular.js. JAMISON: Do you think you can give an overview and kind of a comparison to contrast Angular to some of the other MVC frameworks that people like before you? I mean, Backbone I guess is what most people know.  So, what makes Angular different from Backbone? How does it work? MISKO: So, I have never used Backbone besides it’s framework. But, my understanding is that Backbone is basically you have declare model and then launch on changes on its mode. And the way it does so is that there is a model class object. And whenever you modify the models that use special getters and setters methods, the Backbone know about the changes. So, this is pretty different from Angular because we don’t require you to inherit from anything. We have special getters and setters. Basically, any JavaScript object can be a model. So, that’s one big difference. JAMISON: But you can still observe the changes on objects like that? MISKO: Right.

JavaScript Jabber
032 JSJ Angular.js

JavaScript Jabber

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 19, 2012 50:47


Panel Misko Hevery (twitter github blog) Igor Minar (twitter github blog) Jamison Dance (twitter github blog) Joe Eames (twitter github blog) Tim Caswell (twitter github howtonode.org) AJ O’Neal (twitter github blog) Discussion 01:33 - Angular.js (twitter github blog) 02:33 - Angular.js compared to other frameworks 04:03 - How does it work? 05:22 - Cost 06:06 - HTML Compiler 07:02 - Directives 10:31 - Working with browsers in the future 12:07 - Dependency injection 16:50 - Main method 18:48 - Using require.js 20:53 - How would you build a TreeView widget in Angular? 24:07 - Where data is stored 24:42 - Scope 29:47 - Syncing to servers RESTClient 31:34 - Testability & Services in Angular 39:04 - Benefits of Angular Dependency injection Directives Picks The Arrow (Joe) Font Awesome (Tim) Testacular (Igor) Plunker (Igor) The Better Angels of our Nature: Steven Pinker (Misko) XCOM (Jamison) The Foundation Series: Isaac Asimov (Jamison) Influencer: The Power to Change Anything (AJ) Transcript [This episode is sponsored by ComponentOne, makers of Wijmo. If you need stunning UI elements or awesome graphs and charts, then go to wijmo.com and check them out.] [Hosting and bandwidth provided by the Blue Box Group. Check them out at bluebox.net] JAMISON: Hi everybody and welcome to episode 32 of the JavaScript Jabber podcast. I'm not your host Charles Max Wood, I'm Jamison Dance. Chuck is at a conference this week. So, he is not here. We have with us Joe Eames. JOE: Hey everybody! JAMISON: Tim Caswell. TIM: Hello. JAMISON: And we have two special guests. I'm going to mangle your names, so I'm sorry. It’s Misko Hevery. MISKO: Misko Hevery. Yeah, thank you. JAMISON: Misko Hevery and Igor Minar? IGOR: Minar. Yeah. JAMISON: Great. You guys wanna introduce yourself really quick? MISKO: Sure. So, this is Misko Hevery, original creator of Angular.js. IGOR: Hi everybody! I'm Igor. I joined Misko about 2 years ago on this venture of creating better browser and better environment for creating client-side applications. JAMISON: And if you can’t tell, we are going to talk about Angular.js this week. So, I know it is kind of a Google project now. Did it start out that way? MISKO: It started out with something I was working on and eventually I've open sourced it at a product with Google internal application and just gotten such a rave reviews and new features that people actually says, “Hey why don’t you work on this full time and turn in on to a real product?” So, that's how it’s started. JAMISON: Oh, wow. So, there’s actually a team in Google who are working on Angular as their job? MISKO: Yeah. IGOR: Yes. JAMISON: That's awesome. IGOR: It’s just two of us here now, but we have a bunch of other people working full time on Angular.js and also main contributors-- JAMISON: Oh, go ahead sorry. IGOR: There is a team behind Angular.js. JAMISON: Do you think you can give an overview and kind of a comparison to contrast Angular to some of the other MVC frameworks that people like before you? I mean, Backbone I guess is what most people know.  So, what makes Angular different from Backbone? How does it work? MISKO: So, I have never used Backbone besides it’s framework. But, my understanding is that Backbone is basically you have declare model and then launch on changes on its mode. And the way it does so is that there is a model class object. And whenever you modify the models that use special getters and setters methods, the Backbone know about the changes. So, this is pretty different from Angular because we don’t require you to inherit from anything. We have special getters and setters. Basically, any JavaScript object can be a model. So, that’s one big difference. JAMISON: But you can still observe the changes on objects like that? MISKO: Right.

All JavaScript Podcasts by Devchat.tv

Panel Misko Hevery (twitter github blog) Igor Minar (twitter github blog) Jamison Dance (twitter github blog) Joe Eames (twitter github blog) Tim Caswell (twitter github howtonode.org) AJ O’Neal (twitter github blog) Discussion 01:33 - Angular.js (twitter github blog) 02:33 - Angular.js compared to other frameworks 04:03 - How does it work? 05:22 - Cost 06:06 - HTML Compiler 07:02 - Directives 10:31 - Working with browsers in the future 12:07 - Dependency injection 16:50 - Main method 18:48 - Using require.js 20:53 - How would you build a TreeView widget in Angular? 24:07 - Where data is stored 24:42 - Scope 29:47 - Syncing to servers RESTClient 31:34 - Testability & Services in Angular 39:04 - Benefits of Angular Dependency injection Directives Picks The Arrow (Joe) Font Awesome (Tim) Testacular (Igor) Plunker (Igor) The Better Angels of our Nature: Steven Pinker (Misko) XCOM (Jamison) The Foundation Series: Isaac Asimov (Jamison) Influencer: The Power to Change Anything (AJ) Transcript [This episode is sponsored by ComponentOne, makers of Wijmo. If you need stunning UI elements or awesome graphs and charts, then go to wijmo.com and check them out.] [Hosting and bandwidth provided by the Blue Box Group. Check them out at bluebox.net] JAMISON: Hi everybody and welcome to episode 32 of the JavaScript Jabber podcast. I'm not your host Charles Max Wood, I'm Jamison Dance. Chuck is at a conference this week. So, he is not here. We have with us Joe Eames. JOE: Hey everybody! JAMISON: Tim Caswell. TIM: Hello. JAMISON: And we have two special guests. I'm going to mangle your names, so I'm sorry. It’s Misko Hevery. MISKO: Misko Hevery. Yeah, thank you. JAMISON: Misko Hevery and Igor Minar? IGOR: Minar. Yeah. JAMISON: Great. You guys wanna introduce yourself really quick? MISKO: Sure. So, this is Misko Hevery, original creator of Angular.js. IGOR: Hi everybody! I'm Igor. I joined Misko about 2 years ago on this venture of creating better browser and better environment for creating client-side applications. JAMISON: And if you can’t tell, we are going to talk about Angular.js this week. So, I know it is kind of a Google project now. Did it start out that way? MISKO: It started out with something I was working on and eventually I've open sourced it at a product with Google internal application and just gotten such a rave reviews and new features that people actually says, “Hey why don’t you work on this full time and turn in on to a real product?” So, that's how it’s started. JAMISON: Oh, wow. So, there’s actually a team in Google who are working on Angular as their job? MISKO: Yeah. IGOR: Yes. JAMISON: That's awesome. IGOR: It’s just two of us here now, but we have a bunch of other people working full time on Angular.js and also main contributors-- JAMISON: Oh, go ahead sorry. IGOR: There is a team behind Angular.js. JAMISON: Do you think you can give an overview and kind of a comparison to contrast Angular to some of the other MVC frameworks that people like before you? I mean, Backbone I guess is what most people know.  So, what makes Angular different from Backbone? How does it work? MISKO: So, I have never used Backbone besides it’s framework. But, my understanding is that Backbone is basically you have declare model and then launch on changes on its mode. And the way it does so is that there is a model class object. And whenever you modify the models that use special getters and setters methods, the Backbone know about the changes. So, this is pretty different from Angular because we don’t require you to inherit from anything. We have special getters and setters. Basically, any JavaScript object can be a model. So, that’s one big difference. JAMISON: But you can still observe the changes on objects like that? MISKO: Right.

Talentopoly Podcast
Episode 26 - JavaScript UI Widget Libraries...

Talentopoly Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 1, 2012


Episode 26 - JavaScript UI Widget Libraries                    Subscribe on iTunes Subscribe to RSS Download MP3 Show notes hosted by Jared Brown Brandon Corbin joined by Edward Rudd JS Widget Libs for Desktop and then Mobile Questions: What do people look for in each lib? How do you choose one over another? Desktop: Great for Intranet software, enterprise, engineering and scientific web apps Mobile: Progressive (mobile site) vs native-feeling app (typically wrapped in something like PhoneGap)? Actively developed or stale? JS Widget LibrariesLarge screenjQuery UIGrid coming to v2.1 Movement to clean up the API Lots of dev momentum lately Kendo UI by TelerikUses jQuery Recently out of beta Free for GPL Compatible open source projects $399 per developer (sounds like M$ style licensing.. inherited from the “.NET” background) Mention DataViz and Mobile Has custom theme builder for it’s widgets (not jquery UI’s builder) Doesn’t support IE6 Native UI on each device wijmoBased on jQuery UI (in fact, some of the team works on jQuery UI) Uses jQuery UI themes native has a cdn for access. Free version includes 18 OpenSource widgets Commercial versionIncludes 40+ widgets $299+ (per developer) (or $499 w/ support) Ext JSby SenchaMention Sencha Touch (free) $329 - one developer license (no support) MobilejQuery Mobile - jQuery70 kb http://codiqa.com/ (web GUI prototyping tool) Open source Broad device support Degrades Gracefully (progressive?) yes Has a theme builder (jQuery UI style) Kendo Mobile - TelerikNo pricing yet (in beta) Ready for PhoneGap Sencha Touch - SenchaHow is it diff from jQTouch?Much more programmatic to work with jQTouch is more web dev friendly Support for tables while jQTouch doesn’t http://9-bits.com/post/723711597/jqtouch-and-sencha-touch Free for non-OEMs Touch charts Looks like Android & iOS styling is a more manual thing to do jQTouch(problems with Android?) - SenchaWorks with Zepto or jQueryZepto is a minimal, jQuery syntax compatible lib SASS-based theming In beta Progressive Free ~20 kb Others to consider (both free, open source)JoNot easy to see which UI widgets it offers Looks to have less popularity GWT MobileFrom Google (but code is on GitHub) PhoneGap wrapper Great for pure client-side Java devs PhoneGap + XUI.jsOpen source Zirb Twitter Bootstrap Notes: Kendo UI Licensing. Kendo is dual-licensed under GPLv3/commercial license, jQuery UI is MIT/GPLv2. Support. Purchasing a Kendo commercial license entitles you to support (options here). Professional jQuery UI support is offered by appendTo and the filament group. Feature set. Kendo has some components that are missing in jQuery UI (Grid, Chart, TreeView, Upload, Templates, and soon - MVVM). You might need to stitch plug-ins by different authors if you want to use such functionality alongside jQuery UI. Roadmap. Kendo has a fixed release cycle (3 releases per year), with a fixed roadmap for the next release. The jQuery roadmap does not guarantee when the features will be included. Openness. You can browse the latest jQuery UI source at all times. With Kendo, you get only the source code for major releases when you don’t have a commercial license. If you purchase one, you get all the latest source code. http://jqueryuivskendoui.com/  Discuss comparison table Sencha Touch Aaron Weyenberg on Quora - “Sencha Touch takes much much longer to learn and become comfortable with, but it’s more robust. Sencha Touch documentation and examples, however, are quite unrefined in my opinion. There’s almost no MVC architecture support docs, so be prepared to do a lot of reverse engineering. jQuery Mobile can get you up and running in a day, but it’s not as feature rich, and seems not quite as smooth in terms of transitions and effects.” http://www.quora.com/Were-deciding-between-jQuery-Mobile-and-Sencha-Touch-What-are-the-pros-and-cons-for-each  James Pearce, Developer Relations @ Sencha Inc Of course it very much depends on the use-case, your skill set and your desired architecture. If you want an easy, declarative, markup-configured mobile site, then jQuery Mobile’s progressive enhancements is an obvious option. If you want a richer, more standalone (say, MVC) app, built using a  programmatic, RIA philosophy, then the Sencha Touch route would probably be better. It’s more likely that you’d take this approach if you were keen to wrap the app up in PhoneGap to deploy in an app store, for example. jQTouch Sencha touch is a little more complicated for those used to web design to use, in that it is almost a purely programmatic model (you don’t design pages in html, you programmatically add elements to a page). It does, however, have a much richer widget model and is a lot more fleshed out than jQTouch (it is also a lot bigger)… http://stackoverflow.com/questions/3446186/sencha-touch-vs-jqtouch  Recommendations DEPENDS ON THE USE CASE Desktop jQuery UI Mobile jQuery Mobile

Fear the Bug Video Podcast (SD)
Fear the Bug, Episode 98: Treeview Pane

Fear the Bug Video Podcast (SD)

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 3, 2009 6:32


The Treeview Pane in OnTime allows for quick-filtering by Project, Release, User, and Customer...but there are other quick filters in the User and Customer tab that you may be unaware of. Check out this week's podcast on the Treeview Pane.

Fear the Bug Video Podcast (HD)
Fear the Bug, Episode 98: Treeview Pane

Fear the Bug Video Podcast (HD)

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 3, 2009 6:32


The Treeview Pane in OnTime allows for quick-filtering by Project, Release, User, and Customer...but there are other quick filters in the User and Customer tab that you may be unaware of. Check out this week's podcast on the Treeview Pane.

Fear the Bug Video Podcast (SD)
Fear the Bug, Episode 28: Treeview Pane

Fear the Bug Video Podcast (SD)

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 3, 2008 7:06


The Treeview Pane in OnTime allows for quick-filtering by Project, User, and Customer...but there are other quick filters in the User and Customer tab that you may be unaware of. Check out this week's podcast on the Treeview Pane.

Advanced Visual Basic Programming - Video

treeview