16th-century book of artist biographies by Giorgio Vasari
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This episode is sponsored by House of Macadamias -- Click Here to get our specially curated box that also comes with the free snack bars and 15% offer for CURVA MUNDIAL listeners! Also, be sure to visit our merch store!This episode of CURVA MUNDIAL was recorded before a live audience at Vite in Astoria, Queens, New York, where Giuseppe Capuano breaks bread with us to talk about his love of Bolognia, coming from the city and creating a fanclub for his team in New York City.
Ecoutez L'angle éco de François Lenglet du 27 février 2026.Hébergé par Audiomeans. Visitez audiomeans.fr/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.
Cette semaine je te parle d'une expression du langage familier qui nous vient tout droit des réseaux sociaux “La question est vite répondue”.Si tu ne l'as jamais entendue, c'est normal car elle n'est pas correcte ! Ouf !En revanche, bien qu'elle soit grammaticalement fausse, elle s'est répandue dans l'usage familier en raison de son caractère un peu ridicule. Je t'explique. Un jeune influenceur/entrepreneur (on ne sait pas trop) a débarqué sur les réseaux sociaux en appelant les jeunes entrepreneurs à rejoindre son projet et son réseau de trading en ligne (Son business n'est pas très transparent par ailleurs). Dans son discours, il invite les jeunes qui rêvent d'argent et de peu de travail à travailler avec lui pour faire de l'argent. À la fin de sa vidéo, il lance une punchline “Je pense que la question est vite répondue”.Le buzz est immédiat et tous les francophones s'emparent de cette phrase pour exprimer quelque chose d'évident dans un discours. Dans cet épisode, je t'explique POURQUOI cette phrase n'est pas correcte mais aussi dans quel contexte tu peux l'utiliser. Est-ce que tu as envie de découvrir cet épisode ? Je pense que la question est vite répondue.“Le Français avec Yasmine” existe grâce au soutien des membres et élèves payants. Il y a 3 manières de soutenir ce podcast pour qu'il continue à être libre, indépendant et rebelle : 1️⃣ Le Club de Yasmine Le Club privé du podcast qui donne accès à toutes les transcriptions des épisodes relues et corrigées au format PDF, à 6 épisodes secrets par an, la newsletter privée en français et l'accès à la communauté des élèves et membres sur Discord pour continuer à partager et se rencontrer. https://lefrancaisavecyasmine.com/club 2️⃣ Les livres du podcast Les transcriptions du podcast sont disponibles dans les livres “Le français avec Yasmine” sur Amazon : http://amazon.com/author/yasminelesire 3️⃣ Les cours de français avec YasminePour aller encore plus loin et améliorer ton français avec moi, je te donne rendez-vous dans mes cours et mes formations digitales. Je donne des cours particuliers (en ligne et à Paris) et des cours en groupe en ligne. Rendez-vous sur le site de mon école pour découvrir le catalogue des cours disponibles : www.ilearnfrench.eu ➡️ Rendez-vous sur les réseaux sociaux Instagram : https://www.instagram.com/ilearnfrench/LinkedIn : https://www.linkedin.com/in/yasmine-lesire-ilearnfrench/ ➡️ Crédit musique La musique de cet épisode est créée par le groupe Beam. Merci à Maayan Smith et son groupe pour la musique. Hébergé par Ausha. Visitez ausha.co/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.
5 audits offerts pour faire passer ton business au prochain niveau
Maïté partage ses difficultés de communication avec sa fille de 46 ans, qui évite la relation avec elle depuis le divorce de ses parents à l'adolescence. Elle exprime sa tristesse de ne pas pouvoir passer de temps avec son petit-fils, en raison de l'anxiété et de la surprotection de sa fille. Maïté cherche des solutions pour renouer le lien familial et comprendre les souffrances sous-jacentes. Chaque soir, en direct, Caroline Dublanche accueille les auditeurs pour 2h30 d'échanges et de confidences. Pour participer, contactez l'émission au 09 69 39 10 11 (prix d'un appel local) ou sur parlonsnous@rtl.frHébergé par Audiomeans. Visitez audiomeans.fr/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.
It's survey results reason, and the State of React 2025 results are in! As in the past, Next.js continues to dominate as one of the most used frameworks, but TanStack Start is one to watch. Other honorable mentions include: Zustand, Vite, and (most importantly) Front-end Fire tying for fifth place in the podcast section. Thank you, listeners!Google has a new proposal called WebMCP, which is a way to define structured tools for agents visiting a site, ensuring they can perform actions with increased speed, reliability, and precision.And instead of complicated build processes to convert HTML to markdown for AI agents' benefit, Cloudflare now offers real-time content conversion when AI systems request pages from any Cloudflare site. That's pretty great!Timestamps:1:03 - State of React survey results12:22 - WebMCP24:27 - Markdown for AI agents34:27 - TypeScript 6.0 beta38:00 - Chrome gets split view41:09 - What's making us happyNews:Paige - Markdown for AI agentsJack - WebMCPTJ - State of React 2025 survey results and Claude ReceiptsLightning News: TypeScript 6.0 betaChrome gets split viewWhat Makes Us Happy this Week:Paige - New Girl TV showJack - GridfinityTJ - The ResidenceThanks as always to our sponsor, the Blue Collar Coder channel on YouTube. You can join us in our Discord channel, explore our website and reach us via email, or talk to us on X, Bluesky, or YouTube.Front-end Fire websiteBlue Collar Coder on YouTubeBlue Collar Coder on DiscordReach out via emailTweet at us on X @front_end_fireFollow us on Bluesky @front-end-fire.comSubscribe to our YouTube channel @Front-EndFirePodcast
I denne bonus-episoden er Viaplays Formel 1-ekspert, Stein Pettersen gjest. Hva går de nye reglene for 26-sesongen ut på, og hvem blir raskest? I tillegg sneies det innom både lyden fra de ville 90-tallsmotorene - og noen vanlige biler for gata. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Ecoutez L'angle éco de François Lenglet du 20 février 2026.Hébergé par Audiomeans. Visitez audiomeans.fr/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.
Ecoutez L'angle éco de François Lenglet du 20 février 2026.Hébergé par Audiomeans. Visitez audiomeans.fr/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.
REDIFF - Dans ce nouvel épisode de "Symptômes", la dermatologue Dima Haidar raconte l'une des expériences les plus marquantes de sa carrière. Un jour, une patiente de 40 ans, vivant dans une région isolée, s'est présentée aux urgences avec une lésion inquiétante derrière la tête. Ce qui semblait être une simple infection s'est révélé être bien plus grave...Hébergé par Audiomeans. Visitez audiomeans.fr/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.
L'attore americano Philip, da anni residente in Giappone, viene assunto nell'agenzia Rental Family, dove attori professionisti rivestono ruoli di padri, amici, mariti, mogli, amanti, ecc per i clienti che lo richiedono e che hanno bisogno di elaborare un lutto o provare ancora determinate emozioni.L'incontro con una bambina abbandonata dal padre e un anziano attore, malato di demenza, avranno ripercussioni non solo sul lavoro ma sulla vita stessa di Philip.Commedia gradevole che si segue dall'inizio alla fine (sempre se amate i sottotitoli), nella quale Brendan Fraser è sempre bravo e tanto carino con il trucco da gatto.Ma è anche una pellicola molto prevedibile, che non osa mai troppo e che rimane in superficie nei messaggi che veicola. Ci si commuove con molta parsimonia e in parte è una storia un po' sprecata, che avrebbe avuto molti spunti interessanti da affrontare in modo più approfondito.
Le temps s'écoule-t-il de la même manière pour tout le monde ? Peut-on réellement voyager vers le futur en allant plus vite ? Et si l'espace et le temps formaient une seule et même structure, profondément liée à notre mouvement ? Depuis la théorie de la relativité d'Einstein, notre vision du monde a changé : la vitesse ne modifie pas seulement la perception du mouvement, elle transforme le rythme du temps lui-même.À grande vitesse, le temps ralentit. Les longueurs se contractent. Deux observateurs en mouvement relatif ne partagent plus la même mesure de la durée ni de la distance. Ces effets, confirmés expérimentalement par les horloges atomiques, les particules relativistes et le fonctionnement du GPS, montrent que l'espace-temps n'est pas un décor figé mais une structure dynamique dépendante de la vitesse et du référentiel.Mais cela signifie-t-il que l'on peut dépasser le temps en accélérant ? Le temps est-il vraiment une dimension comparable à celles de l'espace ? Ou possède-t-il un statut particulier dans la structure de l'univers ? À travers les concepts de dilatation du temps, contraction des longueurs et principe de relativité, cette vidéo explore ce que la physique moderne révèle sur la véritable nature de l'espace-temps et sur notre place au sein de cette architecture cosmique.
Elles étaient 320.Assassinées.Et pour beaucoup, victimes de violences sexuelles. Silence. Gêne. Déni. Dans ce Mag déjà diffusé, YB recevait Maïa Brami, écrivaine et journaliste, venue présenter son ouvrage
REDIFF - Dans ce nouvel épisode de "Symptômes", la dermatologue Dima Haidar raconte l'une des expériences les plus marquantes de sa carrière. Un jour, une patiente de 40 ans, vivant dans une région isolée, s'est présentée aux urgences avec une lésion inquiétante derrière la tête. Ce qui semblait être une simple infection s'est révélé être bien plus grave...Hébergé par Audiomeans. Visitez audiomeans.fr/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.
Ce n'est plus de la science-fiction. La réalité brutale de l'intelligence artificielle générative qui vient de franchir un cap historique, note le dernier baromètre de l'Arcep.En seulement deux ans, nous sommes passés d'une curiosité de laboratoire à un outil de masse utilisé par près d'un Français sur deux. C'est aussi un séisme qui redéfinit les frontières entre vie privée et vie professionnelle.Une accélération technologique sans précédentLe premier constat est celui d'une accélération technologique sans précédent dans l'histoire moderne.Là où le smartphone avait mis trois ans pour atteindre un niveau de pénétration significatif, l'IA générative n'a eu besoin que de vingt-quatre mois pour conquérir près de 50 % de la population.Et cette adoption quasi instantanée culmine chez les français de moins de 25 ans avec un taux de 85 %.Pour les entreprises, cela signifie que la question n'est plus de savoir s'il faut intégrer l'IA, mais comment gérer des collaborateurs qui sont déjà, pour la plupart, des utilisateurs aguerris de cette technologie dans leur sphère privée.L'IA générative inverse les codes traditionnels de l'innovationSurtout, au-delà de cette vitesse de déploiement, l'IA générative inverse les codes traditionnels de l'innovation.Historiquement, les grandes vagues technologiques entraient dans nos vies par le bureau avant de s'inviter dans nos salon. Pour l'IA, c'est l'inverse.Le recours à ces outils relève d'abord d'une initiative personnelle plus de 40 % des usagers, tandis que l'usage strictement professionnel concerne 30 % des actifs.C'est ce qu'on appelle le Shadow AI. Les salariés testent, expérimentent et résolvent des problèmes complexes avec ChatGPT ou Claude chez eux, avant de ramener ces réflexes au travail.Par ailleurs, une pression nouvelle apparaît. Près de 20 % des Français se voient désormais imposer l'IA par les plateformes qu'ils utilisent déjà, comme les moteurs de recherche ou les messageries, rendant la technologie incontournable, qu'on le veuille ou non.Une nouvelle fracture numérique de compétence et d'usageEnfin, il faut noter une nouvelle fracture numérique, non plus d'accès, mais de compétence et d'usage.Le profil type de l'utilisateur intensif se dessine très nettement. Il est jeune, diplômé du supérieur, cadre ou indépendant.Pour le monde professionnel, ce clivage est un enjeu majeur. Les indépendants et les cadres, avec plus de 75 % d'utilisateurs, transforment déjà leurs méthodes de travail quand d'autres secteurs restent sur le bord de la route.Cette concentration des usages chez les profils les plus qualifiés risque de créer un avantage compétitif pour ceux qui maîtrisent l'art de la requête et du prompt, laissant présager une restructuration profonde du marché du travail basée sur la collaboration homme-machine.Le ZD Tech est sur toutes les plateformes de podcast ! Abonnez-vous !Hébergé par Ausha. Visitez ausha.co/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.
Tu n'es pas condamné à vivre sous pression financière. Découvre les erreurs invisibles qui entretiennent le stress, les ajustements stratégiques qui libèrent du souffle immédiatement et une approche concrète pour reprendre le contrôle, restaurer la paix et reconstruire solidement ta stabilité financière.➡️➡️ DE L'ENDETTEMENT À LA LIBERTÉ FINANCIÈRE CLIQUEZ ICI ➡️ https://exponentiel.net/endettementLIENS ET RESSOURCES Formation GRATUITE pour développer ton potentiel https://exponentiel.net/potentiel Rejoins notre programme de MENTORAT https://exponentielclassroom.com Service de COACHING personnalisé https://ecoachingexponentiel.com Nos nouvelles formations https://formations.exponentiel.net/formations Notre chaine youtube - ExponentielTV https://www.youtube.com/@Exponentielnet Notre site web: https://exponentiel.net/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/exponentiel... https://www.instagram.com/lucdumontof...
--Épisode #73 Dans cet épisode du podcast Pleine Conscience, nous recevons Gab, enseignante en Kundalini Yoga, pour une conversation profonde sur le système nerveux, la gestion des émotions, la santé mentale et le développement personnel.On parle de spiritualité, de conscience, d'équilibre intérieur, et de la façon dont les émotions peuvent s'imprimer dans le corps et créer du stress, de la fatigue ou des symptômes physiques.Gab partage des outils concrets pour calmer le système nerveux, réduire l'anxiété, mieux gérer le stress et retrouver un état de bien-être plus stable à travers la méditation, la respiration et le Kundalini Yoga.On explore aussi le rythme de vie moderne, la surcharge mentale, la pression quotidienne et l'importance de ralentir pour reconnecter avec soi-même, écouter son intuition et vivre de manière plus alignée.Un épisode profond sur la santé mentale, la pleine conscience, la guérison intérieure et la croissance personnelle.Bonne écoute
Hva bør HR egentlig være opptatt av når det gjelder KI i 2026?I denne episoden løfter vi blikket fra verktøy, prompting og hype og går rett inn i det strategiske landskapet HR står midt i. For kunstig intelligens handler ikke bare om teknologi. Det handler om mennesker, kompetanse, trygghet, kultur og måten vi organiserer arbeid på.Dagens gjest er Alexander Haneng, en av dem som er aller best på å gjøre KI forståelig, relevant og anvendbar for ledere og organisasjoner. Sammen snakker vi om hva utviklingen faktisk betyr for arbeidslivet – og hvorfor HR har en helt sentral rolle fremover. Du får blant annet innsikt i:hvorfor KI ikke er et IT-prosjekt, men en kontinuerlig endringsreisehva «skygge-KI» er og hvorfor det er en voksende utfordringhvordan KI påvirker roller, kompetanse og læringhvorfor fagkompetanse blir mer, ikke mindre, viktig hva som skjer med organisasjoner som velger å vente Dette er episoden for deg som vil forstå hva som står på spill og hva HR bør engasjere seg i nå for å være relevant også i årene som kommer.Alexander jobber til daglig i Digital Norway. Sjekk ut deres gratis kurs på AI her: https://digitalnorway.com/laeringsprogram-om-kunstig-intelligens __Om dagens gjest:Alexander Haneng er en av Norges fremste eksperter på kunstig intelligens og ledelse. Tidligere har han jobbet som innovasjonsdirektør i Posten Bring og med AI i NHO.__Vil du gå dypere i hvordan du jobber systematisk med psykososialt arbeidsmiljø?Leonda holder heldagskurs i hvordan jobbe med psykososialt arbeidsmiljø på din arbeidsplass 17. mars – les mer og meld deg på her.Ønsker du å melde deg på kurs i fasilitering? Les mer her: Leonda fasiliteringskurs________ Vil du ha e-post med ukens fagtips og personlig invitasjon til webinarer fra Leonda? Ja takk! Sjekk ut Leonda sin nye eventkalender her - med inspirerende webinarer, frokostmøter og kurs. Liker du det du hører? Trykk på følg i din podcast app så får du beskjed når nye ukentlige episoder legges ut.
On Jase de la formation canadienne aux Jeux olympiques avec Marc-André Dumont et Stéphane Waite. Pour nous suivre sur nos différentes plateformes
Aujourd'hui dans l'émission, vos gageures les plus stupides, Les petites affaires qui font sacrer Mario et Bruce Wayne dans l'émission... oui oui, Bruce Wayne.
In fuga dalla violenza politica, dalle persecuzioni religiose o dalla povertà, ogni giorno uomini, donne e bambini si mettono in viaggio dall'Asia Centrale, dal Medio Oriente, dall'Africa per intraprendere lunghi e pericolosi viaggi alla ricerca di un futuro migliore. Viaggi che diventano una vera e propria esistenza in esilio, sottotraccia e avvolta dall'incertezza. Le frontiere sono i luoghi in cui l'esistenza di questi esuli emerge in superficie, diventando oggetto di contestazione, di attenzione mediatica e di controllo e repressione da parte delle autorità, ma anche di empatia e aiuto concreto da parte di attivisti e popolazione locale.La sociologa Anne-Claire Defossez e il medico e antropologo Didier Fassin hanno scelto le Alpi, la zona del Monginevro tra l'alta Val di Susa e la regione di Briançon, per studiare i meccanismi che si instaurano sulla frontiera. Tre attori: esuli, poliziotti e attivisti intrecciano rapporti umani complessi e inaspettati, in un ambiente ostile per natura e per scelta politica. La loro indagine sul campo, definita di “partecipazione osservante”, è durata cinque anni, con periodi di permanenza in montagna. Una ricerca che è confluita nel libro Umanità in esilio. Cronache dalla frontiera alpina, uscito in Francia nel 2024 e tradotto in italiano per Feltrinelli lo scorso anno.Laser ha intervistato i due autori, per i quali la frontiera alpina è un prisma attraverso il quale lo sguardo si allarga dalle storie locali ai fenomeni globali, permettendo di indagare le migrazioni, ma forse soprattutto di comprendere la preoccupante evoluzione delle società europee.
durée : 00:03:32 - Le monde à l'endroit - Un mois après la spectaculaire opération militaire américaine ayant conduit à la capture du président vénézuélien Nicolas Maduro, quel est le bénéfice pour Donald Trump ? La réponse est moins évidente que le président américain ne l'affirme. Vous aimez ce podcast ? Pour écouter tous les autres épisodes sans limite, rendez-vous sur Radio France.
Hva er skam? Hvordan kan du kjenne det igjen hos barna dine? Og er det noe vi foreldre kan gjøre for at barna ikke skal kjenne for mye på denne vonde følelsen?
C'est l'opération FRELOC ! Entre 1966 et 1967, la France a obligé les soldats nord-américains à quitter son territoire (dans un délai très court) en quittant le commandement intégré de l'OTAN. Je vous raconte cette histoire dans ce nouvel épisode, bonne écoute.
Sur le buzzer c'est le dernier débat des GG du Sport ! Pile à temps pour s'écharper une dernière fois lors de l'émission…
durée : 00:14:26 - Les Midis de Culture - par : Marie Labory - Le réalisateur Michel Franco revient avec un neuvième long métrage sur l'immigration et la politique étasunienne, où Jessica Chastain campe une héritière qui entretient une relation avec un jeune danseur mexicain. - réalisation : Laurence Malonda - invités : Antoine Leiris Journaliste; Charlotte Garson Rédactrice en chef adjointe des Cahiers du cinéma
Ce midi, On Jase revient sur la défaite des Canadiens face aux Bruins de Boston et met la table pour la grosse semaine qui attend le CH avec Marc-André Dumont et Bruno Gervais. Pour nous suivre sur nos différentes plateformes
Vendre plus vite et payer moins de commissions : c'est la promesse de Homki. Eric Elbaze décrypte ce modèle à honoraires fixes, dans un marché immobilier français sous tension, au micro d'Ariane Artinian.Eric Elbaze est l'invité de ce nouvel épisode de Mon Podcast Immo. Au micro d'Ariane Artinian, le cofondateur de Homki revient sur un modèle qui a fait le pari des honoraires fixes pour transformer la transaction immobilière en France.Créé en 2018 à Marseille, Homki est aujourd'hui présent dans plus de 600 villes, Paris compris. Son principe : mettre fin aux commissions proportionnelles de 5 à 6 % pour proposer des honoraires fixes à partir de 4 900 euros. Résultat : des biens affichés au juste prix, des ventes plus rapides et un net vendeur préservé dans un marché immobilier toujours tendu.« Il devenait impossible de rajouter 30 000 euros de commission sur un bien à 600 000 euros », explique Eric Elbaze. Avec près de 7 000 transactions réalisées et un modèle rentable depuis 2023, Homki prouve que la proptech peut aussi être durable.Derrière le digital, l'humain reste central. « La tech doit être au service de l'expertise terrain », insiste-t-il, rappelant l'importance des agents locaux expérimentés, libérés de la prospection et concentrés sur l'accompagnement des clients.Dans un contexte de stabilisation du marché en 2025-2026, Eric Elbaze se dit confiant : les vendeurs comme les acquéreurs exigent désormais transparence, efficacité et qualité de service.Animé par Ariane Artinian, journaliste et fondatrice du média MySweetImmo
Vi er straks klare for Vixen Awards, der Pia er finalist i sport og treningskategorien, wiii! Silje stiller som moralsk støtte og det viktigste først: hva er det egentlig innafor å ha på seg? Ellers tar vi en runde på 10 gode fakta treningsfolk bør vite noe om der vi blant annet snakker om terskeløkter, trening for hjernen og hvor mange økter i uka som faktisk gir resultater. I tillegg deler Pia store nyheter om endringer på hjemmebane og Silje sår et frø om langvarig skaperglede, men kanskje på en litt annen måte enn man skulle tro. God lytt! Sjekk ut Siljethorstensen.no for å lære mer om Siljes tjenester, yogakurs og treningsmuligheter. Sjekk ut Piaseeberg.no for å sjekke ut Pias tjenester, kurs og treningsmuligheter. Påmelding og info om den neste treningsreisen vår til Hellas her: Treningsreise med Pia & Silje til Sivota Retreat | Apollo Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Aujourd'hui, Joëlle Dago-Serry, coach de vie, Jean-Loup Bonnamy, professeur de philosophie, et Charles Consigny, avocat, débattent de l'actualité autour d'Alain Marschall et Olivier Truchot.
Osvaldo Guerrieri"Zvanì"Indagine sulla morte di Giovanni PascoliGramma Feltrinelliwww.feltrinellieditore.it17 febbraio 1912. L'uomo sorretto da due medici, che scende per la stradina della “Bicocca”, è Giovanni Pascoli. Lascia Castelvecchio di Barga e sta per salire sul treno speciale che lo porterà a Bologna, dove lui, il poeta più amato e più popolare di quegli anni, spera di guarire dalla cirrosi epatica che gli ha sconvolto la vita. Comincia il crudele duello contro un male che la medicina non sa arrestare e che si conclude il 6 aprile, Sabato Santo, nel tripudio delle campane che annunciano la Resurrezione. Come è potuto nascere e svilupparsi questo sconvolgimento?“Ognuno di noi si prepara la propria morte,” ha scritto Leonardo Sciascia raccontando la fine di Raymond Roussel. Stando alle testimonianze dei suoi amici medici, Pascoli se la preparò senz'altro con una condotta di vita segnata dal dolore, dalle delusioni, dalla solitudine e dall'alcol. La sua esistenza è perciò una lunga rincorsa verso l'epilogo atroce. A partire dal trauma infantile dell'assassinio del padre, dalla morte precoce della madre e da quella dei fratelli maggiori, Pascoli si rifugia nei doveri del lutto, felice, quasi, di essere infelice.Ai lutti si aggiungano la povertà inaspettata, l'attività politica nelle caotiche file del socialismo romagnolo sfociata nei 107 giorni di carcere da cui il rivoluzionario esce “per sempre indignato”, la girandola dell'insegnamento prima nei licei e poi nelle università, il desiderio e il “nido” della famiglia così a lungo sognato. Nido che dura poco. Ida, la sorella più grande, si sposa e Giovanni rimane con Maria, la sorella più piccola, che lo ama possessivamente, escludendo chiunque, istericamente dolce e severa.Con la sua scrittura nitida, capace di penetrare a fondo nella psicologia dei suoi personaggi, Osvaldo Guerrieri ritrae vita e morte di un grande poeta, voce unica nella letteratura europea moderna.Osvaldo Guerrieri è nato a Chieti e vive a Torino. È critico teatrale de “La Stampa”, attività per la quale ha ricevuto nel 2003 il premio Flaiano. Tra le sue opere si segnalano L'insaziabile (premio internazionale Mondello 2009), Istantanee (2009), I Torinesi (2011, 2013), Col diavolo in corpo. Vite maledette da Amedeo Modigliani a Carmelo Bene (2013), Curzio (2015), Schiava di Picasso (2016). I suoi racconti Sibilla d'amore e Alè Calais sono diventati spettacoli teatrali rappresentati in Italia e a Parigi.Diventa un supporter di questo podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/il-posto-delle-parole--1487855/support.IL POSTO DELLE PAROLEascoltare fa pensarehttps://ilpostodelleparole.it/
Tu veux que je te raconte l'histoire des piétons qui marchent trop vite? Alors attrape ta brosse à dents, ton dentifrice, et c'est parti!
durée : 00:59:19 - Les Nuits de France Culture - par : Philippe Garbit - Mis en fonction le 17 octobre 1977, le Concorde, avion supersonique franco-britannique relie tous les jours pendant 26 ans, Paris à New York en 3 heures 30, à 20 kms d'altitude, à 2355 kms à l'heure, soit deux fois la vitesse du son. Une aventure inoubliable pour tous ceux qui y ont contribué. - réalisation : Mydia Portis-Guérin - invités : Andrée Putman Architecte d'intérieur et designer française
Dans cette deuxième partie de l'épisode consacré à Éric Briffard, le récit s'accélère et change d'échelle.On quitte la France pour Tokyo, à la fin des années 80. À 27 ans, Éric Briffard part seul, propulsé chef de cuisine d'un restaurant français au cœur d'un hôtel flambant neuf du groupe Mitsubishi. Il découvre un Japon en pleine effervescence, un pays alors presque vierge de chefs français, un terrain d'expression inédit où il n'est plus seulement exécutant mais porteur d'une cuisine, d'une culture, d'un drapeau.Cette période devient fondatrice : immersion totale, produits inconnus en France, marchés, discipline japonaise, exposition médiatique inattendue. Puis vient le retour, brutal, dans l'arène la plus exigeante qui soit : la brigade de Joël Robuchon.Entre fascination, dureté extrême, apprentissage technique absolu et remise en question permanente, Éric Briffard raconte ce que cela signifie d'être formé par l'un des chefs les plus exigeants de l'histoire. Il parle aussi du moment charnière où l'on cesse d'être un exécutant brillant pour chercher, enfin, sa propre voix.Un épisode de bascule, de vertige parfois, où l'on comprend comment se forgent les chefs capables de prendre les commandes des plus grandes maisons.Pour découvrir la cuisine d'Eric Briffard, on vous conseille ces livres !Et pour découvrir l'école Cordon Bleu, c'est par là !
Hvordan kan dere fordele det tredje skiftet på best mulig måte? Bør det være helt likt innad i familien, eller finnes det grunner til å skjevfordele arbeidsoppgavene på hjemmebane? Og er vi egentlig enige i hvilke oppgaver som blir gjort av hvem?
Maurizio Zanari"Le scritture del Grande Infante"Sull'opera-vita di Enzo MoscatoCronopio Edizioniwww.cronopio.ita cura di Claudio Affinito, Antonia Lezza, Matteo Palumbo, Maurizio ZanardiL'idea di un libro collettivo dedicato alle scritture di Enzo Moscato è insorta tra noi di Cronopio dopo la pubblicazione di Archeologia del sangue, di cui Moscato prometteva un seguito che aveva già cominciato a scrivere prima della sua scomparsa. Archeologia del sangue ci aveva così colpiti, commossi e rallegrati, da imporci di segnalare che qui, a Napoli, viveva non solo un'ineguagliabile creatura teatrale, ma anche un essere che si dedicava infaticabile, nella luce e nell'ombra, nel rischio dell'andare in scena e nella protezione di uno spazio appartato – quella esigenza di “clandestinità” che aveva condiviso col “compagnello di giocate” Antonio Neiwiller – all'invenzione di scritture, teatrali, filosofiche, linguistiche, letterarie. musicali.Enzo Moscato è stato un drammaturgo, attore e sceneggiatore italiano. Prolifico autore e interprete teatrale nonché cantante, esordisce in Morte di un matematico napoletano (1992) di Mario Martone. Prete «pop» in Libera (1993) di Pappi Corsicato, è voce melodica di una Napoli tra grazia e perdizione in Rasoi (1993), ancora di Martone, di cui è anche co-sceneggiatore. Surreale Gesù in una sacra rappresentazione a basso costo (Viaggio clandestino - Vite di santi e di peccatori, 1994, di R. Ruiz), in Pozzi d'amore, episodio di I racconti di Vittoria (1995) di A. De Lillo tratto da una sua pièce, monologa sulla morte. Sempre per la De Lillo è il travestito autorecluso protagonista di Maruzzella, episodio del collettivo I vesuviani (1997), e il pensatore illuminista Gaetano Filangieri in Il resto di niente (2005) di A. De Lillo. In Mater natura (2006) di M. Andrei assume le ambigue e divertite vesti di Europa.Come drammaturgo la sua opera è ambientata in larga parte nei Quartieri Spagnoli dove Moscato è cresciuto, come il monologo «Luparella» (1997), «Toledo suite» (2011) e i racconti di «Tempo che fu di Scioscia» (2014).Ha raccontato la sua vita nel libro autobiografico Archeologia del sangue (1948-1961) (Cronopio 2020), finalista al Premio Napoli.«La mia lingua teatrale – in verità un misto multi sonoro e ritmico di napoletano a altri idiomi (italiano, francese, inglese, tedesco, spagnolo, greco, latino, saraceno…) – un po' è inventata, artificiale, costruita “sub vitro” come in un'officina alchemica, privata e segretissima, un po' è il ricalco esagerato, iperbolico, ridondante del caos multietnico-poliglottico che ci gira, ai tempi nostri, attorno».Enzo Moscato è morto a Napoli nel 2023. Così ha dichiarato Mario Martone: «Dobbiamo ricordare Enzo Moscato non solo come grande artista di teatro, ma come poeta. Forse il più straordinario poeta che Napoli abbia espresso negli ultimi decenni».Diventa un supporter di questo podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/il-posto-delle-parole--1487855/support.IL POSTO DELLE PAROLEascoltare fa pensarehttps://ilpostodelleparole.it/
✨ Ce dimanche, je partage avec vous un extrait passionnant avec Francis Eustache. Il y explique pourquoi notre corps joue un rôle clé dans la mémorisation : écrire à la main, manipuler, bouger… Autant de gestes simples qui transforment profondément notre façon d'apprendre et de retenir. Vous pouvez consulter notre politique de confidentialité sur https://art19.com/privacy ainsi que la notice de confidentialité de la Californie sur https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Rejoignez cette chaîne pour bénéficier d'avantages exclusifs :https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC8RbLmWbuLZLvu49vht8zFQ/joinBienvenue sur "Parlons-Nous", là où chaque épisode est une plongée dans la dynamique fascinante de la communication entre hommes et femmes. Si tu cherches des réponses, de l'inspiration, ou simplement une bonne conversation, tu es au bon endroit. ✨
durée : 00:25:12 - Journal de 18h - Le président veut accélérer le réarmement de la France avec un effort budgétaire supplémentaire de 36 milliards d'euros. À Istres, Emmanuel Macron a aussi annoncé l'envoi de nouveaux moyens militaires français au Groenland.
durée : 00:25:12 - Journal de 18h - Le président veut accélérer le réarmement de la France avec un effort budgétaire supplémentaire de 36 milliards d'euros. À Istres, Emmanuel Macron a aussi annoncé l'envoi de nouveaux moyens militaires français au Groenland.
Un supporter interpelle directement un membre de la Dream Team
Tu veux que je te raconte l'histoire de l'homme qui court aussi vite que le métro? Alors attrape ta brosse à dents, ton dentifrice, et c'est parti!
Une nouvelle étude de l'Université de Western Sydney publiée dans la revue Nature Plants, révèle qu'en Australie, les arbres meurent plus vite qu'ils ne poussent, une tendance qui contribue à l'augmentation des émissions de carbone.
Introducing Rob Ruiz Meet Rob Ruiz, a seasoned Senior Full Stack Developer with nearly two decades of expertise in WordPress innovation and open-source magic. As the Lead Maintainer of WP Rig since 2020, Rob has been the driving force behind this groundbreaking open-source framework that empowers developers to craft high-performance, accessible, and progressively enhanced WordPress themes with ease. WP Rig isn’t just a starter theme—it’s a turbocharged toolkit that bundles modern build processes, linting, optimization, and testing to deliver lightning-fast, standards-compliant sites that shine on any device. Show Notes For more on Rob and WP Rig, check out these links: LinkedIn Profile: https://www.linkedin.com/in/robcruiz WP Rig Official Site: https://wprig.io GitHub Repository: https://github.com/wprig/wprig Latest Releases: https://github.com/wprig/wprig/releases WP Rig 3.1 Announcement: https://wprig.io/wp-rig-3-1/ Transcript: Topher DeRosia: Hey everybody. Welcome to Hallway Chats. I’m your host Topher DeRosia, and with me today I have- Rob Ruiz: Rob Ruiz. Topher: Rob. You and I have talked a couple of times, once recently, and I learned about a project you’re working on, but not a whole lot about you. Where do you live? What do you do for a living? Rob: Yeah, for sure. Good question. Although I’m originally from Orlando, Florida, I’ve been living in Omaha, Nebraska for a couple of decades now. So I’m pretty much a native. I know a lot of people around here and I’ve been fairly involved in various local communities over the years. I’m a web developer. Started off as a graphic designer kind of out of college, and then got interested in web stuff. And so as a graphic designer turned future web developer, I guess, I was very interested in content management systems because it made the creating and managing of websites very, very easy. My first couple of sites were Flash websites, sites with macro media Flash. Then once I found content management systems, I was like, “Wow, this is way easier than coding the whole thing from scratch with Flash.” And then all the other obvious benefits that come from that. So I originally started with Joomla, interestingly enough, and used Joomla for about two or three years, then found WordPress and never looked back. And so I’ve been using WordPress ever since. As the years have gone on, WordPress has enabled me to slowly transition from a more kind of web designer, I guess, to a very full-blown web developer and software engineer, and even software architect to some degree. So here we are many years later. Topher: There’s a big step from designer to developer. How did that go for you? I’m assuming you went to PHP. Although if you were doing Flash sites, you probably learned ActionScript. Rob: Yeah. Yeah. That was very convenient when I started learning JavaScript. It made it very easy to learn JavaScript faster because I already had a familiarity with ActionScript. So there’s a lot of similarities there. But yeah. Even before I started doing PHP, I started learning more HTML and CSS. I did do a couple of static websites between there that were just like no content management system at all. So I was able to kind of sharpen my sword there with the CSS and HTML, which wasn’t particularly hard. But yeah, definitely, the PHP… that was a big step was PHP because it’s a proper logical programming language. There was a lot there I needed to unpack, and so it took me a while. I had to stick to it and really rinse and repeat before I finally got my feet under me. Topher: I can imagine. All right. So then you work for yourself or you freelance or do you have a real job, as it were? Rob: Currently, I do have a real job. Currently, I’m working at a company called Bold Orange out of Minneapolis. They’re a web agency. But I kind of bounce around from a lot of different jobs. And then, yes, I do freelance on the side, and I also develop my own products as well for myself and my company. Topher: Cool. Bold Orange sounds familiar. Who owns that? Rob: To be honest, I don’t know who the owners are. It’s just a pretty big web agency out of Minneapolis. They are a big company. You could just look them up at boldorange.com. They work for some pretty big companies. Topher: Cool. All right. You and I talked last about WP Rig. Give me a little background on where that came from and how you got it. Rob: Yeah, for sure. Well, there was a period of time where I was working at a company called Proxy Bid that is in the auction industry, and they had a product or a service — I don’t know how you want to look at that —called Auction Services. That product is basically just building WordPress sites for auction companies. They tasked us with a way to kind of standardize those websites essentially. And what we realized is that picking a different theme for every single site made things difficult to manage and increase tech debt by a lot. So what we were tasked with was, okay, if we’re going to build our own theme that we’re just going to make highly dynamic so we can make it look different from site to site. So we want to build it, but we want to build it smart and we want to make it reusable and maintainable. So let’s find a good framework to build this on so that we can maintain coding standards and end up with as little tech debt as possible, essentially. That’s when I first discovered WP Rig. In my research, I came across it and others. We came across Roots Sage and some of the other big names, I guess. It was actually a team exercise. We all went out and looked for different ones and studied different ones and mine that I found was WP Rig. And I was extremely interested in that one over the other ones. Interestingly enough- Topher: Can you tell me why over the other ones? Rob: That’s a great question. Yeah. I really liked the design patterns. I really liked the focus on WordPress coding standards. So having a system built in that checked all the code against WordPress coding standards was cool. I loved the compiling transpiling, whatever, for CSS and JavaScript kind of built in. That sounded really, really interesting. The fact that there was PHP unit testing built into it. So there’s like a starter testing framework built in that’s easy to extend so that you can add additional unit tests as your theme grows. We really wanted to make sure… because we were very into CICD pipelines. So we wanted to make sure that as developers were adding or contributing to any themes that we built with this, that we could have automated tests run and automated builds run, and just automate as much as possible. So WP rig just seemed like something that gave us those capabilities right out of the box. So that was a big thing. And I loved the way that they did it. Roots Sage does something similar, but they use their blade templating engine built in there. We really wanted to stick to something that was a bit more standard WordPress so that there wasn’t like a large knowledge overhead so that we didn’t have to say like, okay, if we’re bringing on other developers, like junior developers work on it, oh, it would be nice if you use Laravel too because we use this templating engine in all of our themes. We didn’t want to have to worry about that essentially. It was all object-oriented and all that stuff too. That’s what looked interesting to me. We ended up building a theme with WP Rig. I don’t know what they ended up doing with it after that, because I ended up getting let go shortly thereafter because the company had recently been acquired. Also, this was right after COVID too. So there was just a lot of moving parts and changing things at the time. So I ended up getting let go. But literally a week after I got let go, I came across a post on WP Tavern about how this framework was looking for new maintainers. Basically, this was a call put out by Morton, the original author of WP Rig. He reached out to WP Tavern and said, “Look, we’re not interested in maintaining this thing anymore, but it’s pretty cool. We like what we’ve built. And so we’re looking for other people to come in and adopt it essentially.” So I joined a Zoom meeting with a handful of other individuals that were also interested in this whole endeavor, and Morton reached out to me after the call and basically just said, “I looked you up. I liked some of the input that you had during the meeting. Let’s talk a little bit more.” And then that eventually led to conversations about me essentially taking the whole project over entirely. So, the branding, the hosting of the website, being lead maintainer on the project. Basically, gave me the keys to the kingdom in terms of GitHub and everything. So that’s how it ended up going in terms of the handoff between Morton and I. And I’m very grateful to him. They really created something super cool and I was honored to take it over and kind of, I don’t know, keep it going, I guess. Topher: I would be really curious. I don’t think either of us have the answer. I’d be curious to know how similar that path is to other project handoffs. It’s different from like an acquisition. You didn’t buy a plugin from somebody. It was kind of like vibes, I guess. Rob: It was like vibes. It was very vibey. I guess that’s probably the case in an open source situation. It’s very much an open source project. It’s a community-driven thing. It’s for everybody by everybody. I don’t know if all open source community projects roll like that, but that’s how this one worked out. There was some amount of ownership on Morton’s behalf. He did hire somebody to do the branding for WP Rig and the logo. And then obviously he was paying for stuff like the WPrig.io domain and the hosting through SiteGround and so on and so forth. So, we did have to transfer some of that and I’ve taken over those, I guess, financial burdens, if you want to think of it like that. But I’m totally okay with it. Topher: All right. You sort of mentioned some of the things Rig does, compiling and all that kind of stuff. Can you tell me… we didn’t discuss this before. I’m sitting at my desk and I think I want a website. How long does it take to go from that to looking at WordPress and logging into the admin with Rig? Rob: Okay. Rig is not an environment management system like local- Topher: I’m realizing my mistake. Somebody sends me a design in Figma. How long does it take me to go from that to, I’m not going to say complete because I mean, that’s CSS, but you know, how long does it take me to get to the point where I’m looking at a theme that is mine for the client that I’m going to start converting? Rob: Well, if you’re just looking for a starting point, if you’re just like, okay, how long does it take to get to like, okay, here’s my blank slate and I’m ready to start adopting all of these rules that are set up in Figma or whatever, I mean, you’re looking at maybe 5 minutes, 10 minutes, something like that. It’s pretty automated. You just need some simple knowledge of Git. And then there are some prerequisites to using WP Rig. You do have to have composer installed because we do leverage some Composer packages to some of it, although to be honest, you could probably get away with not using Composer. You just have to be okay with sacrificing some of the tools the WP Rig assumes you’re going to have. And then obviously Node. You have to have Node installed. A lot of our documentation assumes that you have NPM, that you’re using NPM for all your Nodes or your package management. But we did recently introduce support for Bun. And so you can use Bun instead of NPM, which is actually a lot faster and better in many ways. Topher: Okay. A lot of my audience are not developers, users, or light developers, like they’ll download a theme, hack a template, whatever. Is this for them? Am I boring those people right now? Rob: That’s a great question. I mean, and I think this is an interesting dichotomy and paradigm in the WordPress ecosystem, because you’ve got kind of this great divide. At least this is something I’ve noticed in my years in the WordPress community is you have many people that are not coders or developers that are very interested in expanding their knowledge of WordPress, but it’s strictly from a more of a marketing perspective where it’s like, I just want to know how to build websites with WordPress and how to use it to achieve my goals online from a marketing standpoint. You have that group of people, and then you have this other group of people that are very developer centric that want to know how to extend WordPress and how to empower those other people that we just discussed. Right? Topher: Right. Rob: So, yeah, that’s a very good question. I would say that WP Rig is very much designed for the developers, not for the marketers. The assumption there is that you’re going to be doing some amount of coding. Now, can you get away with doing a very light amount of coding? Yes. Yes, you can. I mean, if you compare what you’re going to get out of that assumed workflow to something that you would get off like Theme Forest or whatever, it’s going to be a night and day difference because those theme, Forest Themes, have hours, hundreds, sometimes hundreds of hours of development put into them. So, you’re not going to just out of the box immediately get something that is comparable to that. Topher: You need to put in those hundreds of hours of development to make a theme. Rob: As of today, yes. That may change soon though. Topher: Watch this space. Rob: That’s all I’ll say. Topher: Okay. So now we know who it’s for. I’m assuming there’s a website for it. What is it? Rob: Yeah. If you go to WPrig.io, we have a homepage that shows you all the features that are there in WP Rig. And then there’s a whole documentation area that helps people get up and running with WP Rig because there is a small learning curve there that’s pretty palatable for anybody who’s familiar with modern development workflows. So that is a thing. So the type of person that this is designed for anybody that wants to make a theme for anything. Let’s say you’re a big agency and you pull in a big client and that client wants something extremely custom and they come to you with Figma designs. Sure, you could go out there and find some premium theme and try to like child theme and overhaul that if you want. But in many situations, I would say in most situations, if you’re working from a Figma design that’s not based off of another theme already that’s just kind of somebody else’s brainchild, then you’re probably going to want to start from scratch. And so the idea here is that this is something to replace an approach, like underscores an approach. Actually, WP Pig was based off of underscores. The whole concept of it, as Morton explained it to me, was that he wanted to build an underscores that was more modern and full-featured from a development standpoint. Topher: Does it have any opinions about Gutenberg? Rob: It does now, but it did not when I took it over because Gutenberg did not exist yet when I took over WP Rig. Topher: Okay. What are its opinions? Rob: Yeah, sure. The opinion right out of the gate is that you can use Gutenberg as an editor and it has support like CSS rules in it for the standard blocks. So you should be able to use regular Gutenberg blocks in your theme and they should look just fine. There’s no resets in there. It doesn’t start from scratch. There’s not a bunch of styling you have to do for the blocks necessarily. Now, if you go to the full site editing or block-based mentality here, there are some things you need to do in WP Rig to convert the out-of-the-box WP Rig into another paradigm essentially. Right when you pull WP Rig, the assumption is you’re building what most people would refer to as a hybrid theme. The theme supports API or whatever, and the assumption is that you’re not going to be using the site editor. You’re just going to kind of do traditional WordPress, but you might be using Gutenberg for your content. So you’re just using Gutenberg kind of to author your pages and your posts and stuff like that, but not necessarily the whole site. WP Rig has the ability to kind of transform itself into other paradigms. So the first paradigm we built out was the universal theme approach. And the idea there is that you get a combination of the full site editing capabilities. But then you also have the traditional menu manager and the settings customizer framework or whatever is still there, right? These are things that don’t exist in a standard block-based theme. So I guess an easy example would be like the 2025 WordPress theme that comes right out of the box. It comes installed in WordPress. That is a true block-based theme, not a universal theme. So it doesn’t have those features because the assumption there is that it doesn’t need those features. You can kind of transform WP Rig into a universal theme that’s kind of a hybrid between a block-based and a classic theme. And then it can also transform into a strictly block-based theme as well. So following the same architecture as like the WordPress 2025 theme or Ollie or something like that is also a true block-based theme as well. So you can easily convert or transform the starting point of WP Rig into either of those paradigms if that’s the type of theme you’re setting out to build. Topher: Okay. That sounds super flexible. How much work is it to do that? Rob: It’s like one command line. Previously we had some tutorials on the website that showed you step-by-step, like what you needed to change about the theme to do that. You would have to add some files, delete some files, edit some code, add some theme supports into the base support class and some other stuff. I have recently, as of like a year and a half ago or a year ago, created a command line or a command that you can type into the command line that basically does that entire conversion process for you in like the blink of an eye. It takes probably a second to a second and a half to perform those changes to the code and then you’re good to go. It is best to do that conversion before you start building out your whole theme. It’s not impossible to do it after. But you’re more likely to run into problems or conflicts if you’ve already set out building your whole theme under one paradigm, and then you decide how the project you want to switch over to block-based or whatever. You’re likely to run into the need to refactor a bunch of stuff in that situation. So it is ideal to make that choice extremely early on in the process of developing your theme. But either way it’ll still work. That’s just one of the many tools that exist in WP Rig to transform it or convert it in several ways. That’s just one example. There are other examples of ways that Rig kind of converts itself to other paradigms as well. Topher: Yeah. All right. In my development life, I’ve had two parts to it. And one is the weekend hobbyist, or I download cadence and I whip something up in 20 minutes because I just want to experiment and the other is agency life where everything’s in Git, things are compiled, there are versions, blah, blah, blah. This sounds very friendly to that more professional pathway. Rob: Absolutely. Yes. Or, I mean, there’s another situation here too. If you’re a company who develops themes and publishes them to a platform like ThemeForest or any other platform, perhaps you’re selling themes on your own website, whatever, if you’re making things for sale, there’s no reason you couldn’t use WP Rig to build your themes. We have a bundle process that bundles your theme for publication or publishing. Whether you’re an agency or whether you’re putting your theme out for sale, it doesn’t matter, during that bundle process, it does actually white label the entire code base to where there’s no mention of WP Rig in the code whatsoever. Let’s say you were to build a theme that you wanted to put up for sale because you have some cool ideas. Say, page transitions now are completely supported in all modern or in most modern browsers. And when I say print page transitions, for those that are in the know, I am talking about not single page app page transitions, but through website page transitions. You can now do that. Let’s say you were like, “Hey, I’m feeling ambitious and I want to put out some new theme that comes with these page transitions built in,” and that’s going to be fancy on ThemeForest when people look at my demo, people might want to buy that. You could totally use WP Rig to build that out into a theme and the bundle process will white label all of the code. And then when people buy your theme and download that code, if they’re starting to go through and look through your code, they’re not going to have any way of knowing that it was built with WP Rig unless they’re familiar with the base WP Rig architecture, like how it does its object-oriented programming. It might be familiar with the patterns that it’s using and be able to kind of discern like, okay, well, this is the same pattern WP Rig uses, so high likelihood it was built with WP Rig. But they’re not going to be able to know by reading through the code. It’s not going to say WP Rig everywhere. It’s going to have the theme all over the place in the code. Topher: Okay. So then is that still WP Rig code? It just changed its labels? Rob: Yeah. Topher: So, it’s not like you’re exporting HTML, CSS and JavaScript? The underlying Rig framework is still there. Rob: Yeah. During the bundle process, it is bundling CSS and HTML. Well, HTML in the case of a block-based theme. But, yeah, it is bundling your PHP, your CSS, your JavaScript into the theme that you’re going to let people download when they buy it, or that you’re going to ship to your whatever client’s website. But all that code is going to be transpiled. In the case of CSS and JavaScript, there’s only going to be minified versions of that code in that theme. The source code is not actually going to be in there. Topher: This sounds pretty cool. You mentioned some stuff might be coming. You don’t have to tell me what it is, but do you have a timeline? When should we be watching for the next cool thing from Rig? Rob: Okay, cool. Well, I’m going to keep iterating on Rig forever. Regardless of any future products that might be built on WP Rig, WP Rig will always and forever remain an open source product for anybody to use for free and we, I, and possibly others in the future will continue to update it and support it over time. We just recently put out 3.1. You could expect the 3.2 anytime in the next six months to a year, probably closer to six months. One feature I’m looking at particularly closely right now is the new stuff coming out in version 6.9 of WordPress around the various APIs that are there. I think one of them is called the form… There’s a field API and a form API or view API or something like that. So WP Rig comes with a React-based settings framework in it. So if you want your theme to have a bunch of settings in it to make it flexible for whoever buys your theme, you can use this settings framework to easily create a bunch of fields, and then that framework will automatically manage all your fields and store all the data from those fields and make it easy to retrieve the values of the input on those fields, without knowing any React at all. Now, if you know React, you can go in there and, you know, embellish what’s already there, but it takes a JSON approach. So if you just understand JSON, you can go in and change the JSON for the framework, and that will automatically add fields into the settings framework. So you don’t even have to know React to extend the settings page if you want. That will likely get an overhaul using these new APIs being introduced into Rig. Topher: All right. How often have you run into something where, “Oh, look, WordPress has a new feature, I need to rebuild my system”? Rob: Over the last four or five years, it’s happened a lot because, yeah, I mean, like I said, when I first took this thing over, Gutenberg had not even been introduced yet. So, you had the introduction of Gutenberg and blocks. That was one thing. Then this whole full site editing became a thing, which later became the site editor. So that became a whole thing. Then all these various APIs. I mean, it happens quite frequently. So I’ve been working to keep it modern and up to date over the past four years and it’s been an incredible learning experience. It not only keeps my WordPress knowledge extremely sharp, but I’ve also learned how various other toolkits are built. That’s been the interesting thing. From a development standpoint, there’s two challenges here. One of the challenges is staying modern on the WordPress side of things. For instance, WordPress coding standards came out with a version 3 and then a version 3.1 about two years ago. I had to update WP Rig to leverage those modern coding standards. So that’s one example is as WordPress changes, the code in WP Rig also needs to change. Or for instance, if new CSS standards change, right, new CSS properties come out, it is ideal for the base CSS in WP Rig, meaning the CSS that you get right out of the box with it, comes with some of these, for instance, CSS grid, Flexbox, stuff like that. If I was adopting a theme framework to build a theme on, I would expect some of that stuff to be in there. And those things were extremely new when I first took over WP Rig and were not all baked in there essentially. So I’ve had to add a lot of that over time. Now there’s another side to this, which is not just keeping up with WordPress and CSS and PHP, 8. whatever, yada yada yada. You’ve also got the toolkit. There are various node packages and composer packages of power WP Rig and the process in which it does the transpiling, the bundling, the automated manipulation of your code during various aspects of the usage of WP Rig is a whole nother set of challenges because now you have to learn concepts like, well, how do I write custom node scripts? Right? Like there were no WP CLI commands built into WP Rig when I first took it over. Now there’s a whole list. There’s a whole library of WP CLI commands that come in Rig right out of the gate. And so I’ve had to learn about that. So just various things that come with knowing how do you automate the process of converting code, that’s something that was completely foreign to me when I first took over WP Rig. That’s been another incredible learning experience is understanding like what’s the difference between Webpack and Gulp. I didn’t know, right? I would tell people I’m using Gulp and WP Rig and they would be like, “Well, why don’t you just use Webpack?” and I would say, “I don’t know. I don’t know what the difference is.” So over time I could figure out what are the differences? Why aren’t we using Webpack? And I’m glad I spent some time on that because it turns out Webpack is not the hottest thing anymore, so I just skipped right over all that. When I overhauled for version 3, we’re now not using Gulp anymore as of 3.1. We’re now using more of a Vite-like process, far more modern than Webpack and far better and faster and sleeker and lighter. I had to learn a bunch about what powers Vite. What is Vite doing under the hood that we might be able to also do in WP Rig, but do it in a WordPress way. Because Vite is a SaaS tool. If you’re building a SaaS, like React with a… we’re not a SaaS. I guess a spa is a better term to use here. If you’re building a single page application with React or view or belt or whatever, right, then knowing what Vite is and just using Vite right out of the box is perfect. But it doesn’t translate perfectly to WordPress land because WordPress has its own opinions. And so I did have to do some dissecting there and figure out what to keep and what to not keep to what to kind of set aside so that WordPress can keep doing what WordPress does the way WordPress likes to do it, but also improve on how we’re doing some of the compiling and transpiling and the manipulation of the code during these various. Topher: All right. I want to pivot a little bit to some personal-ish questions. Rob: Okay. Topher: This is a big project. I’m sure it takes up plenty of your time. How scalable is that in your life? Do you want to do this for the rest of your life? Rob: That’s a fantastic question. I don’t know about the rest of my life. I mean, I definitely want to do web development for the rest of my life because the web has, let’s be honest, it’s transformed everyone’s way of life, whether you’re a web developer or not. You know, the fact that we have the internet in our pocket now, you know, it has changed everything. Apps, everything. It’s all built on the web. So I certainly want to be involved in the web the rest of my life. Do I want to keep doing WordPress the rest of my life? I don’t know. Do I want to keep doing WP Rig the rest of my life? I don’t know. But I will say that you bring up a very interesting point, which is it does take up a lot of time and also trust in open source over the past four or five years I would argue has diminished a little bit as a result of various events that have occurred over the past two or three years. I mean, we could cite the whole WP Engine Matt Mullerwig thing. We can also cite what’s going on with Oracle and JavaScript. Well, I mean, there’s many examples of this. I mean, we can cite the whole thing that happened… I mean, there’s various packages out there that are used and developed and open source to anybody, and some of them are going on maintained and it’s causing security vulnerabilities and degradation and all this stuff. So it’s a very important point. One thing I started thinking about after considering that in relation to WP Rig was I noticed that there’s usually a for-profit arm of any of these frameworks that seems to extend the lifespan of it. Let’s just talk about React, for example, React is an open source JavaScript framework, but it’s used by Facebook and Facebook is extremely for-profit. So companies that are making infrastructural or architectural decisions, they will base their choice on whether or not to use a framework largely on how long they think this framework is going to remain relevant or valid or maintained, right? A large part of that is, well, is there a company making money off of this thing? Because if there is, the chances- Topher: They’re going to keep doing that. Rob: They’re going to keep doing it. It’s going to stay around. That’s good. I think that’s healthy. A lot of people that like open source and want everything to be free, they might look at something like that and say like, well, I don’t want you to make a paid version of it or there shouldn’t be a pro version. I think that’s a very short-sighted way of looking at that software and these innovations. I think a more experienced way of looking at it is if you want something to remain relevant and maintained for a long period of time, having a for-profit way in which it’s leveraged is a very good thing. I mean, let’s be real. Would WordPress still be what it is today if there wasn’t a wordpress.com or if WooCommerce wasn’t owned by Automattic or whatever, right? They’ll be on top. I mean, it’s obviously impossible to say, but my argument would be, probably not. I mean, look at what’s happened to the other content management systems out there. You know, Joomla Drupal. They don’t really have a flourishing, you know, paid pro service that goes with their thing that’s very popular, at least definitely not as popular as WordPress.com or WordPress VIP or some of these other things that exist out there. And so having something that’s making and generating money that can then contribute back into it the way Automattic has been doing with WordPress over these years has, in my opinion, been instrumental. I mean, people can talk smack about Gutenberg all they want, but let’s be real, it’s 2025, would you still feel that WordPress is an elegant solution if we were still working from the WYSIWYG and using the classic editor? And I know a lot of people are still using the classic editor and there’s classic for us, the fork and all that stuff. But I mean, that only makes sense in a very specific implementation of WordPress, a very specific paradigm. If you want to explore any of these other paradigms out there, that way of thinking about WordPress kind of falls apart pretty quickly. I, for one, am happy that Gutenberg exists. I’m very happy that Automattic continues. And I’m grateful, actually, that Automattic continues to contribute back into WordPress. And not just them, obviously there’s other companies, XWP, 10Up, all these other companies are also contributing as well. But I’m very grateful that this ecosystem exists and that there’s contribution going back in and it’s happening from companies that are making money with this. And I think that’s vital. All that to say that WP Rig may and likely will have paid products in the future that leverage WP Rig. So that’s not to say that WP Rig will eventually cost money. That’s just to say that eventually people can expect other products to come out in the future that will be built on WP Rig and incentivize the continued contributions back into WP Rig. The open source version of WP Rig. Topher: That’s cool. I think that’s wise. If you want anything to stay alive, you have to feed it. Rob: That’s right. Topher: I had some more questions but I had forgotten them because I got caught up in your answer. Rob: Oh, thank you. I’ll take that as a compliment. I mean, my answer was eloquent. But I’m happy to expand on anything, know you, WordPress related, me related, you know, whether it comes to the ecosystem in WordPress, the whole WordCamp meetup thing is very interesting. I led the WP Omaha meetup for many years here in Omaha, Nebraska and I also led the WordCamp, the organizing of WordCamp here in Omaha for several years as well. That whole community, the whole ecosystem, at least in America seems to have largely fallen apart. I don’t know if you want to talk about that at all. But yeah, I’m ready to dive into any topics. Topher: I’m going to have one more question and then we’re going to wrap up. And it was that you were talking about all the things you had to learn. I’m sure there were nights where you were looking at your computer thinking, “Oh man, I had it working, now I gotta go learn a new thing.” I would love for you to go back in time and blog all of that if you would. But given that you can’t, I would be interested in a blog moving forward, documenting what you’re learning, how you’re learning it and starting maybe with a post that’s summarizes all of that. Obviously, that’s up to you and how you want to spend your time, but I think it’d be really valuable to other people starting a project, picking up somebody else’s project to see what the roadmap might look like. You know what I mean? Rob: For sure. Well, I can briefly summarize what I’ve learned over the years and where I’m at today with how I do this kind of stuff. I will say that a lot of the improvements to WP Rig that have happened over the last year or two would not be possible without the advent of AI. Topher: Interesting. Rob: That’s a fancy way of saying that I have been by coding a lot of WP Rig lately. If you know how to use AI, it is extremely powerful and it can help you do many things very quickly that previously would have taken much longer or more manpower. So, yeah, perhaps if there was like five, six, seven people actively, excuse me, actively contributing to WP Rig, then this type of stuff would have been possible previously, but that’s not the case. There is one person, well, one main contributor to WP Rig today and you’re talking to them. There are a handful of other people that have been likely contributing to WP Rig over the versions and you can find their contributions in the change log file in WP Rig. But those contributions have been extremely light compared to what I’ve been doing. I wouldn’t be able to do any of it without AI. I have learned my ability to learn things extremely rapidly has ramped up tenfold since I started learning how to properly leverage LLMs and AI. So that’s not to say that like, you know, WP Rig, all the code is just being completely written by AI and I’m just like. make it better, enter, and then like WP Rig is better. I wish it was that easy. It’s certainly not that. But when I needed to start asking some of these vital questions that I really didn’t have anyone to turn to to help answer them, I was able to turn to AI. For instance, let’s go back to the Webpack versus Gulp situation. Although Gulp is no longer used in WP Rig, you know, it was used in WP Rig until very recently. So I had to understand like, what is this system, how does it work, how do I extend it and how do I update it and all these things, right? And why aren’t we using WebPack and you know, is there validity to this criticism behind you should use webpack instead of Gulp or whatever, right? I was able to use AI to ask these questions and be able to get extremely good answers out of it and give me the direction I needed to make some of these kind of higher level decisions on like architecturally where should WP Rig go? It was through these virtual conversations with LLMs that I was able to refine the direction of WP Rig in a direction that is both modern and forward-thinking and architecturally sound. I learned a tremendous amount from AI about the architecture, about the code, about all of it. My advice to anybody that wants to extend their skill set a little bit in the development side of things is to leverage this new thing that we have in a way that is as productive as possible for you. So that’s going to vary from person to person. But for me, if I’m on a flight or if I’m stuck somewhere for a while, like, let’s say I got to take my kid to practice or something and I’m stuck there for an hour and I got to find some way to kill my time 9 times out of 10, I’m on my laptop or on my phone having conversations with Grok or ChatGPT or Gemini or whatever. I am literally refining… I’m just sitting there asking it questions that are on my mind that I wish I could ask somebody who’s like 10 times more capable than me. It has been instrumental. WP Rig wouldn’t be where it is today if it wasn’t for that. I would just say to anybody, especially now that it’s all on apps and you don’t have to be on a browser anymore, adopt that way of thinking. You know, if you’re on your lunch break or whatever and you have an hour lunch break and you only take 15 minutes to eat, what could you be doing with those other 45 minutes? You could just jump on this magical thing that we have now and start probing it for questions. Like, Hey, here’s what I know. Here’s what I don’t know. Fill these knowledge gaps for me.” And it is extremely good at doing that. Topher: So my question was, can you blog this and your answer told me that there’s more there that I want to hear. That’s the stuff that should be in your book when you write your book. Rob: I’m flattered that you would be interested in reading anything that I write. So thank you. I’ve written stuff in the past and it hasn’t gotten a lot of attention. But I also don’t have any platforms to market it either. But yeah, no, I made some… I’m sorry. Topher: I think your experience is valuable far beyond Rig or WordPress. If you abstract it out of a particular project to say, you know, I did this with a project, I learned this this way, I think that would be super valuable. Rob: Well, I will say that recently at my current job, I was challenged to create an end to end testing framework with Playwright that would speed up how long it takes to test things and also prevent, you know, to make things fail earlier, essentially, to prevent broken things from ending up in the wild, right, and having to catch them the hard way. I didn’t know a lot about Playwright, but I do know how toolkits work now because of WP Rig. And I was able to successfully in a matter of, I don’t know, three days, put together a starter kit for a test framework that we’re already using at work to test any website that we create for any client. It can be extended and it can be hooked into any CI CD pipeline and it generates reports for you and it does a whole bunch of stuff. I was able to do this relatively quickly. This knowledge, yes, does come in handy in other situations. Will I end up developing other toolkits like WP Rig in the future for other things? I guess if I can give any advice to anybody listening out there, another piece of advice I would give people is, you know, especially if you’re a junior developer and you’re still learning or whatever, or you’re just a marketing person and just want to have more control over the functionality side of what you’re creating or more insight into that so you could better, you know, manage projects or whatever. My advice would be to take on a small little project that is scoped relatively small that’s not too much for you to chew and go build something and do it with… Just doing that will be good. But if you can do it with the intent to then present it in some fashion, whether it be a blog article or creating a YouTube video or going to a meetup and giving a talk on it or even a lunch and learn at work or whatever, right, that will, in my experience, it will dramatically amplify how much you learn from that little pet project that’s kind of like a mini learning experience. And I highly encourage anybody out there to do that on the regular. Actually, no matter what your experience level is in development, I think you should do these things on a regular basis. Topher: All right. I’m going to wrap this up. I got to get back to work. You probably have to get back to work. Rob: Yeah. Topher: Thanks for talking. Rob: Thanks for having me, Topher. Really appreciate it. Topher: Where could people find you? WPrig.io? Rob: Yeah, WPrig.io. WP rig has accounts on all of the major platforms and, even on Bluesky and Mastodon. You can look me up, Rob Ruiz. You can find me on LinkedIn. You can find me on all of those same platforms as well. You can add me on Facebook if you want, whatever. And I’m also in the WordPress Slack as well as Rob Ruiz. You can find me in the WordPress Slack. And then I’m on the WordPress Reddit and all that stuff. So yeah, reach out. If anybody wants to have any questions about Rig or anything else, I’m happy to engage. Topher: Sounds good. All right, I’ll see you. Rob: All right, thanks, Topher. Have a good day. Topher: This has been an episode of the Hallway Chats podcast. I’m your host Topher DeRosia. Many thanks to our sponsor Nexcess. If you’d like to hear more Hallway Chats, please let us know on hallwaychats.com.
This week we have Jeppe Reinhold, a core contributor to Storybook working at Chromatic. Jeppe shares how Storybook has evolved from a slow, complex tool to a fast, modern development environment through major architectural changes like Vite integration, ESM migration, and dependency reduction. We talk about the Component Story Format evolution, framework agnosticism challenges, local testing improvements with vitest integration, and how Storybook is integrating with AI and LLMs through MCP servers to help coding agents understand and use component libraries.https://reinhold.is/https://bsky.app/profile/reinhold.ishttps://storybook.js.org/
Dans cet épisode Tristan & Guillaume détaillent un protocole de réathlétisation progressive pensé pour revenir vite sans se blesser, après une pause volontaire, une blessure ou une coupure hivernale.Bénéficiez d'un mois offert sur votre programme d'entrainement Campus Coach avec le code DLTDC Instant Lifestyle :https://www.polar.com/fr/unitehttps://www.andros-sport.frhttps://www.rossignol.com/fr-fr/chaussures-de-trail-venosk-pour-homme-RNNMA50F01.htmlhttps://www.amazon.fr/SANOTO-Conduction-Bluetooth-Waterproof-Sweatproof/dp/B0C858QJD5?th=1Hébergé par Audiomeans. Visitez audiomeans.fr/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.
Wes and Scott revisit their 2025 web development predictions, grading hits and misses across AI, browsers, frameworks, CSS, and tooling. From Temporal and AI coding agents to React, Vite, and vanilla CSS, they reflect on what actually changed, what stalled, and what it all means heading into 2026. Show Notes 00:00 Welcome to Syntax! 866: 2025 Web Development Predictions 01:26 Temporal API will ship in the browser 03:33 On-device AI becomes common 06:14 WebGPU unlocks fast local machine learning TypeGPU 07:10 Models will plateau 10:32 Is there an actual use case for video and photo gen AI? 13:27 Text to UI tools get really good 16:25 Framework choice will matter less 18:53 Web components in Standard Stack, Web Awesome takes off 21:37 AI browsers and Copilot Workspace-style tools will become normal 22:56 AI browsera will become inevitable, OpenAI will launch a browser 27:51 Relative color will feel fully “safe to use” 29:02 Vanilla CSS will make a comeback 30:33 Brought to you by Sentry.io 30:58 CSS mixins and functions spec solidifies CSS Custom Functions and Mixins Module Level 1 33:25 Container style queries will ship everywhere CSS if statements 35:40 Vertical centering jokes will stubbornly persist 36:20 VS Code will reach feature parity with Cursor 38:47 More VS Code forks will appear 39:46 React Compiler drops Babel 40:34 React server components will pop 42:17 Remix re-emerges as something new 43:17 React Native will have its time 44:21 TanStack Start and Tanstack will pop 45:46 SvelteKit gets more granular data loading 46:06 Local first apps will take off 46:43 Bun keeps doing “wild but loved” non-standard features, Bun will launch a platform-as-a-service 48:22 Vite stays king 51:07 Laravel will release a CMS 52:44 Sick Picks + Shameless Plugs Sick Picks Scott: DARKBEAM Flashlight UV Black Light Wes: WOOZOO Fan Hit us up on Socials! Syntax: X Instagram Tiktok LinkedIn Threads Wes: X Instagram Tiktok LinkedIn Threads Scott: X Instagram Tiktok LinkedIn Threads Randy: X Instagram YouTube Threads
durée : 00:04:02 - Les P'tits Bateaux - par : Camille Crosnier - Maël se demande comment les TGV font pour aller si vite. Les enfants aiment les trains, et plus encore ceux qui vont vite ! Mais cela ne manque pas de les intriguer... Vous aimez ce podcast ? Pour écouter tous les autres épisodes sans limite, rendez-vous sur Radio France.