than [ASAP] Methanol Synthesis from CO<sub>2</sub> Hydrogenation over a Potassium-Promoted Cu<italic toggle="yes"><sub>x</sub></italic>O/Cu(111) (<italic toggle="yes">x</italic> = 2) Model Sur By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Fri, 01 May 2020 04:00:00 GMT ACS CatalysisDOI: 10.1021/acscatal.9b05226 Full Article
than [ASAP] Spectroscopic Signatures Reveal Cyclopentenyl Cation Contributions in Methanol-to-Olefins Catalysis By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Fri, 01 May 2020 04:00:00 GMT ACS CatalysisDOI: 10.1021/acscatal.0c00721 Full Article
than Verschwunden! / Hans Magnus Enzensberger ; mit Zeichnungen von Jonathan Penca By library.mit.edu Published On :: Sun, 29 Mar 2015 06:08:29 EDT Hayden Library - PT2609.N9 V47 2014 Full Article
than Radio Benjamin / edited by Lecia Rosenthal ; translated by Jonathan Lutes with Lisa Harries Schumann and Diana K. Reese By library.mit.edu Published On :: Sun, 22 May 2016 06:10:10 EDT Hayden Library - PT2603.E455 A26 2014 Full Article
than Novel translations: the European novel and the German book, 1680-1730 / Bethany Wiggin By library.mit.edu Published On :: Sun, 9 Dec 2018 06:36:07 EST Online Resource Full Article
than Novel Translations: the European Novel and the German Book, 1680-1730 / Bethany Wiggin By library.mit.edu Published On :: Sun, 29 Sep 2019 06:46:09 EDT Online Resource Full Article
than LIGO spots merging neutron stars, scholarly questions about a new Bible museum, and why wolves are better team players than dogs By traffic.omny.fm Published On :: Thu, 19 Oct 2017 14:30:00 -0400 This week we hear stories about the Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory’s latest hit, why wolves are better team players than dogs, and volcanic eruptions that may have triggered riots in ancient Egypt with Online News Editor Catherine Matacic. Sarah Crespi interviews contributing correspondent Lizzie Wade about the soon-to-open Museum of the Bible in Washington D.C. Can it recover from early accusations of forgeries and illicitly obtained artifacts? Listen to previous podcasts. [Image: Public Domain; Music: Jeffrey Cook] Full Article Scientific Community
than Digital Reference Section (DRS) Virtual Programs: New blog post invites readers to "Sample a Taste of History This Thanksgiving" By blogs.loc.gov Published On :: Wed, 21 Nov 2018 10:00:27 -0600 Find a new and historic recipe for a dish to put on your Thanksgiving table in What Mrs. Fisher Knows About Old Southern Cooking. This cookbook, published in 1881, is highlighted in a recent post on the Library of Congress Blog. Abby Fisher perfected her culinary skills as an enslaved cook on a South Carolina plantation but went on to establish a successful catering business in San Francisco and publish a compilation of her recipes—one of the first by an African-American. Learn more about this remarkable woman and, this Thanksgiving, sample a taste of history! Click here to go to the Library of Congress Blog post, "Sample a Taste of History This Thanksgiving!" Full Article
than Leading transformation: how to take charge of your company's future / Nathan Furr, Kyle Nel, and Thomas Zoëga Ramsøy By library.mit.edu Published On :: Sun, 19 Apr 2020 06:48:14 EDT Dewey Library - HD31.2.F87 2018 Full Article
than Obstetrics in family medicine: a practical guide / Paul Lyons, Nathan McLaughin By library.mit.edu Published On :: Sun, 26 Apr 2020 06:32:35 EDT Online Resource Full Article
than Homeric sites around Troy / Jonathan Brown By prospero.murdoch.edu.au Published On :: Brown, Jonathan, 1949- author Full Article
than Assyria : the imperial mission / Mario Liverani ; translated by Andrea Trameri and Jonathan Valk By prospero.murdoch.edu.au Published On :: Liverani, Mario, author Full Article
than Red star over Cuba : the Russian assault on the Western Hemisphere / Nathaniel Weyl By prospero.murdoch.edu.au Published On :: Weyl, Nathaniel, 1910-2005 Full Article
than Know your IPL Team: Rajasthan Royals By www.rediff.com Published On :: Sat, 23 Mar 2019 13:31:46 +0530 Rajneesh Gupta presents statistical summary of Rajasthan Royals and much more. Full Article
than Clinical Trials during an infectious outbreaks: More questions than answers By www.thehindubusinessline.com Published On :: Fri, 08 May 2020 09:49:10 +0530 The world is facing a pandemic of COVID-19, for which there is no effective therapy. And any new therapy can be used in medical practice only if its e Full Article Pulse
than [ASAP] Rapid and Sensitive Detection of anti-SARS-CoV-2 IgG, Using Lanthanide-Doped Nanoparticles-Based Lateral Flow Immunoassay By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Tue, 05 May 2020 04:00:00 GMT Analytical ChemistryDOI: 10.1021/acs.analchem.0c00784 Full Article
than India’s tour of Australia logistically easier to organsise than T20 World Cup, says BCCI treasurer By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Fri, 08 May 2020 11:34:05 +0000 Dhumal admitted that quarantining of Indian players upon their arrival is a possibility, if their tour Down Under goess as per schedule. Full Article
than Covid-19: Scientific journals are now pumping out research faster than ever By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Fri, 08 May 2020 18:00:00 +0000 While there is an urgent need for data, false information can be worse than none at all. Full Article
than Watch: Virat Kohli picks his favourite match other than 2011 ODI World Cup final win By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Sat, 09 May 2020 12:13:21 +0000 The India captain picked the quarter-final win over Australia at the 2016 T20 World Cup, for the importance of the match and the atmosphere. Full Article
than Contesting Leviathan: activists, hunters, and state power in the Makah whaling conflict / Les Beldo By library.mit.edu Published On :: Sun, 2 Feb 2020 08:26:55 EST Dewey Library - SH383.2.B45 2019 Full Article
than Water hyacinth: a potential lignocellulosic biomass for bioethanol / Anuja Sharma, Neeraj K. Aggarwal By library.mit.edu Published On :: Sun, 16 Feb 2020 07:32:02 EST Online Resource Full Article
than Landscape impact assessment in planning processes / Ingrid Belčáková, Paola Gazzola, Eva Pauditšová ; managing editor Agnieszka Topolska, language editor Jonathan Wotton By library.mit.edu Published On :: Sun, 23 Feb 2020 09:06:07 EST Rotch Library - GF90.B45 2018 Full Article
than Sustainable sorbitol-derived compounds for gelation of the full range of ethanol–water mixtures By feeds.rsc.org Published On :: Soft Matter, 2020, Advance ArticleDOI: 10.1039/D0SM00343C, PaperGlenieliz C. Dizon, George Atkinson, Stephen P. Argent, Lea T. Santu, David B. AmabilinoA combination of gelators prepared from sustainable sources combine in a synergic way to widen the scope for the compounds to immobilise liquids, as shown by imaging, diffraction and rheology measurements.To cite this article before page numbers are assigned, use the DOI form of citation above.The content of this RSS Feed (c) The Royal Society of Chemistry Full Article
than The effects of e-cigarette taxes on e-cigarette prices and tobacco product sales [electronic resource] : evidence from retail panel data / Chad D. Cotti, Charles J. Courtemanche, Johanna Catherine Maclean, Erik T. Nesson, Michael F. Pesko, Nathan Tefft By darius.uleth.ca Published On :: Cambridge, Mass. : National Bureau of Economic Research, 2020 Full Article
than A republic of equals: a manifesto for a just society / Jonathan Rothwell By library.mit.edu Published On :: Sun, 5 Apr 2020 07:47:23 EDT Dewey Library - JC575.R68 2019 Full Article
than Race on the brain: what implicit bias gets wrong about the struggle for racial justice / Jonathan Kahn By library.mit.edu Published On :: Sun, 26 Apr 2020 09:04:30 EDT Dewey Library - HV9950.K34 2018 Full Article
than False alarm: the truth about political mistruths in the Trump era / Ethan Porter, Thomas J. Wood By library.mit.edu Published On :: Sun, 26 Apr 2020 09:04:30 EDT Dewey Library - JK1726.P67 2019 Full Article
than Clearer than truth: the polygraph and the American Cold War / John Philipp Baesler By library.mit.edu Published On :: Sun, 26 Apr 2020 09:04:30 EDT Dewey Library - JK468.L5 B34 2018 Full Article
than Rajasthan: HC sets up enquiry committee into mining on Bhilwara border By archive.indianexpress.com Published On :: Mon, 30 Sep 2013 17:03:48 GMT Enquiry committee set up following allegations of irregularities by Cong MP Naveen Jindal's company. Full Article
than Asaram to stay in jail as Rajasthan HC rejects his bail plea By archive.indianexpress.com Published On :: Tue, 01 Oct 2013 08:54:16 GMT The verdict on Asaram's bail plea comes a day after his judicial custody was extended till Oct 11. Full Article
than Phailin not less than super cyclone, wind speed likely to reach 220 kmph By archive.indianexpress.com Published On :: Fri, 11 Oct 2013 06:32:54 GMT The IMD forecast waves up to 2.5 meter to 3.0 meter high in Ganjam, Khurda, Puri. Full Article
than Cyclone Phailin: Ganjam worst hit, more than 2.4 lakh houses damaged By archive.indianexpress.com Published On :: Mon, 14 Oct 2013 15:34:08 GMT Power infrastructure has been damaged to a great extent. Full Article
than Modi Model: The Pathani kurta is likely to be in Narendra Modi's wardrobe By archive.indianexpress.com Published On :: Mon, 14 Oct 2013 22:59:39 GMT Modi's stylist says he may wear kurtas at evening engagements in north India. Full Article
than Rajasthan polls: Mewat Muslims yet to forgive Congress By archive.indianexpress.com Published On :: Wed, 23 Oct 2013 23:25:25 GMT Gopalgarh firing still pains Meo Muslims: 'Why should we vote for Congress?'' Full Article
than More than 20 trains to be cancelled during foggy days By archive.indianexpress.com Published On :: Sat, 26 Oct 2013 08:38:58 GMT But, in lieu of fog, railways shall start booking for the cancelled trains with a three-day notice. Full Article
than Mumbai: More than 200 students taken ill after mid-day meal in school By archive.indianexpress.com Published On :: Mon, 25 Nov 2013 08:54:18 GMT Children consumed a cake served to then after which they started complaining of uneasiness. Full Article
than Convex analysis and nonlinear optimization [electronic resource] : theory and examples / Jonathan M. Borwein, Adrian S. Lewis By darius.uleth.ca Published On :: New York : Springer, [2006] Full Article
than Global perspectives on air pollution prevention and control system design / [edited by] G. Venkatesan, Jaganathan Thirumal By prospero.murdoch.edu.au Published On :: Full Article
than Grasslands and climate change / edited by David J. Gibson, Jonathan A. Newman By prospero.murdoch.edu.au Published On :: Full Article
than In search of good energy policy / edited by Marc Ozawa (Cambridge University Energy Policy Research Group), Jonathan Chaplin (Cambridge University Faculty of Divinity), Michael Pollitt (Cambridge University Judge Business School), David Reiner (Cambridge By prospero.murdoch.edu.au Published On :: Full Article
than Sound reporting : the NPR guide to audio journalism and production / Jonathan Kern By prospero.murdoch.edu.au Published On :: Kern, Jonathan, 1953- author Full Article
than 1993 Kolkata police firing worse than Jallianwala Bagh, says Commission By indianexpress.com Published On :: Mon, 29 Dec 2014 18:35:51 +0000 Full Article DO NOT USE West Bengal India
than 166 JSJ New Relic with Wraithan and Ben Weintraub By devchat.tv Published On :: Wed, 01 Jul 2015 11:00:00 -0400 02:27 - Coding House Scholarship Winners with AJ and Aimee Emily Dreisbach (50% scholarship winner) Blake Gilmore (50% scholarship winner) Berlin Sohn (100% scholarship winner) Congratulations from the panelists of JavaScript Jabber! 09:48 - Ben Weintraub Introduction Twitter GitHub 10:40 - Wraithan Introduction Twitter GitHub Blog 11:01 - Why Care About Monitoring? Insights 13:08 - Mixedpanel 13:57 - How it Works on the Backend Time-series Data MySQL statsd Traces S3 Cassandra Insights 17:26 - New Relic’s CEO: Lew Cirne 18:37 - How the Node Agent Works Express.js Specifics Transactions and Controller Names Database Monitoring MongoDB Oracle Support 23:27 - Deciding Which Databases to Support Postgres 26:41 - Browser Monitoring 32:54 - Using Zombie.js? 34:11 - Tree of Causality Track.js 39:37 - Monetizing Aspect, Viewable Source/Source Available Code 47:28 - Performance CodeGen mraleph Blog v8-perf Benchmarking jsPerf 01:00:53 - New Relic @newrelic New Relic Blog New Relic Community Forum Picks mraleph Blog (Wraithan) v8-perf (Wraithan) The Dear Hunter: A Night on the Town (Jamison) React Rally (Jamison) caddy (AJ) Windows 10: Setup your Raspberry Pi 2 (AJ) Remote debugging protocol (Ben) Chrome Dev Tools Filmstrip View (Ben) Full Article
than 167 JSJ TypeScript and Angular with Jonathan Turner and Alex Eagle By devchat.tv Published On :: Wed, 08 Jul 2015 11:00:00 -0400 02:27 - Alex Eagle Introduction Twitter GitHub Google 02:54 - Jonathan Turner Introduction Twitter GitHub Microsoft [Talk] Jonathan Turner: TypeScript and Angular 2 @ ng-conf 2015 [Talk] Jonathan Turner: TypeScript and Angular 2 @ Angular U 2015 03:30 - What is TypeScript? 04:40 - Google + Microsoft = <3 (Angular Adopting TypeScript) Rob Eisenberg AtScript Jonathan Turner: Angular 2: Built on TypeScript 07:18 - TypeScript Accommodating Angular TC39 Yehuda Katz Aurelia 09:28 - Surge of Interest in Adopting a Typechecker, Type System 14:21 - Angular: Creating a New Language Killing Off Wasabi - Part 1 (FogBugz Article) traceur 16:46 - The Angular 2 Component System and How it Uses New Annotations for Classes 18:01 - Annotations and Decorators 22:06 - TypeScript and Babel?; Adding New Features 25:25 - Non-Angular Users Adopting TypeScript Visual Studio Code 34:55 - Tooling and Setting Modes for Linting and Static Analysis 36:58 - Using Libraries Outside the TypeScript Ecosystem 38:11 - Type Definition Files 40:15 - Content of the Type System 43:19 - Duck Typing 45:12 - Getting People to Care about TypeScript 49:16 - The Angular and TypeScript Relationship Picks f.lux (Aimee) Jafar Husain: Functional Programming in Javascript (learnrx) (Aimee) Startup Timelines (Jamison) Friday Night Lights (Jamison) React Rally (Jamison) Evan Farrer: Unit testing isn't enough. You need static typing too. (Dave) AngularConnect (Joe) ng-click.com (Joe) mdn.io (Joe) Sonic Pi (Chuck) Error Prone (Alex) AudioScope-ng2 (Jonathan) The Nintendo World Championships (Jonathan) Full Article
than 231 JSJ Codewars with Nathan Doctor, Jake Hoffner, and Dan Nolan By devchat.tv Published On :: Wed, 28 Sep 2016 09:00:00 -0400 3:23 Discussing the purpose and aim of Codewars 7:30 The process for building a program with Codewars 11:07 The UI and editor experience 12:55 The challenges faced when first building Codewars 14:23 Explaining PJAX 16:54 Building code on Codewars 21:24 The expanded use of KATA on Codewars 23:11 Practicing “solving problems” and how it translates to real world situations 34:00 How Codewars proves out the persistence of coders 36:41 How Codewars appeals to collaborative workers 44:40 Teachable moments on Codewars 49:40 Always check to see if Codewars is hiring. Codewars uses Qualified.io, which helps automate the hiring process. PICKS: Marrow Sci-fi book Uprooted Fantasy book “Write Less Code” blog post “The Rands Test” blog post Five Stack software development studio “Stranger Things” on Netflix Angular 2 Class in Ft. Lauderdale, Discount Code: JSJ Lean Analytics book Code book Datasmart book Letting Go book Full Article
than JSJ Special Episode: Azure with Jonathan Carter By devchat.tv Published On :: Fri, 17 Mar 2017 07:00:00 -0400 On today's episode, Aimee Knight, AJ O'Neal, Cory House, Joe Eames, and Charles Max Wood discuss Azure with Jonathan Carter. Jonathan has been working at Microsoft for 10 years. He currently focuses on Node.js and Azure. Tune in to learn how you can use Azure in building applications and services. Full Article
than MJS 056: Jonathan Carter By devchat.tv Published On :: Wed, 11 Apr 2018 06:00:00 -0400 Panel: Charles Max Wood Guest: Jonathan Carter This week on My JavaScript Story, Charles speaks with Jonathan Carter. Jonathan is a PM at Microsoft and has been a web developer for over 15 years. At Microsoft, he’s had the opportunity to work on tooling, platform pieces for JavaScript applications, and many other things. He first got into programming when his uncle let him shadow him and the IT department he had working for him, and this is where he was first introduced to software and the idea of working with computers as a career. They talk about his proudest accomplishments within the JavaScript community as well as what he is working on now. In particular, we dive pretty deep on: Jonathan intro Asure How did you first get into programming? Interest in creating a website Dual enrollment in high school at local community college Started off with VB6 Uncle was very active in his programming start .net Scrappy boredom mixed with curiosity led to him actually getting into software Everyone comes into programming differently Your past is important in explaining where you have ended up Node.js on Asure How did you get into JavaScript? Worked at a newspaper in the software division Ajax jQuery Wanted to write better apps CodePush Stayed in JavaScript community because it brings him inspiration and excitement Likes to be able and look back on his past projects App development for fun Is there anything that you are particularly proud of? Profiling tools Liked building tools that meet people where they are at and simplify their jobs Qordoba React Native And much, much more! Links: JavaScript Microsoft Asure Node.js jQuery CodePush Qordoba React Native @LostinTangent Jonathan’s GitHub Picks Charles Anti-Pick: Intellibed Tuft and Needle Jonathan Notion Doomsday by Architects Full Article
than JSJ 333: “JavaScript 2018: Things You Need to Know, and a Few You Can Skip” with Ethan Brown By devchat.tv Published On :: Tue, 02 Oct 2018 06:00:00 -0400 Panel: Aimee Knight Joe Eames Charles Max Wood Special Guests: Ethan Brown In this episode, the panel talks with Ethan Brown who is a technological director at a small company. They write software to facilitate large public organizations and help make projects more effective, such as: rehabilitation of large construction projects, among others. There is a lot of government work through the endeavors they encounter. Today, the panel talks about his article he wrote, and other topics such as Flex, Redux, Ruby, Vue.js, Automerge, block chain, and Elm. Enjoy! Show Topics: 2:38 – Chuck: We are here to talk about the software side of things. Let’s dive into what you are looking at mid-year what we need to know for 2018. You wrote this. 3:25 – Ethan: I start off saying that doing this podcast now, how quickly things change. One thing I didn’t think people needed to know was symbols, and now that’s changed. I had a hard time with bundling and other things. I didn’t think the troubles were worth it. And now a couple of moths ago (an open source project) someone submitted a PR and said: maybe we should be using symbols? I told them I’ve had problems in the past. They said: are you crazy?! It’s funny to see how I things have changed. 4:47 – Panel: Could you talk about symbols? 4:58 – Aimee: Are they comparable to Ruby? 5:05 – Ethan talks about what symbols are and what they do! 5:52 – Chuck: That’s pretty close to how that’s used in Ruby, too. 6:04 – Aimee: I haven’t used them in JavaScript, yet. When have you used them recently? 6:15 – Ethan answers the question. 7:17 – Panelist chimes in. 7:27 – Ethan continues his answer. The topic of “symbols” continues. Ethan talks about Automerge. 11:18 – Chuck: I want to dive-into what you SHOULD know in 2018 – does this come from your experience? Or how did you drive this list? 11:40 – Ethan: I realize that this is a local business, and I try to hear what people are and are not using. I read blogs. I think I am staying on top of these topics being discussed. 12:25 – Chuck: Most of these things are what people are talking. 12:47 – Aimee: Web Assembly. Why is this on the list? 12:58 – Ethan: I put on the list, because I heard lots of people talk about this. What I was hearing the echoes of the JavaScript haters. They have gone through a renaissance. Along with Node, and React (among others) people did get on board. There are a lot of people that are poisoned by that. I think the excitement has died down. If I were to tell a story today – I would 14:23 – Would you put block chain on there? And AI? 14:34 – Panel: I think it’s something you should be aware of in regards to web assembly. I think it will be aware of. I don’t know if there is anything functional that I could use it with. 15:18 – Chuck: I haven’t really played with it... 15:27 – Panel: If you wrote this today would you put machine learning on there? 15:37 – Ethan: Machine Learning... 16:44 – Chuck: Back to Web Assembly. I don’t think you were wrong, I think you were early. Web Assembly isn’t design just to be a ... It’s designed to be highly optimized for... 17:45 – Ethan: Well-said. Most of the work I do today we are hardly taxing the devices we are using on. 18:18 – Chuck and panel chime in. 18:39 – Chuck: I did think the next two you have on here makes sense. 18:54 – Panel: Functional programming? 19:02 – Ethan: I have a lot of thoughts on functional programming and they are mixed. I was exposed to this in the late 90’s. It was around by 20-30 years. These aren’t new. I do credit JavaScript to bring these to the masses. It’s the first language I see the masses clinging to. 10 years ago you didn’t see that. I think that’s great for the programming community in general. I would liken it to a way that Ruby on Rails really changed the way we do web developing with strong tooling. It was never really my favorite language but I can appreciate what it did for web programming. With that said...(Ethan continues the conversation.) Ethan: I love Elm. 21:49 – Panelists talks about Elm. *The topic diverts slightly. 22:23 – Panel: Here’s a counter-argument. Want to stir the pot a little bit. I want to take the side of someone who does NOT like functional programming. 24:08 – Ethan: I don’t disagree with you. There are some things I agree with and things I do disagree with. Let’s talk about Data Structures. I feel like I use this everyday. Maybe it’s the common ones. The computer science background definitely helps out. If there was one data structure, it would be TREES. I think STACKS and QUEUES are important, too. Don’t use 200-300 hours, but here are the most important ones. For algorithms that maybe you should know and bust out by heart. 27:48 – Advertisement for Chuck’s E-book Course: Get A Coder Job 28:30 – Chuck: Functional programming – people talk bout why they hate it, and people go all the way down and they say: You have to do it this way.... What pay things will pay off for me, and which things won’t pay off for me? For a lot of the easy wins it has already been discussed. I can’t remember all the principles behind it. You are looking at real tradeoffs. You have to approach it in another way. I like the IDEA that you should know in 2018, get to know X, Y, or Z, this year. You are helping the person guide them through the process. 30:18 – Ethan: Having the right tools in your toolbox. 30:45 – Panel: I agree with everything you said, I was on board, until you said: Get Merge Conflicts. I think as developers we are being dragged in... 33:55 – Panelist: Is this the RIGHT tool to use in this situation? 34:06 – Aimee: If you are ever feeling super imposed about something then make sure you give it a fair shot, first. 34:28 – That’s the only reason why I keep watching DC movies. 34:41 – Chuck: Functional programming and... I see people react because of the hype cycle. It doesn’t fit into my current paradigm. Is it super popular for a few months or...? 35:10 – Aimee: I would love for someone to point out a way those pure functions that wouldn’t make their code more testable. 35:42 – Ethan: Give things a fair shake. This is going back a few years when React was starting to gain popularity. I had young programmers all about React. I tried it and mixing it with JavaScript and...I thought it was gross. Everyone went on board and I had to make technically decisions. A Friend told me that you have to try it 3 times and give up 3 times for you to get it. That was exactly it – don’t know if that was prophecy or something. This was one of my bigger professional mistakes because team wanted to use it and I didn’t at first. At the time we went with Vue (old dog like me). I cost us 80,000 lines of code and how many man hours because I wasn’t keeping an open-mind? 37:54 – Chuck: We can all say that with someone we’ve done. 38:04 – Panel shares a personal story. 38:32 – Panel: I sympathize because I had the same feeling as automated testing. That first time, that automated test saved me 3 hours. Oh My Gosh! What have I been missing! 39:12 – Ethan: Why should you do automated testing? Here is why... You have to not be afraid of testing. Not afraid of breaking things and getting messy. 39:51 – Panel: Immutability? 40:00 – Ethan talks about this topic. 42:58 – Chuck: You have summed up my experience with it. 43:10 – Panel: Yep. I agree. This is stupid why would I make a copy of a huge structure, when... 44:03 – Chuck: To Joe’s point – but it wasn’t just “this was a dumb way” – it was also trivial, too. I am doing all of these operations and look my memory doesn’t go through the roof. They you see it pay off. If you don’t see how it’s saving you effort, at first, then you really understand later. 44:58 – Aimee: Going back to it being a functional concept and making things more testable and let it being clearly separate things makes working in code a better experience. As I am working in a system that is NOT a pleasure. 45:31 – Chuck: It’s called legacy code... 45:38 – What is the code year? What constitutes a legacy application? 45:55 – Panel: 7 times – good rule. 46:10 – Aimee: I am not trolling. Serious conversation I was having with them this year. 46:27 – Just like cars. 46:34 – Chuck chimes in with his rule of thumb. 46:244 – Panel and Chuck go back-and-forth with this topic. 47:14 – Dilbert cartoons – check it out. 47:55 – GREAT QUOTE about life lessons. 48:09 – Chuck: I wish I knew then what I know now. Data binding. Flux and Redux. Lots of this came out of stuff around both data stores and shadow domes. How do you tease this out with the stuff that came out around the same time? 48:51 – Ethan answers question. 51:17 – Panel chimes in. 52:01 – Picks! Links: JavaScript jQuery React Elixir Elm Vue Automerge - GITHUB Functional – Light JavaScript Lego’s Massive Cloud City Star Wars Lego Shop The Traveler’s Gift – Book Jocks Rule, Nerds Drool by Jennifer Wright 2ality – JavaScript and more Cooper Press Book – Ethan Brown O’Reilly Community – Ethan Brown’s Bio Ethan Brown’s Twitter Sponsors: Kendo UI Sentry Digital Ocean Cache Fly Picks: Aimee Pettier Joe Lego - Star Wars Betrayal at Cloud City Functional-Light JavaScript Charles The Traveler’s Gift The Shack The Expanse Ethan Jocks Rule, Nerd Drool JavaScipt Blog by Dr. Axel Rauschmayer Cooper Press Full Article
than MJS 104: Ethan Brown By devchat.tv Published On :: Tue, 23 Apr 2019 06:00:00 -0400 Sponsors Sentry use the code “devchat” for 2 months free on Sentry small plan CacheFly Host: Charles Max Wood Special Guest: Ethan Brown Summary Ethan Brown shares his story starting with his homeschooling days and getting into programming. He started selling commercial software through his dad’s company at age 16. At age 17 he was recruited for a programming job and moved to New Jersey. Ethan and Charles discuss getting university degrees, whether or not to get them and share their experiences at university. Ethan talks about getting into javascript, what he has done in the Javascript community, and his experience giving talks at conferences. They discuss what the stack looks like for Ethan's company, Value Management Strategies, and what Ethan is currently working on. Ethan ends the episode by talking about one turning point in his career. Links Web Development with Node and Express: Leveraging the JavaScript Stack by Ethan Brown https://vms-inc.com/ http://automerge.com/ https://ant.design/ https://twitter.com/EthanRBrown Picks Charles Max Wood: https://andyfrisella.com/products/the-power-list-daily-planner/ Audiograms https://wavve.co/ https://snappa.com/ Ethan Brown https://cooperpress.com/ https://regexcrossword.com/ Full Article
than JSJ 396: Publishing Your Book with Jonathan Lee Martin By devchat.tv Published On :: Tue, 01 Oct 2019 06:00:00 -0400 Jonathan Lee Martin is an instructor and developer. He got his start in teaching at Big Nerd Ranch doing 1-2 week trainings for mid to senior developers, and then transitioned to 16 week courses for career switchers. He also worked for Digital Crafts for a year, and then wanted to focus on building out his own personal teaching brand. One of his first steps toward building his own brand was to publish his book, Functional Design Patterns for Express.js.The inspiration for Jonathan’s book came from his experience teaching career switchers. He wanted to experiment in the classroom with teaching functional programming in a way that would be very approachable and applicable and dispel some of the magic around backend programming, and that became the template for the book. Jonathan loves the minimalist nature of Express.js and talks about its many uses. He believes that it knowing design patterns can take you pretty far in programming, and this view is related to his background in Rails. When he was working in Rails taming huge middleware stacks, he discovered that applying design patterns made builds take less time. He talks about other situations where knowing design patterns has helped. Express.js leans towards object oriented style over functional programming, and so it takes to these patterns well. Express.js has its shortcomings, and that’s where Jonathan’s favorite library Koa comes into play. The conversation switches back to Jonathan’s book, which is a good way to start learning these higher level concepts. He purposely made it appealing to mid and senior level programmers, but at the same time it does not require a lot of background knowledge. Jonathan talks about his teaching methods that give people a proper appreciation for the tool. Jonathan talks more about why he likes to use Express.js and chose to use it for his book. He cautions that his book is not a book of monads, but rather about being influenced by the idea of composition over inheritance. He talks about the role of middleware in programming. The panel asks about Jonathan’s toolchain and approach to writing books, and he explains how his books are set up to show code. They discuss the different forms required when publishing a book such as epub, MOBI, and PDF. Jonathan found it difficult to distribute his book through Amazon, so he talks about how he built his own server. Charles notes that your method of distributing your book will depend on your goal. If you want to make the most money possible, make your own site. If you want to get it into as many hands as possible, get it on Amazon. Many of the JavaScript Jabber panelists have had experience publishing books, and Jonathan shares that you can reach out to a publisher after you’ve self-published a book and they can get it distributed. Jonathan believes that If he had gone straight to a publisher, he would have gotten overwhelmed and given up on the book, but the step by step process of self-publishing kept things manageable. The panelists discuss difficulties encountered when publishing and editing books, especially with Markdown. Jonathan compares the perks of self-editing to traditional editing. Though he does not plan to opensource his entire editing pipeline, he may make some parts available. The show concludes with the panelists discussing the clout that comes with being a published author. Panelists Charles Max Wood Christopher Buecheler J.C. Hyatt With special guest: Jonathan Lee Martin Sponsors Adventures in Blockchain Sentry use the code “devchat” for 2 months free on Sentry’s small plan The Freelancers’ Show Links Big Nerd Ranch Digital Crafts JSJ 070: Book Club JavaScript Allonge with Reginald Braithwaite JavaScript Allonge by Reginald Braithwaite Functional Design Patterns for Express JS by Jonathan Lee Martin Node.js Express.js Koa Minjs Sinatra Http.createserver Monads Middleware Markdown Pandoc Diff-match-path library Epub MOBI LaTeX Stripe Checkout Fstoppers Softcover Bookseller API Follow DevChatTV on Facebook and Twitter Picks Christopher Buecheler: Cluisbrace.com newsletter J.C. Hyatt: Corsair wireless charging mouse pad Charles Max Wood: Magnetic whiteboard baskets Mrs. Piggle-Wiggle books Jonathan Lee Martin: Eric Elliot JS YellowScale Follow Jonathan and find his book at jonathanleemartin.com Full Article