row 130 JSJ Browser Tools and Extensions By devchat.tv Published On :: Wed, 22 Oct 2014 10:00:00 -0400 The panelists talk about browser tools and extensions. Full Article
row 207 JSJ Growing Happy Developers with Marcus Blankenship By devchat.tv Published On :: Wed, 13 Apr 2016 09:00:00 -0400 02:51 - Marcus Blankenship Introduction Twitter Blog 03:09 - Panelist Worst Boss Experiences 13:06 - Developer Anarchy vs Having a Hierarchy SE-Radio Episode 253: Fred George on Developer Anarchy The Valve Playbook 20:57 - Transitioning Managers Impostor Syndrome 26:05 - Manager Influence 28:33 - Management vs Leadership Leader-Member Exchange Theory 34:37 - Interpersonal Relationships and Happiness 38:24 - What kind of feedback do managers want from their employees? Timesheets 46:17 - Am I manager material? Am I ready to go into management? 48:06 - Following a Technical Track 51:55 - Why would anyone ever want to be a department manager? Picks A Plain English Guide to JavaScript Prototypes (Aimee) Oatmega (Aimee) Luck by Tom Vek (Jamison) The 27 Challenges Managers Face: Step-by-Step Solutions to (Nearly) All of Your Management Problems by Bruce Tulgan (Marcus) React Rally Call for Proposals (Jamison) React Rally (Jamison) Multipliers: How the Best Leaders Make Everyone Smarter by Liz Wiseman (Dave) Soft Skills Engineering Podcast (Dave) Full Article
row 235 JSJ JavaScript Devops and Tools with Donovan Brown and Jordan Matthiesen By devchat.tv Published On :: Wed, 26 Oct 2016 08:00:00 -0400 00:50 Intro to guests Donovan Brown and Jordan Matthiesen 1:14 Javascript and Devops 3:49 Node JS and integrating with extensions 11:16 Learning Javascript coming from another language 15:21 Visual Studio Team Services at Microsoft, integration and unit testing Visualstudio.com Donovanbrown.com 25:10 Visual Studio Code and mobile development Apache Cordova open source project 31:45 TypeScript and tooling 33:03 Unit test tools and methods 38:39 ARM devices and integration QUOTES: “It’s not impossible, it’s just a different set of challenges.” - Donovan Brown “Devops is the union of people, process and products to enable continuous delivery of value to your end users” - Donovan Brown “Apps start to feel more native. They can actually get form.” - Jordan Matthiesen PICKS: Veridian Dynamics (AJ) Jabberwocky Video (AJ) Hard Rock Cafe - Atlanta (Charles) CES (Charles) 3D printers (Donovan) High-Yield Vegetable Gardening (Jordan) taco.visualstudio.com Jordan on Twitter @jmatthiesen Visualstudio.com Donovanbrown.com Donovan on Twitter @donovanbrown SPONSORS: Front End Masters Hired.com Full Article
row MJS 046: Donovan Brown By devchat.tv Published On :: Wed, 31 Jan 2018 23:46:00 -0500 Panel: Charles Max Wood Guest: Donovan Brown This week on My JavaScript Story, Charles speaks with Donovan Brown. Donovan is a principle DevOps Manager at Microsoft. Donovan talks about his journey into programming starting in the 8th grade with Cue Basic to college and writing games in Cue Basic. Donovan talks about different avenues of programming and working independently, and being entrepreneurial, and finally getting a call from Microsoft. Donovan tells many great high energy stories and shares his enthusiasm in his career in DevOps. This is a great episode to hear the possibilities in the programming and developer world. In particular, we dive pretty deep on: How did you get into programming? 8th grade Cue Basic Computer Math Cue Basic Selling notes - Chemistry class Board Game creation Teach yourself C in 21 days Change majors Work at Compaq Computers and go promoted as a software engineer Independent, then into Dev Ops Notion Solutions Ending up in Microsoft doing DevOps Hot Topic - Dev Opts - Release BrianKellerVM Demos DevOps and the Process Visual Studio and people Pain Points Programmers - Permission to do your job? JQuery Yeoman Generator Power Shell Plugin Open source and Contributions to the community DevOps Interviews Podcast and much, much more! Links: http://donovanbrown.com https://github.com/DarqueWarrior @DonovanBrown DevOps Interviews Podcast Picks Donovan Visual Studio Code Charles Installing Windows 10 Docker Support for Windows Full Article
row 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
row JSJ 345: Azure Devops with Donovan Brown LIVE at Microsoft Ignite By devchat.tv Published On :: Tue, 25 Dec 2018 06:00:00 -0500 Panel: Charles Max Woods Special Guests: Donovan Brown In this episode, the Charles speaks with Donovan Brown. He is a principal DevOps Manager with Microsoft with a background in application development. He also runs one of the nation’s fastest growing online registration sites for motorsports events DLBRACING.com. When he is not writing software, he races cars for fun. Listen to today’s episode where Chuck and Donovan talk about DevOps, Azure, Python, Angular, React, Vue, and much, much more! Show Topics: 1:41 – Chuck: The philosophies around DevOps. Just to give you an idea, I have been thinking about what I want to do with the podcasts. Freedom to work on what we want or freedom to work where we want, etc. Then that goes into things we don’t want to do, like fix bugs, etc. How does Microsoft DevOps to choose what they want to do? 2:37 – Guest: We want to automate as much as we can so the developer has less work. As a developer I want to commit code, do another task, rinse and repeating. Minutes and not even hours later then people are tweeting about the next best thing. Do what you want, where you want. Code any language you want. 4:15 – Chuck: What has changed? 4:19 – Guest: The branding changed. The name wasn’t the most favorite among the people. The word “visual” was a concerned. What we have noticed that Azure will let me run my code no matter where I am. If you want to run Python or others it can run in Azure. People didn’t need all of it. It comes with depositories, project management, and so much more! People could feel clumsy because there is so much stuff. We can streamline that now, and you can turn off that feature so you don’t have a heart attack. Maybe you are using us for some features not all of them – cool. 7:40 – Chuck: With deployments and other things – we don’t talk about the process for development a lot. 8:00 – Guest talks about the things that can help out with that. Guest: Our process is going to help guide you. We have that all built into the Azure tab feature. They feel and act differently. I tell all the people all the time that it’s brilliant stuff. There are 3 different templates. The templates actually change over the language. You don’t have to do mental math. 9:57 – Chuck: Just talking about the process. Which of these things we work on next when I’ve got a bug, or a ... 10:20 – Guest: The board system works like for example you have a bug. The steps to reproduce that bug, so that there is no question what go into this specific field. Let the anatomy of the feature do it itself! 11:54 – Chuck comments. 12:26 – Chuck: Back to the feature. Creating the user stories is a different process than X. 12:44 – Guest – You have a hierarchy then, right? Also what is really cool is we have case state management. I can click on this and I expect this to happen... These are actual tasks that I can run. 13:52 – Chuck: Once you have those tests written can you pull those into your CI? 14:00 – Guest: “Manual tests x0.” Guest dives into the question. 14:47 – I expect my team to write those test cases. The answer to your question is yes and no. We got so good at it that we found something that didn’t even exist, yet. 16:19 – Guest: As a developer it might be mind 16:29 – Chuck: I fixed this bug 4x, I wished I had CI to help me. 16:46 – Guest: You get a bug, then you fix a code, etc., etc. You don’t know that this original bug just came back. Fix it again. Am I in Groundhog Day? They are related to each other. You don’t have a unit test to tell you. When you get that very first bug – write a unit test. It will make you quicker at fixing it. A unit test you can write really fast over, and over, again. The test is passing. What do you do? Test it. Write the code to fix that unit test. You can see that how these relate to each other. That’s the beauty in it. 18:33 – Chuck: 90% of the unit tests I write – even 95% of the time they pass. It’s the 5% you would have no idea that it’s related. I can remember broad strokes of the code that I wrote, but 3 months down the road I can’t remember. 19:14 – Guest: If you are in a time crunch – I don’t have time for this unit test. Guest gives us a hypothetical situation to show how unit tests really can help. 20:25 – Make it muscle memory to unit test. I am a faster developer with the unit tests. 20:45 – Chuck: In the beginning it took forever. Now it’s just how I write software now. It guides my thought process. 21:06 – Guest: Yes! I agree. 22:00 – Guest: Don’t do the unit tests 22:10 – Chuck: Other place is when you write a new feature,...go through the process. Write unit tests for the things that you’ve touched. Expand your level of comfort. DevOps – we are talking about processes. Sounds like your DevOps is a flexible tool. Some people are looking for A METHOD. Like a business coach. Does Azure DevOps do that? 23:13 – Guest: Azure DevOps Projects. YoTeam. Note.js, Java and others are mentioned by the Guest. 25:00 – Code Badges’ Advertisement 25:48 – Chuck: I am curious – 2 test sweets for Angular or React or Vue. How does that work? 26:05 – Guest: So that is Jasmine or Mocha? So it really doesn’t matter. I’m a big fan of Mocha. It tests itself. I install local to my project alone – I can do it on any CI system in the world. YoTeam is not used in your pipeline. Install 2 parts – Yo and Generator – Team. Answer the questions and it’s awesome. I’ve done conferences in New Zealand. 28:37 – Chuck: Why would I go anywhere else? 28:44 – Guest: YoTeam was the idea of... 28:57 – Check out Guest 29:02 – Guest: I want Donovan in a box. If I weren’t there then the show wouldn’t exist today. 29:40 – Chuck: Asks a question. 29:46 – Guest: 5 different verticals. Check out this timestamp to see what Donovan says the 5 different verticals are. Pipelines is 1 of the 5. 30:55 – Chuck: Yep – it works on my Mac. 31:04 – Guest: We also have Test Plant and Artifacts. 31:42 – Chuck: Can you resolve that on your developer machine? 31:46 – Guest: Yes, absolutely! There is my private repository and... 33:14 – Guest: *People not included in box.* 33:33 – Guest: It’s people driven. We guide you through the process. The value is the most important part and people is the hardest part, but once on 33:59 – Chuck: I am listening to this show and I want to try this out. I want a demo setup so I can show my boss. How do I show him that it works? 34:27 – Azure.com/devops – that is a great landing page. How can I get a demo going? You can say here is my account – and they can put a demo into your account. I would not do a demo that this is cool. We start you for free. Create an account. Let the CI be the proof. It’s your job to do this, because it will make you more efficient. You need me to be using these tools. 36:11 – Chuck comments. 36:17 – Guest: Say you are on a team of developers and love GitHub and things that integration is stupid, but how many people would disagree about... 38:02 – The reports prove it for themselves. 38:20 – Chuck: You can get started for free – so when do you have to start paying for it? 38:31 – Guest: Get 4 of your buddies and then need more people it’s $6 a month. 39:33 – Chuck adds in comments. If this is free? 39:43 – Guest goes into the details about plans and such for this tool. 40:17 – Chuck: How easy it is to migrate away from it? 40:22 – Guest: It’s GITHub. 40:30 – Chuck: People are looing data on their CI. 40:40 – Guest: You can comb that information there over the past 4 years but I don’t know if any system would let you export that history. 41:08 – Chuck: Yeah, you are right. 41:16 – Guest adds more into this topic. 41:25 – Chuck: Yeah it’s all into the machine. 41:38 – Chuck: Good deal. 41:43 – Guest: It’s like a drug. I would never leave it. I was using TFS before Microsoft. 42:08 – Chuck: Other question: continuous deployment. 42:56 – When I say every platform, I mean every platform: mobile devices, AWS, Azure, etc. Anything you can do from a command line you can do from our build and release system. PowerShell you don’t have to abandon it. 45:20 – Guest: I can’t remember what that tool is called! 45:33 – Guest: Anything you can do from a command line. Before firewall. Anything you want. 45:52 – Guest: I love my job because I get to help developers. 46:03 – Chuck: What do you think the biggest mistake people are doing? 46:12 – Guest: They are trying to do it all at once. Fix that one little thing. It’s instant value with no risks whatsoever. Go setup and it takes 15 minutes total. Now that we have this continuous build, now let’s go and deploy it. Don’t dream up what you think your pipeline should look like. Do one thing at a time. What hurts the most that it’s “buggy.” Let’s add that to the pipeline. It’s in your pipeline today, what hurts the most, and don’t do it all at once. 49:14 – Chuck: I thought you’d say: I don’t have the time. 49:25 – Guest: Say you work on it 15 minutes a day. 3 days in – 45 minutes in you have a CSI system that works forever. Yes I agree because people think they don’t “have the time.” 50:18 – Guest continues this conversation. How do you not have CI? Just install it – don’t ask. Just do the right thing. 50:40 – Chuck: I free-lanced and setup CI for my team. After a month, getting warned, we had a monitor up on the screen and it was either RED or GREEN. It was basically – hey this hurts and now we know. Either we are going to have pain or not have pain. 51:41 – Guest continues this conversation. Have pain – we should only have pain once or twice a year. Rollback. If you only have it every 6 months, that’s not too bad. The pain will motivate you. 52:40 – Azure.com/devops. Azure DevOps’ Twitter 53:22 – Picks! 53:30 – Advertisement – Get a Coder Job Links: Donovan Brown’s GitHub Donovan Brown’s Twitter Donovan Brown Donovan Brown – Channel 9 Donovan Brown – Microsoft Azure YoTeam Azure.com/devops GitHub Azure DevOps’ Twitter Sponsors: Angular Boot Camp Digital Ocean Get a Coder Job course Picks: Charles Jet Blue Beta Testers Donovan YoTeam VSTeam Powershell Module Full Article
row 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
row JSJ 426: Killing the Release Night with Progressive Delivery with Dave Karow By devchat.tv Published On :: Tue, 24 Mar 2020 06:00:00 -0400 JavaScript Remote Conf 2020 May 14th to 15th - register now! Dave Karow is a developer evangelist for Split. He dives into how you can deliver software sustainably without burning out. His background is in performance and he's moved into smooth deliveries. He pushes the ideas behind continuous delivery and how to avoid getting paid to stay late in "free" pizzas. Panel AJ O’Neal Aimee Knight Charles Max Wood Dan Shappir Guest Dave Karow Sponsors G2i | Enjoy the luxuries of freelancing Taiko - free and open source browser test automation CacheFly ____________________________________________________________ "The MaxCoders Guide to Finding Your Dream Developer Job" by Charles Max Wood is now available on Amazon. Get Your Copy Today! ____________________________________________________________ Links Split.io Continuous Delivery zeit.co The Practical Test Pyramid Accelerate The Unicorn Project Ender's Game Ender's Shadow Atlassian Summit DeliveryConf JSJ 418: Security Scary Stories and How to Avoid Them with Kevin A McGrail Feature toggle split.io Dave Karow Progressive Delivery Speaker Deck Dave Karow Learn Enough Command Line to Be Dangerous Beyond Code Bootcamp Picks Aimee Knight: Designing for Performance Early Riser or Night Owl? Dan Shappir: web.dev AJ O’Neal: CineRAID CR-H458 DataCenter 8TB Drives Tiltamax Wireless Follow Focus System Charles Max Wood The Expanse Course Creator PRO Dave Karow: Accelerate Follow JavaScript Jabber on Twitter > @JSJabb Full Article
row Young children's literacy development and the role of televisual texts [electronic resource] / Naima Browne By prospero.murdoch.edu.au Published On :: Browne, Naima Full Article
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row [ASAP] Colloidal-ALD-Grown Core/Shell CdSe/CdS Nanoplatelets as Seen by DNP Enhanced PASS–PIETA NMR Spectroscopy By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Wed, 29 Apr 2020 04:00:00 GMT Nano LettersDOI: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.9b04870 Full Article
row Marine ecosystems : human impacts on biodiversity, functioning and services / edited by Tasman P. Crowe, University College Dublin, Ireland, Christopher L.J. Frid, Griffith University, Queensland, Australia By prospero.murdoch.edu.au Published On :: Full Article
row Biological sampling in the deep sea / edited by Malcolm R. Clark, Mireille Consalvey and Ashley A. Rowden (National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research, Wellington, New Zealand) By prospero.murdoch.edu.au Published On :: Full Article
row Marine community ecology and conservation / edited by Mark D. Bertness, Brown University, John F. Bruno, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, Brian R. Silliman, Duke University, John J. Stachowicz, University of California Davis By prospero.murdoch.edu.au Published On :: Bertness, Mark D., 1949- Full Article
row Chemical process safety: fundamentals with applications / Daniel A. Crowl, Joseph F. Louvar By library.mit.edu Published On :: Sun, 3 Nov 2019 06:18:29 EST Hayden Library - TP155.5.C76 2019 Full Article
row Tomorrows trends in fire retardant regulations, testing, and applications / by FRCA By library.mit.edu Published On :: Sun, 15 Mar 2020 06:23:26 EDT Online Resource Full Article
row Matthew's new David at the end of exile : a socio-rhetorical study of Scriptural quotations / by Nicholas G. Piotrowski By prospero.murdoch.edu.au Published On :: Piotrowski, Nicholas G., author Full Article
row Atlas of the biblical world / by Robert A. Mullins and Mark Vitalis Hoffman ; cartographer, Nick Rowland, FRGS By prospero.murdoch.edu.au Published On :: Mullins, Robert A. (Associate professor of Biblical Studies), author Full Article
row Raymond E. Brown and the Catholic biblical renewal / Donald Senior, CP ; foreword by Ronald D. Witherup, PSS By prospero.murdoch.edu.au Published On :: Senior, Donald, author Full Article
row The last Adam : a theology of the obedient life of Jesus in the Gospels / Brandon D. Crowe By prospero.murdoch.edu.au Published On :: Crowe, Brandon D., author Full Article
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row Laminin-modified gellan gum hydrogels loaded with the nerve growth factor to enhance the proliferation and differentiation of neuronal stem cells By feeds.rsc.org Published On :: RSC Adv., 2020, 10,17114-17122DOI: 10.1039/D0RA01723J, Paper Open Access   This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported Licence.Wenqiang Li, Anfei Huang, Yanheng Zhong, Lin Huang, Jing Yang, Changren Zhou, Lin Zhou, Yanling Zhang, Guo FuLaminin-modified thiolated gellan gum and loaded with the nerve growth factor in facilitateding neuronal stem cell proliferation and differentiation.The content of this RSS Feed (c) The Royal Society of Chemistry Full Article
row Dendrimer crown-ether tethered multi-wall carbon nanotubes support methyltrioxorhenium in the selective oxidation of olefins to epoxides By feeds.rsc.org Published On :: RSC Adv., 2020, 10,17185-17194DOI: 10.1039/D0RA02785E, Paper Open Access   This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported Licence.Bruno Mattia Bizzarri, Angelica Fanelli, Lorenzo Botta, Claudia Sadun, Lorenzo Gontrani, Francesco Ferella, Marcello Crucianelli, Raffaele SaladinoBenzo-15-crown-5 ether supported on multi-wall carbon nanotubes (MWCNTs) by tethered poly(amidoamine) (PAMAM) dendrimers efficiently coordinated methyltrioxorhenium in the selective oxidation of olefins to epoxides.The content of this RSS Feed (c) The Royal Society of Chemistry Full Article
row 49.25% efficient cyan emissive sulfur dots via a microwave-assisted route By feeds.rsc.org Published On :: RSC Adv., 2020, 10,17266-17269DOI: 10.1039/D0RA02778B, Paper Open Access   This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 3.0 Unported Licence.Zhe Hu, Hanqing Dai, Xian Wei, Danlu Su, Chang Wei, Yuanyuan Chen, Fengxian Xie, Wanlu Zhang, Ruiqian Guo, Songnan QuThe cyan emissive sulfur dots with a record high PL QY of 49.25% were successfully synthesized via a microwave-assisted route.The content of this RSS Feed (c) The Royal Society of Chemistry Full Article
row Alkaline water-splitting reactions over Pd/Co-MOF-derived carbon obtained via microwave-assisted synthesis By feeds.rsc.org Published On :: RSC Adv., 2020, 10,17359-17368DOI: 10.1039/D0RA02307H, Paper Open Access   This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported Licence.Adewale K. Ipadeola, Kenneth I. OzoemenaPalladium nanoparticles supported on MOF-derived carbon serve as an efficient bifunctional electrocatalyst for alkaline water-splitting reactions.The content of this RSS Feed (c) The Royal Society of Chemistry Full Article
row Microwave roasting of blast furnace slag for carbon dioxide mineralization and energy analysis By feeds.rsc.org Published On :: RSC Adv., 2020, 10,17836-17844DOI: 10.1039/D0RA02846K, Paper Open Access   This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 3.0 Unported Licence.Zike Han, Jianqiu Gao, Xizhi Yuan, Yanjun Zhong, Xiaodong Ma, Zhiyuan Chen, Dongmei Luo, Ye WangThis paper highlights the potential of microwave roasting in solid-waste treatment and carbon dioxide storage.The content of this RSS Feed (c) The Royal Society of Chemistry Full Article
row Correction: Narrowing band gap and enhanced visible-light absorption of metal-doped non-toxic CsSnCl3 metal halides for potential optoelectronic applications By feeds.rsc.org Published On :: RSC Adv., 2020, 10,17869-17869DOI: 10.1039/D0RA90054K, Correction Open Access   This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported Licence.Jakiul Islam, A. K. M. Akther HossainThe content of this RSS Feed (c) The Royal Society of Chemistry Full Article
row AIUDF MLA thrown to jail By www.assamtimes.org Published On :: Tue, 07 Apr 2020 09:32:36 +0000 Full Article
row Succeeding with SOA [electronic resource] : realizing business value through total architecture / Paul C. Brown By prospero.murdoch.edu.au Published On :: Brown, Paul C Full Article
row Truth, growth, repeat [electronic resource] : (a business manual for generation why) / by Mike Edmonds with Ronnie Duncan By prospero.murdoch.edu.au Published On :: Edmonds, Mike, author Full Article
row Wealth [electronic resource] : grow it and protect it / Stuart E. Lucas By prospero.murdoch.edu.au Published On :: Lucas, Stuart E Full Article
row JAMA Ophthalmology : Validation of the Postnatal Growth and Retinopathy of Prematurity Screening Criteria By traffic.libsyn.com Published On :: Thu, 14 Nov 2019 16:00:00 +0000 Interview with Gil Binenbaum, MD, MSCE, author of Validation of the Postnatal Growth and Retinopathy of Prematurity Screening Criteria Full Article
row Young Indian architect named ‘leader of tomorrow’ by Time By indianexpress.com Published On :: Sat, 20 Sep 2014 06:26:17 +0000 Full Article DO NOT USE Indians Abroad World
row Indian-origin boy crowned Australian spelling bee champ By indianexpress.com Published On :: Wed, 09 Sep 2015 14:42:08 +0000 Full Article DO NOT USE Indians Abroad World
row An ultra-effective pathway for fully removing the oxygen components of graphene oxide by a flame-assisted microwave process By feeds.rsc.org Published On :: Dalton Trans., 2020, Accepted ManuscriptDOI: 10.1039/D0DT01483D, CommunicationXuefeng Zou, Qin Hu, Hengxiu Yang, Feng Chen, Bin Xiang, Xinyue Liang, Qibing Wu, Hujun ShenHere we report an ultra-effective, reliable pathway to reduce GO into graphene by an about 4-seconds flame-assisted microwave process. A holey graphene with a C/O atom ratio of 31.1, a...The content of this RSS Feed (c) The Royal Society of Chemistry Full Article
row Influence of Eu valence in the optical activity of BaTiO3 decorated with CaF2 synthesized by microwave-assisted hydrothermal method By feeds.rsc.org Published On :: Dalton Trans., 2020, Accepted ManuscriptDOI: 10.1039/D0DT01321H, PaperTatiane Strelow Lilge, Adriano Borges Andrade, Claudiane dos Santos Bezerra, Giordano Frederico da Cunha Bispo, Zélia Soares Macedo, Mario Lucio Lúcio Moreira, Mário Ernesto Giroldo ValerioInorganic hybrid materials are promising applications in absorbers and photon harvesting of solar irradiation, such as DSSC cell photoanodes. Moreover, the investigation of the interaction between the photoanode constituent materials...The content of this RSS Feed (c) The Royal Society of Chemistry Full Article
row Environmental litigation: law and strategy / Kegan A. Brown, Andrea M. Hogan, editors By library.mit.edu Published On :: Sun, 2 Feb 2020 08:57:26 EST Dewey Library - KF8925.E5 E583 2019 Full Article
row Murder on Shades Mountain: the legal lynching of Willie Peterson and the struggle for justice in Jim Crow Birmingham / Melanie S. Morrison By library.mit.edu Published On :: Sun, 26 Apr 2020 09:04:30 EDT Hayden Library - KF224.P48 M677 2018 Full Article
row Being brown: Sonia Sotomayor and the Latino question / Lázaro Lima By library.mit.edu Published On :: Sun, 26 Apr 2020 09:04:30 EDT Barker Library - KF8745.S67 L56 2020 Full Article
row Leveraging our advantages : the trade relationship between Australia and Indonesia / Joint Standing Committee on Trade and Investment Growth By prospero.murdoch.edu.au Published On :: Australia. Parliament. Joint Standing Committee on Trade and Investment Growth, author, issuing body Full Article
row The Sarawak report : the inside story of the 1MDB exposé / investigated and reported by Clare Rewcastle Brown ; foreword by Gordon Brown By prospero.murdoch.edu.au Published On :: Brown, Clare Rewcastle, author Full Article
row [ASAP] Influence of pH and Composition on Nonenzymatic Browning of Shelf-Stable Orange Juice during Storage By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Fri, 01 May 2020 04:00:00 GMT Journal of Agricultural and Food ChemistryDOI: 10.1021/acs.jafc.9b07630 Full Article
row [ASAP] CRISPR/Cas9-Mediated <italic toggle="yes">SlMYC2</italic> Mutagenesis Adverse to Tomato Plant Growth and MeJA-Induced Fruit Resistance to <italic toggle="yes">Botrytis cinerea</italic> By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Wed, 06 May 2020 04:00:00 GMT Journal of Agricultural and Food ChemistryDOI: 10.1021/acs.jafc.9b08069 Full Article
row [ASAP] Distinct Quality Changes of Garlic Bulb during Growth by Metabolomics Analysis By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Fri, 08 May 2020 04:00:00 GMT Journal of Agricultural and Food ChemistryDOI: 10.1021/acs.jafc.0c01120 Full Article
row Hemp growing pains By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: 24 Feb 2020 06:00:21 +0000 US regulatory uncertainty threatens to cripple the nascent industry's ability to meet the surge in demand for cannabidiol Full Article
row Researchers grow thin 2-D insulator on large scale By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: 04 Mar 2020 21:25:25 +0000 Single-crystal boron nitride could enable the use of 2-D materials for transistors in computer chips Full Article
row Researchers grow thin 2-D insulator on large scale By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: 15 Mar 2020 10:26:47 +0000 Single-crystal boron nitride could enable the use of 2-D materials for transistors in computer chips Full Article
row As telecom demands grow, optical fibers will need to level up By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: 16 Mar 2020 05:00:33 +0000 Scientists explore how to revamp the hair-thin silica glass fibers to transmit more and more data Full Article
row Fake meat firms raise funds for growth By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: 21 Mar 2020 10:30:38 +0000 Full Article
row Covestro borrows $240 million for sustainability R&D By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: 03 Apr 2020 22:44:04 +0000 Full Article