ga ALTA 1998 Copper Hydrometallurgy Forum : October 20-21, 1998, Brisbane Marriott Hotel, Queensland, Australia : technical proceedings / organised by ALTA Metallurgical Services By prospero.murdoch.edu.au Published On :: Copper Hydrometallurgy Forum 1998 : Brisbane, Qld.) Full Article
ga Nickel/Cobalt Pressure Leaching & Hydrometallurgy Forum : May 13-14, 1996, Hyatt Hotel, Perth, Western Australia / organised by ALTA Metallurgical Services By prospero.murdoch.edu.au Published On :: Nickel/Cobalt Pressure Leaching & Hydrometallurgy Forum (1996 : Perth, W.A.) Full Article
ga ALTA 1997 uranium ore to yellowcake seminar : February 20, 1997, Carlton Crest Hotel, Melbourne Australia / organised by ALTA Metallurgical Services By prospero.murdoch.edu.au Published On :: Full Article
ga Nickel/Cobalt SX/EW Seminar : May 16, 1996, Hyatt Hotel, Perth, Western Australia / organised by ALTA Metallurgical Services By prospero.murdoch.edu.au Published On :: Full Article
ga Copper SX/EW basic principles, & detailed plant design : short course / organised by ALTA Metallurgical Services By prospero.murdoch.edu.au Published On :: Full Article
ga Copper SX/EW basic principles & detailed plant design : short course / organised by ALTA Metallurgical Services By prospero.murdoch.edu.au Published On :: Full Article
ga Microbial processing of metal sulfides / edited by Edgardo R. Donati and Wolfgang Sand By prospero.murdoch.edu.au Published On :: Full Article
ga Gold 100 : proceedings of the International Conference on Gold / [organized by] the South African Institute of Mining and Metallurgy (SAIMM), in association with the Chamber of Mines of South Africa (COM), the Council for Mineral Technology (MINTEK), and By prospero.murdoch.edu.au Published On :: International Conference on Gold (1986 : Johannesburg, South Africa) Full Article
ga Tenth International Mineral Processing Congress, 1973 : proceedings of the tenth International Mineral Processing Congress, organized by the Institution of Mining and Metallurgy and held in London in April, 1973 / edited by M. J. Jones By prospero.murdoch.edu.au Published On :: International Mineral Processing Congress (10th : 1973 : London, England) Full Article
ga The role of manganese in the electrowinning of copper and zinc / Venny Tjandrawan By prospero.murdoch.edu.au Published On :: Tjandrawan, Venny Full Article
ga The mechanisms of the dissolution and passivation of base metal sulfide minerals / by Dmitry Pugaev By prospero.murdoch.edu.au Published On :: Pugaev, Dmitry Full Article
ga Uranium mining : market prospects and environmental consequences : a background paper for delegates to the 1988 ALP National Conference / by Chas Collison and Peter Milton By prospero.murdoch.edu.au Published On :: Collison, Chas Full Article
ga Handbook of lithium and natural calcium chloride : their deposits, processing, uses and properties / Donald E. Garrett (Saline Processors, Inc., Ojai, California) By prospero.murdoch.edu.au Published On :: Garrett, Donald E., author Full Article
ga The extractive metallurgy of brannerite : leaching kinetics, reaction mechanisms and mineralogical transformations / Rorie Alexander Gilligan By prospero.murdoch.edu.au Published On :: Gilligan, Rorie Alexander, author Full Article
ga Gales, rain lash Anantapur district By www.thehindu.com Published On :: Fri, 08 May 2020 23:06:59 +0530 Power supply disrupted in several parts Full Article Andhra Pradesh
ga Settle claims, Jagan tells insurance firms By www.thehindu.com Published On :: Fri, 08 May 2020 23:15:16 +0530 Chief Minister Y.S. Jagan Mohan Reddy on Friday wrote to Life Insurance Corporation of India (LIC) Chairman M.R. Kumar urging him to immediately settl Full Article Andhra Pradesh
ga Vidya Nagar in Tirupati madered zone By www.thehindu.com Published On :: Fri, 08 May 2020 23:23:52 +0530 A control room is set up at the village secretariat Full Article Andhra Pradesh
ga Another case emerges in Vizianagaram district By www.thehindu.com Published On :: Fri, 08 May 2020 23:27:36 +0530 Migrant labourer, who returned from Vijayawada, tests positive Full Article Andhra Pradesh
ga Migrant workers engaged for Polavaram project stage protest By www.thehindu.com Published On :: Fri, 08 May 2020 23:29:15 +0530 ‘Steps are being taken to send them home’ Full Article Andhra Pradesh
ga Gas leak victims yet to come out of shock By www.thehindu.com Published On :: Fri, 08 May 2020 23:31:02 +0530 More lives could have been saved had LG Polymers management sounded siren in time, they say Full Article Andhra Pradesh
ga Gas leak: there is no further danger, says NDRF By www.thehindu.com Published On :: Fri, 08 May 2020 23:33:43 +0530 ‘Styrene vapour emissions have dropped considerably; may take up to 48 hours to declare it a safe zone’ Full Article Andhra Pradesh
ga HRF seeks criminal case against LG Polymers By www.thehindu.com Published On :: Fri, 08 May 2020 23:37:46 +0530 Firm operating in violation of environmental norms, say leaders Full Article Andhra Pradesh
ga Kanna seeks judicial probe into gas leak incident By www.thehindu.com Published On :: Fri, 08 May 2020 23:40:17 +0530 It is a case of human error, says BJP State president Full Article Andhra Pradesh
ga Gas leak: toll mounts to 12 By www.thehindu.com Published On :: Fri, 08 May 2020 23:40:53 +0530 ‘306 victims undergoing treatment in KGH recovering’ Full Article Andhra Pradesh
ga Vizag gas leak: unions blame officials for not taking timely action By www.thehindu.com Published On :: Fri, 08 May 2020 23:46:01 +0530 Vapour began leaking after midnight but help came only at dawn, they allege Full Article Andhra Pradesh
ga VSP fire personnel play key role in containing gas leak By www.thehindu.com Published On :: Fri, 08 May 2020 23:47:18 +0530 They also helped evacuate people from the affected area Full Article Andhra Pradesh
ga 026 JSJ Code Organization and Reuse By devchat.tv Published On :: Tue, 28 Aug 2012 10:00:00 -0400 The panelists talk about code organization and reuse. Full Article
ga 058 JSJ Building Accessible Websites with Brian Hogan By devchat.tv Published On :: Fri, 10 May 2013 03:00:00 -0400 Use this link and code JAVAJAB to get 20% off your registration for FluentConf 2013! Panel Brian Hogan (twitter github blog) AJ O’Neal (twitter github blog) Joe Eames (twitter github blog) Merrick Christensen (twitter github) Charles Max Wood (twitter github Teach Me To Code Rails Ramp Up) Discussion 00:55 - Brian Hogan Introduction HTML5 and CSS3: Develop with Tomorrow's Standards Today by Brian Hogan tmux: Productive Mouse-Free Development by Brian Hogan Web Development Recipes by Brian P. Hogan, Chris Warren, Mike Weber, Chris Johnson, Aaron Godin Development Editor with Pragmatic Bookshelf Professor at Chippewa Valley Technical College 01:48 - What Accessibility Means 02:56 - Making Websites Accessible YSlow People vs Users 06:06 - “The Right Things” VersaBraille Responsive Web Design 09:00 - Tools & Techniques Fahrner Image Replacement (FIR) Web Fonts ⌘+ 14:56 - Manipulating the DOM ARIA - HTML5 Ember.js 16:54 - Screen Resolution 19:24 - Typeahead 20:58 - Testing Jaws VoiceOver 23:11 - Resources WebAIM Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG) Section 508 25:00 - Dealing with different kinds of impairments Transcripts Text Color 28:08 - Ease of Accessibility & Empathy 31:41 - Interactive Pages 35:26 - Making things accessible vs not making things accessible Making experiences better for everyone, period 42:09 - Resources Cont’d Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG) Pro HTML5 Accessibility by Joe O Conner Design Accessible Web Sites: 36 Keys to Creating Content for All Audiences and Platforms by Jeremy Sydik 42:46 - Understanding Others’ Difficulties Picks Leviathan: Warships (Joe) Star Command (Joe) That Conference (Joe) Lowes (AJ) Friends (AJ) Ticket to Ride (Chuck) 4 Pics 1 Word (Chuck) Continuum (Chuck) AngularJS (Brian) Presentation Manager from Woojijuice (Brian) Next Week JavaScript Jabber: jQuery Mobile with Todd Parker Transcript MERRICK: Fine, don’t come to my talk. CHUCK: I won’t. I won’t even come to the conference. [Hosting and bandwidth provided by the Blue Box Group. Check them out at Bluebox.net.] [This episode is sponsored by Component One, makers of Wijmo. If you need stunning UI elements or awesome graphs and charts, then go to Wijmo.com and check them out.] CHUCK: Hey everybody, and welcome to Episode 58 of the JavaScript Jabber Show. This week on our panel, we have AJ O’Neal. AJ: Coming at you semi-live from ORM. CHUCK: Joe Eames. JOE: Hey everybody. CHUCK: Merrick Christensen. MERRICK: What’s up? CHUCK: I’m Charles Max Wood from Devchat.tv. And this week, we have a special guest. And that is Brian Hogan. BRIAN: Hello. CHUCK: Since you haven’t been on the show before, do you want to introduce your self really quickly? BRIAN: Sure, my name is Brian Hogan and I’m a web developer and I like to spend a lot of time hacking on code in Ruby and JavaScript. I also am an author. I’m a development editor with The Pragmatic Bookshelf. And I have a fabulous new gig where I get to teach brand new programmers how to get started programming now. So, that’s what I’m doing myself. CHUCK: So where’s that at? AJ: Cool. BRIAN: That’s at a little technical college in Eau Claire, Wisconsin called Chippewa Valley Technical College. CHUCK: Oh, cool. Yeah, speaking of your reviewing books for The Pragmatic Bookshelf, Ruby Rogues, we actually interviewed Bruce Williams and John Athayde about The Rails View this morning. They mentioned you, and I was like “Oh, we’re talking to him in a couple of hours.” BRIAN: Oh, those are some great guys and that’s a great book. CHUCK: Yup. So, the reason we brought you on the show is because, at least in my case, I know absolutely nothing about building accessible websites. Full Article
ga 105 JSJ JSConf and Organizing Conferences with Chris Williams By devchat.tv Published On :: Wed, 23 Apr 2014 09:00:00 -0400 The panelists discuss JSConf and conference organization with Chris Williams. Full Article
ga 138 JSJ {Track:js} with Todd Gardner By devchat.tv Published On :: Wed, 17 Dec 2014 09:00:00 -0500 The panelists talk {Track:js} with Todd Gardner. Full Article
ga 145 JSJ Meteor.js with Matt DeBergalis By devchat.tv Published On :: Wed, 04 Feb 2015 09:00:00 -0500 The panelists talk to Matt DeBergalis about Meteor.js. Full Article
ga 149 JSJ Passenger Enterprise with Node.js with Hongli Lai and Tinco Andringa By devchat.tv Published On :: Wed, 04 Mar 2015 08:00:00 -0500 Check out RailsClips on Kickstarter!! 02:39 - Hongli Lai Introduction Twitter GitHub Blog Phusion 03:08 - Tinco Andringa Introduction GitHub 03:23 - Phusion Passenger [GitHub] passenger 06:13 - Automation nginx 08:37 - Parsing HTTP Headers Hooking 12:44 - Meteor Support 15:37 - Future Added Features? 17:12 - Passenger Enterprise Ruby Rogues Episode #143: Passenger Enterprise with Tinco Andringa and Hongli Lai About Phusion Passenger Documentation & Support 20:03 - Concurrency and Multithreading Multiprocessing The Cluster Module WebSockets passenger_sticky_sessions 23:33 - Setting Up on a Server for a Node.js Application Debian Packages 25:06 - Union Station Monitoring Tool (Union Station Teaser) Introducing Union Station: our web app performance monitoring and behavior analysis service; now in open beta Using Google Polymer JavaScript Jabber Episode #120: Google Polymer with Rob Dodson and Eric Bidelman Polymer vs Facebook React Picks Emily Claire Reese: Playing Catch-Up (Jamison) Jason Punyon: Providence: Failure Is Always an Option (Jamison) Active Child: You Are All I See (Jamison) FFmpeg (Chuck) YouTube (Chuck) Developers' Box Club (Chuck) Ruby Remote Conf (Chuck) DevChat.tv Kickstarter (Chuck) Dash (Hongli) In the Balance: An Alternate History of the Second World War by Harry Turtledove (Hongli) phusion-mvc (Tinco) Union Station Teaser (Tinco) Radio 1's Live Lounge (Tinco) Full Article
ga 199 JSJ Visual Studio Code with Chris Dias and Erich Gamma By devchat.tv Published On :: Wed, 17 Feb 2016 09:00:00 -0500 Check out allremoteconfs.com to get in on all the conference action this year -- from the comfort of your own home! 02:13 - Chris Dias Introduction Twitter GitHub 02:21 - Erich Gamma Introduction Twitter GitHub 02:31 - Visual Studio Code @code 03:49 - Built on Electron JavaScript Jabber Episode #193: Electron with Jessica Lord and Amy Palamountain 04:25 - Why another tool? Visual Debugging Keybinding Support 08:12 - Code Folding 09:00 - Will people move from Visual Studio to Visual Studio Code? 12:06 - Language Support C# 18:06 - Visual Studio Code and Microsoft Goals 22:47 - Community Support and Building Extensions 28:31 - The Choice to Use Electron 32:41 - Getting VS Code to Work on the Command Line 35:02 - Tabs 38:49 - Visual Studio Code Uptake and Adoption 40:11 - Licenses 44:46 - Designing a UX for Developers 58:15 - Design Patterns Picks LEGO Star Wars: The Force Awakens Video Game - Announce Teaser Trailer (Joe) Firebase (Joe) Progress bar noticeably slows down npm install: Issue #11283 (Jamison) Darkest Dungeon (Jamison) Trek Glowacki Twitter Thread (Jamison) Mogo Portable Seat (Chuck) Clear Acrylic Wall Mountable 10 Slot Dry Erase Marker & Eraser Holder Organizer Rack (Chuck) Bitmap Graphics SIGGRAPH'84 Course Notes (Erich) Salsa (Chris) The Microsoft Band (Chris) Making a Murderer (Chris) Full Article
ga 242 JSJ Visual Studio and .NET with Maria Naggaga By devchat.tv Published On :: Wed, 14 Dec 2016 08:00:00 -0500 1:15 - Introducing Maria Naggaga .NET Twitter 2:32 - .NET new developers 3:55 - NYC Microsoft bootcamp 6:25 - Building a community of .NET programmers 7:25 - Why would a Javascript developer care about .NET? 9:30 - Getting started with .NET 15:50 - The power of asking questions 22:45 - Recruiting new programmers to the industry @bitchwhocodes Seattle.rb 37:00 - Javascript and C# 48:30 - Running .NET on Raspberry Pi Picks: Super Cartography Bros album by OverClocked ReMix (AJ) Daplie (AJ) Daplie Wefunder (AJ) The Eventual Millionaire (Charles) Devchat Conferences (Charles) 15- Minute Calls (Charles) Codeland Conference (Maria) March by Congressman John Lewis (Maria) Microsoft Virtual Academy (Maria) Full Article
ga JSJ 273: Live to Code, Don't Code to Live with 2 Frugal Dudes Sean Merron and Kevin Griffin By devchat.tv Published On :: Tue, 08 Aug 2017 06:00:00 -0400 JSJ 273: Live to Code, Don't Code to Live with 2 Frugal Dudes Sean Merron and Kevin Griffin This episode of JavaScript Jabber features panelists Aimee Knight, Cory House, and Charles Max Wood. Special guests Sean Merron and Kevin Griffin discuss how to live frugally. Tune in to hear their advice! [00:02:14] Introduction to Sean and Kevin Sean and Kevin are the hosts of the 2 Frugal Dudes Podcast. They are middle class software engineers. Sean works a 9 to 5 job, while Kevin owns a small business called Swift Kick. Swift Kick is a company that focuses on independent consulting, software development, and training companies for software development. [00:05:50] Different Types of Financial Advisors There is no legal reason that financial advisors have to work in your best interest. On the 2 Frugal Dudes Podcast, Sean and Kevin advise people to use fiduciary advisors. These types of advisors are not legally allowed to accept kickbacks from different funds. This means that they are more likely to help you to the best of their ability. They get paid for their services. Laws are currently changing so that everyone has to be a fiduciary advisor unless clients sign a specific form. [00:10:00] What do I do with money left over at the end of the month that I can’t put into a 401K and Roth IRA? They suggest that you put only the amount of money in your 401K that your company will match. Then, put the rest into a Roth IRA and max that out. Before you decide to do what next, you need to decide why you are saving money. When will you need the money? What will you need it for? Once you know the answer to these questions, you will be able to assess what your money will best be placed. For example, if you are saving to buy a house you need to put your money in a safe investment. A Roth IRA can be used as a savings vehicle or as an emergency fund. Sean believes that a Bank CD is the safest return you can get. [00:14:30] Best Way to Save For those who are self-employed, it is a good idea to have two emergency funds – a personal and a business fund. Business emergency funds should have five months of personal salary. Kevin built his up over two or three years and uses it as self-insurance. Sean says that the employee world is different. For him, he only keeps the minimum amount in his emergency fund. He knows that he is in a field where his job is in high demand, so feels comfortable with being able to get a job quickly. For others, this may not be the case. Have to evaluate how much to save based on how long you think you may need the money. [00:18:50] What is the first thing people should be doing for their own financial well being? Kevin follows Dave Ramsey’s advice. Basic emergency fund. He uses $1,000. Most emergencies fall under that amount of money. Get rid of all consumer debt. This includes car payments, credit cards, and student loans. Mortgage is not consumer debt. Grow an emergency fund to three or six months of expenses. Investments. Setting up retirement funds, paying for college, or mortgages. Sean values early retirement so he focuses on that. What does retirement mean to me? What does rich mean? You should always track your money through a budget. Then you can funnel money towards emergency funds and tackling debt. Self-insurance means that you don’t have to worry about funds. It helps lower your stress knowing that you have your finances in order. It is a peaceful place to be and opens up opportunities for you. If someone has stressors in their life – for example, their car breaks down – and they have no money to fix it, they now have car and money problems. This stress can then potentially lead to other problems such as marriage problems. If the money to fix the broken car would have been there, it would alleviate stress. [00:28:23] Difference between 401k, IRA, and Roth IRAs A 401k is an employer provided, long-term retirement savings account. This is where you put in money before it is taxed. With this plan you are limited with the funds you can choose from to invest in. IRAs are long-term retirement plans as well. The first type of IRA is a Traditional IRA, which is similar to a 401k. You get tax reduction for the money you put in the account. You pay taxes once you withdraw money. A Roth IRA is where you already pay taxes on money that you are putting in, but don’t have to pay taxes when withdrawing money. You can withdraw contributions at anytime without being penalized, you just can’t take out any earnings. Another thing that is potentially good for early retirement is a Roth IRA conversion ladder. This is where you take money from a 401k and convert it into a Roth IRA and use it before 60 years old to fund early retirement. Traditional IRAs are good for business owners looking for tax deductions now. An HSA (Health Savings Account) can also be used as a retirement device. It goes towards medical expenses if needed. [00:34:20] Are there tools or algorithms I can use to figure this stuff out? There are some. Portfolio Visualizer allows you to choose different portfolio mixes and put different amounts of money in each one. Portfolio Charts is similar to Portfolio Visualizer but gives nice graphics. Sean created a JavaScript website to help people use to figure out early retirement. The hardest part is calculating return because you have to estimate what your return will be each year. [00:39:00] Put Your Money Somewhere The only bad investment is not making an investment. Even making a bad investment is better than not having any at all. Inflation eats away at money that is just sitting. [00:42:05] If you get one of these advisors what advice should you be looking for? Need someone that tries to understand your particular situation. “It depends” is very true and your advisor should know that. No two people will have the same financial goals. They should want to help reach your goals in the least costly way possible. Other things they should be able to do is be honest and help you control your emotions during upswings and downswings. [00:47:08] Why index funds? As an investor, you can buy an index fund cheaper than buying the whole index. A mutual fund will try to buy and sell the stocks in that index in order to follow the index's performance. As an investor, you have the opportunity to buy into a mutual fund that handles it for you. You don’t have to independently invest in companies either. You can invest in an index instead that will look at, for example, top performing technology companies. It is usually a better value. [00:53:33] How much do I invest in my business verses putting money into a Roth IRA or 401k? Sean thinks it comes down to retirement goals. At some point you will want money to come in passively and retire in the future. If you can passively put X amount of dollars into your company then it can be looked at as a form of investment. Kevin evaluates his business goals every quarter. He creates a business budget based off of those goals. Picks Cory Random Walk Down Wall Street by Burton Malkiel Rich Dad, Poor Dad by Robert Kiyosaki Ego is the Enemy by Ryan Holiday Aimee Hacker News Thread – How to Not Bring Emotions Home With You Phantogram Charles Money Master the Game by Tony Robbins ELPs (Endorsed Local Providers) Dave Ramsey Sean The Little Book of Common Sense Investing by John Bogle Mr. Money Mustache Blog www.mint.com Kevin Unshakable by Tony Robbins YNABS The Millionaire Next Door by Thomas Stanley Links 2 Frugal Dudes Twitter Sean's Twitter Kevin's Twitter www.swiftkick.in www.kevgriffin.com http://earlyretirementroadmap.com/ 2 Frugal Dudes Podcast Full Article
ga JSJ 291: Serverless For JavaScript with Gareth McCumskey By devchat.tv Published On :: Tue, 12 Dec 2017 06:00:00 -0500 Panel: Charles Max Wood Aimee Knight AJ O’Neal Joe Eames Special Guests: Gareth McCumskey In this episode, JavaScript Jabber speaks with Gareth McCumskey about Serverless For JavaScript. Gareth leads the dev team at Expat Explore in Cape Town, South Africa. Gareth and this team specialize in exploring the Serverless realm in JavaScript. The JavaScript Jabbers panel and Gareth discuss the many different types of serverless systems, and when to implement them, how serverless system work, and when to go in the direction of using Serverless. In particular, we dive pretty deep on: What does it mean to be Serverless? Since platform as a service. Microservice on Docker Firebase “no backend” Backend systems Cloud functions and failure in systems How do you start to think about a serverless system? How do decide what to do? AWS Lambda Working in a different vendor Node 4 Programming JS to deploy Using libraries for NPM How is works with AWS Lambda Where is the database? More point of failure? Calls to Slack? Authentication Micro Services Elastic Bean Stalk Static Assets, S3, Managing Testing the services Integration testing And much more! Links: @garethmcc @expatexplore gareth.mccumskey.com https://github.com/garethmcc serverless.com Picks: Aimee Serverless Architectures NG-BE Conference AJ Documentary on Enron Hard Thing about Hard Things Charles Serverless Framework The Storm Light Achieves Avengers: Infinity War Gareth Building MicroServices Skeptics Guide To The Universe Podcast Expate Explore Joe Wonder - Movie Gloom In Space - Board Game Full Article
ga JSJ 292: CosmosDB with Kirill Gavrylyuk By devchat.tv Published On :: Tue, 19 Dec 2017 18:30:00 -0500 Panel: Charles Max Wood Special Guests: Kirill Gavrylyuk In this episode, JavaScript Jabber speaks with Kirill Gavrylyuk. Kirill is a dev manager at Cosmos DB, and works professionally with Azure CosmosDB. Kirill is on JavaScript Jabber to talk about what CosmosDB is in the world of development technology. Chuck and Kirill discuss the nuances of this database technology, how it is implemented, and how to manage and migrate data, among other great features. In particular, we dive pretty deep on: What is Cosmos DB? Bring your data anywhere your users are It is a website Multimodel database Works with Mongodb Cassandra Started as database DB Throughput Key data pairs Switching from MongoDB to Azure How do you decide what goes into this? It looks like an everything database. Migration path Uses cases, problems solved Supporting APIs Does it only exist in the Cloud? An emulator is available. Subscription info. And much more! Links: @kirillg-msft https://www.linkedin.com/in/kirillgavrylyuk Picks: Kirill Shared Debugging with VS Code - Keynote Charles USB Powered Monitor on Amazon Full Article
ga MJS 045: Gant LaBorde By devchat.tv Published On :: Wed, 24 Jan 2018 12:29:00 -0500 Panel: Charles Max Wood Guest: Gant LaBorde This week on My JavaScript Story, Charles speaks with Gant LaBorde. Gant is a regular in React Native Radio of Dev Chat TV. Gant works for Infinite Red and works with Ignite, a toolkit/framework for React Native. Infinite Red is a mobile app consulting company. Gant talks about his journey in programming and working in the development world. Gant describes his early introduction to programming through the fascination of home computers and friends. Gant talks about his experience in learning Javascript, PHP, Data Base, Desktop apps, and much more. Lastly, Gant talks about his contributions to React Native, and other platforms, and his current projects. In particular, we dive pretty deep on: How did you get into programming? Got into programming by help his dad with technology and computers Started his intro into programming through a friend programming on their home computer Basic AOL world - Visual Basic Programming Backend web ASP PHP Javascript talk Typescript talk Cardboard talk How did you get into React Native? Ruby Motion Building the Story How does React Native allow you to build the story? Components and structures Reactotron What are you working on now? Out of sync Yarn files and much, much more! Links: https://infinite.red https://infinite.red/ignite http://blog.npmjs.org/post/81600398588/npm-install-ben-coe-g Yargs InstanbulJS gantlaborde.com Picks Gant Chain React Conference Charles Avengers Infinity forum.devchat.tv Donate React Podcast for Dev Chat TV Full Article
ga MJS 051: Todd Gardner By devchat.tv Published On :: Wed, 07 Mar 2018 08:51:00 -0500 Panel: Charles Max Wood Guest: Todd Gardner This week on My JavaScript Story, Charles speaks with Todd Gardner. Todd is one of the co-founders of Track JS, which is a JavaScript error monitoring service. He first got into programming in Jr. High when he and his friends played around with computers they had dumpster dived for from their school in order to play video games. In High School, he learned how to create websites so that people could register for his LAN parties online. They also discuss the importance of finding passion in what you do as well as what Todd is most proud of contributing to the JS community. In particular, we dive pretty deep on: Track JS Stack trace Telemetry Decodes errors that are actually good to focus on How did you get into programming? Warcraft video game Started programming past gaming in High School LAN parties Pearl The importance of passion in programming C# He didn’t start off with programming as his focus Find the thing that inspires you and go do it! How did you wind up on JavaScript? Working as a consultant Knockout vs Backbone .net contractor to JS contractor Node JS What are you most proud of in JS? Understand that you’re never done with a JS app What are you doing now? And much, much more! Links: Track JS @ToddHGardner Todd.mn Picks Charles Eternium The E-Myth Revisited: Why Most Small Businesses Don't Work and What to Do About It by Michael E. Gerber My Business on Purpose Podcast Jamie Masters Profit First by Mike Michalowicz The 12 Week Year by Brian P. Moran Todd Smart Things Rage Full Article
ga JSJ 318: Cloud-Hosted DevOps with Ori Zohar and Gopinath Chigakkagari LIVE at Microsoft Build By devchat.tv Published On :: Mon, 18 Jun 2018 06:00:00 -0400 Panel: Charles Max Wood Special Guests: Ori Zohar and Gopinath Chigakkagari In this episode, the JavaScript Jabber panelists discuss Cloud-Hosted DevOps with Ori Zohar and Gopinath Chigakkagari at Microsoft Build. Ori is on the product team at VSTS focusing on DevOps specifically on Azure. Gopinath is the group program manager in VSTS primarily working on continuous integration, continuous delivery, DevOps, Azure deployment, etc. They talk about the first steps people should take when getting into DevOps, define DevOps the way Microsoft views it, the advantages to automation, and more! In particular, we dive pretty deep on: Ori and Gopi intro VSTS – Visual Studio Team Services VSTS gives developers the ability to be productive Developer productivity What’s the first big step people should be taking if they’re getting into DevOps? The definition of DevOps The people and the processes as the most important piece DevOps as the best practices Automating processes What people do when things go wrong is what really counts Letting the system take care of the problems Have the developers work on what they are actually getting paid for Trend of embracing DevOps Shifting the production responsibility more onto the developer’s Incentivizing developers People don’t account for integration Continuous integration Trends on what customers are asking for Safety Docker containers And much, much more! Links: Azure Microsoft Build VSTS @orizhr Ori’s GitHub Gopi’s GitHub @gopinach Sponsors Kendo UI Linode FreshBooks Picks: Charles .NET Rocks! Shure SM58 Microphone Zoom H6 Ori Fitbit Pacific Northwest Hiking Gopinath Seattle, WA Full Article
ga MJS 079: Michael Garrigan By devchat.tv Published On :: Wed, 03 Oct 2018 06:00:00 -0400 Panel: Charles Max Wood Guest: Michael Garrigan This week on My JavaScript Story, Charles speaks with http://michaelgarrigan.com who is one of the podcast’s listeners. He is changing careers midway and has had many exciting careers in the past, such as being a professional chef, carpenter, repairman, and so on. Listen to today’s episode to hear Michael’s unique experience with programming and JavaScript. In particular, we dive pretty deep on: 1:18 – Chuck: I started this show but interviewing guests and then opened up to listeners. Michael scheduled an interview and here we go! I find that his experience will be different than mine than others. We will be getting guests on here, but wanted this to be a well-rounded view within the community. 2:25 – Michael’s background! His experience is a mid-career change. To see the things that are intimidating and exciting. 3:16 – How did you get into programming? 3:23 – Michael: How do people talk to machines? What are the different computer languages out there? What do people prefer to use? The C programming language, I saw as the “grandfather” program. That’s the first thing I looked at. Then I was like, “what is going on?” I got a copy of the original K&R book and worked through that. 4:58 – Chuck: I did the C language in college. The Java that I was learning then was less complicated. How did you end up with JavaScript then? 5:26 – Guest: It was easy and you can just open up a console and it works. You want to see things happen visually when you program is great. It’s a great entry point. We started building things in React and how fun that is. I enjoy JavaScript in general. 6:11 – Chuck: What is your career transition? 6:18 – Guest: I have always been a craftsman and building things. I had a portion time I was a professional chef, which is the cold side like sausages and meats and cheeses, etc. I used to do a lot of ice carvings, too. Stopped that and opened a small business and repaired antique furniture for people. Wicker restoration. It was super cool because it was 100+ years old. To see what people did very well was enjoyable. Every few years I wanted to see how something worked, and that’s how I got into it. That was the gateway to something that was scary to something that made programs. 8:24 – Chuck: I was working in IT and wrote a system that managed updates across multiple servers. There is some automation I can do here, and it grew to something else. What made you switch? Were you were looking for something more lucrative? 9:01 – Michael: Main motivation I appreciate the logic behind it. I always build physical items. To build items that are non-physical is kind of different. Using logic to essentially put out a giant instruction sheet is fun. 9:52 – Chuck: At what point do you say I want to do a boot camp? 10:04 – Michael: I might to this as a career. Hobby level and going to work is definitely different. I could see myself getting up every day and going to meetings and talking about these topics and different issues. Coding day to day. 10:51 – Chuck: Who did you talk to who got you started? 10:57 – Guest: Things I read online and friends. They said get the basics behind programming. Languages come and go. Be able to learn quickly and learn the basics. 12:13 – Chuck: In NY city? It’s pricy to live there. 12:33 – Guest: Cost of living is much greater. 12:42 – Chuck: What was it like to go to a boot camp? 12:50 – Guest answers question. 14:30 – Advertisement – Get a Coder Job 15:11 – Chuck: What different projects have you worked on? 15:19 – Guest talks about his many different projects. Like senses.gov. 18:11 – Michael: Working on getting a job. I put together a portfolio and just graduated this past week. 19:38 – Charles: Anything that has been a huge challenge for you? 19:47 – Not really just one. I’ve done big projects in the past. Seeing that I can do them and sheer amount of work that I have put in. Not really too concerned. Only concern is that mid-30s any bias that is out there. I don’t think that will really affect me. 20:25 – Chuck: Yeah, it’s rally not age-bias. 20:55 – Michael: “Making your bones” is an expression in culinary school. That means that you put in the hours in the beginning to become a professional at it. So I have had transitioned several times and each time I had to make my bones and put in the time, so I am not looking forward to that for me right now, but... 21:43 – Chuck: Anything else? 21:51 – Guest: Meetups. 22:40 – Chuck: I have been putting time into making this book. 22:53 – Guest puts in his last comments. 24:00 – Chuck: Thinking about what I want DevChat TV to be. I have been thinking and writing the mission statement for DevChat TV. 25:14 – Chuck: It’s a big deal to get out of debt. My wife and I will be at the end of the year. 25:37 – Guest: Discipline not to spend money, and peer pressure. 25:48 – Picks! 25:57 – Advertisement for Digital Ocean! Links: Book Dave Ramsey: Introducing Our Brand-New Book! Hack Reactor JavaScript Meetup Michaelgarrigan.com – website Sponsors: Code Badge Digital Ocean Cache Fly Get A Coder Job Picks: Charles TNT – The Last Ship Board game – Pandemic Legacy Kickstarter – Code Badges Michael Garrigan Brad’s YouTube channel - ½ million subscribers Michaelgarrigan.com – website Full Article
ga MJS 089: Gareth McCumskey By devchat.tv Published On :: Wed, 12 Dec 2018 06:00:00 -0500 Panel: Charles Max Wood Guest: Gareth McCumskey This week on My JavaScript Story, Charles talks with Gareth McCumskey who is a senior web developer for RunwaySale! They talk about Gareth’s background, current projects and his family. Check out today’s episode to hear all about it and much more! In particular, we dive pretty deep on: 0:00 – Advertisement: Get A Coder Job! 0:53 – Chuck: Hey everyone! Welcome! We are talking today with Gareth McCumseky! 1:05 – Gareth: Hi! 1:22 – Chuck: Are you from Cape Town, Africa? (Guest: Yes!) 1:35 – Gareth and Chuck talk about his name, Gareth, and why it’s popular. 1:49 – Chuck: I am in my late 40’s. You were here for JSJ’s Episode 291! It’s still a hot topic and probably should revisit that topic. 2:20 – Guest: Yes! 2:30 – Chuck: It’s interesting. We had a long talk about it and people should go listen to it! 2:45 – Guest: I am a backend developer for the most part. 3:03 – Chuck: Yeah I started off as an ops guy. It probably hurt me. 3:21 – Guest: Yeah, if you poke it a certain way. 3:29 – Chuck: Let’s talk about YOU! How did you get into programming? 3:39 – Guest: South Africa is a different culture to grow-up in vs. U.S. and other places. I remember the computer that my father had back in the day. He led me drive his car about 1km away and I was about 11 years old. We would take home the computer from his office – played around with it during the weekend – and put it back into his office Monday morning. This was way before the Internet. I was fiddling with it for sure. The guest talks about BASIC. 6:20 – Chuck: How did you transfer from building BASIC apps to JavaScript apps? 6:30 – Guest: Yeah that’s a good story. When I was 19 years old...I went to college and studied geology and tried to run an IT business on the side. I started to build things for HTML and CSS and build things for the Web. The guest goes into-detail about his background! 9:26 – Chuck: Yeah, jQuery was so awesome! 9:34 – Guest: Yeah today I am working on an app that uses jQuery! You get used to it, and it’s pretty powerful (jQuery) for what it is/what it does! It has neat tricks. 10:11 – Chuck: I’ve started a site with it b/c it was easy. 10:19 – Guest: Sometimes you don’t need the full out thing. Maybe you just need to load a page here and there, and that’s it. 10:39 – Chuck: It’s a different world – definitely! 10:48 – Guest: Yeah in 2015/2016 is when I picked up JavaScript again. It was b/c around that time we were expecting our first child and that’s where we wanted to be to raise her. Guest: We use webpack.js now. It opened my eyes to see how powerful JavaScript is! 12:10 – Chuck talks about Node.js. 12:21 – Guest: Even today, I got into AWS Cognito! 13:45 – Chuck: You say that your problems are unique – and from the business end I want something that I can resolve quickly. Your solution sounds good. I don’t like messing around with the headaches from Node and others. 14:22 – Guest: Yeah that’s the biggest selling point that I’ve had. 15:47 – Chuck: How did you get into serverless? 15:49 – Guest: Funny experience. I am not the expert and I only write the backend stuff. Guest: At the time, we wanted to improve the reliability of the machine and the site itself. He said to try serverless.com. At the time I wasn’t impressed but then when he suggested it – I took the recommendation more seriously. My company that I work for now... 17:39 – Chuck: What else are you working on? 17:45 – Guest: Some local projects – dining service that refunds you. You pay for a subscription, but find a cheaper way to spend money when you are eating out. It’s called: GOING OUT. Guest: My 3-year-old daughter and my wife is expecting our second child. 18:56 – Chuck and Gareth talk about family and their children. 22:17 – Chuck: Picks! 22:29 – Advertisement – Fresh Books! 30-Day Trial! END – Cache Fly Links: React Angular JavaScript Webpack.js Serverless jQuery Node AWS Cognito Gareth’s Website Gareth’s GitHub Gareth’s Twitter Sponsors: Cache Fly Get A Coder Job Fresh Books Picks: Charles Max Wood Podcasts: MFCEO Project & Gary Vaynerchuk Pokémon Go! Gareth McCumskey Serverless.com Ingress Prime Full Article
ga JSJ 353: Signal R with Brady Gaster LIVE at Microsoft Ignite By devchat.tv Published On :: Tue, 26 Feb 2019 21:01:00 -0500 Sponsors: Netlify Sentry use the code “devchat” for $100 credit Clubhouse Panel: Charles Max Wood Special Guest: Brady Gaster In this episode, Chuck talks with Brady Gaster about SignalR that is offered through Microsoft. Brady Gaster is a computer software engineer at Microsoft and past employers include Logical Advantage, and Market America, Inc. Check out today’s episode where the two dive deep into SignalR topics. Links: Vue jQuery Angular C# Chuck’s Twitter SignalR SignalR’s Twitter GitHub SignalR Socket.io Node-SASS ASP.NET SignalR Hubs API Guide – JavaScript Client SignalR.net Real Talk JavaScript Parcel Brady Gaster’s Twitter Brady Gaster’s GitHub Brady Gaster’s LinkedIn Picks: Brady Team on General Session Korg SeaHawks Brady’s kids Logictech spot light AirPods Charles Express VPN Hyper Drive J5 ports and SD card readers Podwrench Full Article
ga JSJ 363: Practical JAMstack and Serverless with Gareth McCumskey By devchat.tv Published On :: Tue, 07 May 2019 06:00:00 -0400 Sponsors Triplebyte offers a $1000 signing bonus Sentry use the code “devchat” for $100 credit Linode CacheFly Panel Charles Max Wood Aimee Knight AJ O’Neal Aaron Frost Joe Eames Joined by Special Guest: Gareth McCumskey Summary Gareth McCumskey introduces JAMstack and serverless. He goes into great detail on how it works. Aimee Knight and Aaron Frost voice their concerns about going serverless. Aimee thinks it feels dirty. Aaron has concerns about the code, is it actually easier, what use cases would he use it for, and does it actually save money. Gareth addresses these concerns and the rest of the panel considers the positive and negatives of using JAMstack and serverless. Charles Max Wood asks for specific use cases; Gareth supplies many uses cases and the benefits that each of these cases. Links http://herodev.com/ https://thinkster.io/ https://jamstack.org/ https://www.mongodb.com/cloud/stitch https://expatexplore.com/ https://serverless.com/ https://www.cloud66.com/ https://aws.amazon.com/dynamodb/ https://twitter.com/garethmcc https://www.facebook.com/javascriptjabber https://twitter.com/JSJabber Picks Charles Max Wood: Join the mailing list Watch out for new podcasts Send me defunct podcasts you love chuck@devchat.tv Aimee Knight: Productivity Isn’t About Time Management. It’s About Attention Management. Quest Nutrition Protein Bars AJ O’Neal: Distant Worlds: Music from Final Fantasy by Nobuo Uematsu Legend Of Zelda Concert 2018 Original Soundtrack by Never Land Orchestra How to Diagnose and Fix Everything Electronic by Michael Jay Geier Aaron Frost: The Go-Giver, Expanded Edition: A Little Story About a Powerful Business Idea Gareth McCumskey: https://www.finalfantasyxiv.com/ Steam Play on Linux Joe Eames: Expanding your horizons Seven Languages in Seven Weeks: A Pragmatic Guide to Learning Programming Languages Seven More Languages in Seven Weeks: Languages That Are Shaping the Future https://elm-lang.org/ Full Article
ga JSJ 386: Gatsby.js with Chris Biscardi By devchat.tv Published On :: Tue, 27 Aug 2019 06:00:00 -0400 Sponsors GitLab | Get 30% off tickets with the promo code: DEVCHATCOMMIT Sentry– use the code “devchat” for $100 credit Panel Chris Beucheler AJ O’Neal Aimee Knight With Special Guest: Chris Biscardi Episode Summary Chris is an independent consultant working with open source startups. He taught himself to program and started in open source. He talks about how he got into programming and how he learned to code. One of Chris’ current clients is Gatsby, a static site generator. Chris talks about his work with Gatsby themes, how he got started working with Gatsby, and how you can get started with Gatsby. Chris talks about how Gatsby differs from other static site generators and how difficult it is to use. The panel discusses possible use cases for Gatsby, and agree that if your site is going to get more complex and larger over time, something like Gatsby is what you want to use. Chris talks about what it’s like to migrate to Gatsby from another service. The panel discusses the pros and cons of server-side rendering. Chris talks about building more app-oriented sites with Gatsby and things that you can plug into a Gatsby theme besides a blog. The show concludes with Chris and the panelists agreeing that if you can write it in JavaScript, you can ship it in a Gatsby theme. Links Gatsby Shadowing Docker React GraphQL WordPress Hugo Follow DevChat on Facebook and Twitter Picks AJ O’Neal: Sam Walton Made America: My Story Cinematic by Owl City Aimee Knight: Some things that might help you make better software Chris Beucheler: Venture Cafe Providence Chris Biscardi: Jason Lengstorf Twitch show Chris’ Blog Full Article
ga JSJ 391: Debugging with Todd Gardner By devchat.tv Published On :: Thu, 12 Sep 2019 06:00:00 -0400 Episode Summary Todd Gardner is a software developer, podcaster on the show Script and Style, startup founder, and comedy host for Pub Conf, a ‘comedy after party for developers’. Since he was last on the show 6 years ago, he has seen his startup TrackJS become quite successful. TrackJS is a JavaScript error monitoring service which gives you visibility into your client side experience. It’s different from other tools because focused on simplicity, so you’ll never need a guy on your team dedicated solely to TrackJS because everyone can use it. The panel begins by talking about debugging methods and tools. Some rely solely on the debugger built into their platform while others prefer to use a third party service. They discuss the necessity of using a third party debugger and if there are better solutions than just the built in debugger. They then discuss what to do after you’ve fixed a bug, such as if it is necessary to write a test to make sure it was completely fixed They talk about things to do to make debugging more effective. Todd and Aimee believe that code needs to begin by being designed for debug-ability. The panel discusses issues with invisible boundaries encountered while debugging, such as running out of memory. They talk about ways to mitigate issues that happen outside of your code base. Todd talks about the dangers of ad-blockers, and the panel agrees that it is important to consider how your website will be crippled by the user’s own technology. The end user in a production environment will have a different experience than you did writing it on a professional computer. Todd talks about the difference between debugging for the web versus a mobile application. Todd has encountered particular problems with debugging on a remote device, and he talks about how he solved the issue. The show concludes with Todd giving a quick elevator pitch for TrackJS Panelists Chris Ferdinandi Christopher Buecheler Aimee Knight Charles Max Wood Steve Emmrich With special guest: Todd Gardner Sponsors Adventures in Blockchain Sentry use the code “devchat” for 2 months free on Sentry’s small plan React Round Up Links Track JS (free trial available) Script and Style podcast PubConf Console.log Blackbox for Firefox and Chrome Redux lager Remote JS Follow DevChat on Facebook and Twitter Picks Christopher Buecheler: React/TypeScript cheat sheet Chris Ferdinandi: Pokemon Brawl Space Invaders game Gomakethings.com newsletter Aimee Knight: TechLead Youtube channel Charles Max Wood: Atomic Habits Getting up at 4 am Steve Emmrich: Trello Babushkas and grandmas to help you with your newborn Todd Gardner: PubConf Follow Todd @toddhgardner or todd.mn Full Article
ga JSJ 405: Machine Learning with Gant Laborde By devchat.tv Published On :: Thu, 31 Oct 2019 06:00:00 -0400 Gant Laborde is the Chief Innovation Officer of Infinite Red who is working on a course for beginners on machine learning. There is a lot of gatekeeping with machine learning, and this attitude that only people with PhDs should touch it. In spite of this, Gant thinks that in the next 5 years everyone will be using machine learning, and that it will be pioneered by web developers. One of the strong points of the web is experimentation, and Gant contrasts this to the academic approach. They conversation turns to Gant’s course on machine learning and how it is structured. He stresses the importance of understanding unicode, assembly, and other higher concepts. In his course he gives you the resources to go deeper and talks about libraries and frameworks available that can get you started right away. His first lesson is a splashdown into the jargon of machine learning, which he maps over into developer terms. After a little JavaScript kung fu, he takes some tools that are already out there and converts it into a website. Chris and Gant discuss some different uses for machine learning and how it can improve development. One of the biggest applications they see is to train the computers to figure monotonous tasks out while the human beings focus on other projects, such as watching security camera footage and identifying images. Gant restates his belief that in the next 5 years, AI will be everywhere. People will grab the boring things first, then they will go for the exciting things. Gant talks about his creation NSFW.js, an open source train model to help you catch indecent content. He and Chris discuss different applications for this technology. Next, the panel discusses where machine learning can be seen in everyday life, especially in big companies such as Google. They cite completing your sentences in an email for you as an example of machine learning. They talk about the ethics of machine learning, especially concerning security and personal data. They anticipate that the next problem is edge devices for AI, and this is where JavaScript really comes in, because security and privacy concerns require a developer mindset. They also believe that personal assistant devices, like those from Amazon and Google, will become even more personal through machine learning. They talk about some of the ways that personal assistant devices will improve through machine learning, such as recognizing your voice or understanding your accent. Their next topic of discussion is authenticity, and how computers are actually incredibly good at finding deep fakes. They discuss the practice of placing passed away people into movies as one of the applications of machine learning, and the ethics surrounding that. Since developers tend to be worried about inclusions, ethics, and the implications of things, Gant believes that these are the people he wants to have control over what AI is going to do to help build a more conscious data set. The show concludes with Gant talking about the resources to help you get started with machine learning. He is a panelist on upcoming DevChat show, Adventures in Machine Learning. He has worked with people with all kinds of skill sets and has found that it doesn’t matter how much you know, it matters how interested and passionate you are about learning. If you’re willing to put the pedal to the metal for at least a month, you can come out with a basic understanding. Chris and Gant talk about Tensorflow, which helps you take care of machine learning at a higher level for fast operations without calculus. Gant is working on putting together a course on Tensorflow. If you’re interested in machine learning, go to academy.infinite.red to sign up for Gant’s course. He also announces that they will be having a sale on Black Friday and Cyber Monday. Panelists Christopher Buecheler With special guest: Gant Laborde Sponsors React Round Up Sentry use the code “devchat” for 2 months free on Sentry’s small plan Adventures in Angular Links Machine Learning: How To go from Zero to Hero NSFW.js Tensorflow.js PyTorch Keras Academy.infinite.red Gantlaborde.com Follow DevChatTV on Facebook and Twitter Picks Christopher Buecheler: Next.js Big Wreck, But For The Sun Gant Laborde: Nicornot.com Free 5 day mini course on academy.infinite.red Full Article
ga JSJ 408: Reading Source Code with Carl Mungazi By devchat.tv Published On :: Tue, 19 Nov 2019 06:00:00 -0500 Carl Mungazi is a frontend developer at Limejump in London. He is a former journalist and switched to programming in 2016. Today the panel is discussing the benefits of reading source code. Carl began reading source code because he came into programming late and from a different field. His first project was with Mithril, and he read the source code and documentation to help him understand it. The panelists discuss how reading the source code has helped them and others to improve their coding. They compare reading and understanding source code to learning a foreign language, and discuss different methods. Carl gives some suggestions for reading source code effectively. He advises people to be patient and step through the code. Accept that you will probably take a wrong path at some point or another, but the more you read, the more you will see patterns in how libraries are structured. He also encourages listeners to approach the authors, as they are often happy to lend a hand. Reading source code is an active approach of stepping through, debugging, putting in break points, checking the stack, and so forth. It’s also important to do outside research. Since he has been reading source code, Carl has come to prefer plain JavaScript and libraries with as little code as possible. The panel discusses the benefits of small, simple libraries. Carl gives examples of techniques that he learned from reading a library source code and how he applied it to his own coding style. Reading source code has made him more careful about mixing logic and UI, and now he separates them. He also is more confident in seeing a problem, going to a preexisting library, and just importing the fix for that problem rather than the whole library. Reading source code is really about understanding the code you use in your project. It may slow you down, but you’ll be thankful in the long term because it will help you solve future bugs more efficiently. Carl talks more about his debugging process. He still relies on a debugger, but reading a library helps you to see patterns and guess the output of a function. These patterns persist in other libraries as well. Once you can guess correctly what will happen, you go back to reading the code and find instances where the output is unexpected, and fix it. Carl’s closing thoughts are that through reading source code, he has learned that although code is used differently in each library, they are all written in the same language, and therefore interrelated. This gave him more confidence in reading code because they’re all fundamentally the same. When a bug is discovered, he encourages listeners to look at the source code before googling a solution. Panelists AJ O’Neal Dan Shapir Steve Edwards Charles Max Wood Guest Carl Mungazi Sponsors Hasura.io Sentry | Use the code “devchat” for $100 credit Adventures in Angular Links Mithril.js Preact Limejump Picks AJ O’Neal Zen of Python The Go Proverbs Go with Versions Link’s Awakening soundtrack Dan Shapir Programming Pearls book Lord of Light Steve Edwards Jabra Elite 65T Charles Max Wood Garth Brooks The Rocky movies Carl Mungazi Follow Carl @CarlMungazi and carlmungazi.com EcmaScript Spec HTML 5.2 Snarky Puppy Full Article
ga MJS 138: Carl Mungazi By devchat.tv Published On :: Tue, 25 Feb 2020 06:01:00 -0500 Carl is a developer from Zimbabwe currently living in London. He explains how he started out as a journalist and wound up doing web development to keep track of news stories coming out in his local area. He leveled up by attending meetups and talking to other developers. He currently works for LimeJump, an energy startup which is creating a virtual power plant by connecting together different power assets Host: Charles Max Wood Joined By Special Guest: Carl Mungazi Sponsors Sentry CacheFly ______________________________________ "The MaxCoders Guide to Finding Your Dream Developer Job" by Charles Max Wood is now available on Amazon. Get Your Copy Today! ______________________________________ Links Nailing Your First (Info-Product) Launch CarlMungazi.com Picks Carl Mungazi: React Dev Tools Charles Max Wood: Gmelius Devchat Workshops The Dev Rev Podcast Full Article
ga Years of plenty, years of want [electronic resource] : France and the legacy of the Great War / Benjamin Franklin Martin By prospero.murdoch.edu.au Published On :: Martin, Benjamin F., 1947- Full Article