al 029 JSJ Bower.js with Alex MacCaw and Jacob Thornton By devchat.tv Published On :: Tue, 02 Oct 2012 05:00:00 -0400 Panel Alex MacCaw (twitter github blog) Jacob Thornton (Fat) (twitter github blog) AJ O’Neal (twitter github blog) Jamison Dance (twitter github blog) Joe Eames (twitter github blog) Charles Max Wood (twitter github Teach Me To Code Intro to CoffeeScript) Discussion Bower.js (web) Bower.js (twitter) Bower.js (github) SXSW Package managers ender-js BPM hem Benefits Small components Yeoman.io Browserify Dependencies Segmenting the community Transports Mozilla (github) Commands Building an actual package manager node.js Moving parts of a package manager Events Challenges Ember.js Mobile web application development Google Chrome apps Desktop apps in JavaScript Picks Kershaw Ken Onion Tactical Blur Folding Knife (AJ) The xx: Coexist (Jamison) Neil Armstrong’s Solemn but Not Sad Memorial Cathedral (Jamison) Collective Soul Cat (Jamison) Amazon Prime (Joe) Star Trek Original Series on Amazon Prime (Joe) Functional Programming Principles in Scala: Martin Odersky (Joe) Domo (hiring!) (Joe) Delegation in Google (Chuck) Civilization IV (Chuck) Fujitsu ScanSnap (Chuck) Bill Nye’s Twitter Account getting suspended was not cool (Jacob) Github + Twitter profile redesign (Jacob) Avoid 7/11 Hot Dog Flavored Chips (Jacob) The Big Picture (Alex) CoffeeScriptRedux (Alex) Stripe (Alex) Full Article
al 037 JSJ Promises with Domenic Denicola and Kris Kowal By devchat.tv Published On :: Fri, 07 Dec 2012 07:00:00 -0500 Panel Kris Kowal (twitter github blog) Domenic Denicola (twitter github blog) AJ O’Neal (twitter github blog) Jamison Dance (twitter github blog) Joe Eames (twitter github blog) Merrick Christensen (twitter github) Charles Max Wood (twitter github Teach Me To Code Intro to CoffeeScript) Discussion 02:41 - Promises Asynchonous programming 05:09 - Using Promises from top to bottom 07:08 - Domains NodeConf SummerCamp 07:55 - Q 10:22 - q.nfbind 11:15 - Q vs jQuery You’re Missing the Point of Promises Coming from jQuery 15:41 - long-stack-traces turn chaining JavaScriptStackTraceApi: Overview of the V8 JavaScript stack trace API (error.prepare stack trace) 19:36 - Original Promises/A spec and Promises/A+ spec when.js Promises Test Suite Underscore deferred 24:22 - .then Chai as Promised 26:58 - Nesting Promises spread method 28:38 - Error Handling causeway 32:57 - Benefits of Promises Error Handling Multiple Async at once Handle things before and after they happen 40:29 - task.js 41:33 - Language e programming language CoffeeScript 44:11 - Mocking Promises 45:44 - Testing Promises Mocha as Promised Picks Code Triage (Jamison) The Creative Sandbox Guidebook (Joe) Steam (Joe) Pluralsight (Joe) montage (Kris) montagejs / mr (Kris) CascadiaJS 2012 - Domenic Denicola (Domenic) Omnifocus (Chuck) Buckyballs (AJ) Transcript JOE: I can’t imagine your baby face with a beard, Jamison. JAMISON: I never thought I had a baby face. AJ: It was always a man face to me. JOE: Everybody who is 15 years younger than me has a baby face. [This episode is sponsored by ComponentOne, makers of Wijmo. If you need stunning UI elements or awesome graphs and charts, then go to wijmo.com and check them out.] [This show is sponsored by Gaslight Software. They are putting on Mastering Backbone training in San Francisco at the Mission Bay Conference Center, December 3rd through 5th. They'll be covering Jasmine, Backbone and CoffeeScript. For more information or to register, go to training.gaslightsoftware.com] [Hosting and bandwidth provided by the Blue Box Group. Check them out at bluebox.net] CHUCK: Hey everybody. Welcome to episode 37 of the JavaScript Jabber show. This week on our panel, we have AJ O'Neal. AJ: Yo, yo, yo, comin' at you live from the executive boardroom suite of Orem, Utah. CHUCK: Jamison Dance. JAMISON: Hey guys! CHUCK: Joe Eames. JOE: Hey there! CHUCK: Merrick Christensen MERRICK: What's up. CHUCK: I'm Charles Max Wood from devchat.tv and this week we have some guests -- and that is Kris Kowal. KRIS: Hello. Yeah, Kowal. CHUCK: Kowal. OK. And Domenic Denicola. Did I say that right? DOMENIC: Denicola. CHUCK: Denicola. DOMENIC: It’s OK I got Americanized. That's probably the proper Italian pronunciation. Hi guys! CHUCK: I speak proper Italian, so probably. KRIS: Yeah and for what it’s worth, I think that the proper Polish is Kowal or something, but yeah. JAMISON: Kris, are you from the Midwest? You have kind of Minnesota-ish accent. KRIS: No. I'm actually unfortunately from somewhere in the suburbs of Los Angeles, but I grew up indoors and did listen to Prairie Home Companion. So I don’t know. Maybe. [laughter] CHUCK: Awesome. All right. So this week we are going to be talking about… actually there's one thing I need to announce before. If you are listening to this episode, you’ll probably notice a little bit of a difference with our sponsorship message. I actually left off one important piece to one of the sponsorship messages and that is for the Gaslight software training that's going to be in San Francisco, if you wanna sign up, go to training.gaslightsoftware.com and you can sign up there. They’ve been a terrific sponsor and I feel kind of bad that I botched that. But anyway, Full Article
al 047 JSJ Specialized vs Monolithic with James Halliday and Tom Dale By devchat.tv Published On :: Fri, 15 Feb 2013 07:32:00 -0500 Panel Tom Dale (twitter github blog Tilde Inc.) James Halliday (twitter github substack.net) AJ O’Neal (twitter github blog) Jamison Dance (twitter github blog) Merrick Christensen (twitter github) Joe Eames (twitter github blog) Tim Caswell (twitter github howtonode.org) Charles Max Wood (twitter github Teach Me To Code Rails Ramp Up) Discussion 01:52 - James Halliday Introduction browserify 02:37 - Tom Dale Introduction iCloud Ember.js Big Data & Hadoop 04:47 - Specialized vs Monolithic github.com/tildeio Idiology Micro Libraries 14:13 - Learning Frameworks 18:04 - Making things modular 25:23 - Picking the right tool for the job 27:44 - voxel.js & emberjs emberjs / packages BPM - Browser Package Manager NPM - Node Packaged Modules testling-ci Backbone.js 38:19 - Module Systems CommonJS 41:14 - Cloud9 Use Case 43:54 - Bugs jQuery Source Code Picks jQuery 2.0 (Merrick) ECMAScript 6 Module Definition (Merrick) AMD (Merrick) Yiruma (Joe) Elementary (Joe) Miracle Berry Tablets (AJ) The Ubuntu You Deserve (AJ) Bravemule (Jamison) RealtimeConf Europe (Tim) visionmedia / cpm (Tim) Why I Love Being A Programmer in Louisville (or, Why I Won’t Relocate to Work for Your Startup: Ernie Miller (Chuck) Is Audio The Next Big Thing In Digital Marketing? [Infographic] (Chuck) testling-ci (James) voxel.js (James) CAMPJS (James) Discourse (Tom) Williams-Sonoma 10-Piece Glass Bowl Set (Tom) The Best Simple Recipes by America’s Test Kitchen (Tom) Next Week Why Javascript is Hard Transcript JAMISON: You can curse but we will just edit it out and replace it with fart noises. TOM: I’ll be providing plenty of my own. [Laughter] JAMISON: Okay, good. [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 47 of the JavaScript Jabber show. This week on our panel, we have AJ O’Neal. AJ: Yo! Yo! Yo! Coming at you not even live! CHUCK: [Laughs] Alright, Jamison Dance. JAMISON: Hi guys, it’s tough to follow that. CHUCK: Merrick Christensen. MERRICK: Hey. CHUCK: Joe Eames. JOE: Howdy! CHUCK: Tim Caswell. TIM: Hello. CHUCK: I’m Charles Max Wood from DevChat.tv. And this week, we have two guests. The first one is Tom Dale. TOM: Hey, thanks for having me. CHUCK: The other is James Halliday. JAMES: Yep. Hello. CHUCK: Welcome to the show, guys. We were having a conversation a while back, I don’t remember if it was during another episode or after another episode. But we were having a discussion over code complexity and having like small simple libraries or small simple sets of functionality versus large monolithic sets of functionality, and how to approach those and when they’re appropriate. So, we brought you guys on to help us explore this because you're experts, right? TOM: I don’t think that’s a fair analysis of the situation, but we can certainly fumble our way through something. [Laughter] CHUCK: Alright. So, why don’t you guys, real quick, just kind of introduce yourselves? Give us a little background on what your experience is so that we know which questions to ask you guys. James, why don’t you start? I know you’ve been on the show before. JAMES: Hello. I suppose I wrote Browserify which is relevant here. It’s a common JS style, bundler packager thing that just uses NPM. And I have a bunch of other libraries. And I really like doing data development as just a bunch of little modules put together. They are all published completely independently on NPM. I think I’m up to like 230-ish some odd modules on NPM now. So, I’ve been doing that and I really like that style. Full Article
al 049 JSJ MooTools with Valerio Proietti and Arian Stolwijk By devchat.tv Published On :: Fri, 01 Mar 2013 01:00:00 -0500 Panel Valerio Proietti (twitter github) Arian Stolwijk (twitter github blog) Joe Eames (twitter github blog) Merrick Christensen (twitter github) Jamison Dance (twitter github blog) Charles Max Wood (twitter github Teach Me To Code Rails Ramp Up) Discussion 01:08 - Arian Stolwijk Introduction MooTools Developer Symbaloo 01:39 - Valerio Proietti Introduction MooTools Creator Spotify 02:21 - What is MooTools? Github - MooTools 07:04 - The Class System mootools / prime 09:36 - Milk 10:25 - Design Goals Ghost 11:19 - Prime mootools / wrapup CommonJS 14:18 - MooTools vs jQuery 19:53 - Using MooTools and jQuery together Object Oriented jQuery with MooTools @jQuery Conference: Ryan Florence 21:08 - MooTools for Frameworks epitome neuro Github - MooTools 23:48 - Chaining MooTools Demos - Chaining 26:59 - Request API for Ajax calls 29:11 - Favorite MooTools-using Websites Spotify 9GAG 29:45 - Accomplishments Class System wrapup arian / prime-util 31:36 - The history of MooTools script.aculo.us moo.fx Picks Wasteland 2 (Joe) The Lost Fleet Series by Jack Campbell (Joe) MooTools (Merrick) People who can ride on airplanes for the first time (Merrick) ES6 Module Transpiler - Tomorrow's JavaScript module syntax today (Jamison) ajacksified / song-of-github (Jamison) Community Vote for OpenWest Conference 2013 (Jamison) walmartlabs / hapi (Jamison) Cornify (Chuck) Parade of Homes (Chuck) Dave Ramsey's Financial Peace University (Chuck) Floby / node-libspotify (Valerio) visionmedia / superagent (Valerio) kamicane / moofx (Valerio) Why Mozilla Matters: Brendan Eich (Arian) Ubuntu (source code) (Arian) Next Week QUnit with Jörn Zaefferer Transcript MERRICK: Yeah, call me Mer-rock, I’m cool with that. [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 49 of the JavaScript Jabber Show. This week on our panel, we have Joe Eames. JOE: Howdy. CHUCK: We have Merrick Christensen. MERRICK: Hey, guys. CHUCK: Jamison Dance. JAMISON: Hello friends. CHUCK: And I'm Charles Max Wood from DevChat.tv. And I just want to remind you, if you're going to sign up for Rails Ramp Up, you have one week. We also have two special guests and that is Valerio Proietti VALERIO: Hello. CHUCK: And Arian Stolwijk. ARIAN: Hello. CHUCK: And I think I got close on those names. Okay. So, why don't we have Arian go first? I'd like you just to introduce yourself really quickly for people who aren’t familiar with who you are? ARIAN: So, I’m Arian. I'm a MooTools developer mostly. Besides that, I work for a company called Symbaloo which is bookmark website page. Besides that, I'm actually still studying for my Master’s Degree in Embedded Systems. And that's about it. CHUCK: Cool. And Valerio, do you want to introduce yourself? VALERIO: Sure. Well, I created MooTools a few years ago and since then, a lot of cool people have joined the project like Arian who we have here today. I’m currently working in Sweden at Spotify. CHUCK: Oh, cool! MERRICK: Very cool! CHUCK: Yeah, we like Spotify. MERRICK: Is that the headquarters of Spotify is in Sweden? VALERIO: Yeah, this is the where the magic happens. They have other offices but they're not as important as the Swedish one. [Laughter] VALERIO: I'm kidding. Everybody’s important, not just the Swedish one. CHUCK: Very nice, very nice. Alright. So, do you guys want to just take a minute and explain what MooTools is? I think people have some idea, but just to get kind of a base line for the rest of the conversation. VALERIO: Yes, Full Article
al 057 JSJ Functional Programming with Zach Kessin By devchat.tv Published On :: Thu, 02 May 2013 05:00:00 -0400 Use this link and code JAVAJAB to get 20% off your registration for FluentConf 2013! Panel Zachary Kessin (twitter github Mostly Erlang Podcast) Jamison Dance (twitter github blog) Merrick Christensen (twitter github) Charles Max Wood (twitter github Teach Me To Code Rails Ramp Up) Discussion 00:55 - Zach Kessin Introduction Programming HTML5 Applications Building Web Applications with Erlang Product Structure Mostly Erlang Podcast 03:01 - Functional Programming Haskell LISP Scheme Erlang Underscore.js chain 06:44 - Monad q Maybe monad 11:33 - Functional Languages vs JavaScript No side effects 18:09 - Why Functional Programming? 037 JSJ Promises with Dominic Denicola and Kris Kowal Higher order functions Ext JS 24:35 - Tail_call Recursion cdr car 044 JSJ Book Club: Effective JavaScript with David Herman 32:54 - Programming Languages Seven Languages in Seven Weeks: A Pragmatic Guide to Learning Programming Languages (Pragmatic Programmers) by Bruce Tate 33:38 - Functional Programming Libraries valentine Maybe.coffee q 36:13 - What do you miss in JavaScript? Pattern Matching Picks Vi Hart on Normalcy of Pi (Jamison) Sport Balls Replaced With Cats (Jamison) JavaScript Allongé by Reginald Braithwaite (Merrick) BonsaiJS (Merrick) Wringing out Water on the ISS - for Science! (Chuck) RequireJS (Chuck) Mostly Erlang (Zach) Boston PD (Zach) Iron Dome (Zach) Next Week Building Accessible Websites on a Podcast with Brian Hogan Transcript [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 57 of the JavaScript Jabber Show. This week on our panel, we have Jamison Dance. JAMISON: Hello, friends. CHUCK: Merrick Christensen. MERRICK: Hi. CHUCK: I’m Charles Max Wood from Devchat.tv and this week, we have a special guest and that’s Zach Kessin. ZACH: Hey everybody. CHUCK: Did I say your name right, Zach? ZACH: Yep, you got it right. CHUCK: Alright. This week, we’re going to be talking about functional programming in JavaScript. You want to give us a little bit of a background on you, so that you can kind of explain, I don’t know, who you are and your expertise here? ZACH: Oh, okay. So yeah, I’m Zach Kessin. I’ve been a software developer for close to 20 years, on the web, close to 20 years now. My first web app in PHP version -- oh, not PHP, in Perl version 4 with mSQL, because MySQL didn’t exist yet. That was, like, 1994. And let’s see, I’ve been doing web applications ever since. Worked in Boston area, in London and then in Israel for about 10 years now. I’m also the author of ‘Programming HTML5 Applications’ and ‘Building Web Applications with Erlang’, both published by O’Reilly. And my interests include functional programming, code generation and concurrency in Erlang. So, well, that’s a different show. That’s sort of my background. And I work at a small Tel Aviv startup called Product Structure that we build [inaudible] components and workflows that will be self-optimizing on your website. So, that’s what we’re doing. We’re launching it soon. CHUCK: Cool. MERRICK: Very cool. CHUCK: You just launched your own podcast, didn’t you? ZACH: Yeah. I just launched my own podcast called ‘Mostly Erlang’. It’s going to cover Erlang and occasionally other functional languages like Haskell and OCML. We had our first, we recorded our first episode last week. And the first episode is called ‘Building Skynet’. And the second episode will be on the Webmachine framework, which is an HTTP framework, backend framework though, to do semantically correct Webmachine. Full Article
al 061 JSJ Functional Reactive Programming with Juha Paananen and Joe Fiorini By devchat.tv Published On :: Fri, 31 May 2013 03:00:00 -0400 Panel Juha Paananen (twitter github blog) Joe Fiorini (twitter github blog) AJ O’Neal (twitter github blog) Jamison Dance (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 01:20 - Joe Fiorini Introduction Interaction Developer at Designing Interactive in Cleveland, OH 01:42 - Juha Paananen Introduction Software Developer at Reaktor in Helsinki, Finland 02:30 - Functional Reactive Programming (FRP) vs Functional Programming 057 JSJ Functional Programming with Zach Kessin 04:25 - Declarative Programming 05:55 - Map and Filter 07:05 - bacon.js Flapjax 09:10 - Mapping and filtering event streams 10:40 - Asynchronicity and Promises 14:28 - Using FRP ReactiveCocoa Complex UIs TodoMVC with Bacon.js, Backbone.js and Transparency.js by pyykiss 20:02 - Ember.js and FRP 22:04 - MVC frameworks and FRP Juha Paananen: FRP, Bacon.js and stuff: Chicken, Egg and Bacon.js 24:35 - Learning FRP 25:49 - Where did FRP come from? What is (functional) reactive programming? - Stack Overflow Conal Elliott: Composing Reactive Animations Haskell Reactive-banana - HaskellWiki 29:07 - Going beyond visual media substack/stream-handbook 32:18 - Wrappers 33:31 - How to build things with FRP libraries Juha Paananen @ MLOC.JS: Functional Reactive Programming in JavaScript using Bacon.js Picks SlideShare: Functional Reactive Programming in JavaScript (AJ) Valve: The AI Systems of Left 4 Dead by Michael Booth (Jamison) programming is terrible (Jamison) Simple Made Easy: Rich Hickey (Jamison) AngularJS Fundamentals (Joe's Pluralsight Course) (Joe) Open Source Bridge (Joe) That Conference (Joe) Star Trek: Into Darkness (Joe) ServerBear (AJ) rainwave (AJ) rwbackend (AJ) Mesa Boogie Lone Star Guitar Amplifier (Merrick) backburner.js (Merrick) messageformat.js (Merrick) Digital Ocean (Chuck) Emacs (Chuck) emacs_libs (Chuck) Tmux (Chuck) GitLab (Chuck) Flight by Twitter (Joe F.) Ember.js (Joe F.) CodeMash (Joe F.) fantasy-land (Juha) The Bacon.js postings featuring Phil Roberts (Juha) Iron Sky (Juha) Reaktor Dev Day (Juha) Next Week Dojo with Dylan Schiemann Transcript MERRICK: How come nobody acknowledges when I talk? What about that? JAMISON: That’s a deeper problem than a microphone. [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 61 of the JavaScript Jabber Show. This week on our panel, we have AJ O’Neal. AJ: Yo, yo, yo. Coming at you live from Iowa. CHUCK: Again? AJ: Oh, I guess I was there last time, huh? It’ll be New York soon. CHUCK: We have Jamison Dance. JAMISON: Howdy, guys. CHUCK: Joe Eames. JOE E: Hey there. CHUCK: Merrick Christensen. MERRICK: What’s up? CHUCK: I’m Charles Max Wood from DevChat.tv. This week, we have two special guests. We have Joe Fiorini. JOE F: Hello everyone. CHUCK: And Juha Paananen. JUHA: Yeah. Hi everybody. Juha Paananen. CHUCK: Thank you for straightening that up for me. We’re going to have you guys introduce yourself real quick, since you haven’t been on the show before. Joe, why don’t you start us off? JOE F: Sure. My name is Joe Fiorini and I am an Interaction Developer at Designing Interactive in Cleveland, Ohio. I do a decent amount of JavaScript development every week. I’ve discovered Functional Reactive Programming three or four months ago and it’s changed my world. CHUCK: Awesome. And Juha, do you want to introduce yourself as well? JUHA: Yeah, why not? I’m Juha. I’m from Finland. Helsinki. Full Article
al 069 JSJ The Application Cache with Jake Archibald By devchat.tv Published On :: Fri, 02 Aug 2013 09:00:00 -0400 Panel Jake Archibald (twitter github blog) Jamison Dance (twitter github blog) Charles Max Wood (twitter github Teach Me To Code Rails Ramp Up) Discussion 01:14 - Jake Archibald Introduction Works on Developer Relations on the Google Chrome Team 01:57 - The Application Cache Eric Bidelman: A Beginner's Guide to Using the Application Cache - HTML5 Rocks Down Fall 07:12 - Working with Single Page Apps 08:40 - Detecting Connectivity Express.js Yehuda Katz: Extend the Web Forward 15:42 - Running Offline 19:55 - Generating Manifest Files Grunt Task for App Cache Manifests 26:34 - NavigationController 28:49 - Progressive Enhancement Jake Archibald: Progressive enhancement is still Important 059 JSJ jQuery Mobile with Todd Parker 058 JSJ Building Accessible Websites with Brian Hogan Feature Detection Modernizr SEO Picks Arduino (Jamison) Draft (Jamison) RoboRally (Chuck) Adobe Audition CS6 (Chuck) Blue Microphones Yeti USB Microphone - Silver Edition (Chuck) async-generators (Jake) Rick Byers: DevTools just got a cool new feature in Chrome canary (Jake) johnny-five (Jamison) Next Week Book Club: JavaScript Allongé with Reginald Braithwaite Transcript CHUCK: Maybe we’ll just talk about your general smarty-pants-ness. [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.] [This podcast is sponsored by JetBrains, makers of WebStorm. Whether you’re working with Node.js or building the front end of your web application, WebStorm is the tool for you. It has great code quality and code exploration tools and works with HTML5, Node, TypeScript, CoffeeScript, Harmony, LESS, Sass, Jade, JSLint, JSHint, and the Google Closure Compiler. Check it out at JetBrains.com/WebStorm.] CHUCK: Hey everybody and welcome to Episode 69 the JavaScript Jabber Show. This week on our panel we have Jamison Dance. JAMISON: Hello friends. CHUCK: I’m Charles Max Wood from DevChat.TV. And we have a special guest and that is Jake Archibald. JAKE: Hello. CHUCK: Jake, do you want to introduce yourself for the folks who haven’t heard of you before? JAKE: Sure thing. I work on the Google Chrome team as part of DevRel. What I’m doing there is a combination of speaking at conferences about particular stuff. I got to do a lot in performance at the moment, but I also do a lot of standards work where I’ve done a lot with an alternative to application cache, which we’ll be talking about, but also looking at things like script loading and some of the resource priority stuff. CHUCK: Cool. So it sounds like you’re smart on a number of levels then. JAKE: Or dumb at all. [Chuckles] I can only see what I work on. I don’t know if I’m any good at it. [Chuckles] CHUCK: So we brought you on to talk about the application cache. I’m not completely sure I know what is totally involved there. Is it just the cache like you clear the browser cache cache or is it something else? JAKE: Well. the aim for the application cache was to let you make a site that works offline. So we’ve got the http cache and that works, in a manner of speaking. But if you have, say a website where you’ve cached your JavaScript, you’ve cached your CSS. You’ve cached your html page and some images. That’s great, but the user will visit another website and the browser will go and delete the CSS file from your site from the cache just to make room for the stuff from this other site. That means that if we were just going to use the http cache for making things work offline, people go to your site, your html’s there, your images are there, your JavaScript’s there, but your CSS is not and that’s going to break your site. Full Article
al 070 JSJ Book Club: JavaScript Allongé with Reginald Braithwaite By devchat.tv Published On :: Fri, 09 Aug 2013 12:47:00 -0400 Panel Reginald Braithwaite (twitter github blog) Jamison Dance (twitter github blog) Joe Eames (twitter github blog) AJ O’Neal (twitter github blog) Merrick Christensen (twitter github) Charles Max Wood (twitter github Teach Me To Code Rails Ramp Up) Discussion 02:08 - Reg Braithwaite Introduction Github 03:46 - JavaScript Allongé by Reginald Braithwaite 06:43 - The Y Combinator Kestrels, Quirky Birds, and Hopeless Egocentricity by Reginald Braithwaite 14:26 - Book Summary/Perspective Functions QED, The Strange Theory of Light and Matter by Richard P. Feynman 21:37 - Footnotes Flashman: A Novel by George MacDonald Fraser 26:42 - allong.es Michael Fogus 29:15 - Sharing Knowledge & Information 33:01 - The Coffee Theme CoffeeScript Ristretto by Reginald Braithwaite 37:42 - Favorite Parts of the Book How Prototypes Work Combinators 42:18 - Writing the Beginning 44:41 - Reg’s Programming Background One Two Three . . . Infinity: Facts and Speculations of Science by George Gamow Picks ng-conf (Joe & Merrick) LUMOback (Merrick) Twilio (AJ) Bountysource (AJ) Brian Stevens / Data Porters (Chuck) InformIT (Chuck) Safari Books Online (Chuck) QED, The Strange Theory of Light and Matter by Richard P. Feynman (Reginald) One Two Three . . . Infinity: Facts and Speculations of Science by George Gamow (Reginald) Understanding Computation: From Simple Machines to Impossible Programs by Tom Stuart (Reginald) Realm of Racket: Learn to Program, One Game at a Time! by Matthias Felleisen (Reginald) Special Offer! JSJABBERROCKS will give $5 off JavaScript Allongé by Reginald Braithwaite on Friday, August 9th through Sunday, August 11th 2013 ONLY! Next Week JavaScript Strategies at Microsoft with Scott Hanselman Transcript MERRICK: Turns out my habit is Joe coming over to my desk and saying, [singing] “Da-na-na-na, jabber time!” [Laughter] AJ: Nice. REG: That behavior is always acceptable if you are dressed for the part. [Laughter] CHUCK: Since this is pure audio, you don’t even have to be dressed. JOE: I have a pair of parachute pants. MERRICK: I actually record most of this show while I'm in the bathtub. [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.] [This podcast is sponsored by JetBrains, makers of WebStorm. Whether you’re working with Node.js or building the front end of your web application, WebStorm is the tool for you. It has great code quality and code exploration tools and works with HTML5, Node, TypeScript, CoffeeScript, Harmony, LESS, Sass, Jade, JSLint, JSHint, and the Google Closure compiler. Check it out at JetBrains.com/WebStorm.] CHUCK: Hey everybody and welcome to Episode 70 the JavaScript Jabber show. This week on our panel we have Jamison Dance. JAMISON: Hello friends. CHUCK: Joe Eames. JOE: Hey there. CHUCK: AJ O’Neal. AJ: Still coming at you almost live from San Francisco. CHUCK: Merrick Christensen. MERRICK: What’s up guys? CHUCK: There we go. I’m Charles Max Wood from DevChat.TV. And we have a special guest, and that is Reg Braithwaite. REG: Pleased to be here with you. MERRICK: That was a real voice if I’ve ever heard one. JOE: Yeah. Awesome. CHUCK: No kidding. We should have you do some voice overs for us. MERRICK: We should. CHUCK: You’re listening to JavaScript Jabber. [Chuckles] AJ: Say, “In a world…” [Chuckles] REG: In a world… CHUCK: Anyway… [Laughter] AJ: Derailed, derailed. CHUCK: Yeah, totally. Reg, since you’re new to the show, do you want to introduce your self briefly? REG: Certainly. I’m a 51-year-old programmer. I got started the old-fashioned way, Full Article
al 073 JSJ React with Pete Hunt and Jordan Walke By devchat.tv Published On :: Fri, 30 Aug 2013 07:00:00 -0400 Panel Pete Hunt (twitter github blog) Jordan Walke (twitter github) Joe Eames (twitter github blog) AJ O’Neal (twitter github blog) Jamison Dance (twitter github blog) Merrick Christensen (twitter github) Charles Max Wood (twitter github Teach Me To Code Rails Ramp Up) Discussion 01:34 - Pete Hunt Introduction Instagram Facebook 02:45 - Jordan Walke Introduction 04:15 - React React - GitHub 06:38 - 60 Frames Per Second 09:34 - Data Binding 12:31 - Performance 17:39 - Diffing Algorithm 19:36 - DOM Manipulation 23:06 - Supporting node.js 24:03 - rendr 26:02 - JSX 30:31 - requestAnimationFrame 34:15 - React and Applications 38:12 - React Users Khan Academy 39:53 - Making it work Picks Ben Mabey: Clojure Plain & Simple (Jamison) JSConf 2013 Videos (Jamison) Kittens (Jamison) PBS Idea Channel (AJ) Free Trial SSL (AJ) OSX Wifi Volume Remote Control (AJ) js-git (Merrick) vim-airline (Merrick) MLS LIVE (Joe) Seraphina by Rachel Hartman (Joe) ng-conf (Joe) Hire Chuck (Chuck) GoToMeeting (Chuck) ScreenFlow (Chuck) syriandeveloper (Pete) jsFiddle (Pete) Hotel Tonight (Pete) Green Flash Brewery Beer: Palate Wrecker (Jordan) All Things Vim (Jordan) Next Week Grunt.js with Ben Alman Transcript JAMISON: Joe is Merrick’s personal assistant. CHUCK: [Laughter] MERRICK: No, we’re just in this little room and he had, he was like, “Yeah” JOE: Want me to freshen up your coffee, sir? [Chuckles] JAMISON: Feed me some tacos, Joe. [Laughter] [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.] [This podcast is sponsored by JetBrains, makers of WebStorm. Whether you’re working with Node.js or building the front end of your web application, WebStorm is the tool for you. It has great code quality and code exploration tools and works with HTML5, Node, TypeScript, CoffeeScript, Harmony, LESS, Sass, Jade, JSLint, JSHint, and the Google Closure Compiler. Check it out atJjetBrains.com/WebStorm.] CHUCK: Hey everybody and welcome to episode 73 of the JavaScript Jabber Show. This week on our panel, we have Joe Eames. JOE: Hey there. CHUCK: AJ O’Neal. AJ: Live again from Provo. CHUCK: Jamison Dance. JAMISON: Hey friends. CHUCK: Merrick Christensen. MERRICK: Hey guys. CHUCK: I’m Charles Max Wood from DevChat.TV and we have two special guests this week. Pete Hunt. PETE: Hey guys. CHUCK: And Jordan Walke. JORDAN: Hi. CHUCK: Since you guys haven’t been on the show before, do you want to introduce yourselves? We’ll have Pete go first. PETE: Sure. So my name’s Pete. I work on general React stuff these days. But my day job is building the Instagram web experience. If you go to Instagram.com, we have a bunch of frontend stuff you can play with and a bunch of backend infrastructure that supports all that. That’s what I mostly work on. We’re big users of React at Instagram so I ended up contributing a lot to the React core as well. JAMISON: So did you come from Instagram or from Facebook and then to work on Instagram? PETE: Well it was actually a pretty good story just in terms of the integration of the two companies. I was originally at Facebook for a couple of years and we acquired Instagram and they came in and they wanted to build a web presence. Facebook’s core competency is definitely web technologies and Instagram hasn’t historically focused on that. So we were able to take the Facebook web expertise and get Instagram up and running really quickly. I came from the Facebook side but the team is still very much a separate team, their own building, that kind of thing. So that’s my background. CHUCK: Awesome. JAMISON: Sweet. CHUCK: And Jordan? Full Article
al 074 JSJ Grunt with Ben Alman By devchat.tv Published On :: Fri, 06 Sep 2013 07:00:00 -0400 Panel Ben Alman (twitter github blog) AJ O’Neal (twitter github blog) Jamison Dance (twitter github blog) Ryan Florence (twitter github blog) Charles Max Wood (twitter github Teach Me To Code Rails Ramp Up) Discussion 01:34 - Ben Alman Introduction Bocoup 02:54 - “Cowboy” Cowboy Coder 06:53 - The Birth of Grunt Ender make rake jake 14:34 - Installing Globally & Plugins JSHint grunt-cli lodash async 20:43 - Managing the project and releasing new versions 22:32 - What is Grunt? What does it do? jQuery libsass SASS stylus 26:39 - Processes & Building Features node-task guard grunt-contrib-watch node-prolog 35:29 - The Node Community and reluctance towards Grunt 41:35 - Why the separation of task loading and configuration? 46:18 - Contributions and Contributing to Grunt 55:18 - What Ben would have done differently building Grunt Ease of Upgrade Picks Web Components (Ryan) Eliminate Sarcasm (Ryan) Bee and PuppyCat (Jamison) MONOPRICE (AJ) AJ O'Neal: Moving to GruntJS (AJ) The Best Map Ever Made of America’s Racial Segregation (Chuck) Clean Off Your Desk (Chuck) Polygon (Ben) My Brother, My Brother and Me (Ben) Echofon (Ben) Bocoup (Ben) Next Week Maintainable JavaScript with Nicholas Zakas Transcript RYAN: We’re potty training my son right now. So, I was up like eight times cleaning poo off of everything. [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.] [This podcast is sponsored by JetBrains, makers of WebStorm. Whether you’re working with Node.js or building the frontend of your web application, WebStorm is the tool for you. It has great code quality and code exploration tools and works with HTML5, Node, TypeScript, CoffeeScript, Harmony, LESS, Sass, Jade, JSLint, JSHint, and the Google Closure Compiler. Check it out at JetBrains.com/WebStorm.] CHUCK: Hey everybody and welcome to episode 74 of the JavaScript Jabber Show. This week on our panel, we have AJ O’Neal. AJ: I’m eating beef jerky. CHUCK: Jamison Dance. JAMISON: Hello. CHUCK: We have a special guest. I guess you’re a guest in filling in for Merrick and Joe and that’s Ryan Florence. RYAN: Hey, how’s it going? I don’t know if I can fill two shoes, but I will try. CHUCK: Well, you have two feet, right? RYAN: Okay. Well, that’s four shoes. CHUCK: [Chuckles] I’m Charles Max Wood from DevChat.TV. We also have another special guest and that is Ben Alman. BEN: Yo! What’s up, everyone? CHUCK: So, do you want to introduce your self, Ben, since you haven’t been on the show before? BEN: I’m Ben Alman. Oh, okay. [Laughter] AJ: That’s not conceited. RYAN: That’s really all he needs. BEN: That’s it. The show’s over, roll credits. So yeah, I’m Ben. You can find me online as @cowboy on Twitter or GitHub and I’m at BenAlman.com. And if you Google me, I have finally got enough SEO juice to beat the other Ben Alman who’s the Orthopedic Surgeon for sick children in Canada. So screw you, guy who helps sick kids. [Laughter] BEN: No, it’s cool. It’s cool, right? But for a while, I was like, “Damn this guy.” But I can’t do anything because he helps sick children. So there’s another Benjamin Alman out there doing things for society and me, I just code. So, I work at Bocoup. We’re at Bocoup.com. Our logo is a rooster, Bob the Rooster, and we make a lot of cool web and open web and open source stuff. And so, I do training there. I teach people JavaScript and jQuery. But I also work on open source tools. I spend a lot of my time, actually, behind the scenes in Node writing JavaScript, experimenting, R&D, writing tools, et cetera. CHUCK: Awesome. So, Full Article
al 077 JSJ Monocle with Alex MacCaw By devchat.tv Published On :: Fri, 27 Sep 2013 07:00:00 -0400 Panel Alex MacCaw (twitter github blog) Joe Eames (twitter github blog) Jamison Dance (twitter github blog) AJ O’Neal (twitter github blog) Charles Max Wood (twitter github Teach Me To Code Rails Ramp Up) Discussion 01:13 - Going Rogue Video 02:12 - Alex MacCaw Introduction 029 JSJ Bower.js with Alex MacCaw and Jacob Thornton JavaScript Web Applications: jQuery Developers' Guide to Moving State to the Client by Alex MacCaw The Little Book on CoffeeScript: The JavaScript Developer's Guide to Building Better Web Apps by Alex MacCaw 02:44 - Monocle Alternative for Hacker News 03:39 - Speed Alex MacCaw: Time to first tweet sinatra MVC Framework Synchronicity 10:48 - SEO Google Webmaster Tools The Google Webmaster Video on Single-page Apps / SEO Alex MacCaw: SEO in JS Web Apps 14:01 - The Social Aspect of Monocle/Community 17:09 - Caching 17:47 - Google Website Optimizer 18:26 - Responsiveness 21:00 - Client-side & Server-side 25:11 - Testing for Performance PageSpeed Insights 28:39 - The Design Process sinatra sequel 31:44 - Sourcing.io Sourcing.io Signup 34:15 - Inspiration Picks MicroFormat Tool (AJ) Google Markup Helper (AJ) Gmail Markup Schemas (AJ) OUYA (AJ) TowerFall (AJ) Final Fantasy 7 (emulator) Final Fantasy 7 (PC) (AJ) Sunlounger (Joe) Pebble Watch (Joe) ng-conf (Joe) Book Yourself Solid: The Fastest, Easiest, and Most Reliable System for Getting More Clients Than You Can Handle Even if You Hate Marketing and Selling by Michael Port (Chuck) Coder (Alex) List of Ig Nobel Prize winners (Alex) Next Week Working From Home Transcript ALEX: The rain in Spain falls mainly on the plain. [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.] [This podcast is sponsored by JetBrains, makers of WebStorm. Whether you’re working with Node.js or building the frontend of your web application, WebStorm is the tool for you. It has great code quality and code exploration tools and works with HTML5, Node, TypeScript, CoffeeScript, Harmony, LESS, Sass, Jade, JSLint, JSHint, and the Google Closure Compiler. Check it out at JetBrains.com/WebStorm.] CHUCK: Hey everybody and welcome to episode 77 of the JavaScript Jabber show. This week on our panel, we have Joe Eames. JOE: Hey there. CHUCK: Jamison Dance. JAMISON: Hey friends. CHUCK: AJ O’Neal. AJ: It'sa mia, it'sa AJ. CHUCK: I’m Charles Max Wood from DevChat.TV. And before I introduce our guest, I just want to make a quick announcement. Tomorrow as we’re recording this, so when you get this episode it will be last Friday, is my Freedom Day. It’s the day I got laid off from my last full-time job and went freelance. So in honor of that, I’m putting together a video. I’ve called it ‘Going Rogue’. Yes, I know that there’s a political thing around that, whatever. Anyway, I called it ‘Going Rogue’. You can get it at GoingRogueVideo.com. It’s basically the first year of me going freelance. I’ve just talked through how it all went. The mistakes I made, the things I learned, the things I did right, and just gave general advice to anyone who’s looking to go freelance. Or if you’re interested in some of the challenges that come with that, it’s a video that I’m putting together to kind of explain that. Like I said, it’s free. You can get it at GoingRogueVideo.com. Yeah, I’m pretty excited about it. I’m also excited about Freedom Day. Anyway, we also have a special guest today, and that’s Alex MacCaw. ALEX: How do you do? Thank you for having me. CHUCK: You’ve been on the show before, but it’s been almost a year. Do you want to introduce yourself again? ALEX: Well, I’m mostly a JavaScript programmer. Full Article
al 079 Lo-Dash with John-David Dalton By devchat.tv Published On :: Fri, 11 Oct 2013 10:02:00 -0400 The gang talks to Lo-Dash maintainer John-David Dalton about open source software, performant Javascript, Lo-Dash and Underscore Full Article
al 082 JSJ JSHint with Anton Kovalyov By devchat.tv Published On :: Fri, 01 Nov 2013 11:00:00 -0400 Anton Kovalyov joins the Jabber gang to talk about JSHint, linting, parsing, lexing and much more. Full Article
al 084 JSJ Node with Mikeal Rogers By devchat.tv Published On :: Fri, 15 Nov 2013 10:00:00 -0500 In this episode, the panelists talk Node with Mikeal Rogers. Full Article
al 087 JSJ TC39 with Alex Russell By devchat.tv Published On :: Fri, 13 Dec 2013 08:00:00 -0500 The panelists discuss TC39 with Alex Russell. Full Article
al 089 JSJ The Node Security Project with Adam Baldwin By devchat.tv Published On :: Fri, 27 Dec 2013 08:00:00 -0500 The panelists talk to The Node Security Project founder and organizer, Adam Baldwin. Full Article
al 092 JSJ The MEAN Stack with Ward Bell and Valeri Karpov By devchat.tv Published On :: Fri, 17 Jan 2014 08:00:00 -0500 The panelists discuss the MEAN stack with Ward Bell and Valeri Karpov. Full Article
al 093 JSJ The New York Times and JavaScript with Eitan Konigsburg, Alastair Coote and Reed Emmons By devchat.tv Published On :: Fri, 24 Jan 2014 08:00:00 -0500 The panelists discuss The New York Times and JavaScript with Eitan Konigsburg, Alastair Coote and Reed Emmons. Full Article
al 096 JSJ The Challenges of Large Single Page JavaScript Applications with Bart Wood By devchat.tv Published On :: Fri, 14 Feb 2014 08:00:00 -0500 The panelists talk to Bart Wood about large single page JavaScript applications. Full Article
al 097 JSJ Gulp.js with Eric Schoffstall By devchat.tv Published On :: Wed, 19 Feb 2014 08:00:00 -0500 The panelists talk to Eric Schoffstall, the creator of Gulp.js. Full Article
al 100 JSJ Centennial Episode Celebration By devchat.tv Published On :: Wed, 12 Mar 2014 10:00:00 -0400 The panelists celebrate their 100th episode! Full Article
al 106 JSJ Protractor with Julie Ralph By devchat.tv Published On :: Wed, 30 Apr 2014 09:00:00 -0400 The panelists talk to Julie Ralph about AngularJS's protractor. Full Article
al 113 JSJ Community Dynamics with Reginald Braithwaite By devchat.tv Published On :: Wed, 18 Jun 2014 09:00:00 -0400 The panelists talk to Reginald Braithwaite about the dynamics of the JavaScript community. Full Article
al 135 JSJ Smallest Federated Wiki with Ward Cunningham By devchat.tv Published On :: Wed, 26 Nov 2014 09:00:00 -0500 The Panelists talk to the creator of the Smallest Federated Wiki, Ward Cunningham. Full Article
al 139 JSJ The Mozilla Developer Network with Les Orchard and David Walsh By devchat.tv Published On :: Wed, 24 Dec 2014 09:00:00 -0500 The panelists talk about the Mozilla Developer Network with Les Orchard and David Walsh. Full Article
al 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
al 146 JSJ React with Christopher Chedeau and Jordan Walke By devchat.tv Published On :: Wed, 11 Feb 2015 09:00:00 -0500 The panelists talk to Christopher Chedeau and Jordan Walke about React.js Conf and React Native. Full Article
al 147 JSJ io.js with Isaac Schleuter and Mikeal Rogers By devchat.tv Published On :: Wed, 18 Feb 2015 09:00:00 -0500 The panelists talk to Isaac Schleuter and Mikeal Rogers about io.js. Full Article
al 158 JSJ Roots with Jeff Escalante By devchat.tv Published On :: Wed, 06 May 2015 09:00:00 -0400 02:30 - Jeff Escalante Introduction Twitter GitHub Carrot Creative 03:15 - Roots [GitHub] roots 05:20 - Static Sites vs Dynamic Sites Resource: Static vs Dynamic Websites Scale SEO (Search Engine Optimization) 13:47 - Plugins 15:48 - Multipass Compile Functionality JSX 20:27 - Roots vs Other Static Site Generators Technical Debt 22:31 - Netlify 26:22 - HTTPS Mathias Biilmann: Five Reasons you want HTTPS for your Static site Let's Encrypt Extended Validation Certificate (EV Certificate) Picks ECMAScript 6 — New Features: Overview & Comparison (Aimee) Jacob Kaplan-Moss: Keynote at Pycon 2015 (Aimee) Dr. Who (AJ) Power Rangers (AJ) Marvel Digital Comics Unlimited (Joe) GoFundMe (Joe) Netlify (Jeff) accord (Jeff) Contentful (Jeff) Full Article
al 165 JSJ ShopTalk with Chris Coyier and Dave Rupert By devchat.tv Published On :: Wed, 24 Jun 2015 11:00:00 -0400 02:43 - Dave Rupert Introduction Twitter GitHub Blog Paravel 03:42 - Chris Coyier Introduction Twitter GitHub Blog CSS-Tricks CodePen 06:24 - The ShopTalk Show and Podcasting @shoptalkshow “What do I learn next?” => “Just Build Websites!” Question & Answers Aspect 23:19 - Tech Is A Niche Paul Ford: What is Code? 29:51 - Balancing Technical Content for All Levels of Listeners Community Opinion 38:42 - Learning New CSS Tricks (Writing Blog Posts) Code Golf 41:54 - The Accessibility Project Adventures in Angular Episode #027: Accessibility with Marcy Sutton Anne Gibson: An Alphabet of Accessibility Issues 56:02 - Favorite & Cool Episodes ShowTalk Show Episode #091: with Jamison Dance and Merrick Christensen ShopTalk Show Episode #101: with John Resig ShopTalk Show Episode #157: with Alex Russell ShopTalk Show Episode #147: with Tom Dale ShopTalk Show Episode #123: Special Archive Episode from 2004 ShopTalk Show Episode #166: with Lisa Irish ShopTalk Show Episode #161: with Eric Meyer Picks FIFA Women's World Cup (Joe) Winnipeg (Joe) The Martian by Andy Weir (Joe) Zapier (Aimee) SparkPost (Aimee) dev.modern.ie/tools/vms (AJ) remote.modern.ie (AJ) Microsoft Edge (AJ) StarFox Zero for Wii U (AJ) Hot Plate (AJ) untrusted (AJ) Skiplagged (Dave) Judge John Hodgman (Dave) Wayward Pines (Chris) Sturgill Simpson (Chris) The Economic Value of Rapid Response Time (Dave) The Adventure Zone (Dave) React Rally (Jamison) Matsuoka Shuzo: NEVER GIVE UP (Jamison) DESTROY WITH SCIENCE - Quantum Loop (Jamison) Serial Podcast (Chuck) Ruby Remote Conf (Chuck) Full Article
al 167 JSJ TypeScript and Angular with Jonathan Turner and Alex Eagle By devchat.tv Published On :: Wed, 08 Jul 2015 11:00:00 -0400 02:27 - Alex Eagle Introduction Twitter GitHub Google 02:54 - Jonathan Turner Introduction Twitter GitHub Microsoft [Talk] Jonathan Turner: TypeScript and Angular 2 @ ng-conf 2015 [Talk] Jonathan Turner: TypeScript and Angular 2 @ Angular U 2015 03:30 - What is TypeScript? 04:40 - Google + Microsoft = <3 (Angular Adopting TypeScript) Rob Eisenberg AtScript Jonathan Turner: Angular 2: Built on TypeScript 07:18 - TypeScript Accommodating Angular TC39 Yehuda Katz Aurelia 09:28 - Surge of Interest in Adopting a Typechecker, Type System 14:21 - Angular: Creating a New Language Killing Off Wasabi - Part 1 (FogBugz Article) traceur 16:46 - The Angular 2 Component System and How it Uses New Annotations for Classes 18:01 - Annotations and Decorators 22:06 - TypeScript and Babel?; Adding New Features 25:25 - Non-Angular Users Adopting TypeScript Visual Studio Code 34:55 - Tooling and Setting Modes for Linting and Static Analysis 36:58 - Using Libraries Outside the TypeScript Ecosystem 38:11 - Type Definition Files 40:15 - Content of the Type System 43:19 - Duck Typing 45:12 - Getting People to Care about TypeScript 49:16 - The Angular and TypeScript Relationship Picks f.lux (Aimee) Jafar Husain: Functional Programming in Javascript (learnrx) (Aimee) Startup Timelines (Jamison) Friday Night Lights (Jamison) React Rally (Jamison) Evan Farrer: Unit testing isn't enough. You need static typing too. (Dave) AngularConnect (Joe) ng-click.com (Joe) mdn.io (Joe) Sonic Pi (Chuck) Error Prone (Alex) AudioScope-ng2 (Jonathan) The Nintendo World Championships (Jonathan) Full Article
al 177 JSJ UI Validation with Oren Rubin By devchat.tv Published On :: Wed, 16 Sep 2015 11:00:00 -0400 02:43 - Oren Rubin Introduction Twitter GitHub LinkedIn TESTIM.IO 05:43 - Testing Unit Testing End-to-end Testing Acceptance Testing Functional Testing Performance Testing 18:18 - Page Object(s) Locators 27:10 - Protractor & Selenium Zombie 32:06 - Checking UI (Screenshots) 37:04 - End-to-end > Full Coverage? 40:03 - When should you start testing? 42:21 - Cucumber 45:39 - Debugging Picks Paul Ford: 10 Timeframes (Jamison) Kishi Bashi - “In Fantasia” (Jamison) Matt Zabriskie (Jamison) http-backend-proxy (Aimee) repl.it (Aimee) React.js Training with Michael Jackson and Ryan Florence (Joe) React Rally (Joe) AngularConnect (Joe) ng-conf (Joe) Ruby Remote Conf Videos (Chuck) Angular Remote Conf (Chuck) 15 Minute Podcast Listener chat with Charles Wood (Chuck) Dave Haeffner: Elemental Selenium (Oren) CSS Secrets by Lea Verou (Oren) Cloudinary (Oren) Full Article
al 193 JSJ Electron with Jessica Lord and Amy Palamountain By devchat.tv Published On :: Wed, 06 Jan 2016 11:00:00 -0500 Get your JS Remote Conf tickets! Freelance’ Remote Conf’s schedule is shaping up! Head over here to check it out! 02:17 - Jessica Lord Introduction Twitter GitHub Blog 02:40 - Amy Palamountain Introduction Twitter GitHub Blog 03:14 - Electron Atom 04:55 - Cross-platform Compatibility 05:55 - Electron/Atom + GitHub 07:16 - Electron/Atom + React ? 07:57 - Use Cases for Electron muan/mojibar mafintosh/playback npm-scripts-gui Amy Palamountain: Building native applications with Electron @ Nordic.js 2015 15:09 - Creating Electron Apps on Phones 17:25 - Running a Service Inside of Electron Visual Studio Code Adventures in Angular Episode #44: Visual Studio Code with Erich Gamma and Chris Dias 19:46 - Making an Electron App Photon conors/photon Photon Components N1 24:09 - Sharing Code 27:40 - Plugins for Functionality electron-accelerator electron-packager electron-prebuilt 31:08 - Keeping Up-to-date/Adding Features 33:14 - Pain Points NuGet 36:22 - Using Electron for Native JavaScript Jabber Episode #186: JSJ NativeScript with TJ VanToll and Burke Holland PhoneGap Reactive Native NativeScript 39:48 - What is a “webview”? 42:12 - Getting Started with Electron 43:28 - Robotics/Hardware Hacking with Electron JIBO Picks Autolux - Future Perfect (Jamison) Move Fast and Break Nothing (Aimee) [egghead.io] Getting Started with Redux (Dave) Destructuring and parameter handling in ECMAScript 6 (Dave) JS Remote Conf (Chuck) Freelance Remote Conf (Chuck) React Remote Conf (Chuck) Pebble Time Steel (Chuck) UglyBaby Etsy Shop (Amy) Jimmy Fallon: Kid Theater with Tom Hanks (Jessica) Full Article
al 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
al 205 JSJ Shasta with Eric Schoffstall By devchat.tv Published On :: Wed, 30 Mar 2016 09:00:00 -0400 02:28 - Eric Schoffstall Introduction Twitter GitHub Blog Instagram 02:59 - shasta Dan Abramov tahoe 07:20 - Getting Started github.com/shastajs/boilerplate 08:20 - Solidifying on Best Practices 10:37 - Made to Work Together vs Made to be Neatly Modular 11:19 - shasta and redux 12:01 - shasta Ideals Opinions Immutable.js 15:07 - Making Choices 17:35 - redux-thunk, redux-saga 19:01 - Lessons Learned from gulp.js Open Source Marketing 23:55 - redux-router 25:20 - React-Specific vs Agnostic Lazer Team 27:35 - Experimentation with shasta 29:50 - Relay and GraphQL Conflict 31:31 - Swapability 35:30 - The Future of front-end development in JavaScript; Where shasta fits in mercury Victor Savkin: Managing State in Angular 2 Applications Picks Victor Savkin: Managing State in Angular 2 Applications (Joe) Lazer Team (Joe) Big Black Delta (Jamison) Learning to Use Google Analytics More Effectively at CodePen (Jamison) Thing Explainer: Complicated Stuff in Simple Words by Randall Munroe (Dave) Soft Skills Engineering Podcast (Dave) RevolutionConf 2016 (Aimee) [Frontend Masters] Functional-Lite JavaScript (Aimee) Lush Cosmetics (Aimee) horizon (Eric) Shannon and the Clams - Rip Van Winkle (Eric) shasta (Eric) Full Article
al 210 JSJ The 80/20 Guide to ES2015 Generators with Valeri Karpov By devchat.tv Published On :: Wed, 04 May 2016 09:00:00 -0400 Check out React Remote Conf 01:56 - Valeri Karpov Introduction Twitter GitHub Blog JavaScript Jabber Episode #92: The MEAN Stack with Ward Bell and Valeri Karpov 02:17 - Booster Fuels 03:06 - ES2015 Generators The 80/20 Guide to ES2015 Generators by Valeri Karpov co 05:47 - try-catch 07:49 - Generator Function vs Object The Fibonacci Sequence 10:39 - Generator Use Cases 12:02 - Why in ES6 would they come out with both native promises and generators? Koa 14:04 - yield star and async await 17:06 - Wrapping a Generator in a Promise 19:51 - Testing 20:56 - Use on the Front-end 22:14 - The 80/20 Guide to ES2015 Generators by Valeri Karpov and Tech Writing nightmare Professional AngularJS Picks Why and How Testing Can Make You Happier (Aimee) Pitango Gelato (Aimee) The Primal Blueprint by Mark Sisson (Chuck) The Primal Blueprint 21-Day Total Body Transformation (Chuck) acquit (Valeri) nightmare (Valeri) now (Valeri) The 80/20 Guide to ES2015 Generators by Valeri Karpov (Valeri) Full Article
al 214 JSJ Pebble with Heiko Behrens and François Baldassari By devchat.tv Published On :: Wed, 01 Jun 2016 09:00:00 -0400 Check out Newbie Remote Conf! 02:11 - Heiko Behrens Introduction Twitter GitHub Blog 02:42 - François Baldassari Introduction Twitter GitHub 03:04 - JavaScript and Pebble Espruino jerryscript 06:40 - Watch vs Phone Pebble.js 09:32 - Memory Constraints and Code Size Limitations APIs rockyjs tween.js 26:24 - Advantages of Writing in JavaScript 32:09 - Capabilities of the Watch iPhreaks Episode #153: Using Mobile Devices to Manage Diabetes with Scott Hanselman 37:08 - Running Web Servers 39:29 - Resources rockyjs Newsletter Pebble Slack Channel Pebble Developer Page @PebbleDev Pebble TicToc Source 41:58 - Voice Capabilities 43:06 - UI For the Round Face vs Square Face 46:18 - Future Pebble Milestones Picks Vortex Poker 3 (Jamison) Thao & The Get Down Stay Down (Jamison) Maciej Ceglowski: Barely succeed! It's easier! (Jamison) The Way of Kings Trilogy by Brandon Sanderson (Joe) Juniors Are Awesome (Aimee) octotree (Aimee) Fully Alive by Ken Davis (Chuck) Sara Soueidan (Heiko) Jake Archibald: Using the service worker (Heiko) beyond tellerrand’s Videos (Heiko) Fabien Chouteau: Make with Ada: Formal proof on my wrist (François) pebble.rs (François) The World of Yesterday by Stefan Zweig (François) See Also iPhreaks Show Episode #146: Pebble with Heiko Behrens and Daniel Rodríguez Troitiño Full Article
al 216 JSJ Angular with Rob Wormald Live from Microsoft Build 2016 By devchat.tv Published On :: Wed, 15 Jun 2016 09:00:00 -0400 This episode was recorded live from The Microsoft Build Conference 2016. In this episode we chatted with Rob Wormald of the Angular Core team at Google about Angular. You can follow him on Twitter, or check out what he’s done over on GitHub. Picks Visual Studio Code (Rob) Service Workers (Rob) Richard Campbell and Carl Franklin from .NETRocks (Chuck) Full Article
al 221 JSJ Visual Studio Code with Wade Anderson Live From Microsoft Build 2016 By devchat.tv Published On :: Wed, 20 Jul 2016 09:00:00 -0400 This episode was recorded live from The Microsoft Build Conference 2016. In this episode we chatted with Wade Anderson of Microsoft about Visual Studio Code. You can follow him on Twitter, or check out what he’s done over on GitHub. Picks Parks and Recreation (Wade) VidAngel (Wade) A special thanks again goes out to Richard Campbell and Carl Franklin from .NETRocks for putting this podcast series together! You rock! Full Article
al 222 JSJ Nodal with Keith Horwood By devchat.tv Published On :: Wed, 27 Jul 2016 09:00:00 -0400 02:35 - Keith Horwood Introduction Twitter GitHub Blog Polybit 02:50 - Nodal | nodal The LAMP Stack Node.js Django Rails 05:41 - Frameworks 07:56 - Async Flow; Callback Execution Brian LeRoux 10:29 - Nodal Use Cases 13:11 - GraphQL 15:07 - PostgreSQL 17:56 - Developer Evolution github.com/poly/dotcom 24:05 - Scheduled Tasks and Migrations Sidekiq 28:57 - ORM Flexibility 33:14 - API Payloads 35:24 - The ORM 40:37 - Testing 43:10 - 1.0? 45:18 - Getting Started Picks The 2016 UtahJS Conference (Dave) Writing good code: how to reduce the cognitive load of your code (Aimee) Natural Calm (Aimee) Unplugging from technology (Chuck) #CodeNewbie (Chuck) Angular Remote Conf (Chuck) React Remote Conf (Chuck) Rails Remote Conf (Chuck) All Remote Confs (Chuck) React, IoT, Bots, APIs — Why Web Development Needs a Change (Keith) fortran-machine (Keith) Full Article
al 225 JSJ Functional Programming with John A. De Goes By devchat.tv Published On :: Wed, 17 Aug 2016 09:00:00 -0400 03:08 - John A. De Goes Introduction Twitter GitHub Blog SlamData 04:07 - PureScript JavaScript Jabber Episode #189: PureScript with John A. De Goes and Phil Freeman 04:58 - “Purely Functional” 09:18 - Weaknesses With Functional Programming Object-oriented Programming Procedural Programming 14:36 - Organizing a FP Codebase John A. De Goes: A Modern Architecture for FP 17:54 - Beginners and Functional Programming; Getting Started Learning About the History of Functional Programming Hiring Junior Devs to do FP 28:20 - The Rise of Functional Programming in JavaScript-land 32:08 - Handling Existing Applications 36:03 - Complexity Argument 41:53 - Weighing Language Tradeoffs; Alt.js Picks Nadia Odunayo: The Guest: A Guide To Code Hospitality @ RailsConf 2016 (Aimee) React Rally (Jamison) Cleanup Algorithm (Jamison) PostgreSQL Exercises (Jamison) iPad Pro (Chuck) Smart Keyboard for iPad Pro (Chuck) Apple Pencil (Chuck) GoodNotes (Chuck) John A. De Goes: Halogen: Past, Present, and Future (John) slamdata (John) Full Article
al 230 JSJ Node at Capital One with Azat Mardan By devchat.tv Published On :: Wed, 21 Sep 2016 08:00:00 -0400 00:51 Jameson is looking for clients who need front and back end code for apps; @Jergason (Contact him via Direct Message) 04:40 An explanation of Capital One and its operations 6:06 How many Capital One developers are using Node and how it is being implemented 10:30 Process of approval for app/website development 14:15 How the culture at Capital One affects technology within the company 18:25 Using Javascript libraries to manage different currencies 19:40 Venmo and its influence on banking 22:32 Whether banks are prepared to operate in a cashless society 29:44 Using HTML and Javascript for updating projects or creating new ones 35:21 Who picks up Javascript easily and why: “It’s more about grit than raw intelligence.” 44:00 Upgrading via open source codes 45:40 The process for hiring developers 51:35 Typescript vs. non-typescript PICKS: “Nerve” Movie Brave Browser “Stranger Things” on Netflix Angular 2 Class in Ft. Lauderdale, Discount Code: JSJ “Strategy for Healthier Dev” blog post Health-Ade Beet Kombucha “The Adventure Zone” podcast On the Cruelty of Really Teaching Computer Science article by E.W. Dijkstra “The Freelancer Show” podcast “48 Days” podcast Node.university Azat Mardan’s Website Azat Mardan on Twitter CETUSA – Foreign exchange program Full Article
al 232 JSJ GunDB and Databases with Mark Nadal By devchat.tv Published On :: Wed, 05 Oct 2016 08:00:00 -0400 03:45 What makes the Gun database engine special 07:00 Defining a database 12:58 The CAP Theorem 22:56 What Graphs are and how they function (circular references) 30:32 Gun and rotational disk systems 32:08 Gun’s optimizations for performance in ensuing versions 39:55 The prevalence of open source companies 42:45 Further discussing the CAP Theorem and its nuances 50:33 Gun’s purpose and design 52:13 What a Firebase is 54:22 How to get started with Gun - Visit Gun Tutorial, Gun's Github Page, and Gun Node Module QUOTES: “I think the database should bend to your application’s demands, rather than you having to bend to the database’s demands.” –Mark Nadal “…The protocol that GUN defines is something that can be implemented in any language. Because GUN is in the language, you don’t have the context which latency of having to make an HTTP call or socket request…” –AJ O’Neill “Let’s demystify the black magic of CAP.” –Mark Nadal PICKS: Dan North’s Deliberate Learning Video 8Tracks Internet Radio Pokemon Indigo League on Netflix Daplie Personal Cloud Young Frankenstein Movie Mystic Vale Card Game JS Remote Conference React Remote Conference Farm Heroes Super Saga Game App Full Article
al 238 JSJ Intellectual Property and Software Forensics with Bob Zeidman By devchat.tv Published On :: Wed, 16 Nov 2016 08:00:00 -0500 TOPICS: 03:08 The level of difficulty in determining code creators on the Internet 04:28 How to determine if code has been copied 10:00 What defines a trade secret 12:11 The pending Oracle v Google lawsuit 25:29 Nintendo v Atari 27:38 The pros and cons of a patent 29:59 Terrible patents 33:48 Fighting patent infringement and dealing with “patent trolls” 39:00 How a company tried to steal Bob Zeidman’s software 44:13 How to know if you can use open source codes 49:15 Using detective work to determine who copied whom 52:55 Extreme examples of unethical behavior 56:03 The state of patent laws PICKS: Cognitive Bias Cheat Sheet Blog Post Bagels by P28 Foods Let’s Encrypt Indigogo Generosity Campaign Super Cartography Bros Album MicroConf 2017 MindMup Mind Mapping Tool Words with Friends Game Upcoming Conferences via Devchat.tv Good Intentions Book by Bob Zeidman Horror Flick Book by Bob Zeidman Silicon Valley Napkins Full Article
al 240 JSJ Visual Studio Code with Chris Dias By devchat.tv Published On :: Wed, 30 Nov 2016 08:00:00 -0500 Previous Episodes with Visual Studio Code’s Team: JSJ Episode 199, Visual Studio Code with Chris Dias and Erich Gamma JSJ Episode 221, Visual Studio Code with Wade Anderson 1:45 - What’s new at Visual Studio Code Visual Studio Code’s Twitter VS Code Github Chris Dias’ Twitter Chris Dias’ Github 3:42 - Confusion with Javascript versus separate languages 7:15 - Choosing your tools carefully 8:20 - Integrated shell and docker extensions 12:05 - Agar.io Extensions and extension packs 16:15- Deciding what goes into Visual Studio Code and what becomes an extension 18:20 - Using Github Issues and resolving user complaints 22:08 - Why do people stray away from VS proper? 23:10 - Microsoft and VS legacy 27:00 - Man hours and project development 31:30 - The Visual Studio default experience 37:10 - What are people writing with VS Code? 39:20 - Community versus developer views of VS Code 41:40 - Using Electron 44:00 - Updating the system 44:50 - How is Visual Code written? 48:00 - The future of Visual Code Studios https://github.com/microsoft/vscode/issues Picks: Don McMillan (AJ) Daplie Wefunder (AJ) Daplie (AJ) Facebook feed blocker plug-in (Charles) Tab Wrangler (Charles) Smart Things (Chris) Wood Pizza Ovens (Chis) PJ Mark, Chris’ friend and marketer (Chris) Full Article
al 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
al 244 JSJ Visual Studio with Sam Guckenheimer By devchat.tv Published On :: Wed, 28 Dec 2016 08:00:00 -0500 1:05 - Introducing Sam Guckenheimer Twitter Microsoft Devops 2:45 - Continuous integration with Visual Studio 4:15 - Visual Studio on Macs Download link 5:55 - Is Visual Studio just for C#? Chris Dias JSJ Episode 8:45 - Container support and the Cloud 14:20 - Docker and Visual Studio 17:40 - Communicating with multiple services 24:15 - Talking to clients about change and working with transformation 33:00 - Telemetry and collecting data 37:50 - Xamarin forms 47:50 - Deployment with changed endpoints Picks: Daplie Wefunder (AJ) Unroll.Me (Charles) Focused Inbox on Outlook (Sam) WhiteSource (Sam) The Girl On The Train (Sam) The Pigeon Tunnel by John le Carre (Sam) Full Article
al MJS #002: Mark Nadal By devchat.tv Published On :: Thu, 26 Jan 2017 06:00:00 -0500 On today's episode of My JS Story, Charles Max Wood welcomes Mark Nadal. Mark runs GUN, an open source fire-based. He loves open source community that's why he focuses on it. On this, he shares how he got into the world of programming, and we'll find out how he feels about doing it. Tune in to MJS 002 My JS Story Mark Nadal. Full Article
al MJS #007: Mikeal Rogers By devchat.tv Published On :: Thu, 02 Mar 2017 06:00:00 -0500 On today's episode of My JS Story, Charles Max Wood welcomes Mikeal Rogers. Mikeal is the creator of NodeConf and request, community organizer at Node.js Foundation, and a co-host of RFC podcast. Tune in to My JS Story Mikeal Rogers to learn more about how he started in programming and what he is currently up to. Full Article
al JSJ 252 The 20th Anniversary of Visual Studio with Bowden Kelly By devchat.tv Published On :: Tue, 07 Mar 2017 06:00:00 -0500 Javascript Jabber is hosted this week by Joe Eames, Aimee Knight, AJ O'Neal, Cory House, Charles Max Wood and their special guest Bowden Kelly. Bowden is a program manager at Microsoft and he shares some insight into the new features in Visual Studio 2017 RTM with Bowden Kelly. Full Article