JSJ 345: Azure Devops with Donovan Brown LIVE at Microsoft Ignite
JavaScript Jabber25 Joulu 2018

JSJ 345: Azure Devops with Donovan Brown LIVE at Microsoft Ignite

Panel: Charles Max Woods Special Guests: Donovan Brown In this episode, the Charles speaks with Donovan Brown. He is a principal DevOps Manager with Microsoft with a background in application development. He also runs one of the nation’s fastest growing online registration sites for motorsports events DLBRACING.com. When he is not writing software, he races cars for fun. Listen to today’s episode where Chuck and Donovan talk about DevOps, Azure, Python, Angular, React, Vue, and much, much more!Show Topics:1:41 – Chuck: The philosophies around DevOps. Just to give you an idea, I have been thinking about what I want to do with the podcasts. Freedom to work on what we want or freedom to work where we want, etc. Then that goes into things we don’t want to do, like fix bugs, etc. How does Microsoft DevOps to choose what they want to do?2:37 – Guest: We want to automate as much as we can so the developer has less work. As a developer I want to commit code, do another task, rinse and repeating.Minutes and not even hours later then people are tweeting about the next best thing. Do what you want, where you want. Code any language you want.4:15 – Chuck: What has changed?4:19 – Guest: The branding changed. The name wasn’t the most favorite among the people. The word “visual” was a concerned. What we have noticed that Azure will let me run my code no matter where I am. If you want to run Python or others it can run in Azure.People didn’t need all of it. It comes with depositories, project management, and so much more! People could feel clumsy because there is so much stuff. We can streamline that now, and you can turn off that feature so you don’t have a heart attack. Maybe you are using us for some features not all of them – cool.7:40 – Chuck: With deployments and other things – we don’t talk about the process for development a lot.8:00 – Guest talks about the things that can help out with that.Guest: Our process is going to help guide you. We have that all built into the Azure tab feature. They feel and act differently. I tell all the people all the time that it’s brilliant stuff. There are 3 different templates. The templates actually change over the language. You don’t have to do mental math.9:57 – Chuck: Just talking about the process. Which of these things we work on next when I’ve got a bug, or a ...10:20 – Guest: The board system works like for example you have a bug. The steps to reproduce that bug, so that there is no question what go into this specific field. Let the anatomy of the feature do it itself!11:54 – Chuck comments.12:26 – Chuck: Back to the feature. Creating the user stories is a different process than X.12:44 – Guest – You have a hierarchy then, right? Also what is really cool is we have case state management. I can click on this and I expect this to happen...These are actual tasks that I can run.13:52 – Chuck: Once you have those tests written can you pull those into your CI?14:00 – Guest: “Manual tests x0.”Guest dives into the question. 14:47 – I expect my team to write those test cases. The answer to your question is yes and no.We got so good at it that we found something that didn’t even exist, yet.16:19 – Guest: As a developer it might be mind16:29 – Chuck: I fixed this bug 4x, I wished I had CI to help me.16:46 – Guest: You get a bug, then you fix a code, etc., etc. You don’t know that this original bug just came back. Fix it again. Am I in Groundhog Day?They are related to each other. You don’t have a unit test to tell you. When you get that very first bug – write a unit test. It will make you quicker at fixing it. A unit test you can write really fast over, and over, again. The test is passing. What do you do? Test it. Write the code to fix that unit test. You can see that how these relate to each other. That’s the beauty in it.18:33 – Chuck: 90% of the unit tests I write – even 95% of the time they pass. It’s the 5% you would have no idea that it’s related. I can remember broad strokes of the code that I wrote, but 3 months down the road I can’t remember.19:14 – Guest: If you are in a time crunch – I don’t have time for this unit test.Guest gives us a hypothetical situation to show how unit tests really can help.20:25 – Make it muscle memory to unit test. I am a faster developer with the unit tests.20:45 – Chuck: In the beginning it took forever. Now it’s just how I write software now.It guides my thought process.21:06 – Guest: Yes! I agree.22:00 – Guest: Don’t do the unit tests22:10 – Chuck: Other place is when you write a new feature,...go through the process. Write unit tests for the things that you’ve touched. Expand your level of comfort.DevOps – we are talking about processes. Sounds like your DevOps is a flexible tool. Some people are looking for A METHOD. Like a business coach. Does Azure DevOps do that?23:13 – Guest: Azure DevOps Projects. YoTeam. Note.js, Java and others are mentioned by the Guest.25:00 – Code Badges’ Advertisement25:48 – Chuck: I am curious – 2 test sweets for Angular or React or Vue. How does that work?26:05 – Guest: So that is Jasmine or Mocha? So it really doesn’t matter. I’m a big fan of Mocha. It tests itself. I install local to my project alone – I can do it on any CI system in the world. YoTeam is not used in your pipeline. Install 2 parts – Yo and Generator – Team. Answer the questions and it’s awesome. I’ve done conferences in New Zealand.28:37 – Chuck: Why would I go anywhere else?28:44 – Guest: YoTeam was the idea of...28:57 – Check out Guest29:02 – Guest: I want Donovan in a box. If I weren’t there then the show wouldn’t exist today.29:40 – Chuck: Asks a question.29:46 – Guest: 5 different verticals.Check out this timestamp to see what Donovan says the 5 different verticals are. Pipelines is 1 of the 5.30:55 – Chuck: Yep – it works on my Mac.31:04 – Guest: We also have Test Plant and Artifacts.31:42 – Chuck: Can you resolve that on your developer machine?31:46 – Guest: Yes, absolutely! There is my private repository and...33:14 – Guest: *People not included in box.*33:33 – Guest: It’s people driven. We guide you through the process. The value is the most important part and people is the hardest part, but once on33:59 – Chuck: I am listening to this show and I want to try this out. I want a demo setup so I can show my boss. How do I show him that it works?34:27 – Azure.com/devops – that is a great landing page.How can I get a demo going? You can say here is my account – and they can put a demo into your account. I would not do a demo that this is cool. We start you for free. Create an account. Let the CI be the proof. It’s your job to do this, because it will make you more efficient. You need me to be using these tools.36:11 – Chuck comments.36:17 – Guest: Say you are on a team of developers and love GitHub and things that integration is stupid, but how many people would disagree about...38:02 – The reports prove it for themselves.38:20 – Chuck: You can get started for free – so when do you have to start paying for it?38:31 – Guest: Get 4 of your buddies and then need more people it’s $6 a month.39:33 – Chuck adds in comments. If this is free?39:43 – Guest goes into the details about plans and such for this tool. 40:17 – Chuck: How easy it is to migrate away from it?40:22 – Guest: It’s GITHub.40:30 – Chuck: People are looing data on their CI.40:40 – Guest: You can comb that information there over the past 4 years but I don’t know if any system would let you export that history.41:08 – Chuck: Yeah, you are right.41:16 – Guest adds more into this topic.41:25 – Chuck: Yeah it’s all into the machine.41:38 – Chuck: Good deal.41:43 – Guest: It’s like a drug. I would never leave it. I was using TFS before Microsoft.42:08 – Chuck: Other question: continuous deployment.42:56 – When I say every platform, I mean every platform: mobile devices, AWS, Azure, etc.Anything you can do from a command line you can do from our build and release system. PowerShell you don’t have to abandon it.45:20 – Guest: I can’t remember what that tool is called!45:33 – Guest: Anything you can do from a command line. Before firewall. Anything you want.45:52 – Guest: I love my job because I get to help developers.46:03 – Chuck: What do you think the biggest mistake people are doing?46:12 – Guest: They are trying to do it all at once. Fix that one little thing.It’s instant value with no risks whatsoever. Go setup and it takes 15 minutes total. Now that we have this continuous build, now let’s go and deploy it. Don’t dream up what you think your pipeline should look like. Do one thing at a time. What hurts the most that it’s “buggy.” Let’s add that to the pipeline.It’s in your pipeline today, what hurts the most, and don’t do it all at once.49:14 – Chuck: I thought you’d say: I don’t have the time.49:25 – Guest: Say you work on it 15 minutes a day. 3 days in – 45 minutes in you have a CSI system that works forever. Yes I agree because people think they don’t “have the time.”50:18 – Guest continues this conversation.How do

Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/javascript-jabber--6102064/support.

Jaksot(735)

175 JSJ Elm with Evan Czaplicki and Richard Feldman

175 JSJ Elm with Evan Czaplicki and Richard Feldman

02:27 - Evan Czaplicki IntroductionTwitter GitHubPrezi 02:32 - Richard Feldman IntroductionTwitter GitHubNoRedInk02:38 - Elm @elmlang04:06 - Academic Ideas05:10 - Functional Programming, Functional Reactive Programming & Immutability16:11 - ConstraintsFaruk AteşModernizrThe Beauty of ConstraintsTypes / Typescript24:24 - Compilation27:05 - Signals start-app36:34 - Shared Concepts & Guarantees at the Language Level43:00 - Elm vs React 47:24 - IntegrationPortslunr.js52:23 - Upcoming Features54:15 - TestingElm-Test elm-check56:38 - Websites/Apps Build in ElmCircuitHub58:37 - Getting Started with ElmThe Elm Architecture Tutorial Elm Examples59:41 - Canonical Uses?01:01:26 - The Elm Community & ContributionsThe Elm Discuss Mailing ListElm user group SFStack Overflow ?The Sublime Text PluginWebStorm Support for Elm?Codagrunt-elm gulp-elmExtras & ResourcesEvan Czaplicki: Let's be mainstream! User focused design in Elm @ Curry On 2015 Evan Czaplicki: Blazing Fast HTML: Virtual DOM in ElmPicks The Pragmatic Studio: What is Elm? Q&A (Aimee) Elm (Joe) Student Bodies (Joe) Mike Clark: Getting Started With Elm (Joe) Angular Remote Conf (Chuck) Stripe (Chuck) Alcatraz versus the Evil Librarians (Alcatraz, No. 1) by Brandon Sanderson (Chuck) Understanding Comics: The Invisible Art by Scott McCloud (Evan) The Glass Bead Game: (Magister Ludi) A Novel by Hermann Hesse (Evan) The Design of Everyday Things: Revised and Expanded Edition by Don Norman (Richard) Rich Hickey: Simple Made Easy (Richard) NoRedInk Tech Blog (Richard)Special Guests: Evan Czaplicki and Richard Feldman. Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/javascript-jabber/donationsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacyBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/javascript-jabber--6102064/support.

2 Syys 20151h 9min

174 JSJ npm 3 with Rebecca Turner and Forrest Norvell

174 JSJ npm 3 with Rebecca Turner and Forrest Norvell

Don’t miss out! Sign up for Angular Remote Conf! 02:28 - Forrest Norvell IntroductionTwitter GitHub02:37 - Rebecca Turner IntroductionTwitter GitHub Blog03:05 - Why npm 3 Exists and Changes in npm 2 => 3DebuggingLife Cycle OrderingDeduplication08:36 - Housekeeping09:47 - Peer Dependency ChangesThe Singleton Pattern15:38 - The Rewrite Process and How That Enabled Some of the Changes Coming OutCJ Silverio: Npm registry deep dive @ Oneshot Oslo 22:50 - shrinkwrapping 27:00 - Other Breaking Changes?Permissions30:40 - Tiny Jewels33:24 - Why Rewrite?36:00 - npm’s Focus on the Front EndBower npm Roadmap 42:04 - Transitioning to npm 342:54 - Installing npm 344:11 - Packaging with io.js and Node.js 45:16 - Being in BetaPicks Slack List (Aimee) Perceived Performance Fluent Conf Talks (Aimee) Paul Irish: How Users Perceive the Speed of The Web Keynote @ Fluent 2015 (Aimee) Subsistence Farming (AJ) Developer On Fire Episode 017 - Charles Max Wood - Get Involved and Try New Things (Chuck) Elevator Saga (Chuck) BrazilJS (Forrest) NodeConf Brazil (Forrest) For quick testing: `npm init -y`, configure init (Forrest) Where Can I Put Your Cheese? (Or What to Expect From npm@3) @ Boston Ember, May 2015 (Rebecca) Open Source & Feelings Conference (Rebecca) bugs [npm Documentation] (Rebecca) docs [npm Documentation] (Rebecca) repo [npm Documentation] (Rebecca)Special Guests: Forrest Norvell and Rebecca Turner. Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/javascript-jabber/donationsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacyBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/javascript-jabber--6102064/support.

26 Elo 201556min

173 JSJ Online Learning with Gregg Pollack

173 JSJ Online Learning with Gregg Pollack

Check out Angular Remote Conf! 02:55 - Gregg Pollack IntroductionTwitter GitHubEnvy Labs@envylabsCode School@codeschool  Starter Studio05:19 - Code SchoolRails for ZombiesTry Ruby 06:49 - Course ContentCode School Angular.js CoursesBreaking the Ice with Regular ExpressionsThe Fundamentals of Design09:42 - Plots & Storylines11:40 - Code School vs Pluralsight 14:09 - Structuring CoursesFrontend vs BackendBuilding Blocks of Express.jsReal-Time Web with Node.js  Security & SandboxingabecedaryMocha18:21 - JavaScript.com Try jQuery Contributing to JavaScript.comLet Us KnowTry JavaScriptResources22:47 - Designing Exercises & ChallengesabecedaryChai30:31 - The Future of Online LearningThinkfulBloc.ioAirPairHackHands Smarterer34:01 - Teaching Best PracticesPicks Mr. Robot (Gregg) #ILookLikeAnEngineer (Aimee) Why we Need WebAssembly An Interview with Brendan Eich (Aimee) Raspberry Pi 2 Model B (AJ) Periscope (Chuck)Special Guest: Gregg Pollack. Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/javascript-jabber/donationsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacyBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/javascript-jabber--6102064/support.

19 Elo 201533min

172 JSJ NodeSchool with Jason Rhodes

172 JSJ NodeSchool with Jason Rhodes

Check out Angular Remote Conf! 02:22 - Jason Rhodes IntroductionTwitter GitHub BlogSparkPostNodeSchool@nodeschool GitHub: NodeSchoolcharmCityJS@charmcityjs 03:46 - NodeSchoolJason Rhodes: A Story About NodeSchool and Community Building at CascadiaJS 2014Jason Rhodes: NodeSchool Trying Node AND Contributing @ Empire Node 201406:05 - “Workshopper(s)”07:13 - How Meetups Run (Format), Target Audience11:09 - Pair Programming and Peer Learning14:34 - Starting a NodeSchool Chapter15:53 - Implementing Diversity18:07 - Mentoring and Mentorship20:49 - Time Commitment and Effort24:02 - Appealing to All Experience Levels of Attendees26:48 - The NodeSchool Community30:45 - Being a Member of an Open Source CommunityPicks Better Off Ted (Joe) Cat Exercise Wheel (Aimee) That Conference (Joe) primitive.io (Joe) React Rally (Aimee) Falcor YouTube Playlist (Aimee) javascriptjabber.com/15minutes (Chuck) Entreprogrammers Retreat 2015  (Chuck) Love Letter (Jason) charmCityJS (Jason) Mad Max: Fury Road (Jason)Special Guest: Jason Rhodes. Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/javascript-jabber/donationsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacyBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/javascript-jabber--6102064/support.

12 Elo 201541min

171 JSJ Babel with Sebastian McKenzie

171 JSJ Babel with Sebastian McKenzie

02:28 - Sebastian McKenzie IntroductionTwitter GitHub Blog02:53 - Babel (Pronunciation Clarification)05:56 - HistoryLearn ES2015 - Babel09:14 - The State of Babel09:59 - Babel and the TC39 Process11:54 - Features That Can’t Be TranspiledWeak Maps and Proxies    13:45 - Readability and Performance OutputTraceur18:12 - Plugin Architecture19:58 - ES6/2015 Feature ImplementationBlockscopingLabelsExceptionsDestructuring25:49 - The Birth of Babel26:45 - Babel vs Traceur28:08 - Future Babel FeaturesCode OptimizationMinificationLinting30:15 - The Status of ES2015 and ES201631:01 - Browser Support35:03 - Marketing 35:59 - TypeScript 37:24 - Babel Development and LaborPicks Primitive.io (Joe) Armada: The Novel by Ernest Cline (Joe) How to Win Friends & Influence People by Dale Carnegie (AJ) Web Security Warriors Podcast (AJ) Nodevember (Aimee) The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy by Douglas Adams (Dave) Yellowstone National Park (Dave) React Rally (Dave) Iterativ: AngularJS Kurs (Chuck) Hire Thom Parkin! (Chuck) The Martian by Andy Weir (Sebastian) Five Guys Burgers and Fries (Sebastian)Special Guest: Sebastian McKenzie . Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/javascript-jabber/donationsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacyBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/javascript-jabber--6102064/support.

5 Elo 201547min

170 JSJ RabbitMQ with Derick Bailey

170 JSJ RabbitMQ with Derick Bailey

Check out RailsClips!   02:38 - Derick Bailey Introduction Twitter GitHub BlogEntreprogrammers RabbitMQ: Patterns for Applications by Derick Bailey 03:36 - RabbitMQrequest-response Messaging Pattern 05:22 - Synchronous/Asynchronous; Chronological/Non-Chronological 10:33 - Why Do JS Devs Care About RabbitMQ? 12:10 - RabbitMQ and Complexity 14:04 - RabbitMQ’s Model Pub/Sub - RedisEnterprise Integration Patterns: Designing, Building, and Deploying Messaging Solutions by Gregor Hohpe Exchanges, Queues, and Bindings 22:15 - Event Emitters, Organizing Your Code Documentation 31:18 - Service Busses & Monitoring Systems NServiceBus 32:58 - How do you decide you need a messaging system? 36:40 - When Applications Crash… 39:24 - Event Sourcing Kafka 44:05 - Fault Tolerance/Failure Cases “Just let it fail” 50:21 - Putting RabbitMQ in Place SchedulingLong Wait vs Short Wait 58:28 - Formatting Your Messages RabbitMQ: Patterns for Applications by Derick Bailey 01:04:13 - “Saga” (Workflow) 01:05:10 - RabbitMQ For DevelopersUse code JSJABBER for 20% off the bundle! Picks W3Schools (AJ)1984 by George Orwell (AJ) The edit button on the MDN page (AJ)[YouTube] W3Schools is just... Better (AJ)The Go Programming Language (AJ)[YouTube] Go Programming: Learn the Go Programming Language in One Video (AJ)hackthe.computer (AJ)Maze Algorithm (AJ)A* Algorithm (AJ)React Rally (Jamison)Web Design: The First 100 Years (Jamison)Evan Czaplicki: Let's be mainstream! User focused design in Elm @ Curry On Prague 2015 (Jamison)Paracord (Chuck)Soto Pocket Torch (Chuck)Exploring ES6: Upgrade to the next version of JavaScript by Dr. Axel Rauschmayer (Derick)Small World (Derick)Star Wars Darth Bane Trilogy (Derick)LEGO Star Wars The Empire Strikes Back Slave I Set #75060 (Derick)Special Guest: Derick Bailey. Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/javascript-jabber/donationsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacyBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/javascript-jabber--6102064/support.

29 Heinä 20151h 21min

169 JSJ Property-based Testing (QuickCheck) with Zach Kessin

169 JSJ Property-based Testing (QuickCheck) with Zach Kessin

02:20 - Zach Kessin IntroductionTwitter GitHub Zach's BooksParrotJavaScript Jabber: Episode #057: Functional Programming with Zach KessinTesting Erlang With Quickcheck Book04:00 - Mostly Erlang Podcast 05:27 - Property-based Testing (QuickCheck)07:22 - Property-based Testing and Functional Programmingjsverify 09:48 - Pure FunctionsShrinking18:09 - Boundary Cases20:00 - Generating the Data23:23 - Trending Concepts in JavaScript32:33 - How Property-based Testing Fits in with Other Kind of Testing35:57 - Test FailuresPanel Nolan Lawson: Taming the asynchronous beast with ES7 (Aimee) Nodevember (Aimee) Hipster Sound (Jamison) Om Next by David Nolen (Jamison) Gallant - Weight In Gold (Jamison) React Rally (Jamison) Better Off Ted (Joe) Armada: A Novel by Ernest Cline (Joe) Testing Erlang With Quickcheck Book (Zach) Parrot Universal Notification Interface (Zach) The Famine of Men by Richard H. Kessin (Zach)Special Guest: Zach Kessin. Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/javascript-jabber/donationsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacyBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/javascript-jabber--6102064/support.

22 Heinä 201545min

168 JSJ The Future of JavaScript with Jafar Husain

168 JSJ The Future of JavaScript with Jafar Husain

03:04 - Jafar Husain IntroductionTwitter GitHubNetflixTC3903:29 - The Great Name Debate (ES6, ES7 = ES2015, ES2016!!)05:35 - The Release CycleWhat This Means for Browsers08:37 - Babel and ECMAScript 09:50 - WebAssembly 13:01 - Google’s NACL 13:23 - Performance > Features?ES6 Feature Performance (JavaScript Weekly Article) Features Implemented as Polyfills (Why Bother?)20:12 - TC39 24:22 - New FeaturesDecoratorsPerformance Benefit?28:53 -Transpilers34:48 - Object.observe() 37:51 - Immutable Types 45:32 - Structural Types47:11 - Symbols48:58 - Observables52:31 - Async Functionsasyncawait57:31 - Rapid Fire Round - When New Feature Will Be Released in ES2015 or ES2016let - 15for...of - 15modules - 15destructuring - 15promises - 15default function argument expressions - 15asyncawait - 16Picks ES6 and ES7 on The Web Platform Podcast (AJ) Binding to the Cloud with Falcor Jafar Husain (AJ) Asynchronous JavaScript at Netflix by Jafar Husain @ MountainWest Ruby 2014 (AJ) Let's Encrypt on Raspberry Pi (AJ) adventures in haproxy: tcp, tls, https, ssh, openvpn (AJ) Let's Encrypt through HAProxy (AJ) Mandy's Fiancé's Video Game Fund (AJ) The Murray Gell-Mann Amnesia Effect (Dave) The Majority Illusion (Dave) [Egghead.io] Asynchronous Programming: The End of The Loop (Aimee) Study: You Really Can 'Work Smarter, Not Harder' (Aimee) Elm (Jamison) The Katering Show (Jamison) Sharding Tweet (Jamison) The U.S. Women's National Soccer Team (Joe) mdn.io (Joe) Aftershokz AS500 Bluez 2 Open Ear Wireless Stereo Headphones (Chuck) Autonomy, Mastery, Purpose: The Science of What Motivates Us, Animated (Jafar) Netflix (Jafar) quiescent (Jafar) Clojurescript (Jafar)Special Guest: Jafar Husain. Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/javascript-jabber/donationsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacyBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/javascript-jabber--6102064/support.

15 Heinä 20151h 17min

Suosittua kategoriassa Liike-elämä ja talous

sijotuskasti
psykopodiaa-podcast
mimmit-sijoittaa
rss-rahapodi
ostan-asuntoja-podcast
rss-lahtijat
pomojen-suusta
taloudellinen-mielenrauha
rahapuhetta
io-techin-tekniikkapodcast
oppimisen-psykologia
rss-seuraava-potilas
inderespodi
kasvun-kipuja
sijoituspodi
hyva-paha-johtaminen
rss-markkinointiradio
leadcast
kultaiset-hoitajat
rss-rikasta-elamaa