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

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151 JSJ Getting Started with a Career in Web Development with Tyler McGinnis

151 JSJ Getting Started with a Career in Web Development with Tyler McGinnis

02:21 - Tyler McGinnis IntroductionTwitter GitHub BlogDevMountain Programming Bootcamp@DevMtn Firebase Experts Program03:23 - Getting Started at DevMountainHack ReactorNeedle04:38 - DevMountain ConceptionCahlan Sharp05:37 - How Do I Learn How to Code?Struggle. Fail. Tears.[Confreaks] Tyler McGinnis: What I’ve Learned about Learning from Teaching People to Code08:03 - Resources => Consume ALL THE InformationKatya Eames[YouTube] Katya Eames: How to Teach Angular to your KidsA Smarter Way to Learn JavaScript: The new approach that uses technology to cut your effort in half by Mark Myers11:16 - Two Camps: Art (Creators) and Technicians <= Does DevMountain Cater to One or the Other?13:08 - Repetition as a Way to LearnThe Hard Way Series (Zed Shaw)Follow @lzsthw for book related news, advice, and politeness 15:23 - Letting People Struggle vs Helping Them    17:14 - Training/Finding Instructors / Teaching Teachers to be Better Teachers21:08 - Why Is JavaScript a Good Language to Learn?JSX24:11 - DevMountain Mentors26:30 - Student Success Stories28:56 - Bootcamp Learning EnvironmentsReact Week@reactweekRyan Florence34:11 - Oldest and Youngest Students (Success Stories Cont’d)37:18 - Bootcamp Alumni (Employment Rates and Statistics)Picks Costco Kirkland Brand Peanut Butter Cups (Dave) [Confreaks] Tyler McGinnis: What I’ve Learned about Learning from Teaching People to Code (Dave) [YouTube] Katya Eames: How to Teach Angular to your Kids (Dave) [YouTube] Misko Hevery and Rado Kirov: ng-conf 2015 Keynote 2 (Dave) Mandy’s Fiancé (AJ) [YouTube] Katya Eames: How to Teach Angular to your Kids (Joe) ng-conf Kids (Joe) Salt (Joe) [YouTube] Dave Smith: Angular + React = Speed (Tyler) [YouTube] Igor Minor: (Super)Power Management (Tyler) React.js Newsletter (Tyler) Dave Smith’s addendum to his talk (Joe)Special Guest: Tyler McGinnis. 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.

18 Maalis 201550min

150 JSJ OIMs with Richard Kennard, Geraint Luff, and David Luecke

150 JSJ OIMs with Richard Kennard, Geraint Luff, and David Luecke

Check out RailsClips on Kickstarter!! 02:01 - Richard Kennard IntroductionTwitter GitHubKennard ConsultingMetawidget02:04 - Geraint Luff IntroductionTwitter02:07 - David Luecke IntroductionTwitterGitHub02:57 - Object-relational Mapping (ORM)NoSQLDuplication10:57 - Online Interface Mapper (OIM)CRUD (Create, Read, Update, Delete) UI (User Interface)12:53 - How OIMs WorkForm GenerationDynamic GenerationStatic GenerationDuplication of DefinitionsRuntime Generation16:02 - Editing a UI That’s Automatically GeneratedShape Information => Make Obvious Choice23:01 - Why Do We Need These?25:24 - Protocol? Metawidget 27:56 - Plugging Into Frameworksbackbone-formsJSON Schema33:48 - Making Judgement CallsWebComponents, ReactJSON APIAngularJS49:27 - Example OIMsJSON SchemaMetawidgetJsonary 52:08 - TestingPicks The Legend of Zelda: Majora's Mask 3D (AJ) 80/20 Sales and Marketing: The Definitive Guide to Working Less and Making More by Perry Marshall (Chuck) A Wizard of Earthsea by Ursula K. Le Guin (Chuck) Conform: Exposing the Truth About Common Core and Public Education by Glenn Beck (Chuck) Miracles and Massacres: True and Untold Stories of the Making of America by Glenn Beck (Chuck) 3D Modeling (Richard) Blender (Richard) Me3D (Richard) Bandcamp (David) Zones of Thought Series by Vernor Vinge (David) Citizenfour (Geraint) Solar Fields (Geraint) OpenPGP.js (Geraint) forge (Geraint)Special Guests: David Luecke, Geraint Luff, and Richard Kennard. 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.

11 Maalis 20151h 2min

149 JSJ Passenger Enterprise with Node.js with Hongli Lai and Tinco Andringa

149 JSJ Passenger Enterprise with Node.js with Hongli Lai and Tinco Andringa

Check out RailsClips on Kickstarter!! 02:39 - Hongli Lai IntroductionTwitter GitHub BlogPhusion03:08 - Tinco Andringa IntroductionGitHub03:23 - Phusion Passenger[GitHub] passenger06:13 - Automationnginx08:37 - Parsing HTTP HeadersHooking12:44 - Meteor Support15:37 - Future Added Features?17:12 - Passenger EnterpriseRuby Rogues Episode #143: Passenger Enterprise with Tinco Andringa and Hongli Lai About Phusion Passenger Documentation & Support20:03 - Concurrency and Multithreading  MultiprocessingThe Cluster ModuleWebSocketspassenger_sticky_sessions23:33 - Setting Up on a Server for a Node.js ApplicationDebian Packages25:06 - 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 PolymerJavaScript Jabber Episode #120: Google Polymer with Rob Dodson and Eric BidelmanPolymer vs Facebook ReactPicks 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)Special Guests: Hongli Lai and Tinco Andringa. 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.

4 Maalis 201543min

148 JSJ i.cx and EveryBit.js with Matt Asher and Dann Toliver

148 JSJ i.cx and EveryBit.js with Matt Asher and Dann Toliver

02:24 - Dann Toliver IntroductionTwitter GitHub Bento Miso02:35 - Matt Asher IntroductionTwitter GitHub Blog02:51 - EveryBit.js and I.CX[GitHub] everybit.js EveryBit.js Whitepaper 03:43 - ArchitectureEpisode #135: Smallest Federated Wiki with Ward Cunningham06:54 - Sustainability and The Pieces of the SystemContent “Puffs”AuthenticationStorageFirebaseDistributed Hash Table (DHT)The Chord Algorithm (Peer-to-Peer)21:56 - DecentralizationSpace MonkeyMadesafe25:20 - Audience: Why Should I Care?27:38 - Getting Started: Nuts and BoltsFrontend AgnosticStorage and PerformanceUsers and Data ManagementPayload PropertiesMetadataGraph DatabaseAdding New RelationshipsAdding HeuristicsResource Allocator ComponentLocal StorageRAM34:55 - Scaling and Server Cost36:23 - Cloud Storage and Management (Security & Trust)HTTPSSSL ModelGPG Model“Proof of Presence”"Self-verifying"Namecoin Project47:22 - Implementing Cryptographic Primitivesbitcoinjs-lib    Key Management CryptographyOAuth55:13 - The Firefox Sync Tool ProjectPicks [Twitch.tv] Kylelandrypiano (Jamison) "Visualizing Persistent Data Structures" by Dann Toliver (Jamison) Probability and Statistics Blog (Jamison) Seeed Studio (Tim) Adafruit Industries (Tim) SparkFun Electronics (Tim) American Sniper by Chris Kyle, Scott McEwen, and Jim DeFelice (Chuck) Introducing Relay and GraphQL (Dann) The Clojurescript Ecosystem (Dann) Read-Eval-Print-λove (Dann) React Native (Matt)Special Guests: Dann Toliver and Matt Asher. 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.

25 Helmi 20151h 5min

147 JSJ io.js with Isaac Schleuter and Mikeal Rogers

147 JSJ io.js with Isaac Schleuter and Mikeal Rogers

The panelists talk to Isaac Schleuter and Mikeal Rogers about io.js.Special Guests: Isaac Schleuter and Mikeal Rogers. 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.

18 Helmi 20152min

146 JSJ React with Christopher Chedeau and Jordan Walke

146 JSJ React with Christopher Chedeau and Jordan Walke

The panelists talk to Christopher Chedeau and Jordan Walke about React.js Conf and React Native.Special Guests: Christopher Chedeau and Jordan Walke. 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.

11 Helmi 201557min

145 JSJ Meteor.js with Matt DeBergalis

145 JSJ Meteor.js with Matt DeBergalis

The panelists talk to Matt DeBergalis about Meteor.js.Special Guest: Matt DeBergalis. 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.

4 Helmi 20151h 6min

144 JSJ Marionette.js 2.0 with Sam Saccone

144 JSJ Marionette.js 2.0 with Sam Saccone

The panelists talk to Sam Saccone about Marionette.js 2.0.Special Guest: Sam Saccone. 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.

28 Tammi 201538min

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