JSJ 338: It’s Supposed To Hurt, Get Outside of Your Comfort Zone to Master Your Craft with Christopher Buecheler
JavaScript Jabber6 Marras 2018

JSJ 338: It’s Supposed To Hurt, Get Outside of Your Comfort Zone to Master Your Craft with Christopher Buecheler

Panel:
- http://www.aimeemarieknight.com
- AJ O’Neal
- Aaron Frost
- https://2013.boston.wordcamp.org/speakers/
Special Guests: https://www.linkedin.com/in/cwbuecheler In this episode, the panel talks with https://www.linkedin.com/in/cwbuecheler who is an author, blogger, web developer, and founder of CloseBrace. The panel and Christopher talk about stepping outside of your comfort zone. With a technological world that is ever changing, it is important to always be learning within your field. Check out today’s episode to learn more!Show Topics:0:00 – https://www.telerik.com/kendo-ui?utm_campaign=kendo-ui-awareness-jsjabber&utm_medium=social-paid&utm_source=devchattv 1:08 – Aimee: Our guest is Christopher Buecheler – tell us about yourself and what you do.1:22 – https://www.linkedin.com/in/cwbuecheler I run a site and help mid-career developers. I put out a weekly newsletter, too.2:01 – Aimee: It says that you are a fan of “getting comfortable being uncomfortable”?2:15 – Guest: I am a self-taught developer, so that means I am scrambling to learn new things all the time. You are often faced with learning new things. When I learned React I was dumped into it. The pain and the difficulty are necessary in order to improve. If you aren’t having that experience then you aren’t learning as much as you could be.3:26 – Aimee: I borrow lessons that I learned from ice-skating to programming.3:49 – Guest: I started running a few years ago for better health. It was exhausting and miserable at the start and wondered why I was doing it. Now I run 5 times a week, and there is always a level of being uncomfortable, but now it’s apart of the run. It’s an interesting comparison to coding. It’s this idea of pushing through.5:01 – Aimee: If you are comfortable you probably aren’t growing that much. In our industry you always have to be learning because things change so much!5:25 – Guest: Yes, exactly. If you are not careful you can miss opportunities.6:33 – Panel: You have some ideas about frameworks and libraries – one thing that I am always anxious about is being able to make sense of “what are some new trends that I should pay attention to?” I remember interviewing with someone saying: this mobile thing is just a fad. I remember thinking that she is going to miss this opportunity. I am worried that I am going to be THAT guy. How do you figure out what sort of things you should / shouldn’t pay attention to?7:47 – Guest: It is a super exhausting thing to keep up with – I agree. For me, a lot of what I pay attention to is the technology that has the backing of a multi-million dollar company then that shows that technology isn’t going anywhere, anytime soon. The other thing I would look at is how ACTIVE is the community around it?9:15 – Panel: Is there a strategic way to approach this? There is so many different directions that you can grow and push yourself within your career? Do you have any kinds of thoughts/tips on how you want your career to evolve?10:00 – Guest: I am trying to always communicate better to my newsletter audience. Also, a good approach, too, is what are people hiring for? 11:06 – Aimee: Again, I would say: focus on learning.11:30 – Panel: And I agree with Aimee – “learn it and learn it well!”12:01 – Panel: I want to ask Chris – what is https://blog.closebrace.com 12:17 – Guest: I founded it in November 2016, and started work on it back in 2013.14:20 – Panel: It was filled with a bunch of buzz worthy words/title.14:32 – Guest continues his thoughts/comments on https://blog.closebrace.com 16:54 – Panel: How is the growth going?17:00 – Guest: It is growing very well. I put out a massive, massive tutorial course – I wouldn’t necessarily advice that people do this b/c it can be overwhelming. However, growth this year I have focused on marketing. I haven’t shared numbers or anything but it’s increased 500%, and I am happy about it.18:05 – Panel: Are you keeping in-house?18:13 – Guest: I think it would be cool to expand, but now it is in-house. I don’t want to borrow Egg Head’s setup. I would love to cover MORE topics, though.19:05 – Panel: You are only one person.19:08 – Guest: If I can get the site creating more revenue than I can hire someone to do video editing, etc.19:35 – Panel: I think you are overthinking it.19:45 – Guest.19:47 – https://sentry.io/welcome/ 20:47 – Guest.21:30 – Aimee: There are SO many resources out there right now. Where do you think you fit into this landscape?21:44 – The landscape is cluttered, but I feel that I am different b/c of my thoroughness. I don’t always explain line by line, but I do say how and why things work. I think also is my VOICE. Not my radio voice, but the tone and the approach you take with it.23:25 – Panel: I was trying to copy folks in the beginning of my career. And at some point I realized that I needed to find my own style. It always came down to the reasons WHY I am different rather than the similarities. Like, Chris, you have these quick hits on CloseBrace, but some people might feel like they don’t have the time to get through ALL of your content, because it’s a lot. For me, that’s what I love about your content.24:46 – Christopher: Yeah, it was intentional.25:36 – Panel: Good for you.25:49 – https://www.linkedin.com/in/cwbuecheler I am super device agnostic: Android, Mac, PC, etc. I have a lot of people from India that are more Microsoft-base.26:28 – Aimee: I think Egghead is pretty good about this...do you cover testing at all with these things that you are doing? It’s good to do a “Hello World” but most of these sites don’t get into MORE complex pieces. I think that’s where you can get into trouble. It’s nice to have some boiler point testing, too.27:18 – Guest answers Aimee’s question. 28:43 – Aimee: We work with a consultancy and I asked them to write tests for the things that we work with. That’s the value of the testing. It’s the code that comes out.29:10 – Panel: Can you explain this to me. Why do I need to write tests? It’s always working (my code) so why do I have to write a test?29:39 – Guest: When working with AWS I was writing...31:01 – Aimee: My biggest thing is that I have seen enough that the people don’t value testing are in a very bad place, and the people that value testing are in a good place. It even comes back to the customers, because the code gets so hard that you end up repeatedly releasing bugs. Customers will stop paying their bills if this happens too often for them.33:00 – Panel: Aimee / Chris do you have a preferred tool? I have done testing before, but not as much as I should be doing.33:25 – Aimee: I like https://jestjs.io and https://github.com/smooth-code/jest-puppeteer 33:58 – Guest: I like https://jestjs.io, too.34:20 – Aimee: Let’s go to PICKS!34:35 – https://devchat.tv/get-a-coder-job/ Links:
- https://www.javascript.com
- https://jquery.com
- https://reactjs.org
- https://elixir-lang.org
- http://elm-lang.org
- http://closebrace.com
- https://jestjs.io
- https://github.com/smooth-code/jest-puppeteer
- https://podflix.app
- https://github.com/wting/autojump
- https://brutalist-web.design
- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QrR_gm6RqCo
- https://balloonfiesta.com
- https://www.docz.site
- http://closebrace.com
- http://cwbuecheler.com
- https://www.linkedin.com/in/cwbuecheler
- https://github.com/cwbuecheler
- https://gomakethings.com
Sponsors:
-

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159 JSJ Why JavaScript Is Hard

159 JSJ Why JavaScript Is Hard

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13 Touko 201558min

158 JSJ Roots with Jeff Escalante

158 JSJ Roots with Jeff Escalante

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6 Touko 201539min

157 Moving Your Rendering Engine to React with Amit Kaufman and Avi Marcus

157 Moving Your Rendering Engine to React with Amit Kaufman and Avi Marcus

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29 Huhti 201552min

156 JSJ Soft Skills and Marketing Yourself as a Software Developer with John Sonmez

156 JSJ Soft Skills and Marketing Yourself as a Software Developer with John Sonmez

Check out ReactRally: A community React conference in Salt Lake City, UT from August 24th-25th!03:36 - John Sonmez IntroductionTwitter GitHub Simple ProgrammerThe Entreprogrammers PodcastSoft Skills: The Software Developer's Life Manual by John SonmezHow to Market Yourself as a Software Developer Course04:29 - Mastermind GroupsThink and Grow Rich: The Landmark Bestseller - Now Revised and Updated for the 21st Century by Napoleon Hill05:53 - “Soft Skills”Why Care About Soft Skills?People Skills FinancesFitness11:53 - Learned vs InnateLifting Limited BeliefsPractice14:14 - Promotion (Managerial) Paths The Peter Principle17:52 - “Marketing” Value: Give Away 90% / Charge For 10%Seeming “Spammy” (Resistance to Sell)Neil Patel's BlogDocumentation for YourselfAJ O'Neal: How to Tweet from NodeJS 29:53 - Get Up and CODE!#086: Figure Skating and Software Development with Aimee Knight#067: Weight Loss Plan for Charles (Max Wood)33:47 - Burnout Do the Work by Steven PressfieldThe War of Art: Break Through the Blocks and Win Your Inner Creative Battles by Steven PressfieldSystems and Habits (Routines)Methods of ExecutionGet John’s How to Market Yourself as a Software Developer Course for $100 off using the code JSJABBER Comment on this episode for your chance to win one of two autographed copies of Soft Skills: The Software Developer's Life Manual by John Sonmez Picks The Recurse Center (Jamison) Code Words Blog (Jamison) DayZ Player Sings (And Plays Guitar) For His Life (Jamison) Demon (Jamison) Mastodon: Leviathan (Jamison) Jan Van Haasteren Puzzles (Joe) Hobbit Tales from the Green Dragon Inn (Joe) AngularJS-Resources (Aimee) Superfeet Insoles (Aimee) Good Mythical Morning (AJ) The Magic of Thinking Big by David J. Schwartz (Chuck) Streak (John) The E-Myth Revisited: Why Most Small Businesses Don't Work and What to Do About It by Michael E. Gerber (John) Influence: The Psychology of Persuasion, Revised Edition by Robert B. Cialdini (John) Do the Work by Steven Pressfield (John) The War of Art: Break Through the Blocks and Win Your Inner Creative Battles by Steven Pressfield (John) Special Guest: John Sonmez. 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 Huhti 20151h

155 JSJ Webtorrent with Feross Aboukhadijeh

155 JSJ Webtorrent with Feross Aboukhadijeh

Support our Teespring campaign! Get your JavaScript Jabber unisex t-shirts, hoodies, ladies’-sized, and long-sleeve tees!02:01 - Feross Aboukhadijeh IntroductionTwitter GitHub Blog02:39 - Peer-to-Peer Background, Content Delivery Networks (CDNs)WebRTCPeerCDNBitTorrent09:43 - The BitTorrent Protocol and Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP)[YouTube] Feross Aboukhadijeh: WebTorrent (JSConf.Asia 2014) Distributed Hash Table (DHT)13:08 - WebTorrent = BitTorrent over WebRTCTransmission Control Protocol (TCP)The User Datagram Protocol (UDP)Session Traversal Utilities for NAT (STUN)17:22 - Where Do Original Files Come From?Tracker ServersBitTorrent Enhancement Proposal (BEP)21:23 - Opposition27:26 - Where is WebTorrent Going? (Use Cases)Instant.io[GitHub] instant.io29:52 - Live Broadcasts31:12 - Progression of BitTorrent Over TimeTechnical Decentralization35:03 - Same-Origin Policy 36:33 - Firefox Hello PicksJanuary 12th, 2016: Goodbye IE8 and IE9! (Dave) js-must-watch (Aimee) Headspace (Aimee) Popcorn Time (AJ) Steelheart (The Reckoners) by Brandon Sanderson (Chuck) Teespring (Chuck) Loop Drop by Matt McKegg (Feross) SceneVR by Ben Nolan (Feross) WebTorrent (Feross) node-nat-upnp (AJ) node-nat-pmp (AJ) simple-peer (Feross)Special Guest: Feross Aboukhadijeh. 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.

16 Huhti 201547min

154 JSJ Raygun.io Error Reporting and Workflow with John-Daniel Trask

154 JSJ Raygun.io Error Reporting and Workflow with John-Daniel Trask

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8 Huhti 201558min

153 JSJ Careers for Junior Developers with Aimee Knight

153 JSJ Careers for Junior Developers with Aimee Knight

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1 Huhti 20151h 6min

152 JSJ GraphQL and Relay with Nick Schrock and Joe Savona

152 JSJ GraphQL and Relay with Nick Schrock and Joe Savona

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25 Maalis 201539min

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