A show discussing whiskey, web development, and a wide range of whatnot. By the folks at Ship Shape (https://shipshape.io).
The Missteps of GraphQL and the Promise of Progressive Enhancement
In this episode of 'Whiskey, Web, and Whatnot', hosts RobbieTheWagner and Charles William Carpenter III debate podcast names, discuss the feasibility of creating a company, and share insights on tech projects like Biome and Shepherd. They also talk about the importance of leveraging built-in features in tech systems, their take on tech wars, thoughts about the future of JavaScript, and more. Accompanying their tech-related discussions are whiskey tasting notes on Sweetens Cove, Tennessee Straight Bourbon Whiskey.
Key Takeaways
[00:37] - The Reality of Being a CEO
[01:39] - The Mystery of HTMX
[02:16] - Whiskey Tasting: Sweetens Cove
[03:06] - The Science of Whiskey Aging
[03:21] - The Curious Case of Soft Water
[03:42] - Pop Culture References and Whiskey
[07:33] - Whiskey Rating and Review
[15:52] - Tech Talk: GraphQL and Sidebar Placement
[20:23] - The Future of OpenAI
[26:47] - Social Media Algorithms and Engagement
[29:12] - Ubuntu Server and Daily Use Challenges
[30:08] - Exploring Framework Laptops and Modular Tech
[30:52] - The Linux User Experience: A Developer's Perspective
[32:32] - The Pros and Cons of Arch Linux
[33:31] - The Future of Linux and the Framework Laptop
[34:08] - The Struggles of App Development on Ubuntu
[36:27] - The Rise of New JavaScript Runtimes
[37:45] - Exploring Biome: A New Web API Framework
[49:39] - The Future of Shepherd: A Library for Web APIs
[55:19] - Christmas Shopping Habits and Affiliate Programs
Connect with our hosts
Robbie Wagner
Chuck Carpenter
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Help support us by picking up some of our fresh merch at
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2/1/2024 • 1 hour, 2 minutes, 22 seconds
Monthly Malarkey: JavaScript Modules, HTML, and Ryan Reynolds
In this episode of Whiskey Web and Whatnot, hosts RobbieTheWagner and Charles William Carpenter III dive into their experiences with the Astro framework and discuss the challenges with JavaScript module types. They also share insights on managing work life around their families and house pets.
The casual conversation continues with a discussion on TV series like 'The Last of Us', 'The Changeling', 'Wednesday', and 'Black Bird', as well as an interesting back and forth about international and domestic flight experiences. They sign off with some conjecture about the potential for AI, promising a more detailed conversation about this in the next episode.
Key Takeaways
[01:11] - Discussing Podcast Popularity and Listener Appreciation
[01:39] - Exploring the Challenges of Explaining Podcasts to Older Generations
[02:25] - Whiskey Tasting Session: Never Sink Spirits Bourbon Whiskey
[11:27] - Diving into the Complexities of JavaScript Modules
[14:44] - Exploring the Potential of Astro for Web Development
[25:58] - The Power of Tailwind in Web Development
[26:24] - Offering Web Development Help to Local Fire Department
[28:44] - Discussing the Importance of SEO for Podcast Visibility
[30:23] - The Economics of Database Usage
[31:24] - The Business Model of Vercel
[32:40] - The Art of Infiltration and Persuasion
[34:20] - The Challenges of Switching to Vercel
[35:24] - The Entertainment Roundup
[35:46] - The Dark Side of the American Healthcare System
[47:29] - The Joys and Challenges of Hosting Christmas
[54:14] - The Pros and Cons of Moving to Italy
[01:00:34] - The Injustice of Airline Bailouts
Connect with our hosts
Robbie Wagner
Chuck Carpenter
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Spotify
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Whiskey Web and Whatnot
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Whiskey Web and Whatnot Merch
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1/25/2024 • 1 hour, 3 minutes, 14 seconds
Bearded Talks on Beardless Hosts: VSCode Sidebars, AI, and GraphQL with Kelly Vaughn
In this episode, hosts RobbieTheWagner and Charles William Carpenter III invite guest Kelly Vaughn for a casual discussion over a glass of Bardstown Fusion bourbon. The conversation meanders around various topics including podcasting, the concept of artificial intelligence, their favorite Taylor Swift songs, and owning sports cars. Kelly also talks about keynoting the THAT Conference in Texas and shares a preview of her presentation. Keep listening for their hot takes on tech Twitter fights and some humorous discussions!
Key Takeaways
[00:05] - Introduction and Hosts' Banter
[00:48] - Guest Introduction and Previous Episode Recap
[02:00] - Whiskey Tasting: Bardstown Bourbon Company Fusion Series
[04:11] - Whiskey Tasting: Flavor Notes and Ratings
[08:23] - Discussion on Whiskey Accessories and Sponsorships
[16:32] - Hot Takes: AI and Tech Debates
[22:49] - Hot Takes: GraphQL and Sidebar Placement
[31:44] - Cincinnati Chili Debate and Closing Remarks
[33:08] - A Tribute to Skyline Chili Employee
[34:20] - Fast Food Preferences and Discussions
[35:32] - Fast Food and Road Trips
[36:14] - Co-hosts Banter and Jokes
[37:05] - Upcoming Conference and Keynote Preparation
[39:55] - Car Enthusiast Conversations
[57:05] - Taylor Swift Fan Discussion
[01:01:15] - Work-Life Balance in Software Engineering
[01:02:43] - Closing Remarks and Future Plans
Links
Kelly Vaughn Twitter
Kelly Vaughn LinkedIn
Spot AI
Connect with our hosts
Robbie Wagner
Chuck Carpenter
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Whiskey Web and Whatnot Merch
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1/18/2024 • 1 hour, 4 minutes, 27 seconds
Tech Conferences, Remote Work and the Intersection of AI and Web Design with Clark Sell
In this episode of Whiskey Web and Whatnot, hosts RobbieTheWagner and Charles William Carpenter III invite Clark Sell onto the show. Clark, the founder of 'THAT Conference' and 'Unspecified', talks about the genesis of the conference, the current state of tech, and his use of artificial intelligence services likeGPT-3 and DALL-E.
The hosts and Clark also try out a new whiskey, discuss
football and their disdain for certain programming languages. Tune in to hear about the intersection of tech and whiskey, and get some insights into the future of AI and the tech industry.
Key Takeaways
[00:34] - Guest Introduction: Clark Sell
[02:05] - Whiskey Tasting Session
[07:11] - Hot Takes: Tech Debates
[17:08] - The Journey of That Conference
[23:45] - The Future of Tech and Conferences
[31:13] - The Reality of Being a Senior Developer
[31:26] - The Challenges of Job Hunting in Tech
[31:52] - The Impact of AI on Tech Jobs
[33:01] - The Shift to Remote Work
[34:05] - The Debate on Return to Office
[34:37] - The Rise of Online Personalities in Tech
[35:07] - The Influence of Social Media on Tech Careers
[35:42] - The Role of In-Person Interactions in Tech
[36:35] - The Controversy Around React
[37:30] - The Evolution of Web Development
[38:07] - The Debate on HTML as a Programming Language
[39:37] - The Impact of AI on Content Creation
[41:07] - The Influence of Cryptocurrency
[52:17] - The Role of AI in Education
[54:43] - The Future of AI in Content Generation
[58:37] - The Importance of Community Involvement in Tech
Links
Clark Sell Twitter
Clark Sell LinkedIn
THAT Conference
Unspecified
Connect with our hosts
Robbie Wagner
Chuck Carpenter
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1/11/2024 • 59 minutes, 52 seconds
Monthly Malarkey: Cat Pee Problems, French Cuisine and Halloween Costume Plans
Are you ready to swap the smooth strokes of a keyboard for the smooth taste of whiskey? Get set to be whisked away on a "Monthly Malarkey" adventure where H Derringer bourbon whiskey takes center stage, cork shaped like a trusty firearm and all. Sit back and sip along as we share our candid taste test findings, from the intricacies of its flavor profile to whether it truly deserves a spot on your top-shelf. But that's not all – join us as we dissect the online shopping landscape, hunting for those electrifying deals, and rev up the conversation with our thoughts on the latest electric vehicle trends.
Ever had a face-off with carpet stains and lived to tell the tale? In this episode, we share our own showdown with the notorious Stanley Steamer and our relentless pursuit to vanquish persistent pet odors. Parenting is tough enough without adding finicky food preferences into the mix, so we're also spilling the beans on our strategies for dealing with the dietary whims of little ones and the ever-present battle over screen time. Plus, we ponder the all-important question: To gaze or not to gaze into the camera? Your insights might just steer the future of our show.
As we roll out the red carpet for your ears, we recount an escapade through the cobblestoned streets of France, reliving the epicurean ecstasy and the occasional eyebrow-raising dish – oyster ice cream, anyone? We also get real about the pressures of dining in the lap of luxury and share a slice of our Halloween costume conundrums. So, whether you're here for the whiskey wisdom or to peek behind the curtain of our family dynamics, this episode is packed with laughter, revelations, and the kind of honest chatter that feels like a night in with your best pals.
Key Takeaways
[00:39] - Introducing a New Segment: Monthly Malarkey
[01:15] - Whiskey Web and Whatnot: Derringer Whiskey Review
[04:03] - The Whiskey Tasting Experience
[05:00] - Rating the Whiskey
[05:13] - The Price of Whiskey: Is it Worth it?
[08:11] - Moving into a New House
[08:56] - The Debate: Online Shopping vs In-Store Shopping
[15:06] - The Future of Electric Vehicles
[19:31] - The Stanley Steamer Story: A Moving Catastrophe
[27:40] - The Cost of Living and Inflation
[29:25] - Debate on Food Choices for Kids
[29:54] - The Struggles of Parenting Picky Eaters
[30:22] - The Challenges of Introducing New Foods to Kids
[30:59] - The Evolution of Kids' Food Preferences
[31:17] - The Dilemma of Meal Choices for Kids
[32:20] - The Impact of Screen Time on Kids
[33:12] - The Debate on Looking into the Camera
[34:13] - The Fun of Sending Unusual Gifts
[35:11] - The Benefits of Beflow Desks
[35:36] - The Importance of Cable Management
[37:59] - The Joy of Family in Lego
[42:59] - The Experience of Dining in France
[53:33] - The Excitement of Family Halloween Costumes
[57:39] - The Fascination of Kids with Video Games
Connect with our hosts
Robbie Wagner
Chuck Carpenter
Ship Shape
Subscribe and stay in touch
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Whiskey Web and Whatnot Merch
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1/4/2024 • 1 hour, 7 seconds
Hot Takes, Web Technologies, and Learning to Code with Ken Wheeler
Ken Wheeler is a software engineer with well over a decade of experience. He shares stories about his journey into tech, his life, and his hobbies.
Ken fell in love with coding as a kid, building his skills from QBasic to PHP and HTML. He recounts his transition from being a rap producer for a decade to stumbling upon a job listing for a web developer using Flash. After twisting the truth to get through the interview, he spent five years building local restaurant websites with Flash animations. Ken dives into some unfiltered hot takes from TypeScript to CSS and the ongoing debate of sidebar placement in VS Code. He shares his love for inferred types over explicit types, arguing in favor of TypeScript's Hindley-Milner type system.
In this episode, Ken talks to Robbie and Chuck about his thoughts on types, Tailwind and VS Code, his coding journey from QBasic to HTML as a kid, and his technique for landing his first job.
Key Takeaways
[00:48] - Introduction to Ken Wheeler.
[01:56] - A whiskey review: Basil Hayden Straight Bourbon Whiskey.
[19:03] - Tech hot takes.
[40:57] - Ken discusses his New Jersey roots and how he entered the tech field.
[49:51] - Chuck, Robbie, and Ken talk about cars.
[59:00] - Chuck’s plans to move to Italy.
[01:04:41] - Chuck, Robbie, and Ken discuss burgers and sandwiches.
Quotes
[19:20] - “Typescript is good. It's better than Javascript.” ~ Ken Wheeler
[34:50] - “A senior at dickhead.com is not the same as a senior at Google.com.” ~ Ken Wheeler
[37:48] - “Webpack actually isn’t that hard, believe it or not, if you just dig into it.” ~ Ken Wheeler
Links
Ken Wheeler LinkedIn
Ken Wheeler Twitter
OpenAI
Twitter
Formidable
Basil Hayden Straight Bourbon Whiskey
Sagamore Spirit Rye Whiskey
Buffalo Trace Distillery
Pappy Van Winkle
Maker’s Mark
Coors Light
Topgolf
Crocs
Timberland
The Ritz-Carlton
DoorDash
Taco Bell
Tabasco
Cholula
Tailwind CSS
Vanilla CSS
NPM
Shepherd JS
YAML
Serverless UI
Syntax.FM
Beflo
Joe Rogan Podcast
All-In Podcast
Darknet Diaries
Google
Amazon
Webpack
ChatGPT
Vite
NextJS
Airbnb
Ruby on Rails
Django
National Geographic
Juul
Marlboro
Oracle
Salesforce
jQuery
Versace
The North Face
Red Wing Shoes
Thursday Boot Company
Porsche
Jeep
Volvo
Solo Stove
Flex Seal
Inter Milan
Five Guys
Jersey Mike’s USA
In-N-Out
Shake Shack
First We Feast
Arby’s
Burger King
McDonald’s
React Miami
The Primeagen
Chick-fil-A
Connect with our hosts
Robbie Wagner
Chuck Carpenter
Ship Shape
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Whiskey Web and Whatnot
Promos
Top-Tier, Full-Stack Software Consultants
This show is brought to you by Ship Shape. Ship Shape’s software consultants solve complex software and app development problems with top-tier coding expertise, superior service, and speed. In a sea of choices, our senior-level development crew rises above the rest by delivering the best solutions for fintech, cybersecurity, and other fast-growing industries. Check us out at shipshape.io.
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12/28/2023 • 1 hour, 16 minutes, 37 seconds
Open-Source, Payload, and Sim Racing with James Mikrut
The world of programming can be complex, but some developers find beauty in keeping coding clean, simple, and straightforward. This philosophy led developer James Mikrut to write his entire codebase in functional programming.
James is the founder and CEO of Payload, an application framework that he describes as a backend with an API and an automatically generated admin panel. The framework is built with React, Node.js, and Typescript. James reveals the evolution of his project from a licensed tool to a thriving open-source platform. He explains the pivotal decision to embrace open-source, and shares how user feedback steered Payload towards greater heights.
In this episode, James talks to Robbie and Chuck about the culture of open-source, the reason Payload switched to open-source, and the world of sim racing.
Key Takeaways
[00:39] - Introduction to James Mikrut.
[02:36] - A whiskey review: Coopers’ Craft Bourbon.
[17:47] - Tech hot takes.
[41:52] - Why Payload switched to open-source.
[55:18] - Chuck, Robbie, and James talk about gaming.
[57:37] - What career would James choose if he wasn’t in tech?
Quotes
[01:10] - “I saw the need for a proper application framework in Typescript and all the modern bells and whistles, and I started Payload.” ~ James Mikrut
[32:06] - “The web is winning, and I’m a big fan of that.” ~ James Mikrut
[48:25] - “Really, what Payload is, it's a back end with an API and an automatically generated admin panel.” ~ James Mikrut
Links
James Mikrut Twitter
James Mikrut LinkedIn
Payload
Coopers' Craft Bourbon
Old Forester
Brown-Forman Brand
Jack Daniel’s Tennessee Whiskey
Woodford Reserve
New Holland Brewing
Founders Brewing Co.
Milwaukee's Best
Intuit
Internal Revenue Service
Drizzle
SST
React Miami
React
SvelteKit
Next.js
Angular JS
National Geographic
Backbone.js
ThePrimeagen
Next.js Conf
Counter-Strike
Tailwind CSS
Vanilla CSS
Reddit
Beekeeper Studio
Slack
Discord
Microsoft Teams
GitHub
NPM
FIFA 23
Twitter
Mac
Zoom
Cloudflare
Linux
Jira
Zendesk
WordPress
Fortnite
PUBG
iRacing
Connect with our hosts
Robbie Wagner
Chuck Carpenter
Ship Shape
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Whiskey Web and Whatnot
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Whiskey Web and Whatnot Merch
Need a last minute holiday gift and want to support the podcast? We have just the thing! Pick up a Whiskey Web and Whatnot Holiday Sweater on our new merch store: https://whiskey.fund/
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12/21/2023 • 1 hour, 54 seconds
Tech Stacks, Building Apps, and Gaming Nostalgia with David Cramer
Whether you're a seasoned coder or just starting out, the tech you choose can make a big difference. Sometimes choosing the wrong tech can be frustrating and ruin a great project.
David Cramer, Co-Founder and CTO of Sentry, joins Chuck and Robbie to talk about some well-known frameworks in the tech space. They discuss the challenge of selecting a good tech stack. David sheds light on the considerations behind choosing Vercel for Remix apps and the complexities of integrating Fastify for backend services. David also explains the downsides of GraphQL and why it is only relevant for Facebook. Later, he reflects on his gaming nostalgia, sharing experiences of gaming as a teenager and the struggle to find time for immersive gaming as an adult.
In this episode, David talks to Robbie and Chuck about hot takes on GraphQL, crucial development stack decisions, and some of the challenges with adult gaming.
Key Takeaways
[00:42] - Introduction to David Cramer.
[01:26] - A whiskey review: High Wire Distilling Co New Southern Revival Jimmy Red Bourbon
[10:10] - David talks about the history of Sentry and lessons learned.
[14:38] - Tech hot takes.
[26:05] - David’s take on work-life balance.
[33:36] - Why David built Peated.
[42:03] - David talks about his interest in eFoils.
[45:07] - Chuck, Robbie, and David discuss gaming.
[48:18] - If David wasn’t in tech, what career would he choose?
Quotes
[19:31] - “The maturity I’ve gotten as a developer over the years is to stop caring about silly things.” ~ David Cramer
[27:42] - “Nothing great in history has ever been done without a lot of effort.” ~ David Cramer
[34:51] - “One of the best things you can do, if you actually want to get good at something is to have a side project.” ~ David Cramer
Links
David Cramer LinkedIn
David Cramer Twitter
Sentry
Peated
High Wire Distilling Co New Southern Revival Jimmy Red Bourbon
Starburst
Jim Beam
Maker’s Mark
Jack Daniel’s Tennessee Whiskey
Twitter
Django
GitHub
Microsoft
Tailwind CSS
Vanilla CSS
Remix
Next JS
Dropbox
Facebook
National Geographic
Rust
GraphQL
Google
Bottle Blue Book
Vercel
React Miami
The Primeagen
World of Warcraft
Steam
Factorio
SimCity
The Legend of Zelda: Tears of the Kingdom
FIFA 23
Walmart
Spotify
Connect with our hosts
Robbie Wagner
Chuck Carpenter
Ship Shape
Subscribe and stay in touch
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Whiskey Web and Whatnot
Whiskey Web and Whatnot Merch
Need a last minute holiday gift and want to support the podcast? We have just the thing! Pick up a Whiskey Web and Whatnot Holiday Sweater on our new merch store: https://whiskey.fund/
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12/14/2023 • 56 minutes
Throwback Frameworks, Tailwind Fandom, and CSS with Jhey Tompkins
Have you ever reflected on the tools that shaped your journey as a developer? Jhey Tompkins, Senior DX Engineer at Vercel, takes a trip down memory lane with Chuck and Robbie, even diving into the topic of Tailwind.
As a CSS experimenter, Jhey is a fan of Tailwind. He explains how, beyond all the debates, its real value of simplifying CSS shines through. Jhey also walks through his experience with a Backbone Marionette app that's still hanging out on GitHub pages, highlighting one of its most memorable features—event handling in strings. He also touches on modern frameworks like Vue, Astro, and Svelte, sharing his experience with each.
In this episode, Jhey talks to Robbie and Chuck about the inspiration behind his bear logo, experimenting with CSS using Tailwind, and the nostalgia for old-school frameworks.
Key Takeaways
[00:53] - Introduction to Jhey Tompkins.
[02:57] - A whiskey review: Eagle Rare 10 Year.
[14:36] - Jhey explains the inspiration behind his bear logo.
[21:28] - Chuck, Robbie, and Jhey discuss old-school frameworks.
[33:20] - Tech hot takes.
[44:27] - Chuck, Robbie, and Jhey discuss restaurants in the U.S. and UK.
Quotes
[18:03] - “That’s one thing I’m driven by. I love learning different stuff.” ~ Jhey Tompkins
[29:37] - “One of the things I always say to people is, just have a go at building from scratch and then reach for stuff later on.” ~ Jhey Tompkins
[56:47] - “Go beyond the documentation, become it.” ~ Jhey Tompkins
Links
Jhey Tompkins
Jhey Tompkins Twitter
Jhey Tompkins LinkedIn
Vercel
Major League Soccer
Eagle Rare 10-year
Buffalo Trace Distillery
Inter Milan
Manchester United
Matt Pocock
Waze
Maker’s Mark
Pepsi
Costco
CodePen
Three JS
Angular
App Directory
React
YAML
Astro
Django
American Express
GitHub
National Geographic
Ember JS
JSON
Vue.js
Next.js
Svelte
Tailwind CSS
Roomba
Red Hot and Blue
Taco Bell
Wendy’s
In-N-Out Burger
Jack in the Box
Cornish Pasty Co
Hot Pocket
Open UI
GSAP
DevTools
Connect with our hosts
Robbie Wagner
Chuck Carpenter
Ship Shape
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Whiskey Web and Whatnot
Promos
Whiskey Web and Whatnot Merch
Need a last minute holiday gift and want to support the podcast? We have just the thing! Pick up a Whiskey Web and Whatnot Holiday Sweater on our new merch store: https://whiskey.fund/.
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12/7/2023 • 1 hour, 5 minutes, 30 seconds
Cracking the Podcasting Code with Andrew Lisowski and Justin Bennett
Podcasts are a popular way to share knowledge, stories, and ideas in the tech space and the medium continues to evolve rapidly. But what does it truly take to create a successful podcast that captivates an audience?
Andrew Lisowski, Senior Software Engineer at Descript, and Justin Bennett, Engineer at Oxide, are seasoned podcasters and hosts of the Devtools FM podcast where they talk to industry leaders about developer tools. They shared insights on the evolving landscape of podcasting, highlighting the importance of having a sustainable workflow and maintaining consistency. Andrew and Justin believe a major key to podcasting is understanding your audience, their preferences, and how to keep them engaged. Throughout the episode, the conversation covers an array of topics, including the influence of developer tools, the resurgence of HTML-first web development, and the role of WebAssembly (Wasm) in shaping the future of the web.
In this episode, Andrew and Justin talk to Robbie and Chuck about developer tools, the future of tech, and the world of podcasting in the tech space.
Key Takeaways
[00:55] - Introduction to Andrew and Justin.
[03:17] - A whiskey review: Great Jones Straight Bourbon Whiskey.
[14:13] - Tech hot takes.
[37:57] - Andrew and Justin give tips and tricks for podcasting.
[47:45] - Careers that Andrew and Justin would choose if they weren’t in tech.
[48:58] - Andrew and Justin take over Whiskey Web and Whatnot.
Quotes
[20:32] - “I don’t actually think Git is good. It is a utility, and it is good enough for most cases.” ~ Justin Bennett
[33:22] - “If there is a future for Webpack, it’s Rspack.” ~ Andrew Lisowski
[36:46] - “The best frameworks, in my opinion, learn from what other folks are doing.” ~ Justin Bennett
Links
Andrew Lisowski Twitter
Andrew Lisowski LinkedIn
Justin Bennett Twitter
Devtools FM Podcast
Bun
NPM
Jarred Sumner
Anthony Fu
Unison
Great Jones Straight Bourbon Whiskey
Buffalo Trace Distillery
Maker’s Mark Kentucky Straight Bourbon
Rust
GitHub
Mercurial
Perforce
Tailwind CSS
Vanilla CSS
React
Million JS
Aiden Bai
Lululemon
JSON
Webpack
ByteDance
Rspack
Node JS
Deno
Vue
Svelte
Sentry
Descript
The Primeagen
ART19
Twitter
Nuxt
Apple
WordPress
Django
Google
Connect with our hosts
Robbie Wagner
Chuck Carpenter
Ship Shape
Subscribe and stay in touch
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Whiskey Web and Whatnot
Promos
Top-Tier, Full-Stack Software Consultants
This show is brought to you by Ship Shape. Ship Shape’s software consultants solve complex software and app development problems with top-tier coding expertise, superior service, and speed. In a sea of choices, our senior-level development crew rises above the rest by delivering the best solutions for fintech, cybersecurity, and other fast-growing industries. Check us out at shipshape.io.
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11/30/2023 • 1 hour, 4 minutes, 52 seconds
Leveraging CSS, Web Design, and Gaming UI with Adam Argyle
Adam Argyle, Chrome CSS Developer Advocate at Google, is not your typical CSS expert. He is big on education and hosts two podcasts that aim to bridge the gap and help developers embrace the challenges of CSS.
Adam approaches CSS with a dose of humility, acknowledging that it's one of the most complex and least understood aspects of web development. He’s not just a CSS advocate, he is also a gamer at heart, and throughout the episode, he connects the dots between CSS and the gaming industry. Adam highlights an issue in game development - the oversight of UI design. He pointed out that most efforts are concentrated on the technical aspects, often leaving the player experience lacking. He even shared his vision for a specialized UI agency that focuses exclusively on enhancing user interfaces in the gaming world.
In this episode, Adam talks to Robbie and Chuck about leveraging CSS to improve your designs, the Tailwind vs vanilla CSS debate, and the challenges of building UI for games.
Key Takeaways
[01:47] - Introduction to Adam Argyle.
[03:20] - A whiskey review: Wild Turkey Rare Breed Rye.
[16:55] - Adam talks about his upbringing.
[19:40] - Why CSS isn’t a programming language.
[25:22] - Hidden CSS features that add flair to your designs.
[30:54] - Adam’s take on milk.
[33:47] - Adam, Chuck, and Robbie talk about games.
[37:54] - Tech hot takes.
[53:35] - Adam plays the banjo.
[01:01:20] - If Adam wasn’t in tech, what career would he choose?
Quotes
[19.03] - “Everybody is pitching and selling, and you either know how to do it or you don’t.” ~ Adam Argyle
[21:09] - “Here’s my hot take about CSS, it’s the only programming language that delivers types, and it forces them at run time.” ~ Adam Argyle
[26:31] - “One of the most magical fairy dust things you can sprinkle on your website is View Transitions.” ~ Adam Argyle
Links
Adam Argyle
Adam Argyle Twitter
Adam Argyle LinkedIn
Bad at CSS Podcast
The CSS Podcast
Wes Bos
The Code Company
Sentry
Google
Wild Turkey Rare Breed Rye
Coca-Cola
RC Cola
Pepsi
Russell’s Reserve
United States Postal Service
The Wine Spot
ShopTalk Show
Garth Brooks
The Rolling Stones
Shakira
Sinead O'Connor
Ferragamo
Prototype JS
jQuery
Scroll-driven Animations
G.I. Joe
The Primeagen
Pokemon Go
Monster Hunter Now
Nintendo
Hyperspin Systems
Tailwind CSS
Vanilla CSS
Google Chrome
Sarafi
Mozilla Firefox
Rust
Travis
Coldplay
The Legend of Zelda: Tears of the Kingdon
Steam Deck
ASUS
FIFA 2023
The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild
Diablo 4
The Outer Worlds
Starfield
Bethesda Game Studios
Starlink
Microsoft
Active Vision
Chris Coyier
Connect with our hosts
Robbie Wagner
Chuck Carpenter
Ship Shape
Subscribe and stay in touch
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Spotify
Google Podcasts
Whiskey Web and Whatnot
Promos
Top-Tier, Full-Stack Software Consultants
This show is brought to you by Ship Shape. Ship Shape’s software consultants solve complex software and app development problems with top-tier coding expertise, superior service, and speed. In a sea of choices, our senior-level development crew rises above the rest by delivering the best solutions for fintech, cybersecurity, and other fast-growing industries. Check us out at shipshape.io.
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11/23/2023 • 1 hour, 6 minutes, 6 seconds
Learning Angular, Leadership Opportunities, and Google Culture with Sarah Drasner
The transition from coder to manager isn’t easy for developers who love the creative satisfaction and thrill of coding. But both sides of the fence have unique challenges.
Sarah Drasner, Senior Director of Engineering, Web, Android, iOS, and Multiplatform Core Infrastructure at Google, didn’t seek out engineering leadership. Sarah admits that she sometimes misses the flow state of coding but has a new appreciation for management now that she is on the other side. She discusses the culture at Google, navigating the company’s tech stack, and how much she values working with a dedicated and hardworking team. Beyond her tech pursuits, Sarah shines a light on She Code Africa, a nonprofit organization she supports, empowering women in tech.
In this episode, Sarah talks to Robbie and Chuck about why she initially avoided Angular, the challenges of management, and the flow state she misses from coding.
Key Takeaways
[01:01] - Introduction to Sarah Drasner.
[03:26] - A whiskey review: Brenne French Single Malt Whisky.
[15:00] - Tech hot takes.
[39:05] - What is going on with Angular.
[47:09] - Sarah’s experiences being a manager.
[52:10] - The career Sarah would choose if she wasn’t in tech.
Quotes
[22:48] - “I like the idea of being explicit, but I appreciate when languages are a little more bulletproof.” ~ Sarah Drasner
[43:56] - “Dealing with change as a developer is the main reason why you use a framework.” ~ Sarah Drasner
[45:58] - “That’s the reason why so many senior devs go towards this ‘it depends’ way of thinking because we see many different implementations over time.” ~ Sarah Drasner
Links
Sarah Drasner
Sarah Drasner Twitter
Sarah Drasner LinkedIn
Engineering Management for the Rest of Us
She Code Africa
Ada Nduka Oyom
RenderATL
Sagamore Spirit
GitHub
React
Vue JS
Microsoft
Netlify
Google
Apple
Ember JS
Angular
Brenne French Single Malt Whisky
Craigellachie Distillery
Michter’s American
Peerless Distilling Co
Willett Distillery
Angel’s Envy Bourbons
Whiskey Del Bac
Mountain Dew
Solid JS
Ryan Carniato
YouTube
Nuxt
Next JS
Tailwind CSS
Vanilla CSS
CSS-Tricks
Jason Lengstorf
First We Feast
Soundcloud
Connect with our hosts
Robbie Wagner
Chuck Carpenter
Ship Shape
Subscribe and stay in touch
Apple Podcasts
Spotify
Google Podcasts
Whiskey Web and Whatnot
Promos
Top-Tier, Full-Stack Software Consultants
This show is brought to you by Ship Shape. Ship Shape’s software consultants solve complex software and app development problems with top-tier coding expertise, superior service, and speed. In a sea of choices, our senior-level development crew rises above the rest by delivering the best solutions for fintech, cybersecurity, and other fast-growing industries. Check us out at shipshape.io.
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11/16/2023 • 59 minutes, 53 seconds
Engineering Management vs Individual Contributor, Travel, and Inflation with Taylor Poindexter
Being a great engineer doesn’t necessarily mean you’ll be a great engineering manager. So how do you know if a leadership role is right for you? Taylor Poindexter, Software Engineering Manager at Spotify, believes you have to try before you can decide and also know when to walk away.
Taylor started out as a tech lead. She knew she wanted to help people advance their careers, and that passion led her to management. She emphasizes that emotional intelligence and patience are a major part of the role and the signs of an effective leader because people are complex. She talks about some of her personal strengths as a leader and the importance of motivating your team, giving feedback, and taking uncomfortable criticism. Managing people isn’t an easy job, and Taylor’s advice for engineers who realize they don’t love leadership is to walk away before creating an unhappy work culture for your team.
In this episode, Taylor talks to Robbie and Chuck about tech hot takes, building effective engineering cultures, and the challenges and rewards of being an engineering manager.
Key Takeaways
[00:50] - Introduction to Taylor Poindexter.
[02:38] - A whiskey review: Barrel Private Release DJX2.
[12:19] - Tech hot takes.
[18:32] - Taylor talks about her skills as an engineer and manager.
[22:26] - Taylor’s advice for a developer who isn’t sure they want to be a manager.
[27:41] - Types of employees managed by Taylor.
[35:01] - Taylor unpacks her tweet about food spending.
[42:15] - Chuck, Robbie, and Taylor talk about the subscription model.
[45:10] - If Taylor wasn’t in tech, what career would she choose?
[48:32] - Chuck talks about his trip to France.
Quotes
[19:32] - “I think I’m really good at motivating people. I think partially because, at the end of the day, they know I’m really honest and trustworthy.” ~ Taylor Poindexter
[20:19] - “The constant iteration of improving things makes the team a good place.” ~ Taylor Poindexter
[23:03] - “I realized that it was so important to me to give somebody else an enhanced career in whatever way I could.” ~ Taylor Poindexter
Links
Taylor Poindexter
Taylor Poindexter LinkedIn
Taylor Poindexter Twitter
Taylor Poindexter Instagram
Spotify
Black Code Collective
Barrell Private Release DJX2
Jack Rose Dining Saloon
Twitter
I.W. Harper
Laravel
WordPress
Django
Disaronno
Sagamore Spirit Rye
Suntory
Jim Beam
Bun
University of Virginia
Virginia Tech
Solid JS
Ryan Carniato
Astro
Aperol
Hammer & Nails
CleanMyMac
Verizon
Adobe
Netflix
Blockbuster
Connect with our hosts
Robbie Wagner
Chuck Carpenter
Ship Shape
Subscribe and stay in touch
Apple Podcasts
Spotify
Google Podcasts
Whiskey Web and Whatnot
Top-Tier, Full-Stack Software Consultants
This show is brought to you by Ship Shape. Ship Shape’s software consultants solve complex software and app development problems with top-tier coding expertise, superior service, and speed. In a sea of choices, our senior-level development crew rises above the rest by delivering the best solutions for fintech, cybersecurity, and other fast-growing industries. Check us out at shipshape.io.
---
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11/9/2023 • 58 minutes, 56 seconds
Tech Talk, Social Media Use, and Netflix with The Primeagen
The Primeagen is known for embracing controversy. He returns to the podcast for a conversation on a range of topics like masculinity, social media, and pornography. He also opens up about his father’s passing and his journey growing up with a single mother.
Michael Paulson aka The Primeagen, Software Engineer at Netflix, is an influential figure in the tech community. He shares his thoughts on React's evolution and the impact it has on web applications and offers a behind-the-scenes look at the inner workings of Netflix and the problem-solving initiatives he led. He also discusses social media use and explains how he leverages platforms like Twitter, Twitch, and YouTube to express his thoughts while fostering an engaging online community.
In this episode, The Primeagen talks to Robbie and Chuck about his views on frameworks like React, the perils of pornography, and how he is saving Netflix millions of dollars.
Key Takeaways
[01:06] - Introduction to The Primeagen.
[03:48] - A whiskey review - Spirits of French Lick William Dalton Single Barrel Bourbon.
[13:40] - Tech hot takes.
[44:16] - The Primeagen talks about limiting social media use.
[56:05] - What The Primeagen would do if he wasn’t in tech.
[01:01:52] - The Primeagen’s take on pornography.
[01:17:36] - The influence of The Primeagen's father's passing.
[01:21:15] - How The Primeagen saved Netflix millions of dollars.
Quotes
[18:50] - “It feels like React, at this point, is in this state where it’s the industry standard, but I don’t feel like people are happy with it.” ~ The Primeagen
[24:45] - “When people start relying on you as some sort of open source provider, you do still have some level of obligation.” ~ The Primeagen
[35:26] - “The thing about Bun is that I really like it. It’s just not 1.0.” ~ The Primeagen
Links
The Primeagen YouTube
The Primeagen Twitter
The Primeagen Twitch
The Primeagen Instagram
ThePrimeTime
Prime
Spirits of French Lick William Dalton Single Barrel Bourbon
Stitzel-Weller Distillery
Pappy Van Winkle
Bubbalicious
W.L. Weller Antique
Windows
Apple
Xbox
Twitter
Google
Oracle
React
Svelte
HashiCorp
David Heinemeier Hansson
Warren Buffering
Rust
Voodoo Doughnut
Node JS
Bun
ChatGPT
Linux
Vite
Astro
Netflix
The Dvorak Keyboard
Amazon
Stadia
Connect with our hosts
Robbie Wagner
Chuck Carpenter
Ship Shape
Subscribe and stay in touch
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Spotify
Google Podcasts
Whiskey Web and Whatnot
Top-Tier, Full-Stack Software Consultants
This show is brought to you by Ship Shape. Ship Shape’s software consultants solve complex software and app development problems with top-tier coding expertise, superior service, and speed. In a sea of choices, our senior-level development crew rises above the rest by delivering the best solutions for fintech, cybersecurity, and other fast-growing industries. Check us out at shipshape.io.
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11/2/2023 • 1 hour, 35 minutes, 46 seconds
Privacy, Cyber Crime Stories, and Tech with Jack Rhysider
Social media platforms have become our virtual playgrounds, and the choices we make in this realm can have profound impacts on our lives. Are we sacrificing our privacy for the sake of convenience
Jack Rhysider, Creator of the Darknet Diaries podcast, brings an interesting perspective on the world of online communities, privacy concerns, and the delicate balance between convenience and safeguarding personal data. He blends his creativity and knack for storytelling with his expertise in digital security to report some of the fascinating, and sometimes unsettling, stories from the dark corners of the internet. Jack shares his thoughts on whether it’s harmful for people to flock to online communities where everyone is like them. He also delves into his opinions on Twitter and the privacy issues that arise from using the platform.
In this episode, Jack talks to Robbie and Chuck about his experience with various programming languages, the dynamic world of social media, and the perpetual tug-of-war between privacy and convenience in the digital age.
Key Takeaways
[00:27] - Introduction to Jack Rhysider.
[03:23] - A whiskey review: Stellum Rye the Lone Cypress.
[11:11] - Jack's experience as a craps dealer in Las Vegas.
[20:41] - Jack discusses TunnelsUp and programming in Perl.
[28:38] - Jack’s favorite story he has told so far.
[34:39] - Music genres that Jack enjoys.
[42:40] - How Jack feels about the current state of Twitter.
[46:24] - Jack talks about obtaining privacy online.
[55:01] - If Jack didn’t have his podcast, what would he be doing?
Quotes
[02:48] - “That’s my favorite when truth is stranger than fiction.” ~ Jack Rhysider
[23:11] - “I used to have the motto, ‘Windows at work, Apple at home, and Linux everywhere else.’” ~ Jack Rhysider
[32:57] - “Always it’s been, I want those people that can’t tell their story, I want the story that’s never been told, I want that secret stuff.” ~ Jack Rhysider
Links
Jack Rhysider LinkedIn
Jack Rhysider Twitter
Darknet Diaries
TunnelsUp
Ep45: Xbox Underground
Google
Stellum Rye the Lone Cypress
Defcon
Sagamore Spirits
Node JS
Windows
Apple
Linux
Perl
Ruby on Rails
Ember JS
Star Wars
The Mandalorian
Marvel
Xbox
Twitter
Discord
Slack
Bluesky Social
Mastodon
GrapheneOS
NBTV
React
MySudo
Strava
Amazon
Connect with our hosts
Robbie Wagner
Chuck Carpenter
Ship Shape
Subscribe and stay in touch
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Spotify
Google Podcasts
Whiskey Web and Whatnot
Promos
Top-Tier, Full-Stack Software Consultants
This show is brought to you by Ship Shape. Ship Shape’s software consultants solve complex software and app development problems with top-tier coding expertise, superior service, and speed. In a sea of choices, our senior-level development crew rises above the rest by delivering the best solutions for fintech, cybersecurity, and other fast-growing industries. Check us out at shipshape.io.
---
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10/26/2023 • 1 hour, 1 minute, 32 seconds
Self-Taught Engineering, Boot Camps, and Veganism with Welch Canavan
Some engineers have a linear path to their careers, but most of them take unconventional routes to become a developer. For Welch Canavan, Principal Engineer II at Stitch Fix, his journey into coding was a complete accident.
Welch was thrown into coding after the entire senior team above him left the company. He had two choices, sink or swim. With very little coding experience, he decided to tackle the problem-solving on his own and pick up the pieces that the senior team left. That experience propelled him into his career today. According to Welch, once you are motivated enough to learn, you might not need to invest in a boot camp. He also touches on some important aspects of tech like the complexities of maintaining state in URLs and highlights the innovative solutions by T3 stack.
In this episode, Welch talks to Robbie and Chuck about his journey into becoming a self-taught engineer, his responsibilities at Stitch Fix, and how he quit veganism after 20 years.
Key Takeaways
[01:11] - Introduction to Welch Canavan.
[02:21] - A whiskey review: Ritual Zero Proof Whiskey Alternative.
[07:11] - Tech hot takes.
[11:26] - Self-taught web development.
[20:46] - Chuck, Robbie, and Welch talk about the current state of boot camps.
[23:59] - Welch’s current position at Stitch Fix.
[32:35] - Why Welch is no longer a vegan after 20 years.
[38:20] - Welch’s hobbies.
[39:36] - What career would Welch pursue if he wasn’t in tech?
[42:43] - Projects Welch is currently interested in.
Quotes
[13:05] - “I have been making websites as a hobby essentially since I was in middle school.” ~ Welch Canavan
[24:21] - “I kind of got a weird amount into my career without learning much about code.” ~ Welch Canavan
[29:56] - “I really am a big believer that the only worth in a progressively more senior engineer is their ability to teach other people.” ~ Welch Canavan
Links
Welch Canavan
Welch Canavan LinkedIn
Vercel
Stitch Fix
National Geographic
Ritual Zero Proof Whiskey Alternative
Fresca
Sony
Tailwind CSS
Core OS
Jen Simmons
Chris Coyer
Shop Talk Radio
React
Mozilla Firefox
Amazon
Panasonic
Ember JS
Ruby of Rails
Django
Connect with our hosts
Robbie Wagner
Chuck Carpenter
Ship Shape
Subscribe and stay in touch
Apple Podcasts
Spotify
Google Podcasts
Whiskey Web and Whatnot
Top-Tier, Full-Stack Software Consultants
This show is brought to you by Ship Shape. Ship Shape’s software consultants solve complex software and app development problems with top-tier coding expertise, superior service, and speed. In a sea of choices, our senior-level development crew rises above the rest by delivering the best solutions for fintech, cybersecurity, and other fast-growing industries. Check us out at shipshape.io.
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10/19/2023 • 49 minutes, 40 seconds
The Framework Wars, Certifications, and Cincinnati Chili with Dr. Kate Holterhoff
As the tech industry advances at breakneck speed, traditional university programs are struggling to keep pace. Outdated course content and failure to adapt are encouraging developers to go the untraditional route. Can certifications carry the weight of tech education?
Dr. Kate Holterhoff, Analyst at RedMonk, is an educator championing certifications in the tech space. Her background in academia, including teaching stints at institutions like Carnegie Mellon and Georgia Tech gave her a wealth of insights on what is best for the future of tech education. Kate sheds light on the challenges faced by tech education, emphasizing the role of community-driven learning, and exploring the impact of certifications on the modern job market. She also explores the contrast between the knowledge gained in traditional universities and the skills demanded by the tech industry.
In this episode, Dr. Holterhoff talks to Chuck and Robbie about her thoughts on popular X (Twitter) debates, the shifting landscape of tech education, and the role of certifications in developer education.
Key Takeaways
[00:43] - Introduction to Dr. Kate Holterhoff.
[02:46] - A whiskey review: Hirsch Horizon Bourbon.
[09:08] - Tech hot takes.
[20:30] - The next chapter for SPAs after the framework wars.
[31:15] - Certifications in the tech industry.
[50:45] - Kate, Chuck, and Robbie talk about RenderATL.
[54:44] - Chuck and Kate talk about restaurants in Cincinnati.
Quotes
[21:41] - “React isn’t going anywhere. So if what you’re worried about is a job, React is a good place to go.” ~ Dr. Kate Holterhoff
[28:58] - “That’s what always comes up when I think about AI. Everyone has got a chatbot now.” ~ Dr. Kate Holterhoff
[35:02] - “Folks with CS degrees, information science degrees. They actually have to upskill themselves after they get that degree.” ~ Dr. Kate Holterhoff
Links
Dr. Kate Holterhoff
Dr. Kate Holterhoff Twitter
Dr. Kate Holterhoff LinkedIn
RedMonk
RenderATL
Hirsch Horizon Bourbon
Twitter
LinkedIn
Bluesky
Mastodon
Discord
Reddit
Bing
Slack
Instagram
React
Vue
Angular
jQuery
Facebook
Home Depot
Tesla
Ruby
AWS
Georgia Institue of Technology
iPad
Nintendo Switch
Kelly Vaughn
Chris Coyier
Gus’s Fried Chicken
Red Phone Booth
Gold Star Chili
Skyline Chili
Riverfront Pizza & Sports Bar
Connect with our hosts
Robbie Wagner
Chuck Carpenter
Ship Shape
Subscribe and stay in touch
Apple Podcasts
Spotify
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Whiskey Web and Whatnot
Top-Tier, Full-Stack Software Consultants
This show is brought to you by Ship Shape. Ship Shape’s software consultants solve complex software and app development problems with top-tier coding expertise, superior service, and speed. In a sea of choices, our senior-level development crew rises above the rest by delivering the best solutions for fintech, cybersecurity, and other fast-growing industries. Check us out at shipshape.io.
---
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10/12/2023 • 59 minutes, 20 seconds
Adaptability, HTMX, and DivOps with Jonathan Creamer
Jonathan Creamer, Senior Software Engineer at Microsoft and a tech enthusiast, is carving out a niche in the world of front-end tooling. He's even coined the term "DivOps" with the help of his team. Jonathan is passionate about creating and experimenting with new tools that enhance developer workflows. He is on a mission to reduce the reliance on YAML configuration in CI/CD pipelines by converting repetitive tasks into code. For him, it's all about making these processes more efficient, maintainable, and testable.
Jonathan shares one of his core beliefs, which is the importance of staying adaptable in a tech career. He encourages developers to stay open to new languages and concepts. His advice? Invest time in specializing for a few years to gain an in-depth understanding, then move on to the next thing. According to Jonathan, the hallmark of a senior engineer is someone who continually broadens their skill set.
In this episode, Jonathan talks to Robbie and Chuck about hot takes on popular tech topics, the world of front-end tooling, and the importance of staying adaptable as an engineer.
Key Takeaways
[01:26] - Introduction to Jonathan Creamer.
[04:38] - A whiskey review: 13th Colony Southern Bourbon Whiskey
[16:58] - Tech hot takes.
[30:18] - How HTMX will change the way apps are built.
[37:08] - Jonathan talks about how he came up with the term, “DivOps”.
[55:27] - If Jonathan wasn’t in tech, what career would he choose?
Quotes
[30:51] - “There’s no way in Office we’re going to decide, let's get rid of the 20 million lines of React code that we have in our code base and switch to HTMX.” ~ Jonathan Creamer
[35:36] - “There are so many ways to solve problems on front-end development. There’s just no reason to bash anybody for anything.” ~ Jonathan Creamer
[47:51] - “If you’ve been writing front-end code for 10 years and you don’t know how back-end works still, I would imagine you probably do.” ~ Jonathan Creamer
Links
Jonathan Creamer
Jonathan Creamer LinkedIn
Jonathan Creamer Twitter
Microsoft
Hoover
Ford
Eventbrite
React
Lonely Planet
National Geographic
Apple
Coca-Cola
ABC Fine Wine & Spirits
Pins Mechanical
Nashville Barrel Company
Nelson’s Green Brier Distillery
Flutter
Adobe ColdFusion
jQuery
Visual Studio Code
John Resig
Tailwind CSS
Chris Coyier
Digital Ocean
Sentry
Twitter
Svelte
Mozilla Firefox
Google Chrome
Microsoft Edge
Angular
NodeJS
Sagamore Spirit
YAML
Brooks School
Canon
Connect with our hosts
Robbie Wagner
Chuck Carpenter
Ship Shape
Subscribe and stay in touch
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Whiskey Web and Whatnot
Top-Tier, Full-Stack Software Consultants
This show is brought to you by Ship Shape. Ship Shape’s software consultants solve complex software and app development problems with top-tier coding expertise, superior service, and speed. In a sea of choices, our senior-level development crew rises above the rest by delivering the best solutions for fintech, cybersecurity, and other fast-growing industries. Check us out at shipshape.io.
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10/5/2023 • 1 hour, 44 seconds
SST, AWS, and Ember with Dax Raad
Dax Raad, Founder of Bumi and Ironbay and SST Core Maintainer, is a passionate open-source developer who knows his way around the startup tech space with over a decade of experience under his belt. He is intimately involved in the Serverless Stack Toolkit (SST) and sheds some light on what it’s all about.
Dax reveals the story behind the inception of SST and its unique role in the software development ecosystem. He explores how SST is revolutionizing the way developers approach serverless applications by streamlining deployment on AWS while also focusing on developer experience. Dax also touches on the integration of Next.js and how SST has become an essential tool for deploying Next.js applications on AWS seamlessly. The discussion shifts gears to the world of cloud computing, where AWS is the big kingpin. Dax explains how being the first big player gives AWS a huge advantage in terms of money and customers. Other companies like Google Cloud and Azure have a hard time catching up because of AWS’ head start.
In this episode, Dax talks to Robbie and Chuck about his experience in early-stage startups and open-source projects, SST's role in simplifying AWS development, and how JSON API and Ember.js are changing the landscape of web development.
Key Takeaways
[00:32] - Intro to Dax Raad.
[01:35] - A whiskey review: Belle Meade Sour Mash Straight Whiskey.
[11:04] - Tech hot takes.
[18:46] - When Dax got involved in the SST project.
[25:19] - Why businesses build on top of AWS.
[30:35] - The relationship between Next.js and the SST project.
[36:50] - Dax’s experience using Ember.js.
[41:49] - The career Dax would be in if he wasn’t in tech.
[43:55] - Chuck and Dax discuss Lionel Messi being in Miami.
Quotes
[25:43] - “I don’t believe you can catch up with a company that started before you in the cloud business.” ~ Dax Raad
[33:08] - “It is extremely tedious. It is extremely hard to keep up with intentional changes that Vercel and Next.js make but also breakages that they do accidentally.” ~ Dax Raad
[33:43] - “The vast majority of Next.js users, Next,js isn’t the thing they live and die by.” ~ Dax Raad
Links
Dax Raad
Dax Raad Twitter
Dax Raad LinkedIn
AWS
Twitter
Belle Meade Sour Mash Straight Whiskey
Twizzlers
Taco Bell
Maker’s Mark
Jim Beam
Jack Daniel’s Tennessee Whiskey
Pappy Van Winkle
Tailwind CSS
Stitches
HTMX
Astro
Sentry
React
Google Cloud
NPM
Ryan Carniato
Disney
Next JS
Vercel
Ember JS
JSON
Graph QL
Slack
Discord
Orbit JS
Rails
jQuery
Major League Soccer
Inter Miami CF
Connect with our hosts
Robbie Wagner
Chuck Carpenter
Ship Shape
Subscribe and stay in touch
Apple Podcasts
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Whiskey Web and Whatnot
Top-Tier, Full-Stack Software Consultants
This show is brought to you by Ship Shape. Ship Shape’s software consultants solve complex software and app development problems with top-tier coding expertise, superior service, and speed. In a sea of choices, our senior-level development crew rises above the rest by delivering the best solutions for fintech, cybersecurity, and other fast-growing industries. Check us out at shipshape.io.
---
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9/28/2023 • 53 minutes, 20 seconds
Hot Takes, Ember Data, and Open Source with Chris Thoburn (Runspired)
After years in the tech game, senior developers know that it’s important to find a balance between innovation and stability in engineering. How can developers strike the balance between embracing new tools and ensuring the steadfastness of their applications over the long haul?
Chris Thoburn (Runspired), Staff Software Engineer at AuditBoard, is a big deal in the open-source community, particularly within the Ember community. He explains how his journey has been a unique blend of teamwork and adapting and elaborates on the philosophy behind Ember Data. Chris mentions that the framework is like a solid foundation, built to provide a consistent and stable data layer while allowing developers to evolve their apps over the years. His vision is for Ember Data to be a trusted companion for developers creating web apps.
In this episode, Runspired talks to Robbie and Chuck about his views on controversial tech topics like HTMX, the power of Ember Data and its role in creating stable, scalable, and evolving applications, and the pivotal role that open-source plays in shaping technology.
Key Takeaways
[00:50] - Intro to Runspired.
[02:04] - A whiskey review: Hibiki Blended Japanese Whiskey.
[10:52] - Tech hot takes.
[30:26] - How Runspired would rename Ember Data.
[39:40] - Runspired’s success pitching open source.
[47:35] - The career Runspired would be in if he wasn’t in tech.
[50:09] - Runspired shares whether HTMX will change the way web apps are built.
[01:00:21] - Runspired’s first choice karaoke song.
Quotes
[27:25] - “I’ve been around enough, seen enough to realize that getting really caught up in one approach is just an exercise in long-term frustration that I don’t need.” ~ Runspired
[35:35] - “How do you get a company to invest in open-source? It's not about open-source, it's about value to a company.” ~ Runspired
[51:07] - “I think we are approaching a very different era in the maturity of Javascript development.” ~ Runspired
Links
Runspired
Chris Thoburn LinkedIn
Ember
Hibiki Blended Japanese Whiskey
EmberConf
Kool-Aid
Crush Soda
Portland Coffee Roasters
Twitter
Threads
Svelte
Tailwind CSS
YAML
JSON
NPM
GitHub
Microsoft
LinkedIn
Remix
Next.js
Nuxt
React
Angular
Vue.js
RedwoodJS
Solid.js
Svelte
GraphQL
Rust
Active Record
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tRPC
gRPC
Protocol Buffers
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Chuck Carpenter
Ship Shape
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Whiskey Web and Whatnot
Top-Tier, Full-Stack Software Consultants
This show is brought to you by Ship Shape. Ship Shape’s software consultants solve complex software and app development problems with top-tier coding expertise, superior service, and speed. In a sea of choices, our senior-level development crew rises above the rest by delivering the best solutions for fintech, cybersecurity, and other fast-growing industries. Check us out at shipshape.io.
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9/21/2023 • 1 hour, 8 minutes, 51 seconds
Vite, Debugging, and PNPM with Ed Faulkner
The landscape of tech is always changing and adaptability is key. Ed Faulkner, Ember Core Team Member and Founder at Polynomial LLC shares his insights into the dynamic world of software engineering.
Ed kicks things off by shedding light on the importance of using efficient tools in software development. Ed dives into Vite, a build tool known for its speed and user-friendliness. He explains how Vite tackles the slow development process that some old-school build tools bring along. While Vite might not fit every situation, Ed highlights its usefulness for projects where speedy development matters. The conversation takes a turn as Ed dives into the world of package management, discussing PNPM and how mixing Vite with Ember can shake things up for developers.
In this episode, Ed talks to Robbie and Chuck about the challenges with package management, how using Vite with Ember will impact developer experience and the value of knowing how to debug.
Key Takeaways
[00:51] - Intro to Ed Faulkner.
[01:36] - A whiskey review: West Cork Whiskey Cask Strength.
[07:51] - Tech hot takes.
[24:43] - What Vite unlocks for the developer community.
[29:27] - The importance of debugging.
[33:30] - The skills required to build a package manager.
[49:49] - The career Ed would choose if he wasn’t in tech.
Quotes
[08:35] - “As my own career has progressed, I’m definitely a library person. I’m happier building the tools to build applications.” ~ Ed Faulkner
[29:30] - “Software is hard. You can’t work in software and not hit bugs on a daily basis.” ~ Ed Faulkner
[40:35] - “Some stuff is really hard to choose your own adventure with and package management is just one of them.” ~ Ed Faulkner
Links
Ed Faulkner
Ed Faulkner Twitter
EmberConf 2023
Ember
West Cork Whiskey Cask Strength
HTMX
Ember JS
Apple
Go
Vite
Angular
State of JS
PNPM
Yarn
ChatGPT
Node.js
JSON
NPM
React
Connect with our hosts
Robbie Wagner
Chuck Carpenter
Ship Shape
Subscribe and stay in touch
Apple Podcasts
Spotify
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Whiskey Web and Whatnot
Top-Tier, Full-Stack Software Consultants
This show is brought to you by Ship Shape. Ship Shape’s software consultants solve complex software and app development problems with top-tier coding expertise, superior service, and speed. In a sea of choices, our senior-level development crew rises above the rest by delivering the best solutions for fintech, cybersecurity, and other fast-growing industries. Check us out at shipshape.io.
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9/14/2023 • 53 minutes, 35 seconds
Polaris, Vite, and Exploring the Future of Ember with Jared Galanis and Preston Sego
Recorded at EmberConf from the heart of the Multnomah Whiskey Library with Jared Galanis, Software Engineer on the Ember Learning Team, and Preston Sego aka NullVoxPopuli, Software Artificer at AuditBoard, Chuck and Robbie delve into the evolution and future of the Ember framework.
Though Ember isn’t often in the spotlight for being cutting-edge, Jared and Preston unravel the exciting developments in the Ember ecosystem. The conversation centers around Ember Polaris, the eagerly awaited next edition of the Ember framework. Preston explains the concept of "editions" in semantic versioning and how Polaris aims to provide a cohesive story for integrating new features. They also discuss Ember's shift to Vite as a modern build system, resulting in improved performance, startup time, and enhanced plugin ecosystem. Jared sheds light on the Ember learning team and his background in front-end and back-end development. He reinforces Ember's commitment to offering smooth upgrade paths for applications over the years, giving developers a sense of security and longevity.
In this episode, Jared and Preston talk to Robbie and Chuck about the upcoming release of Ember Polaris and its compatibility with Vite, the unique reactivity primitives of Ember, and how changes can modernize the Ember framework while ensuring long-term app stability.
Key Takeaways
[00:29] - Intro to Jared and Preston.
[02:32] - A whiskey review: Willett Straight Rye Whiskey.
[14:50] - Tech hot takes.
[25:25] - Jared and Preston’s favorite programming language.
[27:29] - New developments in Ember, including Polaris.
[39:44] - A whiskey review: Four Roses Single Barrel.
[46:45] - Preston’s opinion on Glimmer.
[56:26] - Chuck, Robbie, Preston, and Jared discuss gaming.
Quotes
[18:58] - “One thing that I’ve appreciated about Tailwind is that it has done a better job of teaching people actually CSS than where people go to learn CSS.” ~ Preston Sego
[30:07] - “It’s exciting to see Ember moving towards being able to use standardized build systems that are used widely throughout Javascript.” ~ Jared Galanis
[52:34] - “People in the React ecosystem are perfectly fine with half-baked things and are willing to try an idea and run with it in their production code.” ~ Preston Sego
Links
Jared Galanis
Jared Galanis on LinkedIn
Jared Galanis Twitter
Preston Sego on LinkedIn
Preston Sego Twitter
Ember
EmberConf
Subway
Netflix
Willett Straight Rye Whiskey
RC Cola
React
Angular
Sagamore Rye Whiskey
Google
Semver
Tailwind CSS
The Primeagen
Impossible Burger
The JS Party Podcast
Svelte
Vue
Preact
Next.js
Vite JS
Jest
Four Roses Single Barrel
Chicken Cock Whiskey
Glimmer.js
Remix
Steam Deck
Asus
FIFA 2023
Sunlight
Moonlight
NVIDIA Shield
Tesla
GitHub
Connect with our hosts
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Chuck Carpenter
Ship Shape
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Top-Tier, Full-Stack Software Consultants
This show is brought to you by Ship Shape. Ship Shape’s software consultants solve complex software and app development problems with top-tier coding expertise, superior service, and speed. In a sea of choices, our senior-level development crew rises above the rest by delivering the best solutions for fintech, cybersecurity, and other fast-growing industries. Check us out at shipshape.io.
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9/7/2023 • 1 hour, 2 minutes, 23 seconds
Tech Topics, Traditional Jobs, and Grinding at Work with Jason Lengstorf
Work-life balance can feel like an impossible expectation to meet. For developers and other tech professionals, it’s even harder to unplug when your profession and personal life are connected to the web. Can developers resist the urge to overwork and embrace non-traditional ways of working?
Jason Lengstorf, Host of Learn With Jason, believes "your job doesn't matter". He explores the concept of "grinding" and shares his ideas on the nuances of working long hours and the importance of maintaining a balanced approach. His perspective revolves around the idea that while putting in extra hours to learn and develop skills can be beneficial, overcommitting to work and neglecting other aspects of life can lead to a loss of creativity, identity, and overall well-being.
In this episode, Jason talks to Robbie and Chuck about his opinion on popular Twitter tech topics, the effects of grinding in your career, and whether traditional jobs have become obsolete.
Key Takeaways
[01:01] - What’s new with Jason since the last episode?
[01:42] - A whiskey review: Bunnahabhain 18-Year Whisky.
[16:01] - Tech hot takes.
[19:17] - Jason talks about developers being attached to specific tools.
[22:58] - A whiskey review: Chicken Cock Whiskey Island Rooster Rum Barrel Rye.
[29:31] - How constant grinding is detrimental to your career.
[38:01] - Jason’s relationship with work.
[44:49] - Jason talks about his camera gear.
Quotes
[20:14] - “I want to build cool shit for the internet and the tools are just tools.” ~ Jason Lengstorf
[30:00] - “I feel very strongly that the idea of being always on is detrimental.” ~ Jason Lengstorf
[40:27] - “The internet is an information vehicle and the information that we’re conveying most of the time is to convince you to put some dollars into somebody else's pocket.” ~ Jason Lengstorf
Links
Learn with Jason
Learn with Jason YouTube
Jason Lengstorf Twitter
Jason Lengstorf LinkedIn
Multnomah Whiskey Library
Bunnahabhain 18 Year Whisky
RC Cola
YouTube
The Macallan
Taylor Poindexter
Tailwind CSS
Front End Feud
Rust
React
PHP
Node JS
Chicken Cock Whiskey Island Rooster Rum Barrel Rye
Sagamore Rye Whiskey
Twitter
Angular
Alone
Hilton
Marriott
RenderATL
Connect with our hosts
Robbie Wagner
Chuck Carpenter
Ship Shape
Subscribe and stay in touch
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Whiskey Web and Whatnot
Top-Tier, Full-Stack Software Consultants
This show is brought to you by Ship Shape. Ship Shape’s software consultants solve complex software and app development problems with top-tier coding expertise, superior service, and speed. In a sea of choices, our senior-level development crew rises above the rest by delivering the best solutions for fintech, cybersecurity, and other fast-growing industries. Check us out at shipshape.io.
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8/31/2023 • 55 minutes, 47 seconds
Hot Takes, React, and WebAssembly with Jack Herrington
By now we know that an engineer with skin in the game is a senior engineer. Experience teaches wisdom and Jack Herrington, Principal Full Stack Engineer, has plenty of it.
Jack dissects the various programming languages from old school to new school, sharing anecdotes and opinions on PHP, ColdFusion, and React. He explores the ongoing JS fatigue phenomenon and emerging alternatives like Deno and Quick. Though Jack is up to date on the latest in tech, he questions the need for complex toolchains and whether simpler solutions, like HTML and JavaScript, might suffice.
In this episode, Jack talks to Robbie and Chuck about polarizing tech topics, whether React Server Components changed React, and the state of Web Assembly.
Key Takeaways
[01:15] - Intro to Jack Herrington.
[02:04] - A whiskey review: Barrell Private Release Amaro Cask Finish.
[09:53] - Tech hot takes.
[19:51] - Did RSCs turn React into PHP?
[29:00] - Big architectural changes at Vercel.
[30:31] - Jack’s opinion on the future of the web.
[36:09] - Jack talks about interesting things happening on Nextdoor.
[39:43] - Jack gives Chuck pizza-making tips and tricks.
[44:49] - What Jack’s career would be if he weren’t in tech.
Quotes
[14:04] - “If you give somebody else your problem to solve, they’re becoming a better engineer while you are not.” ~ Jack Herrington
[32:30] - “There’s a whole form validation system right in the browser, and nobody uses it.” ~ Jack Herrington
[48:05] - “The approach that I have to coding is very practical. I like building stuff for customers, so that's the way I teach it.” ~ Jack Herrington
Links
Jack Herrington
Jack Herrington Twitter
Jack Herrington LinkedIn
The Blue Collar Coder
YouTube
React
Next JS
Rust
The Primeagen
Barrell Private Release Amaro Cask Finish
Tailwind CSS
Panda CSS
Svelte
Twitter
GitHub
Oregon State University
ChatGPT
WordPress
Kindle
Deno Fresh
Qwik
Astro
Node JS
Redux
Elm
Lego
Ember
Tanner Linsley
Angular
Vercel
Apple
Nintendo
Vue
Microsoft Edge
Disney
National Geographic
Nextdoor
Ooni
Safeway
Connect with our hosts
Robbie Wagner
Chuck Carpenter
Ship Shape
Subscribe and stay in touch
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Whiskey Web and Whatnot
Top-Tier, Full-Stack Software Consultants
This show is brought to you by Ship Shape. Ship Shape’s software consultants solve complex software and app development problems with top-tier coding expertise, superior service, and speed. In a sea of choices, our senior-level development crew rises above the rest by delivering the best solutions for fintech, cybersecurity, and other fast-growing industries. Check us out at shipshape.io.
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8/24/2023 • 48 minutes, 30 seconds
Hot Takes, Developer Relations, and AI with Rizel Scarlett
The tech industry is in the middle of an AI revolution, and some developers are wondering if their jobs are at stake. Rizel Scarlett, Developer Advocate at Github, is encouraging developers to embrace the technology instead of fearing it.
As a developer advocate, Rizel’s mission is to empower developers with the knowledge to navigate open source and make the most of GitHub’s tools - including Github’s AI pair programmer, Copilot. She sheds light on some of the features of Copilot that make it stand out among traditional code editors. She introduces Copilot for Docs, Voice, CLI, and Chat which are expected to elevate the coding experience, enhance coding efficiency, improve accessibility, and offer insights for developers of all skill levels. Rizel is a major AI advocate and she believes the technology will make coding more inclusive and user-friendly, allowing a wider range of individuals to participate actively in the developer community.
In this episode, Rizel talks to Chuck and Robbie about the importance of technical skills in advocacy roles, how AI is transforming coding, and using AI to foster inclusivity in tech.
Key Takeaways
[01:01] - Introduction to Rizel Scarlett.
[01:40] - A whiskey review: Minor Case Straight Rye Whiskey.
[08:07] - Tech hot takes.
[14:24] - Should developer advocate or developer relations be technical roles.
[26:21] - Open source projects Rizel is currently excited about.
[32:28] - Rizel delves into the various dimensions of GitHub Copilot.
[35:41] - What would Rizel do if she wasn’t in tech.
[45:11] - Rizel talks about buying a house and the moving process.
Quotes
[15:24] - “I think particularly, it’s helpful if a developer advocate is willing to be technical or is already technical.” ~ Rizel Scarlett
[22:55] - “What people should start thinking about more is just having range on the team.” ~ Rizel Scarlett
[32:45] - “GitHub is going all in on the AI front.” ~ Rizel Scarlett
Links
Rizel Scarlett
Rizel Scarlett Twitter
Rizel Scarlett LinkedIn
GitHub
GitHub Copilot
Minor Case Straight Rye Whiskey
Coca-Cola
Sagamore Rye Whiskey
Matt Pocock
Josh Goldberg
Tailwind CSS
Twitter
TikTok
React
Solid JS
Angie Jones
Brian West
Astro
Angular
Brandon Roberts
OpenSauced
Ember
Next JS
Node JS
Connect with our hosts
Robbie Wagner
Chuck Carpenter
Ship Shape
Subscribe and stay in touch
Apple Podcasts
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Whiskey Web and Whatnot
Top-Tier, Full-Stack Software Consultants
This show is brought to you by Ship Shape. Ship Shape’s software consultants solve complex software and app development problems with top-tier coding expertise, superior service, and speed. In a sea of choices, our senior-level development crew rises above the rest by delivering the best solutions for fintech, cybersecurity, and other fast-growing industries. Check us out at shipshape.io.
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8/17/2023 • 50 minutes
Tech Talk, TypeScript, and Empowering Engineers with Shaundai Person
Shaundai Person, Senior Software Engineer at Netflix, is a TypeScript convert, educator, and advocate for the programming language. But her unconventional journey started as a self-taught engineer working in sales before discovering her passion for coding during maternity leave.
Shaundai candidly shares her personal journey from initially disliking TypeScript to becoming an enthusiastic advocate for its adoption. As a self-taught engineer, Shaundai describes her transformation from a "YOLO" coding mindset to appreciating the structured benefits that TypeScript offers, leading to more organized and efficient codebases. Her upcoming course, "TypeScript for JavaScript Developers," aims to bridge the gap between skepticism and appreciation for TypeScript, helping engineers embrace its potential for making a meaningful impact on their projects and careers.
In this episode, Shaundai talks to Chuck and Robbie about how she landed her role at Netflix, her journey from being a TypeScript skeptic to an advocate, and her TypeScript course called Typescript to Javascript.
Key Takeaways
[00:43] - Introduction to Shaundai Person.
[04:03] - A whiskey review: S.N. Pike’s Magnolia Rye Whiskey Bottled in Bond.
[13:09] - Tech hot takes.
[31:44] - Shaundai talks about her course, Typescript for Javascript Developers.
[41:04] - Why Shaundai was learning rails and golang.
[46:30] - What are Shaundai’s favorite Netflix shows?
Quotes
[31:55] - “TypeScript was something I hated until I learned what the purpose was.” ~ Shaundai Person
[34:11] - “I was in love with JavaScript because it fit my personal values.” ~ Shaundai Person
[51:39] - “If I can spend time with the people that I love in the ways that I want to, then this is the most beautiful life that I can imagine for myself.” ~ Shaundai Person
Links
Shaundai Person
Shaundai Person Twitter
Shaundai Person LinkedIn
TypeScript for JavaScript Developers
Netflix
S.N. Pike’s Magnolia Rye Whiskey Bottled in Bond
Sagamore Spirit
Fireball
Hudson Whiskey
Tailwind CSS
Vanilla CSS
Material UI
Front End Happy Hour
Ryan Burgess
RenderATL
Angie Jones
Publix
Instacart
Nutrafol
Shopify
Codecademy
Salesloft
Angular
React
Basecamp
WordPress
Rust
Next JS
YAML
Black Mirror
Stranger Things
How to Get Rich
Hulu
Amazon Prime Video
Connect with our hosts
Robbie Wagner
Chuck Carpenter
Ship Shape
Subscribe and stay in touch
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Whiskey Web and Whatnot
Top-Tier, Full-Stack Software Consultants
This show is brought to you by Ship Shape. Ship Shape’s software consultants solve complex software and app development problems with top-tier coding expertise, superior service, and speed. In a sea of choices, our senior-level development crew rises above the rest by delivering the best solutions for fintech, cybersecurity, and other fast-growing industries. Check us out at shipshape.io.
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8/10/2023 • 1 hour, 32 seconds
TypeScript, React, and API Issues with Matt Pocock
Matt Pocock, a TypeScript educator and author of Total TypeScript, became an evangelist for the programing language after searching for a solution for a project plagued by API contract issues. When TypeScript brought newfound confidence and increased velocity to the team, Matt never looked back.
Matt highlights the benefits of functional components and the seamless transition from class components to hooks, leading to a happier development environment for everyone involved. From improved error detection to real-time catching of potential issues, TypeScript provides an unmatched level of comfort and productivity for developers, making it a must-have in modern development. For developers like Matt, TypeScript is more than just a tool—it's an indispensable companion. His love for TypeScript inspired him to dedicate his career to teaching other developers how to adopt and leverage the language for optimal efficiency.
In this episode, Matt talks to Robbie and Chuck about his journey with TypeScript, his experience with React hooks, and advice on transitioning a team to Typescript.
Key Takeaways
[00:49] - Introduction to Matt Pocock.
[01:52] - A whiskey review: The Dalmore 12.
[06:58] - Tech hot takes.
[19:19] - When Matt started using TypeScript.
[22:30] - Converting components to TypeScript.
[29:29] - The biggest mistake people make with TypeScript.
[33:07] - New features coming to TypeScript.
[36:36] - Advice for teams hesitant to use TypeScript.
[42:40] - Matt, Chuck, and Robbie discuss football and gaming.
[48:32] - Matt's career as a voice coach.
Quotes
[23:55] - “TypeScript gives you a different way of coding, and a different way is, you feel like you could just get away with anything.” ~ Matt Pocock
[25:21] - “For me, when I’m not using TypeScript, it feels like I’m coding in low power mode.” ~ Matt Pocock
[26:35] - “If someone gets really into TypeScript, they just love it, and they don’t stop loving it.” ~ Matt Pocock
Links
Matt Pocock
Matt Pocock Twitter
Matt Pocock YouTube
Matt Pocock LinkedIn
Total TypeScript
Twitter
YouTube
Vercel
Stately
The Dalmore 12
Tailwind CSS
Ryan Carinato
React
Visual Studio
GitHub
Google
JSON
GraphQL
Zod
TS Error Translator
Magic: The Gathering
Diablo II
Diablo IV
Steam
Football Manager
FIFA 2023
Nintendo Switch
Swindon Town FC
Arsenal FC
Liverpool FC
Tottenham Hotspur
Paris Saint-Germain
Manchester United
Atletico Madrid
Chelsea FC
Manchester City FC
Inter Milan
FC Barcelona
Waze
Connect with our hosts
Robbie Wagner
Chuck Carpenter
Ship Shape
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Whiskey Web and Whatnot
Top-Tier, Full-Stack Software Consultants
This show is brought to you by Ship Shape. Ship Shape’s software consultants solve complex software and app development problems with top-tier coding expertise, superior service, and speed. In a sea of choices, our senior-level development crew rises above the rest by delivering the best solutions for fintech, cybersecurity, and other fast-growing industries. Check us out at shipshape.io.
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8/3/2023 • 54 minutes, 9 seconds
Frontend Feud: CSS Pod vs Whiskey Web and Whatnot
Una & Adam from The CSS Podcast defend their Frontend Feud title against challengers Chuck & Robbie from Whiskey Web and Whatnot. Let’s get it on!
For more info, see: https://changelog.com/jsparty/285
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7/28/2023 • 49 minutes, 50 seconds
Tech Interviews, Contract-To-Hire, and Authenticity with Taylor Desseyn
Navigating the current job market is proving to be a daunting task for developers, even experienced ones like Chuck. Does the hiring process need to be fixed?
Taylor Desseyn, former Managing Director at Vaco, and a seasoned recruiter with 12 years of experience, believes so. Taylor advocates for a much-needed shift in mindset among hiring managers, emphasizing the importance of meeting candidates where they are. He suggests measures such as contract-to-hire options and redo opportunities, allowing candidates to show their true potential beyond the limitations of a single interview. Taylor believes a new approach would invite more diversity and inclusion into the hiring process and make the experience more fair and effective for the candidates and the employers.
In this episode, Taylor talks to Robbie and Chuck about the flaws in the hiring process in the tech industry, the impact of hiring flaws on candidates, and potential solutions to create a more inclusive and effective system.
Key Takeaways
[00:54] - Introduction to Taylor Desseyn.
[01:47] - A whiskey review: Copper Sky Distillery Wheat Whiskey.
[09:30] - Why hiring is broken.
[26:41] - Podcasts that Taylor has on rotation.
[29:42] - Negative experiences with HOAs.
[32:43] - Taylor talks about his horses.
[44:21] - Taylor discusses his upbringing.
Quotes
[11:18] - “To me, I would say that company missed out on a great talent, you, because they were too concerned about the industry.” ~ Taylor Desseyn
[22:50] - “I think 60% to 70% of the interview needs to be the company selling the opportunity to the candidate.” ~ Taylor Desseyn
[36:14] - “Because of COVID, one thing I’ve realized is that we’re all overworked.” ~ Taylor Desseyn
Links
Taylor Desseyn
Taylor Desseyn Twitter
Taylor Desseyn LinkedIn
Vaco
Copper Sky Distillery Wheat Whiskey
University of South Carolina
Maker’s Mark
WL Weller
RenderATL
Farm Bureau Financial Services
GitHub
Brian Douglas
Amazon
Ember
React
OpenSauced
Carrot Tech
Twitter
Ego Is the Enemy by Ryan Holiday
LongWinded by Nature
Group Chat
TikTok
Guidance Counselor 2.0
Chris Coyier
ShopTalk
Twilio
Microsoft
YouTube
Amway
Connect with our hosts
Robbie Wagner
Chuck Carpenter
Ship Shape
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Whiskey Web and Whatnot
Top-Tier, Full-Stack Software Consultants
This show is brought to you by Ship Shape. Ship Shape’s software consultants solve complex software and app development problems with top-tier coding expertise, superior service, and speed. In a sea of choices, our senior-level development crew rises above the rest by delivering the best solutions for fintech, cybersecurity, and other fast-growing industries. Check us out at shipshape.io.
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7/27/2023 • 53 minutes, 49 seconds
Whiskey Web and Whatnot 100th Episode Round Table with Chris Coyier, Scott Tolinski, Tracy Lee, and Wes Bos
In this milestone 100th episode, Chuck and Robbie are joined by a round table of industry experts and web developers with different philosophies, preferences, and experiences in the tech space to share their opinions on the state of web development. The round table includes Chris Coyier, Co-Founder of CodePen; Scott Tolinski, former Owner of Level Up Tutorials; Tracy Lee, CEO and Co-Founder of This Dot Labs; and Wes Bos, Founder of BosType Inc.
The panel shares their opinions on the state of web development, reflecting on the journey from vanilla JavaScript to the rise of Tailwind CSS. They delve into the impact of Tailwind CSS on modern web development, discuss exciting new front-end APIs like the View Transitions API and Anchor Positioning API, and emphasize the importance of mastering JavaScript fundamentals.
In this episode, Robbie and Chuck bring industry experts together for a captivating discussion filled with valuable insights on the evolution of front-end development, new web technologies, and their interests outside of web development.
Key Takeaways
[01:43] - An introduction to the round table of industry experts.
[03:47] - A whiskey review: Sagamore and Benchmark.
[07:00] - Tech hot takes.
[21:14] - Scott’s experience using popover API.
[23:18] - Chuck discusses Chris’ talk at RenderATL.
[24:38] - How ChatGPT is negatively affecting Mozilla Firefox.
[28:21] - What each guest would do if they weren’t in web development?
[32:46] - Interesting topics on Chuck’s Twitter feed.
[40:46] - What makes a milk?
Quotes
[09:11] - “CSS is getting so complex now that it has to be compiled.” ~ Wes Bos
[23:15] - “Yeah, man, HTML rules.” ~ Scott Tolinski
[25:33] - “People stopped using Google as much, they’re going to AI.” ~ Wes Bos
Links
Chris Coyier
Chris Coyier Twitter
Chris Coyier LinkedIn
Wes Bos
Wes Bos Twitter
Wes Bos LinkedIn
Scott Tolinski
Scott Tolinski Twitter
Scott Tolinski LinkedIn
Tracy Lee Twitter
Tracy Lee LinkedIn
Kelly Vaughn Twitter
Kelly Vaughn LinkedIn
RenderATL
CodePen
Syntax Podcast
Level Up Tutorials
This Dot Labs
Modern Web
Sentry
Sagamore Spirit
Benchmark Kentucky Straight Bourbon
Tailwind CSS
Twitter
Nuxt
Angular
React JS
jQuery
Ember
Netflix
Rust
Microsoft
Safari
Mozilla Firefox
WWCD23
Google
Apple
ChatGPT
IMBD
Adobe After Effects
The Dalmore 12
Ken Wheeler
Nike
Trader Joe’s
Smartless Podcast
BlackRock
Ferrari
Make-A-Wish Foundation
Apple News
Connect with our hosts
Robbie Wagner
Chuck Carpenter
Ship Shape
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Whiskey Web and Whatnot
Top-Tier, Full-Stack Software Consultants
This show is brought to you by Ship Shape. Ship Shape’s software consultants solve complex software and app development problems with top-tier coding expertise, superior service, and speed. In a sea of choices, our senior-level development crew rises above the rest by delivering the best solutions for fintech, cybersecurity, and other fast-growing industries. Check us out at shipshape.io.
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7/20/2023 • 54 minutes, 33 seconds
OpenSauced, Developer Advocacy, and AI with Brian Douglas
Brian Douglas, Founder and CEO at OpenSauced, learned to code while pursuing his MBA and stayed up-to-date with the latest trends and technologies by tuning into podcasts and blogs.
Brian’s passion eventually caught the attention of Netlify, where he joined as an advocate. Later, he became the first advocate at GitHub, building out a developer relations team. Brian shares insights into the open-source world and the challenges faced by maintainers. He introduces his current venture, OpenSauced.pizza, which aims to improve GitHub insights and provide valuable knowledge about open-source contributions and tech debt. Brian mentions plans to expand the platform's support to include other Git host providers like GitLab and Bitbucket.In this episode, Brian talks to Robbie and Chuck about his journey from developer to developer advocate, the importance of developer experience, and his current project, OpenSauced.pizza, focusing on GitHub insights with plans to expand to support other Git host providers.
Key Takeaways
[00:31] - Introduction to Brian Douglas.
[01:59] - A whiskey review: Teeling Whiskey Wonders of Wood Single Pot Still.
[08:42] - Tech hot takes.
[15:03] - How Brian got into developer advocacy.
[25:39] - Brian talks about OpenSauced.
[32:15] - Future plans for OpenSauced.
[37:09] - Chuck asks Brian to teach him how to Dougie.
[38:06] - Brian explains how to start a podcast.
[42:40] - What Brian is most excited about with AI.
Quotes
[21:08] - “Everyone complains about how many Spidermans have we seen or Batman origin stories we’ve seen, but it’s the same thing on the web.” ~ Brian Douglas
[26:53] - “We want to move away from the big brother-like tools that exist.” ~ Brian Douglas
[39:11] - “My thing is, just do it. If it doesn't work out, use all that to start a new one.” ~ Brian Douglas
Links
Brian Douglas Twitter
Brian Douglas LinkedIn
Github
OpenSauced
Little Caesars
Teeling Wonders of Wood Single Pot Still
Jameson Irish Whiskey
World Drinks Awards
Josh Goldberg
Tailwind CSS
Angular
React
Netlify
Jamstack Radio
Supabase
Firebase
Google
Flutter
Apple Vision
Apple
Microsoft
Netflix
GitLab
Chris Coyier
Pizza Hut
Spotify
GitHub Copilot
Alexa
Stack Overflow
RenderATL
SXSW
Ember
Sauced Newsletter
Connect with our hosts
Robbie Wagner
Chuck Carpenter
Ship Shape
Subscribe and stay in touch
Apple Podcasts
Spotify
Google Podcasts
Whiskey Web and Whatnot
Top-Tier, Full-Stack Software Consultants
This show is brought to you by Ship Shape. Ship Shape’s software consultants solve complex software and app development problems with top-tier coding expertise, superior service, and speed. In a sea of choices, our senior-level development crew rises above the rest by delivering the best solutions for fintech, cybersecurity, and other fast-growing industries. Check us out at shipshape.io.
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7/13/2023 • 51 minutes, 17 seconds
Tech Careers, Hot Takes, and Wix with Emmy Cao and Yoav Abrahami
Chuck and Robbie are joined by Emmy Cao, Developer Advocate at Wix, and Yoav Abrahami, Chief Architect at Wix at the RenderATL 2023 conference to talk all things tech, including whether low code, no code tools are making developers obsolete.
Emmy and Yoav delve into Wix’s code-first approach, where users can write code and then create screens that modify that code visually. They highlight the accessibility of Wix's platform for designers and individuals new to development, allowing them to learn coding concepts with ease. They also discuss the inclusivity of the developer community, acknowledging that coding proficiency does not define one's legitimacy as a developer. They appreciate the democratization of coding and the potential for more people to learn and engage with technology through platforms like Wix.
In this episode, Emmy and Yoav talk to Robbie and Chuck about their perspective on popular tech debates on Twitter, the evolving nature of developer roles, and the concept of no-code and low-code platforms like Wix.
Key Takeaways
[00:25] - Introduction to Emmy Cao and Yoav Abrahami.
[01:05] - A whiskey review: Castle and Key - Restoration Rye Whiskey.
[11:26] - Yoav and Emmy speak about tech careers and tech hot takes.
[33:17] - Yoav and Emmy discuss the direction Wix is going in.
[47:46] - Vendor lock-in at Wix.
[52:06] - Emmy talks about e-sports coaching.
[56:36] - Yoav’s walk from Israel to the United States.
Quotes
[14:01] - “Development is about the experience, getting something done, getting software shipped, fixing these problems.” ~ Yoav Abrahami
[15:03] - “Thirty years ago, it was just a developer alone sitting behind a computer coding.” ~ Yoav Abrahami
[41:48] - “Honestly, I don’t think coding is as hard as people make it out to be.” ~ Emmy Cao
Links
Emmy Cao Twitter
Emmy Cao LinkedIn
Yoav Abrahami Twitter
Yoav Abrahami LinkedIn
Wix
Devs on Wix
Castle and Key: Restoration Rye Whiskey
Douglas Laing & Co
Fireball Whiskey
Sagamore Rye Whiskey
Chicken Cock Whiskey
HBO Max
Peacock
Twitter
Tailwind CSS
Adobe Photoshop
EmberConf 2023
Ember
Velo
React
jQuery
Angular
WordPress
ChatGPT
OpenAI
Squarespace
Headless UI
Codux
Adobe Dreamweaver
Node JS
GitHub
AWS Lambda
Roblox
Valve Corporation
FIFA 2023
Discord
Connect with our hosts
Robbie Wagner
Chuck Carpenter
Ship Shape
Subscribe and stay in touch
Apple Podcasts
Spotify
Google Podcasts
Whiskey Web and Whatnot
Top-Tier, Full-Stack Software Consultants
This show is brought to you by Ship Shape. Ship Shape’s software consultants solve complex software and app development problems with top-tier coding expertise, superior service, and speed. In a sea of choices, our senior-level development crew rises above the rest by delivering the best solutions for fintech, cybersecurity, and other fast-growing industries. Check us out at shipshape.io.
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7/6/2023 • 1 hour, 1 minute, 37 seconds
Hot Takes, Remix, and Next.js with Chance Strickland
Chuck and Robbie catch up with Chance Strickland, Senior Software Engineer at Replo, at the RenderATL conference. Chance kicks off the conversation by sharing that he is now working at a small startup after leaving the Remix core team.
The trio discuss the benefits and drawbacks of using signals, a tool that helps manage asynchronous JavaScript. They explore how signals can enhance code readability and simplify complex workflows, but caution against potential performance issues and the learning curve involved. The conversation shifts to rebasing, with Chance providing insights into its usage and advantages. He explains how rebasing can help maintain a clean Git history and enable seamless collaboration in a team setting.
In this episode, Chance talks to Robbie and Chuck about his experiences with tools like Tailwind, rebasing in Git, and the pros and cons of using signals in web development.
Key Takeaways
[01:57] - Introduction to Chance Strickland.
[04:11] - A whiskey review: Chicken Cock Kentucky Straight Bourbon.
[12:25] - Tech hot takes.
[19:17] - Chance’s opinion on Tailwind CSS.
[37:07] - What Chance loves about Next.js.
[45:59] - Why Chance is skipping leg day.
Quotes
[18:55] - “You can’t just come in and swing a hammer at everything because you read someone somewhere said this. You have to think about all of that context and understand.” ~ Chance Strickland
[20:47] - “Tailwind really is just a tool built on a CSS Principle.” ~ Chance Strickland
[28:28] - “The thing that keeps me coming back is the very simple promise that React has always given, which is, your UI is a function of your state.” ~ Chance Strickland
Links
Chance Strickland Twitter
Chance Strickland LinkedIn
FrontToBack
RenderATL 2023
EmberConf 2023
Replo
Remix
React
Radix UI
Chicken Cock Kentucky Straight Bourbon
Nike
Jack Daniel’s Tennessee Whiskey
DoorDash
Buffalo Trace Distillery
Skrewball Peanut Butter Whiskey
Fireball
Maker’s Mark
Kent C. Dodds
Tailwind CSS
Twitter
BEM
Astro
GitHub
Jason Miller
Preact
Next JS
Vercel
Ember
WordPress
GoDaddy
AWS
Shopify
Deno
Cloudflare
Shake Shack
In-N-Out
Taco Bell
Chi-Chi’s
Gus’s Fried Chicken
Cracker Barrel
Connect with our hosts
Robbie Wagner
Chuck Carpenter
Ship Shape
Subscribe and stay in touch
Apple Podcasts
Spotify
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Whiskey Web and Whatnot
Top-Tier, Full-Stack Software Consultants
This show is brought to you by Ship Shape. Ship Shape’s software consultants solve complex software and app development problems with top-tier coding expertise, superior service, and speed. In a sea of choices, our senior-level development crew rises above the rest by delivering the best solutions for fintech, cybersecurity, and other fast-growing industries. Check us out at shipshape.io.
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6/29/2023 • 58 minutes, 23 seconds
Web Browsers, Level Up Tutorials, and Sentry with Scott Tolinski
Chuck and Robbie are joined by Scott Tolinski, Executive Producer at Sentry, for a recorded chat from the RenderATL conference. The trio delves into lively discussions on various tech topics and shares their candid opinions on ongoing Twitter debates.
Scott opens up about his role at Sentry and how the acquisition has impacted his other venture, Level Up Tutorials. He sheds light on the new direction of Level Up Video and the exciting opportunities it brings for delivering free web development content. Scott also emphasizes the advantages of partnering with Sentry and the increased focus it allows for Syntax. He also provides insights on using a PostCSS plugin to deploy custom media queries and addresses the progress of Safari and its position compared to Internet Explorer (IE) as the browser with the poorest support for certain features.
In this episode, Scott talks to Chuck and Robbie about custom media queries, browser support for new CSS features, and the acquisition of Level Up Tutorials.
Key Takeaways
[01:15] - Introduction to Scott Tolinski.
[01:41] - A whiskey review: The Macallan Double Cask 12 Years Old.
[06:11] - Tech hot takes.
[14:22] - Scott talks about new features in CSS.
[16:29] - Features supported in the top web browsers.
[21:30] - How Scott's position at Sentry affects Level Up Tutorials.
[25:14] - Tools available that aren’t used frequently.
[30:33] - Tools in the works that excite Scott.
[32:36] - Scott talks about his time as an accountant and breakdancer.
[41:10] - The most uncool things Scott likes to do.
Quotes
[13:41] - “People just repeat what the library authors have said over and over again even if they don’t necessarily know what that means.” ~ Scott Tolinski
[16:44] - “Between Firefox and Safari, they’re really close into who has the worst support for things.” ~ Scott Tolinski
[26:33] - “People don’t realize that, to use the clipboard API, it’s a one-liner of JavaScript that is really easy to remember, but everybody reaches for a library.” ~ Scott Tolinski
Links
Scott Tolinski
Scott Tolinski Twitter
Scott Tolinski LinkedIn
EmberConf 2023
RenderATL 2023
Syntax Podcast
Level Up Tutorials
Sentry
Stranahan's - Colorado Whiskey
Costco
Twitter
Tailwind CSS
Svelte
React
Bootstrap
Ember JS
GitHub
Remix
Kent C. Dodds
Google
Safari
Firefox
Google Chrome
Arc
Discord
Amy Kapernick
Colby Fayock
James Quick
DOM
YouTube
Astro
Guitar World
University of Michigan
Ghostly International
Matthew Dear
Steam
Bravo TV
The Legend of Zelda: Tears of the Kingdom
Connect with our hosts
Robbie Wagner
Chuck Carpenter
Ship Shape
Subscribe and stay in touch
Apple Podcasts
Spotify
Google Podcasts
Whiskey Web and Whatnot
Top-Tier, Full-Stack Software Consultants
This show is brought to you by Ship Shape. Ship Shape’s software consultants solve complex software and app development problems with top-tier coding expertise, superior service, and speed. In a sea of choices, our senior-level development crew rises above the rest by delivering the best solutions for fintech, cybersecurity, and other fast-growing industries. Check us out at shipshape.io.
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6/22/2023 • 45 minutes, 15 seconds
Next.js, Vercel, and Subscription Models
Chuck and Robbie dive into their recent experience of building a new podcast site and all the frameworks in their toolkit including Next.js, Vercel, and surprisingly, React.
Robbie shares the motivation behind building a new podcast site, with the duo wanting more control over analytics, customization, and the overall look and feel, rather than relying on podcast platforms. Robbie used a Tailwind template in Next.js due to its modern features and the ease of leveraging Next.js' capabilities. But the frameworks in Chuck and Robbie’s toolkit are not without flaws. They discuss Vercel's payment model and pricing plans, including a request for a la carte payment options to escape multiple subscriptions.
In this episode, Robbie and Chuck talk about their experience using Next.js and Vercel for their podcast website, the potential for optimizing React usage in static sites, and the costly subscription model.
Key Takeaways
[02:30] - A whiskey review - Ancient Age Kentucky Straight Bourbon Whiskey.
[10:17] - Chuck and Robbie praise Next.js and Vercel.
[37:07] - The problem with the subscription model.
[45:02] - Robbie finally moves.
[51:39] - Chuck and Robbie’s summer plans and gaming.
Quotes
[10:36] - ”Next.js, a good meta-framework that makes even React tolerable for Robbie.” ~ Chuck Carpenter
[26:34] - “IT organizations can be very strict about how many additional places you’re able to put code.” ~ Chuck Carpenter
[28:52] - “Anything that’s built to make money, is going to be optimized for the people making the money.” ~ Robbie Wagner
Links
Riverside
Zencastr
Ancient Age: Kentucky Straight Bourbon Whiskey
Buffalo Trace
RC Cola
Jack Daniel’s Tennessee Whiskey
Rittenhouse Rye
Guillermo Rauch
Next.js
React
Tailwind CSS
Slack
Vercel
Amazon Web Services
Netlify
Astro
OpenNext
Seed.run
Fly.io
iPhone
PlanetScale
Heroku
PostgreSQL
Supabase
Cloudflare
ClickUp
Disney
Hulu
Fox
Comcast
HBO
Netflix
Verizon
Cox
Century Link
PODS
Federal Reserve
Target
Render ATL
EmberConf 2023
Zelda: Tears of the Kingdom
Super Mario Odyssey
Diablo 4
Nintendo
HP Elitebook
FIFA 2023
Stadia
Steam
AMD
iMac
Connect with our hosts
Robbie Wagner
Chuck Carpenter
Ship Shape
Subscribe and stay in touch
Apple Podcasts
Spotify
Google Podcasts
Whiskey Web and Whatnot
Top-Tier, Full-Stack Software Consultants
This show is brought to you by Ship Shape. Ship Shape’s software consultants solve complex software and app development problems with top-tier coding expertise, superior service, and speed. In a sea of choices, our senior-level development crew rises above the rest by delivering the best solutions for fintech, cybersecurity, and other fast-growing industries. Check us out at shipshape.io.
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6/15/2023 • 1 hour, 2 minutes, 13 seconds
CodePen, Web Animation, and the Future of AR/VR with Stephen Shaw
Stephen Shaw is a Front End Developer at CodePen. But his journey into the world of web development traces back to his earliest memory, captured in a nostalgic photo from 1987 of him sitting on his dad's lap gazing at a computer tower.
Today Stephen contributes to building one of the most widely used code editors for the web. CodePen, as Stephen reveals, is a dynamic social network where people share code samples and demos among a vibrant community. Stephen reminisces about his involvement in working on Ken Wheeler's cash and using classic web animation tools like GSAP (GreenSock Animation Platform). He's also keen on exploring what lies ahead. Stephen predicts that Apple's rumored headset device will harness the power of AR/VR, pushing developers to adapt to the technology.
In this episode, Stephen talks to Robbie and Chuck about his challenges using typescript at CodePen, the evolution of web animation tools, and the future of VR and AR on the web.
Key Takeaways
[00:35] - An Introduction to Stephen Shaw.
[01:53] - A whiskey review: Angels Envy Straight Bourbon Whiskey.
[07:00] - Tech hot takes.
[09:58] - Why Stephen’s team is converting projects to typescript.
[18:21] - Stephen talks about his time maintaining cash.
[21:11] - How to design web animations.
[24:44] - Stephen discusses the future of VR and AR on the web.
[35:07] - Stephen’s career journey.
[42:45] - Chuck, Robbie, and Stephen explore gaming.
[47:48] - Stephen's other hobbies.
Quotes
[07:32] - “If you have an existing code that works, don’t add typescript. That's not going to make your life any easier.” ~ Stephen Shaw
[25:00] - “I think that we’re very close to a crossroads. Similar to back in 2007 when the iPhone was introduced and suddenly everyone was scrambling to have a mobile website.” ~ Stephen Shaw
[39:57] - “That’s my idea of a web developer. I want to make information accessible. I want to figure out who the audience is and make them connect with what they need.” ~ Stephen Shaw
Links
Stephen Shaw Twitter
Stephen Shaw LinkedIn
CodePen
Dribble UI
David Khourshid
Angels Envy Straight Bourbon Whiskey
Woodford Reserve
Tailwind CSS
Github
Visual Studio Code
Zod
Solid JS
React
Twitter
Rust
Ruby on Rails
GraphQL
Next JS
jQuery
GreenSock
Figma
Rive
Adobe
Apple
Oculus Quest
Firefox
Google
Amazon
Microsoft
CodeSandbox
JSFiddle
The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild
The Legend of Zelda: Tears of the Kingdon
Nintendo Switch
Toys “R” Us
Skyrim
Virginia Tech
Kirby
Super Mario Odyssey
Lego
Star Wars
Disney Plus
DigitalOcean
Connect with our hosts
Robbie Wagner
Chuck Carpenter
Ship Shape
Subscribe and stay in touch
Apple Podcasts
Spotify
Google Podcasts
Whiskey Web and Whatnot
Top-Tier, Full-Stack Software Consultants
This show is brought to you by Ship Shape. Ship Shape’s software consultants solve complex software and app development problems with top-tier coding expertise, superior service, and speed. In a sea of choices, our senior-level development crew rises above the rest by delivering the best solutions for fintech, cybersecurity, and other fast-growing industries. Check us out at shipshape.io.
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6/8/2023 • 58 minutes, 51 seconds
Building Zed: A Code Editor for Performance and Collaboration with Nathan Sobo
Nathan Sobo, Founder of Zed Industries, is a founding member of the team that built Atom at GitHub. With nine years of experience under his belt, Nathan made the bold decision to leave GitHub and start a new venture: building Zed, a code editor that captures his vast knowledge and ambitious goals.Nathan opens up about the frustrations he faced with web technology, specifically Electron, which was initially developed to construct Atom but ended up being a resource-hungry burden. Zed, on the other hand, aims to be a more streamlined and efficient code editor by harnessing the power of Rust. Of course, this path was not without its challenges, as Nathan candidly shares the steep learning curve and unique ownership model that came with using Rust. But with determination and a deep understanding of Rust's capabilities, Nathan and his team created an editor with enough promise to secure funding in just two weeks.
In this episode, Nathan talks to Robbie and Chuck about his experience working with Atom, his motivation for building Zed, and the challenges of analyzing community feedback.
Key Takeaways
[00:31] - Introduction to Nathan Sobo.
[02:51] - A whiskey review: Redbreast Kentucky Oak Edition.
[14:12] - Why Nathan created Zed.
[27:55] - Future plans for Zed.
[43:01] - Where the name Zed comes from.
[48:08] - Nathan’s views on crypto.
[53:39] - Nathan's time in Italy.
Quotes
[17:52] - “The learning curve for Rust was, I describe it as a vertical cliff with snakes nesting in the rocks biting me as I ascended it.” ~ Nathan Sobo
[39:11] - “If I look for 20 miles in any direction, I see shit that would be a really good idea to add to Zed.” ~ Nathan Sobo
[42:31] - “I didn’t lick my finger and figure out which way the wind was blowing to start working on Zed. I did it because I wanted to do it, and I didn’t even know why I wanted to do it.” ~ Nahan Sobo
Links
Nathan Sobo Twitter
Nathan Sobo LinkedIn
Zed Industries
GitHub
Rust
Redbreast Kentucky Oak Edition
Kentucky Owl
Nike
Whiskey Advocate’s Top 2 Whiskeys of 2022
Four Roses Bourbon
Teeling Whiskey
Emacs
Chromium
Chrome DevTools
Visual Studio Code
Chrome
Tuple
Pop
Slack
Warp
Electron JS
Twitter
Flutter
JSON
React
Web Assembly
Tree-sitter
Hacker News
Costco
Kirkland
Facebook
Vue
Pulp Fiction
Svelte
PHP
Ember
GPT-4
RenderATL 2023
Hot Ones
Airbnb
Duolingo
Campari
Amaro Nonino
Fernet-Branca
Aperol
Bud Light
Avignonesi
Connect with our hosts
Robbie Wagner
Chuck Carpenter
Ship Shape
Subscribe and stay in touch
Apple Podcasts
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Whiskey Web and Whatnot
Top-Tier, Full-Stack Software Consultants
This show is brought to you by Ship Shape. Ship Shape’s software consultants solve complex software and app development problems with top-tier coding expertise, superior service, and speed. In a sea of choices, our senior-level development crew rises above the rest by delivering the best solutions for fintech, cybersecurity, and other fast-growing industries. Check us out at shipshape.io.
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6/1/2023 • 1 hour, 4 minutes, 58 seconds
Hot Takes, Bun, and Zig with Jarred Sumner
Jarred Sumner, Founder and CEO of Oven, is bringing speed to the world of Javascript with his project, Bun. Bun is a next-generation Javascript runtime bundler, transpiler, and NPM package manager that promises lightning-fast speeds. It's already making waves in the industry. The company secured seven million dollars in funding to build hosting for Bun in August 2022.
One of the secrets to Bun's success is its use of the underrated programming language Zig. Jarred explains that Zig allowed him to be incredibly productive and save time with its memory allocator. Another essential feature of Bun is its pre-allocation of almost everything, avoiding the need for dynamically pushing arrays, which can significantly slow down the process. The new version of Bun also has a different runtime than other frameworks like Node and Deno, making it even faster.
In this episode, Jarred talks to Robbie and Chuck about his views on trending Twitter topics, how his company uses benchmarks to optimize Bun's performance, and what he believes has happened to the creativity of the web.
Key Takeaways
[00:30] - Introduction to Jarred Sumner.
[01:17] - A whiskey review: Peerless Small Batch Kentucky Straight Bourbon
[04:42] - Tech hot takes.
[11:15] - Jarred’s new bundler.
[15:36] - Jarred’s reason for using Zig.
[18:52] - Upcoming hosting product Jarred’s team is working on.
[23:09] - What happened to the creativity of the web?
[27:58] - Jarred’s draft tweets.
[30:12] - Jarred’s hobbies besides coding.
[38:51] - Other developers and projects Jarred finds interesting.
Quotes
[16:06] - “Zig is really productive. I tried to use Rust, and I just had a lot of trouble being productive.” ~ Jarred Sumner
[17:55] - “For CPUs, the thing that’s slow usually is not actually the processing, it’s memory.” ~ Jarred Sumner
[22:52] - “I think that we can make the internet and Javascript applications faster, and we can make it easier to deploy, and we can make it better. It going to be a lot of work, but it's going to be really fun.” ~ Jarred Sumner
Links
Jarred Sumner
Jarred Sumner Twitter
Jarred Sumner Github
Jarred Sumner LinkedIn
Why isn’t the internet more fun and weird?
Bun
Oven
Peerless Small Batch Kentucky Straight Bourbon
BEM
GitHub
Ember JS
React
Intercom
Node JS
Deno
Zig
Rust
Google Chrome
Chromium
Vercel
Amazon Management Console
Twitter
Myspace
CNET
Reddit
Roblox
Stripe
Disney Plus
Marvel
DC
Batman Beyond
Back to the Future
The Boring Company
Netflix
Elysia JS
Wasm
Shepherd JS
Mozilla Firefox
Connect with our hosts
Robbie Wagner
Chuck Carpenter
Ship Shape
Subscribe and stay in touch
Apple Podcasts
Spotify
Google Podcasts
Whiskey Web and Whatnot
Top-Tier, Full-Stack Software Consultants
This show is brought to you by Ship Shape. Ship Shape’s software consultants solve complex software and app development problems with top-tier coding expertise, superior service, and speed. In a sea of choices, our senior-level development crew rises above the rest by delivering the best solutions for fintech, cybersecurity, and other fast-growing industries. Check us out at shipshape.io.
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5/25/2023 • 50 minutes, 36 seconds
Native Inputs, Blockchain, and Bluesky
What happened to the blockchain? A few years ago, it seemed like the whole world had high hopes for the technology. Today, Chuck and Robbie wonder if it will ever make a comeback. In addition to following up on last week’s episode about input types, Chuck and Robbie remember the days when software piracy was rampant and how it affected the industry. This leads to a discussion about the blockchain and how everyone seemed to jump on the bandwagon a few years ago. But now, the technology seems to have faded into the background. However, Chuck and Robbie point out that the blockchain still has practical use cases, especially for things that require trust and immutability like government documents or a history of maintenance on a property.In this episode, Chuck and Robbie talk about the use of native inputs and how they can save time and effort, what happened to the blockchain and whether it will make a comeback, and the ebbs and flows of social media apps.
Key Takeaways
[02:21] - A whiskey review: Buffalo Trace 90 Proof.
[09:50] - Chuck and Robbie discuss native inputs that they know.
[17:52] - New features launched in Supabase.
[20:36] - Subscription models.
[23:33] - What happened to the blockchain?
[27:42] - Bluesky invites on Twitter and the current state of social media.
[40:03] - Chuck and Robbie talk about gaming.
[48:01] - The crazy offer Robbie got for his house.
[50:13] - What Chuck and Robbie have been watching.
Quotes
[09:26] - “Buffalo Trace, really good, readily available, inexpensive that is a top choice.” ~ Chuck Carpenter
[12:26] - “Oftentimes, they ask what makes a senior engineer, and I think the joy in deleting code is one of them.” ~ Chuck Carpenter
[30:21] - “When TikTok came out, I was like TikTok is dumb. No one is ever going to use this. It’s just for little kids to post dance videos and do stupid things, and now it's the biggest thing ever.” ~ Robbie Wagner
Links
Buffalo Trace 90 Proof
Sazerac Rye
Todd Snyder
Uniqlo
Coca Cola
RC Cola
PepsiRC Cola
Maker’s Mark
Babel
M&M’s
jQuery
Bootstrap
Big O Tires
Supabase
Firebase
Google
Nicki Minaj
Netlify
Vercel
Adobe Photoshop
Rust
ChatGPT
Blockchain
Twitter
Bluesky
Mastodon
TikTok
YouTube
Wes Bos
Vine
Facebook
Craigslist
Poshmark
Apple
Venmo
PayPal
The Legend of Zelda: Tears of the Kingdom
Super Mario Odyssey
The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild
Hogwarts Legacy
Tony Hawk’s Pro Skater 1+2
Xbox
Nintendo Switch
8BitDo
EA
Star Wars Eclipse
Lego
Starlink
Titans
Mandalorian
Peloton
Succession
The Witcher
The Jonas Brothers
Connect with our hosts
Robbie Wagner
Chuck Carpenter
Ship Shape
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Whiskey Web and Whatnot
Top-Tier, Full-Stack Software Consultants
This show is brought to you by Ship Shape. Ship Shape’s software consultants solve complex software and app development problems with top-tier coding expertise, superior service, and speed. In a sea of choices, our senior-level development crew rises above the rest by delivering the best solutions for fintech, cybersecurity, and other fast-growing industries. Check us out at shipshape.io.
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5/18/2023 • 55 minutes, 50 seconds
HTML, Shadowbanning, and Open Source Buyouts
Engineers often have the urge to create something bigger and better than what already exists, driven by their competitive nature. But this desire for innovation can sometimes lead to overengineering, resulting in a loss of valuable time and resources.
Robbie shares his recent frustrating experience with the custom date and time pickers in an app that left him feeling flustered and confused. Chuck believes that a developer got carried away with trying to conquer a personal challenge or solve a unique user requirement, which is a common mistake. The truth is, there's no shame in using the existing vanilla libraries that are battle-tested. Chuck and Robbie recommend starting with the base functionality provided by the browser and progressively enhancing it, rather than building entirely custom components from scratch.In this episode, Robbie and Chuck talk about the benefits and drawbacks of building custom web components versus using native browser functionalities, the complexities of the Twitter algorithm, and open-source projects that are backed by corporate funders.
Key Takeaways
[00:33] - A whiskey review: Sazerac Rye.
[06:34] - Building custom vs. browser native HTML.
[34:01] - Chuck and Robbie’s challenges with Twitter.
[37:15] - What's wrong with cryptocurrency?
[44:36] - Chuck sold his Rivian while Robbie’s house is still on the market.
[52:48] - Syntax Podcast partners with Sentry.
Quotes
[09:41] - “Ultimately, you’re always looking at what a browser provides for free and why that isn’t good enough.” ~ Chuck Carpenter
[13:08] - “Safari is the new Internet Explorer.” ~ Chuck Carpenter
[41:21] - “The nice thing with Ethereum is it is really backing most coins because people just build on top of Ethereum.” ~ Robbie Wagner
Links
Sazerac Rye
Buffalo Trace Distillery
Vuori
Jason Bateman
Rittenhouse Rye
Safari
iPhone
Internet Explorer
Progressive Web App
Chromium
Arc Browser
Brave Browser
jQuery
React
Vue.js
WordPress
Bootstrap
Material UI
Tailwind
Next.js
Vercel
Netlify
Solid JS
Svelte
Seed.run
Twitter
Shiba Inu
Bitcoin
Dogecoin
Ethereum
Benzinga
Cars & Bids
Doug DeMuro
Syntax Podcast
Porsche
ShopTalk
Wes Bos
Chris Coyier
Render ATL
Connect with our hosts
Robbie Wagner
Chuck Carpenter
Ship Shape
Subscribe and stay in touch
Apple Podcasts
Spotify
Google Podcasts
Whiskey Web and Whatnot
Top-Tier, Full-Stack Software Consultants
This show is brought to you by Ship Shape. Ship Shape’s software consultants solve complex software and app development problems with top-tier coding expertise, superior service, and speed. In a sea of choices, our senior-level development crew rises above the rest by delivering the best solutions for fintech, cybersecurity, and other fast-growing industries. Check us out at shipshape.io.
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5/11/2023 • 1 hour, 2 minutes, 16 seconds
Hot Takes, TanStack, and Open Source with Tanner Linsley
Tanner Linsley, Co-Founder and VP of UI/UX at Nozzle is known for creating some of the most popular open-source libraries in the tech space. These libraries keep the wheels turning by making things easier for him and many other developers in their day-to-day jobs.Tanner has built libraries, such as React Query and React Table, that are now part of TanStack, his branded collection of tools. TanStack's other products include a router currently in beta, TanStack Query Table, TanStack Virtual, and TanStack Ranger. Tanner explains that he started building these tools while working on his SEO analytical platform, Nozzle, where they were created to solve the challenges he faced while developing the platform. It hasn’t been easy managing the expectations of users and maintaining open-source projects without major funding, but Tanner has made an impact in the community nonetheless.
In this episode, Tanner talks to Robbie and Chuck about his take on trending tech topics, his popular open-source libraries in TanStack, and his future framework plans.
Key Takeaways
[00:24] - Introduction to Tanner Linsley.
[01:33] - A whiskey review: MONDAY Zero Alcohol Whiskey.
[11:55] - Tech hot takes.
[29:14] - What is TanStack?
[35:17] - What is a framework?
[45:08] - Tanner’s non-tech hobbies.
Quotes
[19:47] - “The ultimate UI that existed before so many other UI’s is Excel.” ~ Tanner Linsley
[24:22] - “Anytime you do anything outside of React, with state management, it’s all going to come back to use-sync-external-store.” ~ Tanner Linsley
[34:55] - “I have really big eyes for Solid right now. Even though almost everything I do is still in React. I stare at the greener grass every day, every day, for Solid.” ~ Tanner Linsley
Links
Tanner Linsley Twitter
Tanner Linsley LinkedIn
TanStack
MONDAY Zero Alcohol Whiskey
MONDAY Whiskey Sour Kit
Saturday Night Live
Ana de Armas
Diet Coca Cola
Tailwind CSS
Ryan Carniato
React
Solid JS
Preact JS
Vue
Next.js
Nozzle
Astro JS
Vite
Vercel
Remix
Shopify
Netlify
Dominik Dorfmeister
Adobe Creative Cloud
Reactathon
React Summit
React Rally
Spotify
Kent C. Dodds
Tyler McGinnis
Ryan Florence
Svelte
Connect with our hosts
Robbie Wagner
Chuck Carpenter
Ship Shape
Subscribe and stay in touch
Apple Podcasts
Spotify
Google Podcasts
Whiskey Web and Whatnot
Top-Tier, Full-Stack Software Consultants
This show is brought to you by Ship Shape. Ship Shape’s software consultants solve complex software and app development problems with top-tier coding expertise, superior service, and speed. In a sea of choices, our senior-level development crew rises above the rest by delivering the best solutions for fintech, cybersecurity, and other fast-growing industries. Check us out at shipshape.io.
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5/4/2023 • 54 minutes, 38 seconds
Confluent, Kafka, and Developer Advocacy with Lucia Cerchie
When you think about the career journey of a software developer, teaching elementary school is not typically the first thing that comes to mind. But for Lucia Cerchie, Developer Advocate at Confluent, her elementary school teaching experience gave her a huge advantage in her work.
In this episode, Lucia discusses her work with Kafka, a distributed event streaming platform, and how she creates content to introduce developers to Kafka more easily, especially for beginners. She explains Kafka’s scalability and how it can handle large amounts of data in real-time, making it a great choice for processing high volumes of data. But Kafka isn’t the answer for everyone. Lucia emphasizes the importance of understanding the "why" behind using it and knowing when to leverage it based on the problem at hand.
Lucia talks to Robbie and Chuck about her journey from being an elementary school teacher to her career in developer advocacy, her work at Confluent with Kafka, and how she creates content to make complex technologies more accessible.
Key Takeaways
[00:27] - Introduction to Lucia Cerchie.
[01:46] - A whiskey review: Barrel Bourbon Batch 032.
[06:45] - Hot takes from Twitter.
[14:21] - Lucia’s path to becoming a developer advocate.
[19:58] - Lucia explains Kafka.
[26:35] - Lucia explains Confluent and its business model.
[39:15] - Programming languages Lucia has used in her tutorials.
[44:17] - Chuck, Robbie, and Lucia talk about exercise.
[47:45] - Lucia talks about her hobbies.
Quotes
[16:01] - “The motivation actually comes from back when I was teaching. Which is, I want to help other people learn and make teaching accessible.” ~ Lucia Cerchie
[25:03] - “Kafka's use cases are not just event-driven web apps. It’s things like main frame conversions, data pipelines.” ~ Lucia Cerchie
[40:08] - “I think I would recommend Python to absolute beginners to coding just because of the human readability of the language.” ~ Lucia Cerchie
Links
Lucia Cerchie Twitter
Lucia Cerchie LinkedIn
Confluent
Confluent Developer
What is Apache Kafka®? (A Confluent Lightboard by Tim Berglund) + ksqlDB
Apache Kafka Documentation
Cerchie/learn-about-CLIs
Cerchie/magic-byte-illustration
Cerchie/git-cherry-pick-tutorial
AIS demo
Barrell Bourbon Batch 032
Band-Aid
Twitter
NPM
Tailwind CSS
Vanilla CSS
Typescript
Ember JS
ThePrimeagen
IBM
GraphQL
New York Times
Wordle
Facebook
National Geographic
Socket
Vim
Kinesis Ergo
Dvorak Keyboard
Windows
Mac
Linux
Acquia
Rust
Elixir
ChatGPT
Daisy Jones & the Six
Fleetwood Mac
Stack Overflow
Neovim
CoffeeScript
WebAssembly
GitHub
Connect with our hosts
Robbie Wagner
Chuck Carpenter
Ship Shape
Subscribe and stay in touch
Apple Podcasts
Spotify
Google Podcasts
Whiskey Web and Whatnot
Top-Tier, Full-Stack Software Consultants
This show is brought to you by Ship Shape. Ship Shape’s software consultants solve complex software and app development problems with top-tier coding expertise, superior service, and speed. In a sea of choices, our senior-level development crew rises above the rest by delivering the best solutions for fintech, cybersecurity, and other fast-growing industries. Check us out at shipshape.io.
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4/20/2023 • 54 minutes, 5 seconds
Twitter Open Source Algorithm, Home Labs, and Chat GPT vs. Bard
Twitter released its open-source algorithm and developers like Robbie and Chuck are digging into the code to find out what they have been hiding. While the recommendation algorithm has been useful, it also has major pitfalls. Twitter’s algorithm categorizes and deprioritizes users from appearing on people's feeds which is frustrating when your page is the one being deprioritized.
Google launched its AI competitor, Bard. In a rap battle, ChatGPT emerged victorious, and the two AIs even agreed to take over the world together, which the hosts found somewhat creepy.In this episode, Robbie and Chuck talk about biases they discovered in Twitter’s open-source algorithm, how developers are turning home networks into high-tech home labs, and how Google’s new AI compares to ChatGPT.
Key Takeaways
[01:45] - A whiskey review: Jack Daniel’s Old No. 7.
[14:16] - Ways to improve safety on websites.
[20:00] - Twitter makes its algorithm open source.
[29:00] - What are home labs?
[45:05] - Bard vs. ChatGPT.
[50:47] - Virginia Tech Women’s Basketball team in the Final 4.
Quotes
[25:08] - “Twitter source code, there's a lot to start to unravel there, but it's nice that the algorithms are out.” ~ Chuck Carpenter
[29:27] - “There’s a whole culture of home lab creation, and it’s essentially like taking your home network and elevating it.” ~ Chuck Carpenter
[37:46] - “Mutanies are bad but, whenever one goes the way you want we call it a revolution instead.” ~ Robbie Wagner
Links
Jim Beam
Jack Daniel’s
Glencairn
Destination Imagination
Odyssey of the Mind
Pepsi
Miller High Life
Big League Chew
Frank Sinatra
Hpnotiq
Bacardi
Dr Pepper
Kool-Aid
GitHub Copilot
Javascript
IndexedDB
Twitter
The Primeagen
Scala
Rust
Donald Trump
Astro
Dazed and Confused
SolidJS
ChatGPT
Kubernetes
Alexa
Pi-hole
Home Assistant
Rasberry Pi
React
Minecraft
Arch Linux
Gnome
Vim
Dominos
NPM
Nextcloud
Bard
ShareGPT
GitLab
Amazon
Microsoft
Prim Logix
Virginia Tech
NCAA Tournament 2023
FIFA World Cup
ESPN
Premier League
McDonald’s
Tabasco
Connect with our hosts
Robbie Wagner
Chuck Carpenter
Ship Shape
Subscribe and stay in touch
Apple Podcasts
Spotify
Google Podcasts
Whiskey Web and Whatnot
Top-Tier, Full-Stack Software Consultants
This show is brought to you by Ship Shape. Ship Shape’s software consultants solve complex software and app development problems with top-tier coding expertise, superior service, and speed. In a sea of choices, our senior-level development crew rises above the rest by delivering the best solutions for fintech, cybersecurity, and other fast-growing industries. Check us out at shipshape.io.
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4/13/2023 • 1 hour, 2 minutes, 1 second
Tech Layoffs, the Economy, and Remote Work
The tech industry is still grappling with the aftermath of the second dot com crash. Executives are cash grabbing, banks are failing and the government seems to be turning a blind eye. Will executives replace all their developers with AI?
It can be difficult to not turn your frustration to the C-suite when they seem to be getting more wealthy by cutting labor costs. Meanwhile, developers are living with the uncertainty and financial burden of ongoing tech layoffs. The industry’s business practices and poor regulation seem a casualty of the pandemic from which the tech industry hasn’t recovered.
In this episode, Robbie and Chuck talk about the concerning state of the tech industry and the economy, ongoing layoffs and their impact on developers' lives, and the shift in remote work culture.
Key Takeaways
[00:35] - A whiskey review: Black Button Single Barrel Finished in Port Cask.
[08:58] - Chuck and Robbie discuss how the pandemic has affected tech jobs.
[33:34] - Chuck and Robbie discuss college loyalty.
[41:00] - Robbie talks about his upgraded camera setup.
[43:58] - Chuck receives his Rivian R1S.
Quotes
[17:15] - “I’m a fan of capitalism in general, but there has got to be more regulation around it.” ~ Robbie Wagner
[20:07] - “Everybody loves capitalism until it doesn’t work for them.” ~ Chuck Carpenter
[22:27] - “Facebook killed MySpace, and ever since, I’ve hated them.“ ~ Robbie Wagner
Links
Boyz n the Hood
Black Button Distilling
FDA
Ports of New York Winery
Salamander Signature Cake
Pepperidge Farm
Federal Reserve
American Airlines
First Republic Bank
Microsoft
Google
Facebook
Twitter
PayPal
Peter Thiel
Dogecoin
Tesla
LinkedIn
Virginia Tech
The Inn at Virginia Tech
Holiday Inn
McDonald’s
Arby’s
Chick-Fil-A
ThePrimeagen
Learn with Jason
Range Rover
Rivian
Audi
Chevrolet
Cars and Bids
Doug DeMuro
Ford
MeUndies
Hanes
Todd Snyder
Vuori
Servant
Apple
Rad
Skate or Die
Ted Lasso
Premier League
FIFA 2023
Meta
Bitski @shipshapecode
Connect with our hosts
Robbie Wagner
Chuck Carpenter
Ship Shape
Subscribe and stay in touch
Apple Podcasts
Spotify
Google Podcasts
Whiskey Web and Whatnot
Top-Tier, Full-Stack Software Consultants
This show is brought to you by Ship Shape. Ship Shape’s software consultants solve complex software and app development problems with top-tier coding expertise, superior service, and speed. In a sea of choices, our senior-level development crew rises above the rest by delivering the best solutions for fintech, cybersecurity, and other fast-growing industries. Check us out at shipshape.io.
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4/6/2023 • 58 minutes, 24 seconds
Exploring Open-Source and SolidJS with Ryan Carniato
Ryan Carniato, Creator of SolidJS and Principal Engineer at Netlify, has always had a love for music and tech. He set his punk rock dreams aside and settled down to become a full-time engineer.
Ryan started programming at the age of 11 and got his first job at eBay where he contributed to their top open-source project, Marko. After building his network and experience in open source, he landed a job with Netlify living many developers’ dreams of getting paid to work on open-source projects.
In this episode, Ryan talks to Chuck and Robbie about working on open-source projects, his experiences at eBay and Netlify, and his thoughts on TypeScript and inferred types versus explicit types.
Key Takeaways
[00:31] - Introduction to Ryan Carniato.
[02:18] - A whiskey review - Barrel Whiskey Infinity Barrel Project.
[10:54] - Ryan comments on tech hot takes from Twitter.
[15:21] - How Ryan started programming at 11 years old.
[19:50] - Ryan's journey into working on open-source projects.
[45:48] - Ryan talks about music, hiking, and video games.
Quotes
[13:04] - “When you think of Typescript, you think of something concrete, like something you can build on, and dependable. In Javascript, it's more like an art. Kinda like painting.” ~ Ryan Carniato
[19:14] - “I think at a young age where you can find those things that you are empowered to just do whatever you feel like, it's super powerful.” ~ Ryan Carniato
[29:14] - “Our biggest bottleneck is the network and the devices that are in the users' hands.” ~ Ryan Carniato
Links
Ryan Carniato Twitter
Mr. Solid
SoildJS
eBay
Netlify
Barrel Whiskey Infinity Barrel Project
Twitter
Motley Crue
Tailwind CSS
The Primeagen
SEGA Genesis
Nintendo
Geek Squad
Jurassic Park
Vue JS
Knockout JS
Backbone JS
Marko JS
The Madness
The Clash
High Fidelity
Angular
Ember JS
React
Svelte
Astro
Next JS
jQuery
Jason Miller
JSX
Mesa Boogie
Chrono Triggers
Dungeons & Dragons
Twitch
The Witcher 3
Gwent
Skyrim
FIFA 23
Nintendo Switch
Mario Kart
Discord
Github
Connect with our hosts
Robbie Wagner
Chuck Carpenter
Ship Shape
Subscribe and stay in touch
Apple Podcasts
Spotify
Google Podcasts
Whiskey Web and Whatnot
Top-Tier, Full-Stack Software Consultants
This show is brought to you by Ship Shape. Ship Shape’s software consultants solve complex software and app development problems with top-tier coding expertise, superior service, and speed. In a sea of choices, our senior-level development crew rises above the rest by delivering the best solutions for fintech, cybersecurity, and other fast-growing industries. Check us out at shipshape.io.
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3/30/2023 • 1 hour, 7 minutes, 12 seconds
The Benefits of Networking, Tech Conferences, and Disney World
Conferences are one of the best ways to network with like-minded developers and find new insights to bring back to your team. Plus, you might even be able to build your entire wardrobe for the year out of free swag.Chuck and Robbie are no strangers to the conference scene, they’ve attended their fair share back when developers had to find them by word of mouth. Today, there are some aggregators out which apparently have every developer conference type of thing under the sun. Whether you're going with your team or flying solo, you're bound to learn something new and hopefully come away with a few takeaways. And let's not forget the cool locations some conferences are hosted in - definitely a plus.In this episode, Robbie and Chuck talk about upcoming tech conferences in 2023, the benefits of attending conferences and networking with other engineers, and how to convince leadership to invest in conference trips for their team’s professional development.
Key Takeaways
[00:37] - A whiskey review: Nashville Barrel Company Straight Rye Whiskey.
[04:49] - Upcoming tech conferences and why attendance is beneficial.
[17:08] - Chuck and Robbie announce they will be recording WWW at EmberConf.
[21:41] - How do you attend a conference without having to pay for it?
[25:37] - Chuck’s trip to Disney World.
[40:19] - Better underwear options than MeUndies.
Quotes
[07:15] - “Going to any conference that's in a different area or potentially different subject matter than you’re used to is going to help broaden the way you look at things.” ~ Robbie Wagner
[17:11] - “We have been confirmed that we will be recording a live episode of this podcast at EmberConf.” ~ Robbie Wagner
[25:27] - “It’s important to develop your network, and in subject matters you’re interested in is a great place to do it.” ~ Chuck Carpenter
Links
Reddit
Nashville Barrel Company
Javascript
Confs.tech
Dev Events
Render ATL
Slack
Ember
Discord
VueConf US
Nuxt
EmberConf
Portlandia
LinkedIn
Disney World
The Villages
Wes Bos
ThePrimeagen
Kinesis 360
Logitech Lif for Mac
MeUndies
Saxx
My Package
J. Crew
Adidas
Nike
StockX
Stadium Goods
Puma
Mugsy Jeans
The Woman in the House Across the Street from the Girl in the Window
Shrinking
Play Station
ChatGPT
Hogwarts Legacy
Zelda
Diablo 4
Uniqlo
Vans
Connect with our hosts
Robbie Wagner
Chuck Carpenter
Ship Shape
Subscribe and stay in touch
Apple Podcasts
Spotify
Google Podcasts
Whiskey Web and Whatnot
Top-Tier, Full-Stack Software Consultants
This show is brought to you by Ship Shape. Ship Shape’s software consultants solve complex software and app development problems with top-tier coding expertise, superior service, and speed. In a sea of choices, our senior-level development crew rises above the rest by delivering the best solutions for fintech, cybersecurity, and other fast-growing industries. Check us out at shipshape.io.
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3/23/2023 • 54 minutes, 18 seconds
PNPM, Algorithms, and Angular
It’s hard to find a good package manager, and even the most seasoned developers still struggle to figure them out. Robbie kicks off the tech talk by sharing his misadventures trying to figure out pnpm leading Chuck to ask the burning question “Would you wear a pnpm T-shirt?”Despite Robbie’s struggles in pnpm, he still believes it is the better option compared to alternatives like npm, Yarn V1, or Yarn V3. The duo agree that pnpm fixes the biggest problem with traditional package managers like npm and Yarn V1, which is hoisting. The duo dive deep into the technical aspects of package management, discussing the challenges of installing and managing dependencies in a large-scale project, and how pnpm addresses these challenges. They cover topics like global caching, peer dependencies, and the correct way to define dependencies.In this episode, Robbie and Chuck talk about the pros and cons of pnpm, the downsides of using algorithm tests to vet developers, and the exciting new changes coming to Angular.
Key Takeaways
[00:30] - Chuck and Robbie ask for feedback and suggestions from listeners.
[03:55] - A whiskey Review: Michter’s Kentucky Straight Rye.
[09:43] - Robbie talks about his pnpm adventure.
[25:34] - Chuck and Robbie’s thoughts on algorithms testing.
[28:51] - The big changes coming to Angular.
[38:05] - Robbie talks about his 1970 Ford Bronco.
[43:22] - Chuck talks about Ted Lasso season three and other TV shows.
[53:15] - Chuck and Robbie talk about upcoming video games.
Quotes
[21:35] - “The idea of having separate apps in a separate package and piecing those together, good idea. Ember Engines, bad idea.” ~ Robbie Wagner
[32:16] - “People who have been working with Angular or even, let's say, five years ago jumped into it, got it, loved it, they really love it. They’re passionate about it.” ~ Chuck Carpenter
[25:41] - “I can't do algorithms, and I'm against algorithm tests.” ~ Robbie Wagner
Links
LinkedIn
Twitter
Michter’s Kentucky Straight Rye
Sagamore Spirit Distillery
PNPM
Sarah Drasner
Yarn
Lodash
NPM
Ember
Turborepo
Webpack
Embroider
Git Submodules
Google
Angular
Signal
Solid JS
Starbeam
React
Shepherd
Vue
Ford Bronco
Salamander
Hagerty Insurance Company
Ferrari
Ted Lasso
Jeni’s Splendid Ice Creams
Whole Foods
AFC Richmond
FIFA 2023
Seinfeld
Emily in Paris
Friends
Resident Evil
Carnivale
Peaky Blinders
Netflix
HBO
The Black Donnellys
NBC
The Witcher
Superman
Liam Hemsworth
Miley Cyrus
Nintendo Switch
Skyrim
Starfield
Bethesda
Diablo 4
The Legend of Zelda
Xbox
Steam
Tesla
Linux
Connect with our hosts
Robbie Wagner
Chuck Carpenter
Ship Shape
Subscribe and stay in touch
Apple Podcasts
Spotify
Google Podcasts
Whiskey Web and Whatnot
Top-Tier, Full-Stack Software Consultants
This show is brought to you by Ship Shape. Ship Shape’s software consultants solve complex software and app development problems with top-tier coding expertise, superior service, and speed. In a sea of choices, our senior-level development crew rises above the rest by delivering the best solutions for fintech, cybersecurity, and other fast-growing industries. Check us out at shipshape.io.
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3/9/2023 • 56 minutes, 46 seconds
Balancing Legacy Code, Content Creation, and Career Growth with The Primeagen
Michael Paulson, aka The Primeagen, is known for his live streams, crazy memes, and unpopular opinions on Twitter. But he is also a software engineer with over a decade of experience in a legacy C++ codebase. Juggling engineering with any other hobby is difficult, so how does he make it work?The Primeagen, a software engineer at Netflix, is committed to content creation and passionate about encouraging aspiring developers to get out of “tutorial hell” and start building. He wakes up at 5:30 every morning to make time for family, work, and content creation, but even the most dedicated developers hit roadblocks throughout their careers. The Primeagen’s latest challenge is figuring out how to grow his channel and turn content creation into a sustainable full-time role. In this episode, The Primeagen talks to Robbie and Chuck about his strict policies for working in a large legacy code base, the challenges of being a content creator, and his plans to create a new Frontend Master course.
Key Takeaways
[01:22] - Introduction to The Primeagen.
[05:40] - A whiskey review - Nelson Brother Reserve Bourbon.
[13:35] - How to choose between Git rebase versus Git merge.
[26:11] - How universities are producing equipt programmers.
[36:07] - The Primeagen’s future plans and the challenges associated with growth.
[50:20] - The Primeagen’s hobbies besides coding.
[54:52] - Why The Primeagen moved to South Dakota.
Quotes
[04:50] - “Programming is not supposed to be difficult because you don’t know what you’re doing. Programming is supposed to be difficult because you're building something hard.” ~ The Primeagen
[23:14] - “The web in the next three years is going to arrive at a crossroad where more than one thing can happen. We can all get a chance to use something that is less traditional. Once those things start happening, it just opens the door for everything to execute. The next big revolution is coming.” ~ The Primeagen
[43:20] - “I'm making a thing that I'm pouring my heart into, I hope people like, and then when people don't watch, oh that hurts.” ~ The Primeagen
Links
The Primeagen YouTube
The Primeagen Twitter
The Primeagen Twitch
The Primeagen Instagram
Rick and Morty
Matt Pocock
Vim
Twitch
YouTube
TypeScript
Beasts of No Nation
Netflix
Lilyhammer
Nelson Brothers Reserve Bourbon
Green Brier Distillery
Jack Daniel’s
Blanton’s Bourbon
Buffalo Trace Distillery
Prettier
Rust
Web Assembly
PHP
Astro
React
Adobe Photoshop
Adobe Dreamweaver
NetBeans
jQuery
Frontend Masters
Tailwind
Material UI
Bem
George Carlin
Dave Chappelle
The Chappelle Show
Brian Regan
Trash Dev Twitter
National Geographic
Pzuraq
StarCraft
Logitech Lift
Super Nintendo
Ember
Kinesis Advantage 360
Dvorak Keyboard
Roblox
Fortnite
Apex Legends
Evil Dead 2
Superbowl LVII
Philadelphia Eagles
Kansas City Chiefs
Phoenix Suns
Army of Darkness
Play Station
RxJS
Vita
Wii U
Sagamore Rye Whiskey
Connect with our hosts
Robbie Wagner
Chuck Carpenter
Ship Shape
Subscribe and stay in touch
Apple Podcasts
Spotify
Google Podcasts
Whiskey Web and Whatnot
Top-Tier, Full-Stack Software Consultants
This show is brought to you by Ship Shape. Ship Shape’s software consultants solve complex software and app development problems with top-tier coding expertise, superior service, and speed. In a sea of choices, our senior-level development crew rises above the rest by delivering the best solutions for fintech, cybersecurity, and other fast-growing industries. Check us out at shipshape.io.
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3/2/2023 • 1 hour, 4 minutes, 4 seconds
Prioritizing the Team Over the Tool with Jason Lengstorf
Jason Lengstorf built up an audience on YouTube by doing unscripted live coding and sharing his mistakes with his community. He credits his background as a musician and frontman of an emo band for helping him get comfortable with looking foolish in front of people.
As the host of Learn With Jason, he believes there is no right or wrong answer when it comes to choosing a web development tool, as long as the decision is based on the team’s experience and the situation that the tool will enhance. Jason shares his experience and lessons learned at IBM where they allowed teams to use any tool they wanted. This resulted in different parts of the platform being built with different frameworks and the need to standardize.
In this episode, Jason talks to Chuck and Robbie about the importance of choosing the right web development tool for the job, the adoption possibilities for Astro, and what the future holds for open-source developers.
Key Takeaways
[00:33] - Introduction to Jason Lengstorf, Host of Learn With Jason.
[05:03] - A whiskey review: Heaven Hill Bottled-in-Bond.
[15:06] - Jason’s opinion on Tailwind and how to choose the correct web tool.
[22:16] - What makes Astro powerful?
[29:16] - Funding open-source projects.
[44:19] - How Jason feels about Redwood JS.
[47:44] - Incorporating TypeScript in personal projects.
[50:17] - Jason’s interests in pajama pants and burgers.
Quotes
[15:34] - “You should use whatever you can convince your whole team to use. A lot of the discussion about which tool is right or wrong is sort of missing the forest for the trees.” ~ Jason Lengstorf
[16:46] - “If you have a group of people who have an expertise or a lack of expertise, then the tools you choose should be polyfilling for where they’re at and allowing them to use their strengths.” ~ Jason Lengstorf
[20:53] - “The only way that you can really use a tool wrong is if you’re dragging people kicking and screaming against their will into using a tool. You’re just setting yourself up for failure.” ~ Jason Lengstorf
Links
Jason Lengstorf Twitter
Jason Lengstorf LinkedIn
Learn with Jason
Learn with Jason YouTube
ErgoDox EZ
Heaven Hill Bottled-in-Bond
Buffalo Trace Distillery
Ezra Brooks Bourbon
Evan Williams Bourbon
Pappy Van Winkle
Febreze
Bacardi 151
Tailwind CSS
JavaScript
React JS
BEM
Netlify
IBM Cloud
Backbone JS
Angular
Vue
jQuery
Astro
Gatsby JS
Svelte
Next JS
Internet Explorer
Facebook
Vercel
Remix
Preact JS
Qwik
Jason Miller
Andrew Clark
Zach Leatherman
Eleventy
Ryan Carniato
Kyle Matthews
Render
Fly
Hydrogen
Rich Harris
Oracle
Tom Preston-Werner
Shopify
Cloudflare
Solid JS
Lululemon
Red Hat
NPM
Microsoft
Google
Homebrew
Open Collective
Planned Parenthood
Redwood JS
Rails
Tanner Linsley
TanStack
The Burger Show
Hot Ones
Nuxt JS
Parks and Recreation
Amboy
Chat GPT
Connect with our hosts
Robbie Wagner
Chuck Carpenter
Ship Shape
Subscribe and stay in touch
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Whiskey Web and Whatnot
Top-Tier, Full-Stack Software Consultants
This show is brought to you by Ship Shape. Ship Shape’s software consultants solve complex software and app development problems with top-tier coding expertise, superior service, and speed. In a sea of choices, our senior-level development crew rises above the rest by delivering the best solutions for fintech, cybersecurity, and other fast-growing industries. Check us out at shipshape.io.
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2/23/2023 • 1 hour, 3 minutes, 57 seconds
Astro 2.0, Island Architecture, and React with Fred K. Schott
Astro 2.0 is launching new exciting features and it’s setting the bar for HTML frameworks. What makes Astro unique in web development and what are its future possibilities?
Fred K. Schott, CEO of the Astro Technology Company, says it’s all in the framework’s content focus and island architecture. For Fred, the aim is to have a tool that's HTML-first but still sprinkles in interactivity and allows developers to bring in components from other frameworks. They focused on solving the problem of sending a full JavaScript application to power a mostly static site. The attention to developer experience paid off and is one of the reasons Astro is creating waves in the developer community. In this episode, Fred talks with Chuck and Robbie about how Astro uses an HTML-first approach to create content-focused websites, the latest features of Astro V2, and the trend of blindly using popular frameworks like React.
Key Takeaways
[00:21] - An introduction to Fred K. Schott.
[03:19] - A whiskey review: Pinhook: Artist Series Release No. 2 Whiskey Nicking.
[19:07] - The challenge of creating forms in Astro vs. other platforms.
[23:32] - React’s strengths and weaknesses.
[30:55] - What makes Astro unique?
[44:25] - Fred’s favorite HTML element.
[47:57] - Fred’s hobbies.
Quotes
[02:36] - “Someone once described Astro as the first web framework that’s HTML first without hating developers for not using HTML, and I always resonated with that.” ~ Fred K. Schott
[26:12] - “I think you can’t talk about React without talking about where the web was at that point. We had a template in two different code bases, two different languages, it was a mess. And that’s the world that React came in and kind of saved us from.” ~ Fred K. Schott
[31:38] - “What makes (Astro) unique is our content focus. We talked about, you have one Solid component that’s a form and otherwise a mainly static site, that’s exactly where Astro shines.” ~ Fred K. Schott
Links
Fred K. Schott
Fred K. Schott Twitter
Fred K. Schott LinkedIn
Astro
Astro Discord
Astro Twitter
Astro 2.0 Details
Astro Content Collections
Astro Hybrid Rendering
Jack Forge
Twitter
Hot Ones
Kent C. Dodds
Pinhook: Artist Series Release No. 2 Whiskey Nicking
Maker’s Mark Bourbon
React
Ember
YouTube
TikTok
SolidJS
Svelte
Tailwind
Josh Collinsworth
Facebook
JQuery
JSon
Vue
National Geographic
NBC
Ryan Carniato
Nuxt
Gatsby
The JS Party Podcast
WordPress
Next JS
Second Life
SimCity
Ben and Jerry’s
Snowpack
Polymer
ChatGPT
Zach Leatherman
11ty
Netlify
Connect with our hosts
Robbie Wagner
Chuck Carpenter
Ship Shape
Subscribe and stay in touch
Apple Podcasts
Spotify
Google Podcasts
Whiskey Web and Whatnot
Top-Tier, Full-Stack Software Consultants
This show is brought to you by Ship Shape. Ship Shape’s software consultants solve complex software and app development problems with top-tier coding expertise, superior service, and speed. In a sea of choices, our senior-level development crew rises above the rest by delivering the best solutions for fintech, cybersecurity, and other fast-growing industries. Check us out at shipshape.io.
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2/16/2023 • 58 minutes, 37 seconds
Features of Astro 2.0, Challenge of Material UI, and Cleanse Diets
Astro has once again become a hot topic, capturing the attention of developers and impressing them with its user-friendly features. Astro 2.0 introduced new and improved error overlays that are functional and well-designed, making debugging more efficient for developers.
Astro 2.0 is powered by the fast and efficient Vite 4, which has received high praise in the developer community. Robbie thinks Vite is the future of build tools and based on the State of JS results, many others seem to agree. Chuck shares his struggles with using material UI as a library for Tailwind, which has left him feeling frustrated. But, Robbie thinks using Tailwind UI and Headless UI makes material UI redundant.In this episode, Chuck and Robbie talk about the exciting new features of Astro 2, the pros and cons of using material UI, and their cleanse diets.
Key Takeaways
[01:42] - A whiskey review: Very Olde St. Nick Ancient Cask 8-Year-Old Rye Whiskey.
[09:02] - New features in Astro 2.0.
[15:35] - Asto 2.0 introduces Vite 4 as its bundler.
[25:04] - The drawbacks of Material UI.
[36:05] - Chuck speaks about his cleanse diet.
[47:48] - Chuck’s experience at NBC Sports Premier League Fan Fest.
[52:37] - Robbie talks about his Ford Bronco Restomod.
Quotes
[17:06] - “Everyone seems excited about building on top of Vite, and it unlocks so many things, so I think that would be a huge step forward for everyone.” ~ Robbie Wagner
[19:46] - “I love how many JavaScript-supporting tools are written in other languages.” ~ Chuck Carpenter
[30:47] - “Solid is really great. If you know React, which 99% of people do, the syntax is the same.” ~ Robbie Wagner
Links
Very Olde St. Nick Ancient Cask 8-Year-Old Rye Whiskey
Todd Snyder
Pappy Van Winkle
Preservation Distillery
Astro 2.0
Next.js
React
Ember
Nullvox
Webpack
Vite
Nuxt
State of JS
Rollup
Parcel
Bun
Deno
Shop Talk Show
Syntax
Ryan Dahl
Node
Rust
Tailwind CSS
Post CSS
Material UI
Tailwind UI
Headless UI
Solid JS
DietBet
Adobe Photoshop
Arnold Schwarzenegger
Amazon
NBC Sports Premier League Fan Fest
Barclays Bank
Cotton Bureau
FedEx
UPS
Ford Bronco
Pocket Casts
Restomods
Connect with our hosts
Robbie Wagner
Chuck Carpenter
Ship Shape
Subscribe and stay in touch
Apple Podcasts
Spotify
Google Podcasts
Whiskey Web and Whatnot
Top-Tier, Full-Stack Software Consultants
This show is brought to you by Ship Shape. Ship Shape’s software consultants solve complex software and app development problems with top-tier coding expertise, superior service, and speed. In a sea of choices, our senior-level development crew rises above the rest by delivering the best solutions for fintech, cybersecurity, and other fast-growing industries. Check us out at shipshape.io.
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2/9/2023 • 58 minutes, 45 seconds
Tailwind Twitter Wars and the State of JS
The developer community can be highly opinionated. We find our favorite tools and fiercely support them because they help us meet our goals.
Tailwind has been polarizing since it launched in 2017. Some developers swear by it, claiming it makes their code cleaner while others think it’s a waste of time. The State of JS results are in and they reveal that Ember is still lagging behind in retention, interest, usage, and awareness compared to other frameworks. Chuck and Robbie agree that it doesn't really matter what framework you use, as long as you are productive and have a reusable, understandable way of working.
In this episode, Robbie and Chuck talk about the polarizing debates in the developer community surrounding Tailwind CSS on Twitter, the results of the 2023 State of JS survey, and their favorite shows.
Key Takeaways
[01:33] - A whiskey review - Wolves X Undeated Signature Blend.
[11:17] - Recent Tailwind wars on Twitter.
[20:03] - Chuck and Robbie review the State of JS survey.
[44:50] - How Chuck and Robbie enjoyed their holiday.
Quotes
[14:29] - “I started back in the day, and you did inline styles with tables to make your Photoshop slices work out, you know what I mean? Couldn't get any uglier than that.” ~ Chuck Carpenter
[19:44] - “Sometimes you just don't get to win all the battles. That's just part of software engineering.” ~ Chuck Carpenter
[27:10] - “I think in general, everything is becoming there's less resistance on all fronts. Like you don't have to have a CS degree, whereas they might have looked at that before.” Robbie Wagner
Links
Warner Bros.
Looney Tunes
Sour Patch Kids
State of JS
Tailwind
Twitter
Wolves X Undeated Signature Blend
Undefeated
Willett Distillery
Sam Selikoff
Wes Bos
Vim
Craftsman
DeWalt
React
Nuxt PWA
The Hacker News
Crayon
Ember
Vue
Next.js
Vite
Vitest
ESBuild
Playwright
PNPM
Svelte
Facebook
NPM
Cypress
Webpack
Hipster Ponto Tech
Dev.To
Soft Skills Engineering
Angular Plus Show
The Walking Dead
Gone With the Wind
Law and Order: SVU
The Vow
White Lotus
HBO Max
The Witcher
Nintendo Switch
Gwent
Zelda
Harry Potter: Hogwarts Legacy
Universal Studios
EPL Fan Fest
FIFA: World Cup Qatar 2022
Connect with our hosts
Robbie Wagner
Chuck Carpenter
Ship Shape
Subscribe and stay in touch
Apple Podcasts
Spotify
Google Podcasts
Whiskey Web and Whatnot
Top-Tier, Full-Stack Software Consultants
This show is brought to you by Ship Shape. Ship Shape’s software consultants solve complex software and app development problems with top-tier coding expertise, superior service, and speed. In a sea of choices, our senior-level development crew rises above the rest by delivering the best solutions for fintech, cybersecurity, and other fast-growing industries. Check us out at shipshape.io.
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2/2/2023 • 57 minutes, 59 seconds
CSS Trig, Cypress, and Software Testing Alternatives
Slow page speeds and bad developer experience are huge pain points. If you can get those two things right, the developer community will likely rally behind you. CSS hit the bullseye when it introduced trigonometry functions to boost performance by avoiding Javascript. But Cypress has been a big letdown in DX.Before introducing trig functions, CSS was pretty limited and it relied on Javascript to do all the complex styling. Since Javascript takes a significant amount of time to parse, that’s a big hit to your overall page speed. Now, CSS trig functions allow more flexibility to style pages with angles. Even Chuck, who isn’t a fan of CSS, can admit this is a big win for developers. Cypress, on the other hand, has locked some of their features behind a paywall and some developers are not happy about the change. Chuck and Robbie both find the tool too complicated and expensive compared to its alternatives.
In this episode, Robbie and Chuck talk about CSS introducing trigonometry functions to avoid Javascript, why Cypress isn’t living up to their expectations, testing software alternatives, and Chuck’s new sim racing hobby.
Key Takeaways
[00:28] - A whiskey review: Orphan Barrel: Muckety Muck 26 Year
[09:28] - CSS adds trigonometry functions.
[17:05] - What makes a good testing tool.
[33:19] - Chuck and Robbie talk about their upbringing and food.
[40:45] - Chuck’s sim racing experiences.
[50:46] - Robbie talks about selling his house.
Quotes
[27:32] - “I tried to use Cypress, and I just gave up because it took me more than an hour to figure out, and I was just like, that's not worth my time.” ~ Robbie Wagner
[28:43] - “Playwright looks like a pretty nice play in the space.” ~ Chuck Carpenter
[30:00] - “As a professional developer, if a tool is helping me every day, and you say it’s going to cost me $10 a day, okay. As long as I don't have 400 tools that I need to pay $10 a month for.” ~ Robbie Wagner
Links
Orphan Barrel: Muckety Muck 26 Year
UGG
SoBe
The Macallan Distillary
Total Wine & More
De Wine Spot
Tailwind CSS
YAML
iMac
iPhone
Windows
Cypress
Prisma
MySQL
SQLite
GitHub
Playwright
Mock Service Worker
Jira
Astro
Ember
Jest
Selenium Webdriver
Vitest
Porsche Experience
GeForce Now
EA
iRacing
Steam
PlayStation
Assetto Corsa
Logitech
Porsche
Tesla
Ford Mustang Mach E
Porsche Macan
Porsche Cayenne
Rivian
Range Rover Sport
Rolls Royce
Connect with our hosts
Robbie Wagner
Chuck Carpenter
Ship Shape
Subscribe and stay in touch
Apple Podcasts
Spotify
Google Podcasts
Whiskey Web and Whatnot
Top-Tier, Full-Stack Software Consultants
This show is brought to you by Ship Shape. Ship Shape’s software consultants solve complex software and app development problems with top-tier coding expertise, superior service, and speed. In a sea of choices, our senior-level development crew rises above the rest by delivering the best solutions for fintech, cybersecurity, and other fast-growing industries. Check us out at shipshape.io.
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1/26/2023 • 59 minutes, 57 seconds
SQL vs NoSQL, Web Technologies, and Holiday Recap
If you’re like Robbie and you haven’t dug into SQL since college, learning the basics of SQL vs NoSQL is a great place to start. Working with data isn’t a part of every developer’s day-to-day, but it can’t hurt to understand the differences.
NoSQL is gaining popularity among engineers because of the ease and flexibility of updating fields with new data. Some engineers prefer taking unstructured data and using a programming language they already know, like Python, to write their queries. SQL is far more structured and requires strict rules for writing queries. As with most things in tech, whether SQL is better than NoSQL depends on your business and use cases.
In this episode, Robbie and Chuck talk about the pros and cons of SQL vs NoSQL, why they like SQL databases like Prisma and Postgres, and their Christmas and New Year festivities.
Key Takeaways
[00:56] - Chuck and Robbie wrap up the Advent of Whiskey.
[01:35] - A whiskey Review: Yellowstone Select Kentucky Straight Bourbon Whiskey.
[04:47] - SQL versus NoSQL.
[13:24] - Using Prisma and MySQL.
[28:56] - Chuck and Robbie discuss the holidays and family life.
Quotes
[16:40] - “I don't have to touch databases much, but when I do, I like that they are Postgres.” ~ Robbie Wagner
[17:13] - “I never really remember having fun with a project that was in SQL Server or MySQL.” ~ Robbie Wagner
[22:26] - “This project is using Prisma, and Prisma has nice sugar around accessing entities.” ~ Chuck Carpenter
Links
Yellowstone Select Kentucky Straight Bourbon Whiskey
Lime Stone Branch
Buffalo Trace
MySQL
DynamoDB
PostgresSQL
Prisma
PostGIS
Supabase
Postico
SQL Server
Ember Data
Astro
SolidJS
Next.js
SolidStart
Remix
Shopify
Spotify
Michael Jackson
Roka Akor
Pepsi
90-Day Finance
Andor
Peaky Blinders
Spirited
The Greatest Showman
Everyone Says I Love You
Woody Allen
Edward Norton
Drew Barrymore
Hamilton
Disney
Book of Mormon
Deadpool
Ryan Reynolds
Welcome to Wrexham
Mint Mobile
My Next Guest Needs No Introduction
Comedians in Cars Getting Coffee
Kim Kardashian
Kanye
Titanic
House of Cards
James Dean
Sharpie
Porsche
iPhone
CNN
Don Lemon
Anderson Cooper
Kevin Hart
Connect with our hosts
Robbie Wagner
Chuck Carpenter
Ship Shape
Subscribe and stay in touch
Apple Podcasts
Spotify
Google Podcasts
Whiskey Web and Whatnot
Top-Tier, Full-Stack Software Consultants
This show is brought to you by Ship Shape. Ship Shape’s software consultants solve complex software and app development problems with top-tier coding expertise, superior service, and speed. In a sea of choices, our senior-level development crew rises above the rest by delivering the best solutions for fintech, cybersecurity, and other fast-growing industries. Check us out at shipshape.io.
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1/19/2023 • 53 minutes, 39 seconds
The Case for Adopting TypeScript with Josh Goldberg
Many people dream about being their own boss, but there’s no clear rulebook that outlines how to get there. While self-employment seems glorious to some, it’s not for everyone. How does someone know when they are ready to take the step into the unknown, and how do they know if that choice will suit them?
Josh Goldberg, Open Source Developer and author of Learning TypeScript, built much of his coding career at Microsoft and Codecademy before taking the leap into full-time open source tooling in January 2022. Since then, he has published a book and expanded his networking by speaking at over 30 conferences, but he still has time to discuss coding languages and hiking in Arizona over a glass of whiskey. In this episode, Josh talks to Chuck and Robbie about Typescript adoption, becoming a full-time open source developer, and the power of expanding your professional network.
Key Takeaways
[01:48] - An intro to Josh Goldberg.
[2:28] - A whiskey review - Barrell Armida Bourbon Whiskey.
[07:01] - Chuck, Robbie, and Josh’s whiskey rating.
[12:27] - Josh’s latest book, Learning TypeScript.
[21:27] - GraphQL vs. TypeScript.
[23:40] - Josh’s journey into TypeScript.
[27:18] - Josh’s thoughts on adding a type system directly to JavaScript.
[30:11] - The case for TypeScript adoption.
[34:20] - TypeScript conversion strategies and solutions from Codecademy.
[39:43] - Josh’s transition to full-time open source developer.
[42:27] - Josh’s advice for aspiring full-time open source developers.
[45:10] - Josh’s experience speaking at conferences as a developer advocate.
[57:50] - Josh’s closing remarks.
Quotes
[29:33] - “You have to iterate in public and learn from real world usage in order to get things right.” ~ Josh Goldberg
[31:14] - “If you’re trying to convince people to switch to TypeScript, you convince them based on the pain points they have and how TypeScript fits into them.” ~ Josh Goldberg
[42:27] - “There are a lot of people who are interested in going full-time open source. It’s a great place to be, but I wouldn’t recommend going into this without a lot of prior work. To build up your network, to get a full-time job in a development team that gives you mentorship and management that helps you grow that way so that you are well equipped to go into open source first.” ~ Josh Goldberg
Links
Josh Goldberg on LinkedIn
Josh Goldberg Website
Josh Goldberg Blog
Learning TypeScript
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute
Barrell Armida Bourbon Whiskey
TypeScript
JavaScript
PHP
GraphQL
C++
Adobe Photoshop
HTML
Flow
Meta
CoffeeScript
Codecademy
Config file
Opensource
VTEST
GitHub
Halo
Microsoft
Connect with our hosts
Robbie Wagner
Chuck Carpenter
Ship Shape
Subscribe and stay in touch
Apple Podcasts
Spotify
Google Podcasts
Whiskey Web and Whatnot
Top-Tier, Full-Stack Software Consultants
This show is brought to you by Ship Shape. Ship Shape’s software consultants solve complex software and app development problems with top-tier coding expertise, superior service, and speed. In a sea of choices, our senior-level development crew rises above the rest by delivering the best solutions for fintech, cybersecurity, and other fast-growing industries. Check us out at shipshape.io.
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1/12/2023 • 59 minutes, 21 seconds
Bringing Designers and Developers Together with Pablo Ruiz-Múzquiz
Working together in a professional environment is easier said than done, especially when teams have conflicting workflows, priorities, and skill sets. Designers are all too familiar with having their work feel like a second priority to developers. Is there a way that designers and developers can collaborate successfully without sacrificing their individual needs?
Enter Penpot, the first Open Source design and prototyping platform for cross-domain teams. Penpot was developed by Pablo Ruiz-Múzquiz, CEO and Co-Founder of Kaleidos, Taiga and Penpot, to bring collaboration between designers and developers to the next level. Penpot inspires designers to become comfortable using open source and allows developers to become excited about the design process.
In this episode, Pablo talks to Chuck and Robbie about how Penpot differs from its primary competitor, Figma, and why designers and developers love their platform.
Key Takeaways
[00:36] - An intro to Pablo Ruiz-Múzquiz.
[02:38] - A whiskey review - Willet Family Estate Bottled Rye.
[05:31] - Chuck, Robbie, and Pablo’s whiskey ranking.
[07:47] - What Penpot is and how it compares to Figma.
[15:50] - Adobe’s defensive acquisition of Figma.
[24:54] - Why Pablo is excited about Penpot.
[29:37] - How Penpot brings together designers and developers.
[34:30] - Two top priority feature requests for Penpot.
[39:23] - Use cases for Penpot.
[44:31] - Why Pablo got expelled.
[48:34] - Pablo’s diverse hobbies - from mead brewing to archery.
Quotes
[26:27] - “We don’t just want to accelerate design into code, but also coding to design.” ~ Pablo Ruiz-Múzquiz
[31:18] - “First, we need to make sure that designers really appreciate what we’re doing. Whenever they first encounter Penpot, they see it, they feel it. It’s meant for them. Not as a gift from engineers.” ~ Pablo Ruiz-Múzquiz
[36:54] - “Design is more important than ever. Design is eating software faster than software is eating the world. Software is a key differentiator, a key element in the critical palette of innovation. Design is key, and yet it remains outside the software building pipeline.” ~ Pablo Ruiz-Múzquiz
Links
Pablo Ruiz-Múzquiz on LinkedIn
Pablo Ruiz-Múzquiz on Twitter
Pablo Ruiz-Múzquiz's website
Willet Family Estate Bottled Rye
Kaleidos
Penpot
Taiga
Figma
Adobe
Universidad Complutense de Madrid
The Lord of the Rings Trilogy
The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power
The Hobbit Film Series
Twitter
Elon Musk on Twitter
Connect with our hosts
Robbie Wagner
Chuck Carpenter
Ship Shape
Subscribe and stay in touch
Apple Podcasts
Spotify
Google Podcasts
Whiskey Web and Whatnot
Top-Tier, Full-Stack Software Consultants
This show is brought to you by Ship Shape. Ship Shape’s software consultants solve complex software and app development problems with top-tier coding expertise, superior service, and speed. In a sea of choices, our senior-level development crew rises above the rest by delivering the best solutions for fintech, cybersecurity, and other fast-growing industries. Check us out at shipshape.io.
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1/5/2023 • 1 hour, 1 minute, 48 seconds
Advent of Whiskey: Holiday Treats, Final Holiday Trivia, and Quantum Computing
It’s the Advent of Whiskey finale, and Chuck and Robbie keep it casual with more holiday treats, trivia, and traditions. But it wouldn’t be Whiskey Web and Whatnot without a little tech. Physicists are doing mindbending things with tech and in case you didn’t already know it, computers can create wormholes now. In this episode, Chuck and Robbie talk about their favorite holiday treats, holiday trivia, and creating wormholes using quantum computers.
Key Takeaways
[01:06] - Number 22 Whiskey - Keeper’s Heart Irish + America Whiskey.
[05:49] - Number 23 Whiskey - Compass Box Oak Cross Blended Malt Scotch.
[09:20] - Number 24 Whiskey - Knappogue Castle 12-Year-Old Bourbon Cask Matured Whisky.
[15:26] - Chuck and Robbie’s favorite holiday treats.
[18:45] - Holiday Trivia.
[21:10] - The quantum computer that mimics real-world physics.
Quotes
[12:28] - “There’s something special about a 12-year-old single malt whiskey. It’s like a premium steak house that ages their wagyu rib eye for six weeks.” ~ Chuck Carpenter
[25:01] - “I think it would be really cool to have an automated Taco Bell. You go up and press a button, and it gives you the food, and no one had to do anything.” ~ Robbie Wagner
Links
Keeper’s Heart Irish + America Whiskey
Snatch
Peaky Blinder
Tony Hawk Pro Skater
FIFA
Sky Rim
Breath of the Wild
Compass Box Oak Cross Blended Malt Scotch Whisky
GitHub
Tom Preston Warner
Knappogue Castle 12 Year Old Bourbon Cask Matured
A Quantum Computer has Simulated a Wormhole for the First Time
Star Trek
The Jetsons
Chat GPT
Taco Bell
Athletic Greens
Connect with our hosts
Robbie Wagner
Chuck Carpenter
Ship Shape
Subscribe and stay in touch
Apple Podcasts
Spotify
Google Podcasts
Whiskey Web and Whatnot
Top-Tier, Full-Stack Software Consultants
This show is brought to you by Ship Shape. Ship Shape’s software consultants solve complex software and app development problems with top-tier coding expertise, superior service, and speed. In a sea of choices, our senior-level development crew rises above the rest by delivering the best solutions for fintech, cybersecurity, and other fast-growing industries. Check us out at shipshape.io.
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12/24/2022 • 28 minutes, 12 seconds
Advent of Whiskey: Holiday Trivia Continued and Web Developer Tools
Every developer has a tech stack that they swear by. The perfect stack is usually a combination of convenience and productivity.
Robbie released a blog on Ship Shape featuring “Top 5 Web Developer Tools for 2023”. The list features a browser that’s perfect for work and personal use, two terminals, a collaborative clutter-free code editor, and a simplified version of Git. Even if you have old favorites, it can’t hurt to switch them up and test out some of the new tools powering the developer community. They’re usually faster and a lot easier than old-school tools.
In this episode, Chuck and Robbie continue to talk about holiday trivia and the top five best web developer tools mentioned in the latest Ship Shape blog post.
Key Takeaways
[00:54] - Number 20 Whiskey - Starward Nova Single Malt Whisky.
[04:32] - Number 21 Whiskey - Yellow Rose Distilling Outlaw Bourbon Whiskey.
[07:17] - Holiday Trivia.
[11:39] - Top five web developer tools.
Quotes
[19:35] - “You kinda get comfortable with your tools and set in your ways. I hardly ever changed my tools, and I want to be better about just trying other stuff.” ~ Robbie Wagner
[22:32] - “ I feel like VS Code is busy. It’s really busy.” ~ Chuck Carpenter
Links
Starward Nova Single Malt Whisky
Yellow Rose Distilling Outlaw Bourbon Whiskey
Top 5 Web Developer Tools for 2023
Arc
High Fidelity
Brave
Vim
Zed
VS Code
Warp
Rust
GitHub
GitHub Desktop
Fig
Click Up
Pulp Fiction
Connect with our hosts
Robbie Wagner
Chuck Carpenter
Ship Shape
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Top-Tier, Full-Stack Software Consultants
This show is brought to you by Ship Shape. Ship Shape’s software consultants solve complex software and app development problems with top-tier coding expertise, superior service, and speed. In a sea of choices, our senior-level development crew rises above the rest by delivering the best solutions for fintech, cybersecurity, and other fast-growing industries. Check us out at shipshape.io.
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12/23/2022 • 30 minutes, 22 seconds
Advent of Whiskey: More Holiday Trivia and Tech Interviews
Robbie and Chuck think the process is rigged. Memorizing algorithms and solving problems in 30 minutes isn’t good enough to judge someone’s capabilities and decide whether they can be trusted for a job.
Many great developers crack under the pressure of interviews but that doesn’t mean they’re not good at what they do. The interview process is just a formality to verify someone’s identity, it shouldn’t be used to drill developers and set them up for failure. Companies are better off looking at a developer’s open-source and public projects to see what they have to offer.
In this episode, Chuck and Robbie talk about Holiday Trivia and the major downside with algorithms in tech interviews.
Key Takeaways
[00:37] - Number 17 Whiskey: Writer’s Tears Copper Pot Irish Whiskey.
[06:40] - Number 18 Whiskey: Lawes San Luis Valley Straight Rye.
[10:44] - Number 19 Whiskey: Kurayoshi Pure Malt Whiskey.
[13:54] - Holiday Trivia.
[22:45] - Fixing a broken interview system.
Quotes
[18:44] - “I’m a passenger on this journey, and I want to have experiences in that journey.” ~ Chuck Carpenter
[26:28] - “You’re a JavaScript developer. You’re a react developer. You’re a whatever. Those paradigms are completely made up in every single company.” ~ Chuck Carpenter
Links
Writer’s Tears Copper Pot Irish Whiskey
Jameson 15
Redemption Rye Whiskey
Lawes San Luis Valley Straight Rye
Togouchi Premium Blend Japnese Whiskey
Kurayoshi Pure Malt Whiskey
Die Hard
Home Alone
Lego
Porsche
Old Trafford
Manchester United
React
Connect with our hosts
Robbie Wagner
Chuck Carpenter
Ship Shape
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Top-Tier, Full-Stack Software Consultants
This show is brought to you by Ship Shape. Ship Shape’s software consultants solve complex software and app development problems with top-tier coding expertise, superior service, and speed. In a sea of choices, our senior-level development crew rises above the rest by delivering the best solutions for fintech, cybersecurity, and other fast-growing industries. Check us out at shipshape.io.
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12/22/2022 • 30 minutes, 17 seconds
Advent of Whiskey: Holiday Trivia, Food History, and YAML
Is YAML a programming language? According to Robbie and Chuck, it’s not. And even though you could code in YAML and add functions to it, doesn’t mean you should. Some things are better left uncomplicated.
YAML is a data structuring format, and that’s what it’s good at. While some might disagree, Chuck and Robbie believe functions are one of the key elements of programming languages and YAML doesn’t have that baked in. If you’re looking for functions, it’s better to stick to a programming language that has what you need.
In this episode, Chuck and Robbie talk about holiday trivia, the history behind Pearl Milling Company’s rebrand, and the pros and cons of coding in YAML.
Key Takeaways
[01:11] - Number 15 Whiskey - Blackened Flagship.
[04:47] - Number 16 Whiskey - Amrut Indian Single Malt Whiskey.
[08:27] - The story of the Pearl Milling Company.
[13:07] - Holiday Trivia.
[17:40] - Best use case for YAML.
Quotes
[18:45] - “You think of CSV as a data structuring format, I think of JSON as a more data structuring format, and I think of YAML as an even more robust, diverse data structure format.” ~ Chuck Carpenter
[20:07] - “Programming languages are good at executing things, and I would think that YAML is not a programming language in the classic sense.” ~ Robbie Wagner
Links
Blackened Flagship Whiskey
Metallica
Amrut Indian Single Malt Whiskey
The Pearl Milling Company
Ben’s Original Rice
Costco
YAML
NPM
Connect with our hosts
Robbie Wagner
Chuck Carpenter
Ship Shape
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Whiskey Web and Whatnot
Top-Tier, Full-Stack Software Consultants
This show is brought to you by Ship Shape. Ship Shape’s software consultants solve complex software and app development problems with top-tier coding expertise, superior service, and speed. In a sea of choices, our senior-level development crew rises above the rest by delivering the best solutions for fintech, cybersecurity, and other fast-growing industries. Check us out at shipshape.io.
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12/21/2022 • 24 minutes, 32 seconds
Advent of Whiskey: Framework Predictions, Voting for WWW on State of JS, and Football
It’s anyone’s guess what the future of front-end frameworks will hold but the developer community on Twitter has its own predictions. Meanwhile, usage numbers for Javascript frameworks are showing that Vue and Next are catching up to React. Is the hype around React plateauing, or is that wishful thinking?
Whether you call them meta frameworks, backend frameworks, or rendering frameworks, they seem to be sparking excitement in the Javascript community. Remix, Vercel, Next JS, and Nuxt are the ones to watch. But out of all the front-end frameworks, Robbie believes Svelte will come out on top because it has the best balance of vanilla Javascript with added features.
In this episode, Chuck and Robbie talk about frameworks steering the future of front-end development, what’s happening in the 2022 Qatar World Cup, and the structure of college football.
Key Takeaways
[01:25] - Number 13 Whiskey: Noble Oak - Double Oak Rye Whiskey.
[04:26] - Number 14 Whiskey: Akashi Japanese Blended Whiskey.
[08:12] - Holiday Trivia.
[14:05] - Predictions in the front-end frameworks space.
[20:48] - 2022 World Cup standings and college football.
Quotes
[16:02] - “I think the things that are exciting are rendering frameworks. Which is like Next.js and Nuxt.” ~ Robbie Wagner
[19:42] - “The things that get the hype and feel quote-unquote sexy are different than the things that might actually be used to build 50% or more of apps in the real world.” ~ Robbie Wagner
Links
Noble Oak: Double Oak Rye Whiskey
Akashi Japanese Blended Whiskey
Amazon
Eight Crazy Nights
The Today Show
Bitcoin
State of JS
Ember
React
Svelte
Vue
Next JS
Nuxt
Astro
Vercel
Shepherd JS
Wes Bos
FIFA World Cup Qatar 2022
Connect with our hosts
Robbie Wagner
Chuck Carpenter
Ship Shape
Subscribe and stay in touch
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Whiskey Web and Whatnot
Top-Tier, Full-Stack Software Consultants
This show is brought to you by Ship Shape. Ship Shape’s software consultants solve complex software and app development problems with top-tier coding expertise, superior service, and speed. In a sea of choices, our senior-level development crew rises above the rest by delivering the best solutions for fintech, cybersecurity, and other fast-growing industries. Check us out at shipshape.io.
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12/20/2022 • 28 minutes, 45 seconds
Advent of Whiskey: Testing the Hype of ChatGPT, GitLab, and Holiday Trivia
Popularity doesn’t equal quality. We’ve seen it with React and the latest technology to fall victim to this is OpenAI’s chatbot, ChatGPT.
ChatGPT is trending on Twitter and is talked about as one of the great innovations of this era. But when Chuck and Robbie put it to the test to recommend podcast topics, it doesn’t present the most imaginative ideas. Despite the hype, the tech is not all-knowing – it is only as smart as the people who make it. On the other hand, GitLab has the opposite problem. The platform has all the components for success, but it still isn’t heavily adopted in the open-source community.
In this episode, Chuck and Robbie talk about their experience using ChatGPT to generate topics for the podcast, what’s holding back GitLab in the open-source community, and their favorite holiday trivia.
Key Takeaways
[00:37] - Number 11 Whiskey: Walsh Whiskey - The Irishman Single Malt.
[02:58] - Number 12 Whiskey: Balcones - Linage Texas Single Malt Whisky.
[07:30] - Asking ChatGPT to generate podcast topics.
[09:52] - Factors hindering GitLab in the open source community.
[20:18] - Holiday Trivia.
Quotes
[10:15] - “GitLab is a pretty holistic product in terms of not just hosting Git repositories. It’s pretty feature-rich.” ~ Chuck Carpenter
[14:25] - “I admit that most of what Microsoft does is really good, it's just Windows that's not good, and even they know that.” ~ Robbie Wagner
Links
Walsh Whiskey The Irishman Single Malt
Skittles
Balcones: Linage Texas Single Malt Whisky
Total Wine & More
OpenAI
Wes Bos
Caddy Server
GitLab
Next JS
React
Facebook
GitHub
Microsoft
Windows
Coca Cola
Frosty the Snowman
Spirited
Connect with our hosts
Robbie Wagner
Chuck Carpenter
Ship Shape
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Whiskey Web and Whatnot
Top-Tier, Full-Stack Software Consultants
This show is brought to you by Ship Shape. Ship Shape’s software consultants solve complex software and app development problems with top-tier coding expertise, superior service, and speed. In a sea of choices, our senior-level development crew rises above the rest by delivering the best solutions for fintech, cybersecurity, and other fast-growing industries. Check us out at shipshape.io.
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12/19/2022 • 24 minutes, 41 seconds
Advent of Whiskey: More on State of JS, TV Shows, and Holiday Traditions
Every developer has their limits and Chuck and Robbie share their points of view. Shadow DOM and Custom Elements are the last browser APIs they know in the State of JS survey.
In the spirit of the holiday, they’re breaking out the Christmas movies, decorating gingerbread houses, and visiting Santa villages to spend quality time with family.
In this episode, Chuck and Robbie talk about their final thoughts on browser APIs from the State of JS survey questions, their favorite holiday TV shows, and family holiday traditions.
Key Takeaways
[00:45] - Number 9 Whiskey: Kurayoshi Malt Whisky.
[05:00] - Numer 10 Whiskey: Brenekridge Bourbon Whiskey, A Blend.
[09:08] - Browser APIs mentioned in the State of JS.
[11:44] - TV shows to enjoy during the holidays.
[16:30] - Chuck gives an update on the World Cup and the state of soccer.
[20:05] - Movies to watch during the holidays.
[23:44] - Chuck and Robbie’s holiday traditions.
Quotes
[19:34] - “The World Cup, we’re not in it anymore so you have to pick your next favorite team.” ~ Chuck Carpenter
[22:37] - “I know I watched my fair share of Disney movies back in the day when they were on VHS and LaserDisc.” ~ Robbie Wagner
Links
Kurayoshi Malt Whisky
Togouchi 3 Year Blended Japanese Whisky
Breckenridge Distillery
State of JS
Holiday Baking Champions
Holiday Wars
Alone
Holiday Gingerbread Showdown
The National Eagle Scout Association
Starlink
Google
Netflix
Guardians of the Galaxy
Titans
FIFA World Cup Qatar 2022
United States Men’s National Soccer Team
The Grinch
Frosty and the Snowman
Elf
Spirited
Spirit
Disney Plus
The Jungle Book
The North Pole Experience
The Polar Express
Target
Lego
Connect with our hosts
Robbie Wagner
Chuck Carpenter
Ship Shape
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Spotify
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Whiskey Web and Whatnot
Top-Tier, Full-Stack Software Consultants
This show is brought to you by Ship Shape. Ship Shape’s software consultants solve complex software and app development problems with top-tier coding expertise, superior service, and speed. In a sea of choices, our senior-level development crew rises above the rest by delivering the best solutions for fintech, cybersecurity, and other fast-growing industries. Check us out at shipshape.io.
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12/18/2022 • 28 minutes, 26 seconds
Advent of Whiskey: State of JS, ChatGPT, and Browser APIs
The State of JS is one of the best ways to get your voice heard and learn about the Javascript ecosystem. The React developers are likely in the majority of survey respondents but every developer within the Javascript community should consider taking it to get an accurate representation.
One of the topics covered in the State of JS survey is browser APIs like WebGL, Web Animations, and Service Workers. Chuck and Robbie test their knowledge to see how much they know about them and Robbie recounts his terrible experience with service workers in Ember.
In this episode, Chuck and Robbie talk about the importance of the State of JS survey, the features of different browser APIs, and the viral ChatGPT chatbot from OpenAI.
Key Takeaways
[00:41] - Number Six Whiskey: Mars Shinshu Iwai 45% Japanese Blended Whisky.
[06:12] - Numer Seven Whiskey: J. Rieger & Co. Blended 46%.
[10:35] - Number Eight Whiskey: Two Stacks The Blenders Cut Cask Strength
[17:00] - The features of the new browser APIs.
[20:55] - The popularity of ChatGPT on Twitter.
Quotes
[20:07] - “Well, it's good that you realized that Ember is dead, and you’ve moved on to other technologies.” ~ Chuck Carpenter
[20:43] - “Cache is just hard. That has been said in software for longer than we’ve been around or at least the internet.” ~ Chuck Carpenter
[20:55] - “The only way that I’ve ever used WebSockets was to replace polling for your API.” ~ Robbie Wagner
Links
Flaviar's "Depths of Whiskey" Advent Calendar
Mars Shinshu Iwai 45 Japanese Blended Whisky
J. Rieger & Co. Kansas City Whiskey
Two Stacks The Blenders Cut Cask Strength Whiskey
Jameson Irish Whiskey
Sharpie
Allbirds
Guinness
Svelte
Vue
State of JS
Google Chrome
Safari
Ember
Nuxt
OpenAI
Twitter
WebGL
Connect with our hosts
Robbie Wagner
Chuck Carpenter
Ship Shape
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Whiskey Web and Whatnot
Top-Tier, Full-Stack Software Consultants
This show is brought to you by Ship Shape. Ship Shape’s software consultants solve complex software and app development problems with top-tier coding expertise, superior service, and speed. In a sea of choices, our senior-level development crew rises above the rest by delivering the best solutions for fintech, cybersecurity, and other fast-growing industries. Check us out at shipshape.io.
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12/17/2022 • 29 minutes, 39 seconds
Advent of Whiskey: State of JS and Microsoft's Legacy
The Javascript landscape is ever-changing. We can always rely on the State of JS survey to keep up with the latest trends and changes in the space. According to Robbie, Microsoft seems to be at the forefront of that change.
Microsoft holds the lion’s share of platforms and products in Javascript development including VS Code and GitHub. It’s hard not to rely on Microsoft as a developer. It’s also hard to find someone who doesn’t love the Xbox. But even though they’ve come a long way and given us great inventions, there’s still plenty of room to improve. Especially where developer experience and enterprise products are concerned.
In this episode, Chuck and Robbie talk about results from the State of JS survey, and Microsoft’s legacy of successful gaming versus failed enterprise products.
Key Takeaways
[00:41] - Flaviar's "Depths of Whiskey" Advent Calendar App.
[03:23] - Number Three Whiskey - Chapter 7 Whiskey: Prologue Blended Scotch Malt.
[05:37] - Number Four Whiskey - Kamet Indian Single Malt Whisky.
[10:16] - Number Five Whiskey - Redemption Rye Whiskey.
[15:20] - JavaScript features from the State of JS.
[19:38] - Microsoft hot takes.
Quotes
[17:30] - “If there’s a thing that you don’t want to mutate, don’t mutate it. You don’t need the proxy. You can just use an object.” ~ Robbie Wagner
[19:38] - “It's a really hot take that Microsoft does everything right, except for Windows.” ~ Robbie Wagner
[19:57] - “Have you used Teams? I would rather use Windows than Teams.” ~ Chuck Carpenter
Links
Flaviar's "Depths of Whiskey" Advent Calendar
Barrell Craft Spirits
Chapter 7 Whisky: Prologue Blended Scotch Malt Whiskey
Kamet Indian Single Malt Whisky
Redemption Rye Whiskey
FIFA World Cup Qatar 2022
U.S. Men's National Soccer team
The State of JS
React
Shepherd JS
Ember
Windows
Xbox
Microsoft
Microsoft Teams
NPM
LinkedIn
GitHub
Halo
Bethesda Softworks
Visual Studio Code
Linux
GitLab
Verdaccio
Temporal.io
Connect with our hosts
Robbie Wagner
Chuck Carpenter
Ship Shape
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Whiskey Web and Whatnot
Top-Tier, Full-Stack Software Consultants
This show is brought to you by Ship Shape. Ship Shape’s software consultants solve complex software and app development problems with top-tier coding expertise, superior service, and speed. In a sea of choices, our senior-level development crew rises above the rest by delivering the best solutions for fintech, cybersecurity, and other fast-growing industries. Check us out at shipshape.io.
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12/16/2022 • 29 minutes, 36 seconds
Advent of Whiskey: Coding Advent Calendars and the Strangest AI Projects
It’s the season of advent calendars, and coding platforms are launching challenges left and right. If you are waiting for a sign to try a new language or framework, advent calendars are a great place to start.
The Advent of Whiskey series will be 10 episodes leading up to Christmas.Chuck and Robbie are following Flaviar's Whiskey Advent Calendar 2022, trying new whiskeys each episode and talking about the latest in tech. Robbie might be gearing up to try the CSS advent calendar challenge but don’t expect Chuck to try CSS any time soon.
In this festive episode, Chuck and Robbie talk about learning new skills with a coding advent calendar, AI's strangest or most exciting use cases, and the Advent of Whiskey series following the Flaviar Whiskey Advent Calendar 2022.
Key Takeaways
[00:08] - An introduction to Flaviar's "Depths of Whiskey" Advent Calendar.
[02:07] - Number One Whiskey: Fistful of Bourbon.
[07:32] - Number Two Whiskey: Ron Colon Salvadoreno 100 Proof Rum Rye.
[11:34] - Chuck and Robbie discuss coding advent calendars.
[17:08] - What to look forward to during the advent series.
[18:21] - OpenAI chats on the GPT-3 platform.
Quotes
[14:39] - “For anyone who hasn’t listened before, Chuck really hates CSS.” ~ Robbie Wagner
[18:56] - “GPT is basically an open machine learning, AI platform that you can train on whatever things you want and then start to ask it questions.” ~ Chuck Carpenter
Links
Flaviar's Whiskey: The Depths of Whiskey Advent Calendar 2022
Fistful of Bourbon
William Grant & Sons
Ron Colon Salvadoreno 100 Proof
Advent of Code
Advent of CSS
Figma
Tailwind CSS
GitHub
Twitter
Instagram
Adam Wathan
State of JS
Wes Bos
Scott Tolinski
Syntax. Podcast
Chef Boyardee
OpenAI
King James Bible
Connect with our hosts
Robbie Wagner
Chuck Carpenter
Ship Shape
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Whiskey Web and Whatnot
Top-Tier, Full-Stack Software Consultants
This show is brought to you by Ship Shape. Ship Shape’s software consultants solve complex software and app development problems with top-tier coding expertise, superior service, and speed. In a sea of choices, our senior-level development crew rises above the rest by delivering the best solutions for fintech, cybersecurity, and other fast-growing industries. Check us out at shipshape.io.
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12/15/2022 • 24 minutes, 34 seconds
Supabase, Logflare, and Offroading with Chase Granberry
Chase Granberry can be called a serial entrepreneur. He bootstrapped his first software company before selling it and starting the centralized logging service, Logflare.
Chase sold the company to Supabase and joined the team as an acquired hire to support the team with a centralized logging solution and plotting insights for customers. Chase explains where Supabase is really different from Firebase and some of the benefits you can get from its flexibility combined with real-time data.
In this episode, Chase talks to Chuck and Robbie about joining Supabase after the Logflare acquisition, what makes Supabase different from Firebase, and offroading old cars.
Key Takeaways
[00:26] - An introduction to Chase Granberry.
[03:14] - A whiskey review - Togouchi 3-Year Blended Japanese Whiskey.
[14:40] - How Supabase got its name.
[15:45] - The biggest difference between Supabase and Firebase.
[17:19] - How Chase feels about writing PHP.
[18:16] - Aspects of Supabase written in Elixir.
[21:21] - Frameworks that Chase uses to write his interface.
[29:36] - Upcoming Supabase features.
[32:44] - How Chase maintains his hobbies as a father.
[35:19] - Chase, Chuck, and Robbie talk about classic cars.
Quotes
[16:26] - “We’re open source, and it's Postgres. So it’s a SQL database, not a no SQL database, and you can ultimately do whatever you want with it.” ~ Chase Granberry
[19:59] - “All these things are independent and could live on their own but tied together in a package, I think, is what really makes Supabase interesting.” ~ Chase Granberry
[24:09] - “In reality, how much Javascript do we really need on a page? In 95 percent of cases, it’s honestly not that much.” ~ Chase Granberry
Links
Chase Granberry LinkedIn
Chase Granberry Twitter
Chase Granberry Instagram
Supabase
Logflare
Togouchi 3-Year Blended Japanese Whiskey
Total Wine & More
Hint Water
LaCroix
Target
Cool Hand Luke
Nicki Minaj
Firebase
PHP
Elixir
Phoenix Framework
Astro
Ember
Angular
React
National Geographic
Backbone
Next JS
Chris McCord
JSON:API
Cloudflare
GraphQL
GitHub
Play Station
Ferrari
Lamborghini
Ford
Porsche
Toyota
Jeep
Vacation
Tesla
Matthew Inman
Connect with our hosts
Robbie Wagner
Chuck Carpenter
Ship Shape
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Whiskey Web and Whatnot
Top-Tier, Full-Stack Software Consultants
This show is brought to you by Ship Shape. Ship Shape’s software consultants solve complex software and app development problems with top-tier coding expertise, superior service, and speed. In a sea of choices, our senior-level development crew rises above the rest by delivering the best solutions for fintech, cybersecurity, and other fast-growing industries. Check us out at shipshape.io.
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12/8/2022 • 52 minutes, 22 seconds
Javascript Games, WTF JS, and a Visit to Phoenix
It’s not a normal day at the office. Robbie and his family are in Phoenix and the Whiskey Web and Whatnot hosts got together to play a losing game of golf and sip margaritas followed by whiskey.
In this episode, Chuck and Robbie guess whether things are Javascript packages or grocery items in a game called “Is it a JS package?”, test their knowledge of tricky Javascript syntax from WTF JS, and talk about Robbie’s experience visiting Chuck in Phoenix.
Key Takeaways
[00:57] - A whiskey review - Joseph Magnus Bourbon.
[04:20] - Chuck and Robbie play a game called “Is it a JS package?”
[17:37] - Chuck and Robbie play WTF JS.
[23:58] - Chuck and Robbie whatnot about their golf game and Arizona.
Quotes
[19:57] - “There is a site called JSFuck, and it basically shows you a bunch of examples of how to program things out using three characters.” ~ Chuck Carpenter
[20:24] - “Not many programmers know about labels in JavaScript. They are kind of interesting.” ~ Chuck Carpenter
Links
Joseph Magnus
Hennessy
NPM
Android
React
Avocado JS
Pepper JS
Bread JS
Butter JS
jQuery
Scone JS
Soup JS
Burrito JS
Ham JS
Pizza JS
Google
Sandwich JS
BeEF JS
WTF JS
JSFuck
Old Tucson Studios
Denys Dovhan
Connect with our hosts
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Chuck Carpenter
Ship Shape
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Top-Tier, Full-Stack Software Consultants
This show is brought to you by Ship Shape. Ship Shape’s software consultants solve complex software and app development problems with top-tier coding expertise, superior service, and speed. In a sea of choices, our senior-level development crew rises above the rest by delivering the best solutions for fintech, cybersecurity, and other fast-growing industries. Check us out at shipshape.io.
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12/1/2022 • 35 minutes, 11 seconds
Debating React, Fonts, and Fatherhood with Josh Collinsworth
React isn’t good at anything, except being popular. That’s a bold statement, but it’s one that Josh Collinsworth stands by. It seems like nearly every major tech company has React in their stack. But why is a framework built specifically for Facebook so popular in the general developer community?
Josh Collinsworth, Senior Front End Developer at Shopify, wrote an article titled “The Self-Fulfilling Prophecy of React”. Even though Shopify uses React, Josh didn’t hold back his views on the framework. When React came about, it solved a major problem for Facebook. Since then, it’s been viewed as a solution to every problem and the tech community has been stuck in a loop of teaching React and hiring React developers. But for Josh, React isn’t a solution, it’s just a tool, and it’s not the best out there.
In this episode, Josh talks to Chuck and Robbie about his viral article critiquing React’s popularity, his favorite fonts, and what it’s like juggling fatherhood with side projects.
Key Takeaways
[00:30] - An intro to Josh Collinsworth.
[03:46] - A whiskey review - Wolves Whiskey X Willet Distillery The Rye Project Volume One Batch Two.
[13:00] - Why Josh thinks React’s popularity is just a self-sustaining cycle.
[39:03] - Josh’s favorite fonts.
[45:00] - Josh speaks about how he maintains his hobbies being a father.
[53:34] - How Shopify acquiring Remix has affected Josh.
Quotes
[14:04] - “If you look at the reasons you might actually pick a framework, React doesn't really tend to come out on top in any of those given categories.” ~ Josh Collinsworth
[19:51] - “I think a lot of people don't realize that it hasn't aged that well. It has kind of held itself back in some ways, and the tools that we do now have offer us some advantages that React maybe can't.” ~ Josh Collinsworth
[33:21] - “We're churning boot camp grads out with what we consider the minimum viable knowledge, and in this environment, that's React, and probably extremely little HTML and CSS.” ~ Josh Collinsworth
Links
Josh Collinsworth
React
Shopify
CSS Tricks Complete Beginner's Guide to NPM
Hacker News
Remix
Digital Ocean
Svelte Kit
Astro
Solid JS
Wolves Whiskey
Willett Family Estate
Harley
Sons of Anarchy
The Self-fulfilling Prophecy of React
Facebook
Ember
Webpack
Guillermo
Vercel
Polymer
Vue
Google
Gap
Nullvox
Brew
Max Howell
Preact
RightFont
VS Code
MonoLisa.dev
Slack
90-Day Fiance
Love Island
Pwabuilder.com
Xcode
Electron
Dun and Bradstreet
Linux Snap
Apple
Ubuntu
Stack Overflow
Hydrogen
Connect with our hosts
Robbie Wagner
Chuck Carpenter
Ship Shape
Subscribe and stay in touch
Apple Podcasts
Spotify
Google Podcasts
Whiskey Web and Whatnot
Top-Tier, Full-Stack Software Consultants
This show is brought to you by Ship Shape. Ship Shape’s software consultants solve complex software and app development problems with top-tier coding expertise, superior service, and speed. In a sea of choices, our senior-level development crew rises above the rest by delivering the best solutions for fintech, cybersecurity, and other fast-growing industries. Check us out at shipshape.io.
---
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11/24/2022 • 58 minutes, 1 second
Framework Debates, Tech Layoffs, and Starlink
The tech layoff saga continues. The latest company in the hot seat is Twitter. After Elon Musk took control of the company, the platform has been in disarray, leaving developers out of jobs and Twitter users confused about the future of the platform. Is the tech world on fire?
Whether it’s social media, browser wars, or framework debates – the tech community seems to be in disagreement or in crisis. Tech companies were aggressively hiring developers before the economic downturn. Now, these same companies are ruthlessly laying off around 15-20% of their employees. In many cases, shareholder interests are being placed above the people on the ground building the company. Where Elon Musk is concerned, it’s hard to tell his true intentions.
In this episode, Chuck and Robbie talk about the slew of tech debates happening on Twitter, the fallout from Elon Musk’s Twitter takeover, and Robbie’s experience with Starlink.
Key Takeaways
[02:13] - A whiskey review - Barrell Seagrass.
[10:53] - What developers are saying on Twitter about frameworks.
[28:20] - How the tech world benefits from framework and browser wars.
[30:18] - Chuck and Robbie discuss the layoffs happening in tech.
[36:41] - The power of AWS in web hosting.
[42:03] - Robbie’s Starlink experience.
[46:56] - Robbie talks about his new Bronco and selling his Scout.
[53:10] - Shows Chuck and Robbie are currently watching.
Quotes
[28:58] - “There are things that I like and dislike from every iteration of whatever wars (framework and browser wars) we have but there ultimately are beneficial things that come out of all of them.” ~ Robbie Wagner
[33:52] - “Eight dollars for a Starbucks drink, enjoy it for 30 minutes, very happy. Eight dollars for a month on Twitter, super angry.” ~ Robbie Wagner
[37:27] - “When AWS goes down, half the internet goes down.” ~ Chuck Carpenter
Links
Barrell Seagrass
Phil Collins
Fiori
MGP
George Dickel Whisky
Twitter
React
Next Js
Astro
Web Pack
Turbo Pack
Vue
Vite
Gulp
Rollup
Remix
Shopify
Tea
Java Script
Azure Framework
WASM
Hulu
Netflix
Starbucks
Amazon
Amazon Web Services
Rack Space
Mac
Starlink
Eero
Disney Plus
Bronco
Porsche
Bring a Trailer
Peaky Blinders
Star Wars
The Mandalorian
Obi-Wan Kenobi
Cobra Kai
Karate Kid
The Haunting of Hill House
The Sandman
DC Titans
HBO Max
Batman
Justice League
Connect with our hosts
Robbie Wagner
Chuck Carpenter
Ship Shape
Subscribe and stay in touch
Apple Podcasts
Spotify
Google Podcasts
Whiskey Web and Whatnot
Top-Tier, Full-Stack Software Consultants
This show is brought to you by Ship Shape. Ship Shape’s software consultants solve complex software and app development problems with top-tier coding expertise, superior service, and speed. In a sea of choices, our senior-level development crew rises above the rest by delivering the best solutions for fintech, cybersecurity, and other fast-growing industries. Check us out at shipshape.io.
---
Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/whiskey-web-and-whatnot/message
11/17/2022 • 1 hour, 1 minute, 43 seconds
A11y Hour with Amber Hinds
WordPress powers over 43% of sites on the internet today, making it a powerhouse web technology. Its simplicity attracted bloggers and do-it-yourselfers who navigate the platform by Googling code snippets. That knowledge gap comes with a whole host of accessibility issues.
Amber Hinds, Founder and CEO at Equalize Digital, quit her part-time gig as a freelance developer when she found WordPress was an easier way to manage content. She's been doing accessibility work on the platform since 2016 and has seen a boom in the past two years of companies searching for accessibility experts. Amber built the Accessibility Checker plugin as a guardrail to help DIYers avoid common mistakes by auditing a site and flagging accessibility issues. The plugin is also an education tool for content managers, and developers to learn about accessibility.
In this episode, Amber talks to Chuck and Robbie about web accessibility on WordPress, making accessibility a priority in colleges and boot camps, and RVing around the country with her family.
Key Takeaways
* [00:35] - An intro to Amber Hinds.
* [00:54] - A whiskey review - Weller Special Reserve.
* [07:49] - What it's like working with WordPress in 2022 compared to earlier years.
* [10:47] - Amber gives an overview of WordPress.
* [13:36] - Amber explains unique accessibility problems in WordPress.
* [15:47] - How Equalize Digital's plug-in audits WordPress sites.
* [21:55] - Amber's thoughts on how to make accessibility a priority.
* [35:33] - Chuck and Amber talk about RV life and being on the show, "Going RV".
Quotes
[08:43] - "I think the recent number that I saw was that 43% of websites are built in WordPress." ~ Amber Hinds [https://www.linkedin.com/in/amberhinds/]
[23:53] - "I feel like having more general visibility about the broad range of disabilities and also putting people's faces to things is super helpful." ~ Amber Hinds [https://www.linkedin.com/in/amberhinds/]
[28:33] - "Companies need to realize that accessibility is everyone's responsibility." ~ Amber Hinds [https://www.linkedin.com/in/amberhinds/]
Links
* Amber Hinds LinkedIn [https://www.linkedin.com/in/amberhinds/]
* Amber Hinds Twitter [https://mobile.twitter.com/heyamberhinds]
* Amber Hinds [https://amberhinds.com/]
* Equalize Digital [https://equalizedigital.com/]
* WordPress [https://wordpress.com/]
* Accessibility Checker [https://www.accessibilitychecker.org/]
* Weller Special Reserve [https://www.buffalotracedistillery.com/our-brands/w-l-weller/w-l-weller-special-reserve.html]
* Pappy Van Winkle [https://www.buffalotracedistillery.com/our-brands/van-winkle.html]
* Maker's Mark [https://www.makersmark.com/]
* Buffalo Trace Distillery [https://www.buffalotracedistillery.com/]
* React [https://reactjs.org/]
* Absolut Vodka [https://www.absolut.com/]
* Shopify [https://www.shopify.com/]
* Square Space [https://www.squarespace.com/]
* Drupal [https://www.drupal.org/]
* Matt Mullenweg [https://ma.tt/]
* Automattic [https://automattic.com/]
* Magic Mouse [https://www.apple.com/shop/product/MK2E3AM/A/magic-mouse-white-multi-touch-surface]
* Logitech Lift [https://www.logitech.com/en-us/products/mice/lift-vertical-ergonomic-mouse.html]
* Mac [https://www.apple.com/lae/mac/]
* Darci USB [https://www.specialneedscomputers.ca/index.php?l=product_detail&p=4948]
---
Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/whiskey-web-and-whatnot/message
11/10/2022 • 54 minutes, 59 seconds
Funding Open Source Projects, Leaving Homebrew, and Launching Tea with Max Howell
Working on open source projects is a largely thankless job and a labor of love. The developers behind these projects often juggle full-time jobs to pay their bills while maintaining the software that keeps so much of the internet afloat.
Max Howell, CEO of tea.inc., pivoted from chemistry to web development because of his fascination for open source. He worked full-time and did pull requests for Homebrew during his free time. After hustling to build a package manager used by engineers working for corporate giants like Google and Microsoft, he reached an inevitable burnout. Max created tea.inc. to fairly compensate open source developers for the work they do with the hope that open source work will be lucrative and sustainable full-time. The project has raised 18 million so far and it's set to launch in early November.
In this episode, Max talks to Chuck and Robbie about the burnout of working on underfunded open source projects, why he left Homebrew despite its success, and launching tea.inc. as a Web3 solution for funding open source.
Key Takeaways
* [00:21] - An introduction to Max Howell.
* [01:15] - A whiskey review - American Highway Reserve Bourbon.
* [07:18] - Max's new project, tea.inc.
* [26:21] - Max speaks about England.
* [32:12] - Max discusses his U.S. journey.
* [33:28] - Why Google turned down Max.
Quotes
[08:15] - "I look back on the iPhone as the pivotal moment, really, when development suddenly became cool." ~ Max Howell [https://www.linkedin.com/in/mxcl]
[13:27]- "I had a moment of inspiration where I could see how the open source ecosystem, with all its dependencies and all these packages could be similarly compensated." ~ Max Howell [https://www.linkedin.com/in/mxcl]
[22:50] - "The bottom fell out of the boot camp market because it was a bit of a scam in some ways. You can't learn to program in 10 weeks is the truth of it." ~ Max Howell [https://www.linkedin.com/in/mxcl]
Links
* Max Howell [https://mxcl.dev/]
* Max Howell Twitter [https://twitter.com/mxcl]
* MaxHowell LinkedIn [https://www.linkedin.com/in/mxcl]
* Tea.xyz [https://tea.xyz/https://tea.xyz/]
* Homebrew [https://brew.sh/]
* Microsoft [https://www.microsoft.com/]
* American Highway Reserve [https://seelbachs.com/products/american-highway-reserve]
* Jefferson's Ocean [https://jeffersonsbourbon.com/jeffersons-ocean-bourbon/]
* Sacred Stave [https://santanspirits.com/santan-spirits/sacred-stave-bourbon/]
* Russell Crowe [https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0000128/]
* Mac [https://www.apple.com/lae/mac/]
* Windows [https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/windows]
* Linux [https://www.linux.org/]
* Sagamore [https://www.nativespiritsonline.com/products/sagamore-signature-rye]
* iPhone [https://www.apple.com/lae/iphone/]
* PromiseKit [https://github.com/PromiseKit]
* Timothy Lewis [https://www.linkedin.com/in/timothytlewis]
* Faker.js [https://fakerjs.dev/guide/]
* GitHub [https://github.com/]
* Slack [https://slack.com/]
* Heineken [https://www.heineken.com/]
* Google [https://www.google.com/]
* Twitter [https://twitter.com/]
* Weather.com [https://weather.com/]
* Hacker News [https://thehackernews.com/]
* Mark Zuckerburg [https://www.instagram.com/zuck/?hl=en]
* Apple [https://www.apple.com/store]
---
Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/whiskey-web-and-whatnot/message
11/3/2022 • 57 minutes, 4 seconds
Multi-Page Apps, Prefetch vs Preload, and Web Nostalgia
While multi-page apps (MPAs) seem like a new fixation for the developer community, they're pretty ancient news. If you were browsing the web in the 90s, you were likely visiting a multi-page app. Lucky for us, web tech improved, and made the entire experience of multi-page apps more appealing.
One of the cons of MPAs is that they don't have preload and prefetch out of the box. Single-page apps (SPAs) on the other hand give you the power to decide how your site loads by loading all the resources for your current page and fetching resources for a page you might navigate to after. This might seem small but it makes a huge impact on your site.
The good news is, more computing power gave way to better server-rendered technology, a huge win for multi-page apps. Unlike single-page apps (SPAs), multi-page apps parse very little JavaScript. That shaves seconds off your initial load which is no small feat.
In this episode, Chuck and Robbie discuss the pros and cons of multi-page apps, the benefits and the distinction between prefetch vs preload, and the good old days on the internet.
Key Takeaways
* [02:10] - A whiskey review - Wolves Signature Blend Special Release.
* [08:02] - Chuck and Robbie discuss multi-page apps.
* [13:46] - Advantages and disadvantages of multi-page apps.
* [27:13] - Robbie's opinion on the React Framework.
* [35:47] - Chuck and Robbie reminisce about StumbleUpon and earlier social media sites.
* [41:52] - Chuck and Robbie discuss their parents' internet use.
* [44:30] - Chuck and Robbie talk about their weekend.
Quotes
[8:15] - "Were you around in 1998 when the Internet was first blowing up? You were also on a multi-page app. It was just served by different technologies." ~ Chuck Carpenter [https://twitter.com/CharlesWthe3rd]
[10:56] - "Just HTML is actually pretty good, and it feels like people getting into the industry these days aren't getting exposed to it enough." ~ Robbie Wagner [https://twitter.com/rwwagner90]
[29:29] - "I'm sorry for all of our Ember listeners who are here to listen to me talk about good things about Ember, but the new add-on V2 stuff is some bullshit." ~ Robbie Wagner [https://twitter.com/rwwagner90]
Links
* Wolves Whiskey [https://wolveswhiskeyca.com/]
* React [https://reactjs.org/]
* Nuxt JS [https://nuxtjs.org/]
* Java Script [https://www.javascript.com/]
* Astro [https://astro.build/]
* Twitter [https://twitter.com/?lang=en]
* StumbleUpon [https://www.stumbleupon.com/]
* Pam [https://www.pamcookingspray.com/]
* The Office [https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0386676/]
* GitHub [https://github.com/]
* Orbit [https://orbit.love/]
* Preact [https://preactjs.com/]
* Meta [https://about.meta.com/]
* Ember [https://emberjs.com/]
* Web Pack [https://webpack.js.org/]
* Chris Manson [https://dev.to/real_ate]
* Embroider [https://github.com/embroider-build/embroider]
* Null Vox [https://nullvoxpopuli.com/]
* Gateway [https://www.gateway.com/worldwide/]
* Digg [https://digg.com/]
* Reddit [https://www.reddit.com/]
* Tik Tok [https://www.tiktok.com/en/]
* CNet [https://www.cnet.com/]
* IRS [https://www.irs.gov/]
* Download.com [https://www.download.com/]
* Tesla [https://www.tesla.com/]
---
Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/whiskey-web-and-whatnot/message
10/27/2022 • 59 minutes, 40 seconds
Tailwind CSS, Headless UI, and Powerlifting with Adam Wathan
Maintaining a CSS codebase can become chaotic pretty quickly and building a new stylesheet for every project can get tedious. Frameworks like Tailwind CSS were born to solve this problem.
Adam Wathan, CEO of Tailwind Labs, built a "library-style CSS" for personal use and had no idea the concept would resonate with as many people as it did. When developers started asking him to share his library for them to use in their own projects, he got to work building out the framework. Two years after Tailwind CSS's launch, Adam released Headless UI to bring unstyled compatible UI components into the fold. Since then, it's sparked polarizing discourse between developers who either love it or hate it.
In this episode, Chuck and Robbie talk to Adam about what motivated him to create Tailwind CSS, how Headless UI was born, why Tailwind is creating polarizing discourse among developers, and his powerlifting past.
Key Takeaways
* [00:35] - An introduction to Adam Wathan.
* [01:55] - A whiskey review - W3WC Sagamore Rye Barrel Pick #001.
* [06:51] - Adam explains Tailwind CSS.
* [09:47] - The problems that inspired Adam to create Tailwind.
* [35:24] - How Headless UI fits into Tailwind.
* [41:09] - Whether Tailwind will support other frameworks in the future.
* [44:33] - Adam's powerlifting career.
Quotes
[16:47] - "I started noticing that the only things that really survived every port were the things that were lower and lower level. Something like a class that adds margin left to something that's useful in every project, but a button might look different in every project." ~ Adam Wathan [https://twitter.com/adamwathan]
[23:40] - "The main problem that Tailwind is ultimately trying to solve is giving inline style superpowers. It's not like inline styles are evil, it's like inline styles are awesome. Let's make them super awesome." ~ Adam Wathan [https://twitter.com/adamwathan]
[24:10] - "To me, Tailwind is basically inline styles with a bunch of extra power bolted on." ~ Adam Wathan [https://twitter.com/adamwathan]
Links
* Adam Wathan [https://adamwathan.me/]
* Adam Wathan Twitter [https://twitter.com/adamwathan]
* Adam Wathan LinkedIn [https://www.linkedin.com/in/adam-wathan-9418984a/?originalSubdomain=ca]
* Tailwind CSS [https://tailwindcss.com/]
* Tailwind UI [https://tailwindui.com/]
* Discord [https://discord.com/]
* CSS Zen Garden [http://www.csszengarden.com/]
* Nicolas Gallagher [https://nicolasgallagher.com/]
* Normalize CSS [https://necolas.github.io/normalize.css/]
* Bootstrap [https://getbootstrap.com/]
* Laravel [https://laravel.com/]
* Vue [https://vuejs.org/]
* React [https://reactjs.org/]
* Riverside [https://www.npmjs.com/~riverside]
* Chrome [https://www.google.com/chrome/]
* Stimulus [https://stimulus.hotwired.dev/reference/css-classes]
* Twitter [https://twitter.com/?lang=en]
* Select2 [https://select2.org/]
* BEM [https://getbem.com/]
* Atomic CSS [https://acss.io/]
* Markdown [https://daringfireball.net/projects/markdown/syntax]
* Headless UI [https://headlessui.com/]
* Select2 [https://select2.org/]
* Svelte [https://svelte.dev/]
* Caleb Porzio [https://calebporzio.com/]
* Alpine JS [https://alpinejs.dev/]
* Solid JS [https://www.solidjs.com/]
---
Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/whiskey-web-and-whatnot/message
10/20/2022 • 53 minutes, 58 seconds
Native Apps, Progressive Web Apps, and Media Monopolies
There's a lot to consider before committing to a framework to build a native app. If you choose to build in native, ask yourself whether you're prepared to handle the downsides that come with it.
To start, you're limited to one framework and writing in one programming language. If you're not familiar with the syntax, that could pose a major learning curve. With native apps, it's tempting to have a separate app for every device that a user might run your app on, but on the operations front, that's a slippery slope with high overhead costs. If you're on a tight budget or working on small teams like Chuck and Robbie, the cost of paying developers to maintain a bunch of apps isn't appealing. There's no shame in knowing your resource limitations and taking the easy route.
In this episode, Chuck and Robbie talk about the trade-off between building native apps in Swift, Objective-C, React Native, and other web technologies, why they enjoy progressive web apps, and Disney's monopoly in media.
Key Takeaways
* [02:21] - A whiskey Review - Four Roses Small Batch Select.
* [11:11] - Chuck and Robbie discuss building apps in different frameworks.
* [22:58] - Chuck and Robbie talk about progressive web apps.
* [34:54] - TV Shows Chuck and Robbie are currently watching.
* [51:46] - Chuck and Robbie's Halloween plans.
Quotes
[03:16] - "It's crazy how no one has money because of the recession, and yet everything that you could possibly buy is super expensive and sold out all the time. It doesn't make sense." ~ Robbie Wagner [https://twitter.com/rwwagner90]
[23:04] - "You feel like businesses don't feel like they have a presence unless they're in the App Store." ~ Chuck Carpenter [https://twitter.com/CharlesWthe3rd]
[25:05] - "The one thing that has been that I've used as a progressive web app that's worked well is Google Photos." ~ Robbie Wagner [https://twitter.com/rwwagner90]
Links
* Four Roses Bourbon Small Batch Select [https://fourrosesbourbon.com/bourbon/small-batch-select/]
* Costco [https://www.costco.com/]
* WhistlePig Rye Whiskey [https://whistlepigwhiskey.com/]
* Sagamore Spirit [https://sagamorespirit.com/]
* White Dog Distilling [https://www.whitedogdistilling.com/]
* Buffalo Trace Distillery [https://www.buffalotracedistillery.com/]
* Android [https://www.android.com/]
* Java Script [https://www.javascript.com/]
* iPhone [https://www.apple.com/iphone/]
* Flutter [https://flutter.dev/]
* Google [https://www.google.com/]
* iOS [https://www.apple.com/ios/ios-16/]
* React Native [https://reactnative.dev/]
* Expo [https://expo.dev/]
* Capacitor [https://capacitorjs.com/]
* Electron [https://www.electronjs.org/]
* Samsung [https://www.samsung.com/us/]
* Roku [https://www.roku.com/]
* NextJS [https://nextjs.org/]
* iPad [https://www.apple.com/ipad/]
* Apple [https://www.apple.com/]
* Chrome [https://www.google.com/chrome/]
* Hulu [https://www.hulu.com/]
* Wuf.plus [https://wuf.plus/]
* Astro [https://www.astro.org/]
* Ember [https://emberjs.com/]
* JSON API [https://jsonapi.org/]
* Solid [https://www.solidjs.com/]
* American Horror Story [https://www.fxnetworks.com/shows/american-horror-story]
* Game of Thrones [https://www.hbo.com/game-of-thrones]</
---
Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/whiskey-web-and-whatnot/message
10/13/2022 • 58 minutes, 32 seconds
SolidJS: The Framework Creating a Buzz with Dan Jutan
Every once in a while a new framework rises to popularity and gets the developer community buzzing. One of the frameworks with the most momentum right now is SolidJS. But what makes Solid so special?
Dan Jutan, Product Manager at Astro, Inc. and SolidJS core team member believes the frameworks that prioritize developer experience will always come out on top. Before he landed at Solid, Dan started his career using Vue 3. It didn't take long before he was overwhelmed by the API surface and was searching for a framework that aligned with his values as a developer. Solid has a reputation as one of the fastest frameworks and also combines features from frameworks like React and Vue without any of the issues that bog them down.
In this episode, Dan talks to Chuck and Robbie about his journey exploring different frameworks early in his career, why the developer community loves SolidJS, and the connection between being a programmer and a musician.
Key Takeaways
* [00:59] - An intro to Dan.
* [02:55] - A whiskey review - Frey Ranch Bourban.
* [09:01] - Dan explains Solid.
* [14:27] - Why Dan prefers Solid over other frameworks.
* [20:47] - Specific use cases for Solid.
* [28:07] - How Dan connected Chuck and Robbie with Astro on Twitter.
* [45:25] - Dan speaks about his music and Taylor Swift.
Quotes
[10:00] - "The special thing about Solid is that it combines something you might be used to from React, which is these functional JSX components, with something you might be used to in Vue 3 or even older frameworks." ~ Dan Jutan [https://www.linkedin.com/in/dan-jutan-5bb78222b/]
[14:00] - "With Solid I was just like, oh this simple thing from React without the annoying part of React. And with the simple thing from Vue, without the baggage from Vue." ~ Dan Jutan [https://www.linkedin.com/in/dan-jutan-5bb78222b/]
[24:28] - "If you're looking for a framework to run that interactive part of the page, Solid is a great choice because it's super small and super fast." ~ Dan Jutan [https://www.linkedin.com/in/dan-jutan-5bb78222b/]
Links
* Dan Jutan LinkedIn [https://www.linkedin.com/in/dan-jutan-5bb78222b/]
* Dan Jutan Twitter [https://twitter.com/jutanium?ref_src=twsrc%5Egoogle%7Ctwcamp%5Eserp%7Ctwgr%5Eauthor]
* Astro [https://astro.build/]
* Solid [https://www.solidjs.com/]
* Game of Thrones [https://www.hbo.com/game-of-thrones]
* Frey Ranch Bourbon [https://freyranch.com/straight-bourbon-whiskey/]
* Vue [https://vuejs.org/]
* React [https://reactjs.org/]
* Knockout JS [https://knockoutjs.com/]
* Ember [https://emberjs.com/]
* RX JS [https://rxjs.dev/]
* Preact [https://preactjs.com/]
* Svelte [https://svelte.dev/]
* Codemirror [https://codemirror.net/]
* Next [https://nextjs.org/]
* Twitter [https://twitter.com/?lang=en]
* Remix [https://remix.run/]
* Solid Start [https://docs.solidjs.com/start]
* Ryan Florence [https://ryanflorence.com/]
* Kent C. Dodds [https://kentcdodds.com/]
* Nuxt [https://nuxtjs.org/]
* JavaScript [https://www.javascript.com/]
* Paramore [https://www.paramore.net/]
* Panic! At The Disco [https://panicatthedisco.com/tour]
* Fall Out Boy [https://falloutboy.com/tour]
* Justin Timberlake [https://justintimberlake.com/]
* Taylor Swift [https://www.taylorswift.com/]
---
Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/whiskey-web-and-whatnot/message
10/6/2022 • 59 minutes, 41 seconds
Embracing New Tech, JavaScript, and the W3WC NFT Launch
The beauty of tech is that it keeps evolving. As a developer, it's important to keep evolving too. Whether that's trying new frameworks, starting side projects, or adopting emerging tech.
JavaScript, for example, has taken on a whole new purpose since it was developed in the 90s to support a web browser. The language keeps developers like Robbie intrigued with features that seem underpromoted and underused by the community. At ShipShape, Chuck and Robbie are always experimenting. They're embracing Astro with plans to transition their website from Nuxt, developing a scheduling app, and most importantly they just launched the Whiskey Web and Whatnot NFT.
In this episode, Chuck and Robbie talk about underrated JavaScript features, where to find the Whiskey Web and Whatnot NFT, and why Robbie can't decide on a new car.
Key Takeaways
* [01:22] - Chuck and Robbie introduce their NFT.
* [04:11] - A whiskey review - Starlight Distillery Single Barrel Hubbard's Original Rick House of Indiana Straight Rye Whiskey.
* [09:35] - The difference between Maps and Sets in JavaScript.
* [22:52] - Chuck and Robbie discuss a scheduling app they're developing.
* [36:10] - Chuck and Robbie critique Solid, Astro, and React.
* [44:02] - Robbie whatnots about Ciroc Vodka.
* [45:13] - Chuck and Robbie discuss streaming services, TV shows, and Ryan Reynolds.
* [52:45] - What Robbie thinks about different trucks.
Quotes
[22:58] - "Internally, we're known for some technologies, but we're always experimenting with different things coming up as much as we can." ~ Chuck Carpenter [https://twitter.com/CharlesWthe3rd]
[39:42] - "So the cool thing about Astro is they have support for a lot of different types of frameworks like Vue, Preact, React, and Svelte. If it's a hot thing that someone has mentioned recently, they've got it." ~ Robbie Wagner [https://twitter.com/rwwagner90]
[41:44] - "I think for people that like React and want something that's not React just because React is super old, you could try Solid out." ~ Robbie Wagner [https://twitter.com/rwwagner90]
Links
* Bitski.com/Shipshapecode [https://www.bitski.com/@Shipshapecode/created]
* Huber's Starlight Distillery Old Rickhouse Indiana Straight Rye Whiskey [https://www.huberwinery.com/product/old-rickhouse-rye-whiskey/]
* Seelbach [https://seelbachs.com/]
* Sagamore Rye [https://sagamorespirit.com/spirits/signature-rye-whiskey/]
* JavaScript [https://www.javascript.com/]
* Oracle [https://www.oracle.com/id/]
* Gerber [https://www.gerber.com/]
* Hoover [https://hoover.com/]
* Mad Men [https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0804503/]
* Ember [https://emberjs.com/]
* The Doors [https://thedoors.com/]
* React [https://reactjs.org/]
* Vue 3 [https://vuejs.org/]
* Nuxt [https://nuxtjs.org/]
* Expo [https://expo.dev/]
* iOS [https://www.apple.com/lae/ios/ios-16/]
* Jest [https://jestjs.io/]
* Cypress [https://www.cypress.io/]
* Playwright [https://playwright.dev/]
* Ember [https://emberjs.com/]
* Hacktoberfest [https://hacktoberfest.com/]
* Dependabot [https://github.com/dependabot]
* Digital Ocean [https://www.digitalocean.com/]
* Chris Coyier [https://chriscoyier.net/]
* CSS-Tricks [https://css-tricks.com/]
* CodePen [https://codepen.io/]
---
Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/whiskey-web-and-whatnot/message
9/29/2022 • 58 minutes, 45 seconds
Balancing Engineering Management, Side Hustles, and Porsches with Kelly Vaughn
We all have at least one friend who somehow finds enough hours in a day to have a full-time job and take on several side projects. How can you successfully juggle a career, side hustles, and make time for your passions?
Kelly Vaughn, Engineering Manager at Spot AI, has some thoughts. She is leading a diverse, fully remote, global team that spans from California to India. Kelly keeps her management style flexible to account for the quirks and personality types of her team. When she's not steering the ship at Spot AI, she's advising several startups and working as a consultant. Despite doing it all, she finds time for reading, cycling, and her passion for Porsches.
In this episode, Kelly talks to Chuck and Robbie about her experience leading diverse global engineering teams from agencies to SaaS companies, juggling several side hustles, and collecting Porsches.
Key Takeaways
* [01:22] - An intro to Kelly Vaughn.
* [02:16] - A whiskey review - Barrell Craft Spirits Grey Label Dovetail 15.
* [09:07] - Kelly's current roles at Spot AI and her projects.
* [12:23] - The difference between leading teams in an agency versus in a corporate environment.
* [19:26] - What are the challenges of managing an international team?
* [22:26] - What's Kelly's favorite leadership book?
* [26:40] - Kelly speaks about her love of the Porsche Brand.
* [44:25] - Kelly talks about her cycling challenge for childhood cancer research.
Quotes
[13:37] - "The speed at which you work at an agency versus a SaaS company is vastly different because of the way that you're working. You're working with multiple clients directly versus having any number of customers." ~ Kelly Vaughn [https://twitter.com/kvlly]
[16:26] - "I think what's important to remember is when you're looking for metrics for growth, you need to look beyond just the quantitative metrics and really find a way to measure the qualitative metrics as well." ~ Kelly Vaughn [https://twitter.com/kvlly]
[21:59] - "What I'm doing to manage Team A is not going to be what I need to do to manage Team B. Finding out those differences and the personality quirks is what I've been focusing on so I can make sure they get what they need, in the structure they need it." ~ Kelly Vaughn [https://twitter.com/kvlly]
Links
* Kelly Vaughn Twitter [https://twitter.com/kvlly]
* Kelly Vaughn LinkedIn [https://www.linkedin.com/in/kellyvaughn/]
* Spot AI [https://www.spot.ai/]
* Barrell Craft Spirits Grey Label [https://www.barrellbourbon.com/barrellcraftspirits]
* Sherwin Williams [https://www.sherwin-williams.com/]
* Porsche [https://www.porsche.com/]
* George Stag Jr [https://www.buffalotracedistillery.com/our-brands/stagg/stagg-jr.html]
* First 90 Days [https://hbr.org/books/watkins]
* Acotar [https://www.goodreads.com/series/104014-a-court-of-thorns-and-roses]
* Book of the Month [https://www.bookofthemonth.com/]
* Barbarians at the Gate [https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/781182.Barbarians_at_the_Gate]
* The Big Short [https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/26889576-the-big-short]
* Michael Lewis [https://www.michaellewiswrites.com/]
* The Premonition [https://www.goodreads.com/en/book/show/56790170-the-premonition]
* The Five Dysfunctions of a Team [https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/21343.The_Five_Dysfunctions_of_a_Team]
* Spanish Love Deception [https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/54189398-the-spanish-love-deception]
* Astro [https://astro.build/]
---
Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/whiskey-web-and-whatnot/message
9/22/2022 • 56 minutes, 59 seconds
A11y Hour with Crystal Preston-Watson
Accessibility is like learning a new language, leaving many developers wondering where to start. The answer is pretty simple, start anywhere. But the onus isn't all on devs.
Crystal Preston-Watson has partial sight and uses a screen reader in her day-to-day as a Senior Digital Accessibility Analyst at Salesforce, one of the largest tech companies in the world. As strange as it may seem, she never used a screen reader until she was asked to test one out in her previous role as a quality engineer. Once she got her hands on one, she saw just how much businesses excluded people with disabilities from their target audience.
Crystal knows first-hand how quickly the expenses rack up when the burden of accessibility is placed on people with disabilities. In her talks, she addresses this and other lessons on accessibility with a bit of humor to make the conversation more approachable and beginner-friendly.
In this episode, Chuck and Robbie talk with Crystal about pitching accessibility to higher-ups, the actual cost of accessibility, and her love for comedy and improv.
Key Takeaways
* [01:31] - An intro to Crystal Preston-Watson.
* [02:51] - A whiskey review - Johnny Drum Private Stock.
* [08:51] - Crystal explains accessibility.
* [11:08] - How to pitch accessibility to company leadership.
* [20:42] - Crystal's guide to setting accessibility targets within a company.
* [30:24] - Crystal explains the cost and some of the challenges of being disabled.
* [40:41] - Crystal talks about her love for video games.
* [45:05] - Crystal talks about her love for improv.
Quotes
[17:07] - "Accessibility is everyone's concern. There are some really specific things that only a developer or tester or content creator can do, but at the end of the day, it's a very holistic thing, and everyone needs to be concerned about it." ~ Crystal Preston-Watson [https://twitter.com/ScopicEngineer?ref_src=twsrc%5Egoogle%7Ctwcamp%5Eserp%7Ctwgr%5Eauthor]
[21:33] - "If you have users that can't use your application, that is money wasted. And that's the thing, disabled people have money, and if they can't use your product then they're going to take that money somewhere else unless it is something that is very vital." ~ Crystal Preston-Watson [https://twitter.com/ScopicEngineer?ref_src=twsrc%5Egoogle%7Ctwcamp%5Eserp%7Ctwgr%5Eauthor]
[24:11] - "Everyone will use a mouse if they're not blind and visually impaired and that's just not true." ~ Crystal Preston-Watson [https://twitter.com/ScopicEngineer?ref_src=twsrc%5Egoogle%7Ctwcamp%5Eserp%7Ctwgr%5Eauthor]
Links
* Crystal Preston-Watson [https://crystalprestonwatson.com/]
* Crystal Preston-Watson LinkedIn [https://www.linkedin.com/in/crystalprestonwatson/]
* Crystal Preston-Watson Twitter [https://twitter.com/ScopicEngineer?ref_src=twsrc%5Egoogle%7Ctwcamp%5Eserp%7Ctwgr%5Eauthor]
* Johnny Drum Private Stock [https://www.kentuckybourbonwhiskey.com/the-whiskeys/johnny-drum-private-stock/]
* Salesforce [https://www.salesforce.com/]
* Cardi B Wap [https://music.apple.com/us/album/wap-feat-megan-thee-stallion-single/1526746983]
* It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia [https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0472954/]
* Jaws Screen Reader [https://www.freedomscientific.com/products/software/jaws/]
* React [https://reactjs.org/]
* Social Security Administration [https://www.ssa.gov/]
* MacBook [https://www.apple.com/lae/mac/]
* NVDA [https://www.nvaccess.org/]
* Sketch [https://www.sketch.com/]
---
Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/whiskey-web-and-whatnot/message
9/15/2022 • 51 minutes, 57 seconds
The Release of Nuxt 3 with Daniel Roe
The best way to win over a developer is to make their job simpler. The release of Nuxt 3 promises an even better developer experience than its former versions. That's music to every developer's ears. Who doesn't want faster rendering?
Daniel Roe, framework architect at Nuxt Labs has been working to get Nuxt 3 production ready for a stable release. In addition to DX improvements, once N3 is out of release, you can expect hybrid rendering, less JavaScript, and a cross-platform framework that can be used with pretty much any cloud service.
This Nuxt release is casting a wide net. Daniel and the team wanted the framework to be suited for everyone from hobby bloggers to enterprises. But the biggest win might be for e-commerce sites that need speed, performance, and personalization.
In this episode, Chuck and Robbie talk to Daniel about the features of Nuxt 3, improving the developer experience, and his family vacation to Algarve, Portugal.
Key Takeaways
* [00:38] - An introduction to Daniel Roe.
* [03:29] - A whiskey review - Laphroig Lore.
* [11:20] - The new features in Nuxt 3.
* [19:16] - The best path to convert projects to Nuxt 3.
* [32:47] - The target audience for Nuxt 2 and Nuxt 3.
* [45:31] - Daniel's holiday in Portugal .
* [51:49] - David's side project in Magic Regexp.
Quotes
[12:21] - "Some of the things that Nuxt 3 brings, well, it's been rewritten from the start, so it's given us an opportunity to do what we really wanted to do with Nuxt. And to learn from some of the mistakes we made for Nuxt 2 and adapt Nuxt for a new world. That sounds a bit crap, but more and more I think we're looking to take advantage of different kinds of hardware for rendering HTML." ~ @danielcroe [https://twitter.com/danielcroe?lang=en]
[13:18] - "Nuxt 2, out of the box, is a bare minimum package. I did some checking on this. The cold start for the server was 300 milliseconds. With Nuxt 3, it is three milliseconds." ~ @danielcroe [https://twitter.com/danielcroe?lang=en]
[38:48] - "I always like using suppliers that win me over because they have the best of whatever it is. They're able to meet my needs. Whether that's experience or price point or whatever it is. But they've won me over. I don't have to stay with them. I'm not forced or coerced into it. I didn't make an early choice, and now I'm reaping the whirlwind and having to pay the price for it. I'm with them because I want to be. That's the best scenario. You have the power to choose. You're choosing the platform you feel is the best." ~ @danielcroe [https://twitter.com/danielcroe?lang=en]
Links
* Daniel Roe LinkedIn [https://uk.linkedin.com/in/daniel-roe?original_referer=]
* Daniel Roe Twitter [https://twitter.com/danielcroe?ref_src=twsrc%5Egoogle%7Ctwcamp%5Eserp%7Ctwgr%5Eauthor]
* Nuxt [https://nuxtjs.org/]
* Vue [https://vuejs.org/]
* Bill Bryson [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bill_Bryson]
* Durham University [https://www.durham.ac.uk/homepage/]
* Bill Bryson Library [https://libguides.durham.ac.uk/friendly.php?s=Libraries/billbryson]
* Laphroig Lore [https://www.laphroaig.com/en/lore]
* Laphroig [https://www.laphroaig.com/en/]
* Pringles [https://www.pringles.com/us/home.html]
* Vite [https://vitejs.dev/]
* Webpack [https://webpack.js.org/]
* TypeScript [https://www.typescriptlang.org/]
* React [https://reactjs.org/]
* Discord [https://discord.com/]
* Jest [https://jestjs.io/]
* JavaScript [https://www.javascript.com/]<
---
Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/whiskey-web-and-whatnot/message
9/8/2022 • 55 minutes, 16 seconds
HTML Accessibility, Package Managers, and the Whiskey Web and Whatnot NFT
Devs have a lot on their plate, but the key is to find time for what's important. Championing accessibility is only possible if devs prioritize it and a good place to start is by knowing your HTML elements. If dogs can learn 50 human words, then devs can learn 50 HTML elements.
On another note, not all package managers are made equal. Robbie has been loyal to Yarn for years and is okay with waiting a few minutes for installs. But from Chuck's operations perspective, when you're talking about continuous integration that can eat up a huge chunk of your day, it might be time to look for something that promises speed.
In this episode, Chuck and Robbie talk about the importance of knowing your HTML elements, the pros and cons of different package managers, and the Whiskey Web and Whatnot NFT drop.
Key Takeaways
* [02:09] - Why Chuck and Robbie struggle to find time for reading.
* [04:43] - A whiskey review - Huling Station.
* [12:27] - How many HTML elements can Chuck and Robbie name.
* [26:25] - How to choose the right package manager.
* [41:27] - Chuck and Robbie's eventful trips.
* [56:14] - Whiskey Web and Whatnot's NFT drop.
Quotes
[03:32] - "You can fit in anything that you prioritize, right? If you said working out is the same as eating, it has to be done. You would find time." ~ @rwwagner90 [https://twitter.com/rwwagner90]
[26:38] - "I think HTML is real, and it hasn't been the first-class citizen that it deserves in terms of the Internet itself, whose intention was to distribute documents and have that accessible across schools and scientific organizations and whatever else. So let's not forget what it was all about, especially if you have a content site. Give your content first-class citizenship." ~ @CharlesWthe3rd [https://twitter.com/CharlesWthe3rd]
[27:32] - "NPM is the leader in the JavaScript world, although it has its proponents and opponents. Many people have jumped over to Yarn for some of its benefits over a period of time, and some of its features influenced NPM and bring people back and forth a little bit." ~ @CharlesWthe3rd [https://twitter.com/CharlesWthe3rd]
Links
* Charlie Gerard [https://charliegerard.dev/]
* Java Script [https://www.javascript.com/]
* Huling Station [https://olddominick.com/spirits/huling-station-bourbon-whiskey/]
* National Geographic [https://www.nationalgeographic.com/]
* Siri [https://www.apple.com/siri/]
* Waze [https://www.waze.com/live-map/]
* Old Domonic's [https://olddominick.com/]
* Justin Timberlake [https://justintimberlake.com/]
* Seelbach's [https://seelbachs.com/]
* Nuxt [https://nuxtjs.org/]
* JSX [https://reactjs.org/docs/introducing-jsx.html]
* React [https://reactjs.org/]
* NPM [https://www.npmjs.com/]
* Yarn [https://yarnpkg.com/]
* Github [https://github.com/]
* Ember [https://emberjs.com/]
* jQuery [https://jquery.com/]
* Vercel [https://vercel.com/]
* JSON [https://www.json.org/json-en.html]
* Bun [https://bun.sh/]
* Supabase [https://supabase.com/]
* Firebase [https://firebase.google.com/]
* Redwood [https://redwoodjs.com/]
* Postgres [https://www.postgresql.org/]
* DirecTV [https://www.directv.com/]
* Ron Burgundy [https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0357413/]
* Sea World [https://seaworld.com/]
---
Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/whiskey-web-and-whatnot/message
9/1/2022 • 1 hour
Tech Rants, Supporting Open Source, and Great TV Shows
Building products is hard. And devs can often feel hamstrung by competing priorities. The battle between revenue and quality is ever-present and ongoing. But is it possible to achieve both?
In this episode, Chuck and Robbie discuss some of their frustrations with the tech companies and tech stacks in the modern era, supporting open source projects, and some great TV shows they have been enjoying.
Key Takeaways
* [01:27] - A whiskey review - Barrell Dovetail Whiskey.
* [08:00] - Why tech companies are reluctant to upgrade dependencies.
* [18:08] - The importance of supporting open source projects.
* [30:45] - Why React dominates the landscape.
* [43:13] - Chuck and Robbie discuss TV shows.
* [49:36] - Chuck's weekend plans with family.
* [54:29] - Chuck's Korean fried chicken experience.
Quotes
[10:48] - "I feel like we've done all of this stuff to be like, let's get everyone Scrum certified, and let's do this whole process. And people really bought into that, and it does not help them." ~ @rwwagner90 [https://twitter.com/rwwagner90]
[12:59] - "You read the books. You see the blogs. You get experts to come in and train your teams, and you're still kind of struggling to get it right. But then we keep getting told there's a right way. Who is doing it right?" ~ @CharlesWthe3rd [https://twitter.com/CharlesWthe3rd]
[25:27] - "I think in a perfect world, what I would love to see happen is companies kind of take frameworks under their wing and be like, look, we realize how much work you're doing. We realize there are not that many people doing it. Here are these two people we just hired. Teach them the thing that no one knows so we can increase the buzz factor here and at the same time, instead of just telling you to teach them, here's $500,000. Do whatever you think makes the framework better." ~ @rwwagner90 [https://twitter.com/rwwagner90]
Links
* Barrell Dovetail Whiskey [https://www.barrellbourbon.com/dovetail]
* MGP [https://www.mgpingredients.com/]
* Dr Pepper [https://www.drpepper.com/]
* Cherry Coca Cola [https://us.coca-cola.com/products/coca-cola-flavors/cherry]
* George Dickel Tenessee Whiskey [https://www.georgedickel.com/]
* Jack Daniels Distillery [https://www.jackdaniels.com/]
* Green Brier Distillery [https://www.greenbrier.com/]
* Ember [https://emberjs.com/]
* Next.js [https://nextjs.org/]
* GitHub [https://github.com/]
* NPM [https://www.npmjs.com/]
* Melaine Sumner [https://melanie.codes/]
* Sindre Sorhus [https://sindresorhus.com/]
* Chris Manson [https://ie.linkedin.com/in/realate]
* Microsoft [https://www.oracle.com/industries/micros/]
* Jest [https://jestjs.io/]
* Facebook [https://www.facebook.com/]
* Vitest [https://vitest.dev/]
* Faker [https://fakerjs.dev/]
* Java Script [https://www.javascript.com/]
* Hacker News [https://thehackernews.com/]
* Reddit [https://reddit.com/]
* Sqwok [https://sqwok.im/]
* jQuery [https://jquery.com/]
* LESS [https://lesscss.org/]
* Sass [https://sass-lang.com/]
* Coffee Script [https://coffeescript.org/]
* TypeScrpit [https://www.typescriptlang.org/]
* Lodash [https://lodash.com/]
* Shop Talk [https://shoptalkshow.com/]
* Electro-Voice [https://electrovoice.com/]
---
Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/whiskey-web-and-whatnot/message
8/25/2022 • 59 minutes, 48 seconds
Web Frameworks, the Launch of Astro 1.0, and National Parks with Nate Moore
Introducing a new framework can be challenging, especially when developers are loyal to old favorites. But Astro 1.0 is bridging the gap between old and new by staying compatible and familiar with other frameworks.
Nate Moore, an engineer at Astro Technology Company and core maintainer on Astro has been working on Astro 1.0 for 16 months. His major focus was launching a new web framework that is sustainable and future-proof. Astro 1.0 is targeted at devs building content-based websites and is compatible with most frameworks out there.
In this episode, Nate talks with Robbie and Chuck about the launch of Astro 1.0, its compatibility with other frameworks, frameworks that inspired Astro, and Nate's life goal of visiting every national park.
Key Takeaways
* [00:49] - A quick intro to Nate.
* [01:36] - A whisky review - Laws Centennial Straight Wheat Whiskey 4 Year.
* [09:59] - What is Astro?
* [23:24] - What are the new features in Astro 1.0?
* [30:32] - Web components Nate has used.
* [42:10] - The challenges with monorepos.
* [44:41] - Nate's life goal of visiting every national park.
Quotes
[12:11] - "I think the ecosystem just goes in circles. But it is funny to see people come into the ecosystem and be like, where's your link component? It's like that's just an anchor tag. You don't need a component." - @n_moore [https://twitter.com/n_moore]
[22:39] - "I heard somebody recently described Vite as the United Nations of JavaScript. Everybody is building on top of Vite now, and it's just really cool to see because if you hit a bug and you upstream a fix, then everybody is going to benefit from that, and people are really taking it in a lot of different ways." - @n_moore [https://twitter.com/n_moore]
[27:39] - "I think people are really spoiled by how much investment like Microsoft has made into TypeScript and just like all the tooling around that stuff. It is so much work to get your own language up and running." - @n_moore [https://twitter.com/n_moore]
Links
* Nate Moore Twitter [https://twitter.com/n_moore]
* Astro Twitter [https://twitter.com/astrodotbuild]
* Astro [https://astro.build/]
* NASA [https://www.nasa.gov/]
* Law Whiskey Centennial Wheat Whiskey [https://lawswhiskeyhouse.com/laws-bonded-centennial-wheat-whiskey-turns-five-years-old/]
* 1787 Coworking Space [https://1787.work/]
* JavaScript [https://www.javascript.com/]
* React [https://reactjs.org/]
* HTML [https://html.com/]
* JSX [https://reactjs.org/docs/introducing-jsx.html]
* Stack Overflow [https://stackoverflow.com/]
* JQuery [https://jquery.com/]
* Svelte [https://svelte.dev/]
* Solid [https://www.solidjs.com/]
* Vue [https://vuejs.org/]
* Ryan Carniato Twitter [https://twitter.com/RyanCarniato]
* Redwood [https://redwoodjs.com/]
* Remix [https://remix.run/]
* React Router [https://reactrouter.com/]
* NextJS [https://nextjs.org/]
* Ember [https://emberjs.com/]
* Glimmer [https://glimmerjs.com/]
* Snowpack [https://www.snowflake.com/snowpark/]
* Skypack [https://www.skypack.dev/]
* Vite [https://vitejs.dev/]
* Markdown [https://www.markdownguide.org/]
* Netlify [https://www.netlify.com/]
* Vercel [https://vercel.com/]
* Discord [https://discord.com/]
---
Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/whiskey-web-and-whatnot/message
8/18/2022 • 57 minutes, 38 seconds
A11y Hour with Mark Steadman
Like many developers, Mark Steadman began working in web development with just a couple of goals in mind: write something that runs and passes a test. No major thought for those using the interface he created.
Mark's perspective changed when he sat with a few folks who were blind or had low vision, and watched as they used assistive technology for the web and attempted to navigate a site he'd developed. Their struggle to tackle basic web functions against inaccessible code was Mark's wake-up moment and his inspiration to close the gap between emerging developers and accessibility education.
In this episode, Chuck and Robbie talk with Mark about his passion for accessibility, where most web accessibility issues originate, practical tips for incorporating accessibility into developer workflow, and why accessibility means more than checking a box, meeting quota, and passing a test.
Key Takeaways
* [00:44] - A quick intro to Mark.
* [02:52] - A whiskey review - Angel's Envy Bourbon Port Finish.
* [11:47] - How Mark became an accessibility specialist.
* [19:28] - Where the web accessibility issue originates.
* [27:41] - How to make data visualization accessible.
* [34:29] - The major accessibility complaint we fail to consider with JavaScript frameworks.
* [36:17] - How to keep developers and frameworks on the right track with accessibility.
* [44:22] - A Star Wars-themed whatnot.
* [50:37] - Why Mark likes college football (and their stadiums).
Quotes
[01:50] - "I feel like there's a gap in the field right now where developers are kind of not being reached out to from the accessibility side of things. So my passion in both my job and on the side too, I write for accessibility as well, is to fill that gap." ~ @Steady5063 [https://twitter.com/steady5063]
[38:53] - "That's my biggest advocacy for automation, is it helps developers learn accessibility on the fly." ~ @Steady5063 [https://twitter.com/steady5063]
[01:00:08] - "If you are a developer that's listening to this, take the time to put accessibility as a priority. As much as everybody in the world is going to tell you that priority for accessibility is not there, find time." ~ @Steady5063 [https://twitter.com/steady5063]
Links
* Mark Steadman [https://twitter.com/steady5063]
* Fidelity Investments [https://www.fidelity.com]
* JavaScript [https://www.javascript.com]
* Angel's Envy - Port Wine Whiskey Kentucky Straight [https://www.angelsenvy.com/us/en/product/port-finish/]
* Rivian [https://rivian.com]
* Old Forester [https://www.oldforester.com]
* State Farm [https://www.statefarm.com]
* Deque Systems [https://www.deque.com]
* DEV Community [https://dev.to]
* Jira [https://www.atlassian.com/software/jira]
* React [https://reactjs.org]
* Angular [https://angular.io]
* Vue [https://vuejs.org]
* Ember.js [https://emberjs.com]
* ARIA [https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/Accessibility/ARIA]
* JSX [https://reactjs.org/docs/introducing-jsx.html]
* Sarah L. Fossheim [https://fossheim.io]
* Yahoo Finance [https://finance.yahoo.com]
* Google Finance [https://www.google.com/finance]
* Astro [https://astro.build]
* Melanie Sumner [https://github.com/MelSumner]
* axe Accessibility Linter [https://marketplace.visualstudio.com/items?itemName=deque-systems.vscode-axe-linter]
---
Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/whiskey-web-and-whatnot/message
8/11/2022 • 1 hour, 1 minute, 53 seconds
Conventional Commits vs. Release-It and Chatting About the Changelog
There are two types of engineers. The "normal" ones who strive to make their day-to-day lives as easy as possible and the Robbie's of the world who strive to do everything themselves until the last line of code is sealed in a changelog.
On that note, do you prefer conventional commits? Or the tools out there that make organization easier and, sometimes, automated? Chuck and Robbie don't see eye-to-eye on this particular topic so prepare yourself for the mildest smackdown of the century.
In this episode, Chuck and Robbie discuss the pros and cons of release-it, the beauty of working system-agnostic, why Robbie prefers the changelog, and an attempt to stay abreast of frameworks like fresh coming into focus.
Key Takeaways
* [00:33] - A whiskey review - Howler Head Banana Whiskey.
* [09:12] - A mild smackdown on conventional commits versus release-it.
* [15:23] - Why Chuck and Robbie prefer the changelog.
* [20:35] - What is fresh? And Robbie leaks some internal R&D.
* [26:42] - What Robbie thinks about the Chevy Blazer EV and SUVs in general.
* [44:55] - How Chuck and his family acquired a Recall box.
Quotes
[09:55] - "I don't dislike release-it. Let's be clear there. I just don't want to have to physically do anything beyond opening the pull request and closing the pull request." ~ @CharlesWthe3rd [https://twitter.com/CharlesWthe3rd]
[13:01] - "I'm not a big fan of conventional commits because it adds a lot of noise to your commit log." ~ @rwwagner90 [https://twitter.com/rwwagner90]
[15:06] - "I just think that you [Robbie] are different than a lot of engineers in that you're like, 'I want to touch and do all the things for all 16 jobs, I just want to do it myself and make sure it hits to the end' and other engineers are like, 'what script can I write to never do this again?'" ~ @CharlesWthe3rd [https://twitter.com/CharlesWthe3rd]
Links
* Howler Head Kentucky Banana Bourbon Whiskey [https://www.howlerhead.com]
* Suggest a Whiskey on Twitter! [https://twitter.com/shipshapecode]
* UFC [https://www.ufc.com]
* Dana White [https://www.instagram.com/danawhite/]
* Wooler Brands [https://catalyst-spirits.com]
* Fireball [https://www.fireballwhisky.com]
* Coke [https://www.coca-cola.com]
* release-it [https://github.com/release-it/release-it]
* changelog [https://keepachangelog.com/en/1.0.0/]
* GitHub Actions [https://github.com/features/actions]
* semantic-release-bot [https://www.npmjs.com/~semantic-release-bot]
* Hacker News [https://news.ycombinator.com]
* Microsoft [https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/]
* GitLab [https://about.gitlab.com]
* github-changelog-generator [https://github.com/github-changelog-generator/github-changelog-generator]
* Ember.js [https://emberjs.com]
* fresh [https://fresh.deno.dev]
* Next.js [https://nextjs.org]
* Node [https://nodejs.org/en/]
* Yarn [https://yarnpkg.com]
* Hooks [https://reactjs.org/docs/hooks-intro.html]
* Starbeam [https://github.com/wycats/starbeam/]
* Astro [https://astro.build]
* JavaScript [https://www.javascript.com]
* zerojs [http://technohippy.github.io/zero.js/]
* nojs [https://www.npmjs.com/package/nojs]
* Preact [https://preactjs.com]
* React [https://reactjs.org]
* Optix< [https://www.optixapp.com]
---
Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/whiskey-web-and-whatnot/message
8/4/2022 • 58 minutes, 23 seconds
Emerging Tech, a Resource Renaissance, and Embracing Ember with Preston Sego
A few years into Preston Sego's coding career, a colleague working on increasing interactivity on the company's interface chose Ember for the endeavor. Years later, when Preston began developing his own project, he took his colleague's advice and began testing the waters with Ember as well.
In 2019, Preston noticed interesting work brewing within Ember. Realizing Ember was adaptable to modern tools, Preston decided to dive back in and start building out a chat app to test the framework. That same year, Preston spoke at EmberConf and eventually landed a job at CrowdStrike where the framework of choice was Ember.
In this episode, Preston talks with Chuck and Robbie about comparing Ember to React without angering either side, why he values Ember resources and has worked to create various libraries, what emerging tech Preston's thrilled to be working on, and what tech Preston's violently against.
Key Takeaways
* [01:13] - The origin of Preston's alias.
* [03:13] - A whiskey review - Malahat Rye.
* [10:14] - How Preston got into Ember.
* [20:09] - The exciting tech projects Preston's working on.
* [26:21] - What Preston is looking forward to that's coming out soon.
* [29:13] - What tech Preston is violently against.
* [31:17] - A corn-themed whatnot.
* [35:04] - Why Preston loves pinochle and boring cereal.
* [43:09] - A deep dive on Starcraft.
* [47:54] - What retro games Chuck is playing.
Quotes
[15:04] - "I really like clinical comparisons between things because if you have any emotion whatsoever in a comparison article, you're going to upset one of the sides and you don't wanna do that." ~ Preston Sego [https://twitter.com/nullvoxpopuli]
[23:10] - "I think the most obvious and beneficial use case [of resources] is for data loading. Just because loading anything Async is a pain." ~ Preston Sego [https://twitter.com/nullvoxpopuli]
[26:50] - "The rfc is first-class component templates and it solves the biggest complaint that new hires have at my work where people are just like, 'I don't know how to find this thing, how do you find it?'" ~ Preston Sego [https://twitter.com/nullvoxpopuli]
Links
* Preston Sego [https://www.linkedin.com/in/lprestonsegoiii/]
* Preston on Twitter [https://twitter.com/nullvoxpopuli]
* Malahat Spirits Co. Handcrafted 100% Rye [https://www.malahatspirits.com/rye-whiskey]
* FineCask [https://finecask.com]
* Sagamore Spirit [https://sagamorespirit.com]
* Jack Daniels [https://www.jackdaniels.com/en-us]
* React [https://reactjs.org]
* Glimmer [https://glimmerjs.com]
* Ember [https://emberjs.com]
* EmberConf [https://2022.emberconf.com]
* EmberConf 2022 - Keynote Part 1 by Yehuda Katz [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OgpnkR-oKec]
* Rails [https://rubyonrails.org]
* Slack [http://www.slack.com]
* Angular [https://angular.io]
* Twitter [http://www.twitter.com]
* TypeScript [https://www.typescriptlang.org]
* CrowdStrike [https://www.crowdstrike.com]
* EmberConf 2019 - Comparing Patterns in React and Ember by Preston Sego [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u1IkKWYszzk]
* Hooks [https://reactjs.org/docs/hooks-intro.html]
* Starbeam [https://github.com/wycats/starbeam/]
* SolidJS [https://www.solidjs.com]
* Vue.js [https://vuejs.org]
* Remix [https://remix.run]
* Svelte [https://svelte.dev]
---
Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/whiskey-web-and-whatnot/message
7/28/2022 • 53 minutes, 15 seconds
A11y Hour with Eric Bailey
In recent years, accessibility has evolved from a way to avoid legal landmines, to a specialization developers are taking a serious approach to for the sake of their companies, apps, and users. Eric Bailey has been at the forefront of this maturation, working as both an advocate and educator in the accessibility and inclusive design space.
A user experience designer by trade, Eric developed a passion for accessibility that led him to The A11Y Project – an open source, one-stop shop for digital accessibility education. Eric helps maintain the hub while writing and speaking about the intersectionality of code, usability, and disability.
In this episode, Eric talks with Chuck and Robbie about the challenges of improving digital inclusivity, how to work through inclusive design on a budget, what bothers Eric about developers who are afraid to take the accessibility leap, where platforms fall short, and the tools that make implementing accessibility easier.
Key Takeaways
* [00:39] - A brief intro to Eric.
* [01:35] - A whiskey review - Jefferson's Ocean Bourbon.
* [09:20] - How Eric got involved in accessibility and the A11Y Project.
* [20:53] - How Eric solves for accessibility despite not being disabled.
* [25:55] - How to solicit expertise from the disabled community even with a limited budget.
* [28:35] - The best practices for getting started implementing accessibility.
* [34:46] - A burgers-themed whatnot.
* [37:08] - Comics, Marvel, and streaming culture.
* [48:05] - How the gaming industry is going through an accessibility renaissance.
* [56:35] - A few closing thoughts from Eric.
Quotes
[10:34] - "I used to think [accessibility] shouldn't be a job because everybody should be doing it. But the more I explore this space, the more I understand there is a need for specialization like any other kind of technical consideration." ~ @ericwbailey [https://twitter.com/ericwbailey]
[22:00] - "This is something that I try to be very cognizant of as I identify as abled but I speak with and interact with the disability community: the last thing I want to do is typecast or tokenize or suggest that this is the one true way to do things." ~ @ericwbailey [https://twitter.com/ericwbailey]
[24:16] - "Bringing people in who are daily assistive technology users and having them actually navigate through things is an incredibly compelling, incredibly eye-opening experience." ~ @ericwbailey [https://twitter.com/ericwbailey]
Links
* Eric Bailey [https://twitter.com/ericwbailey]
* The A11Y Project [https://www.a11yproject.com]
* An accessibility checklist [https://www.a11yproject.com/checklist/]
* Accessibility posts [https://www.a11yproject.com/posts/]
* Accessibility resources [https://www.a11yproject.com/resources/]
* Contribute to The A11Y Project [https://www.a11yproject.com/write-for-us/]
* Git [https://git-scm.com]
* Jefferson's Ocean Voyage 24 [https://jeffersonsbourbon.com/jeffersons-ocean-voyage-24/]
* Old Fitzgerald Whiskey [https://heavenhilldistillery.com/old-fitzgerald.php]
* Microformats [http://microformats.org]
* National Geographic [https://www.nationalgeographic.com]
* Remix Run [https://remix.run]
* 11ty [https://www.11ty.dev]
* JavaScript [https://www.javascript.com]
* element transition API [https://developer.chrome.com/blog/shared-element-transitions-for-spas/]
* Velveeta [https://www.kraftheinz-foodservice.com/products/0000070270/velveeta]
---
Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/whiskey-web-and-whatnot/message
7/21/2022 • 58 minutes, 54 seconds
Developing Orbit and the Future of Cross Framework Solutions with Dan Gebhardt
Years ago, Dan Gebhardt was mapping out data needs for an app he was building. In a struggle to make sense of every requirement and apply them to other packages like Ember Data, he hit a wall. At this point, there was no option for adapting Ember Data to the complex specificities of his app's needs.
Dan tried to rationalize a solution, deconstructing entire data universes and all aspects of a data library. The end result was Orbit, a framework-agnostic data layer with use cases beyond the obvious. Since its inception, many developers have leaned on Orbit, including those at Ship Shape.
In this episode, Chuck and Robbie talk with Dan about Orbit's origin story, the best (and least obvious) ways to use Orbit, why Dan chose platform-agnostic, what he really thinks about Starbeam, his ultimate goal with Orbit, and Dan's all-time favorite power tool.
Key Takeaways
* [00:45] - A brief intro to Dan.
* [03:02] - A whiskey review - Nikka Single Malt Miyagikyo.
* [11:04] - Why Dan created Orbit.
* [15:47] - Unexpected use cases for Orbit.
* [21:42] - How Orbit flags a conflict.
* [25:33] - Orbit's use cases outside of JSON:API.
* [32:46] - What Dan thinks about Starbeam.
* [35:12] - How Dan escapes his computer.
* [40:32] - Dan's favorite power tool.
* [42:33] - Dan's thoughts on New Hampshire (and New Jersey).
* [48:46] - Dan's closing thoughts and his sneak peek at a new release.
Quotes
[13:28] - "Sometimes building for the hard case first also helps clarify the simple case and I think that Orbit really scales from the very simple to the very complex set of requirements." ~ @dgeb [https://twitter.com/dgeb]
[17:47] - "That's one of my favorite aspects of working with Orbit is using it as simply as possible to just prototype an app really quickly." ~ @dgeb [https://twitter.com/dgeb]
[33:32] - "The frameworks have too long been siloed and we are now seeing some really interesting cross framework solutions out there, whether you're talking about Starbeam or even something like Remix or Astro." ~ @dgeb [https://twitter.com/dgeb]
Links
* Dan Gebhardt [https://twitter.com/dgeb]
* Ember Core Team Emeritus [https://emberjs.com/teams/]
* JSON:API [https://jsonapi.org]
* Orbit.js [https://github.com/orbitjs]
* Tilde [https://www.tilde.io]
* Ruby On Rails [https://rubyonrails.org]
* Rust [https://www.rust-lang.org]
* Yehuda Katz [https://yehudakatz.com]
* JSONAPI::Resources [https://jsonapi-resources.com]
* Nikka Single Malt Miyagikyo [https://www.nikka.com/eng/brands/singlemalt-miyagikyo/]
* Nikka From The Barrel [https://www.nikka.com/eng/brands/fromthebarrel/]
* The Glencairn Whiskey Glass [https://www.glencairnwhiskyglass.com]
* The Norlan Whiskey Glass [https://norlanglass.com/pages/norlan-whisky-glass]
* GraphQL [https://graphql.org]
* IndexedDB [https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/IndexedDB_API]
* Ember Data [https://guides.emberjs.com/release/models/]
* Swach [https://swach.io/]
* Git [https://git-scm.com]
* Apollo [https://www.apollographql.com]
* Whiskey Web and Whatnot: Discovering Ember, Adopting Orbit, and Unlocking Optimization with Chris Thoburn (runspired) [https://www.whiskeywebandwhatnot.fm/discovering-ember-adopting-orbit-and-unlocking-optimization-with-chris-thoburn-runspired/]
* LinkedIn [http://www.linkedin.com]
---
Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/whiskey-web-and-whatnot/message
7/14/2022 • 50 minutes, 51 seconds
Matt Johnson: When Web3 Is Worth It and Learning to Lead
In high school, Matt Johnson followed in the footsteps of his older brother, pursuing similar hobbies like sports and music. After joining a band, Matt realized they needed a website. Mirroring his brother, Matt learned to code, built a website, and changed his college major.
Following graduation, Matt dove into business ownership, buying out the company he interned for with a business partner. That once small operation has grown to a team of over 100 and as of July 1st, Matt will be Midwestern Interactive's sole owner. Like Chuck and Robbie, Matt made the switch from programmer to business owner and is committed to his role as a people and business leader.
In this episode, Matt talks with Chuck and Robbie about learning to love coding, Matt's philosophy on tech and business, what's valuable and what's fluff with Web3, and why Matt took up golf after putting coding on the backburner.
Key Takeaways
* [00:29] - A brief introduction to Matt.
* [01:24] - A whiskey review.
* [08:34] - How Matt discovered coding.
* [12:17] - Matt's (and Robbie's) music career.
* [15:14] - How Matt decides what tech to work with.
* [16:33] - How often Matt actually codes as a business owner.
* [22:56] - The very last piece of billable code Matt wrote for Midwestern Interactive.
* [26:39] - How Matt views the value of Web3.
* [34:40] - What golf and programming have in common.
* [39:23] - What other businesses Matt runs and how those ventures came to be.
* [44:20] - What Matt thinks of YAML.
* [44:58] - How Chuck and Robbie strategize with tech and testing.
* [52:42] - How Matt produces consistently strong outcomes.
Quotes
[14:25] - "It's pretty crazy, right? You leverage the tools for what you love to do, and then you fall in love with the tool. It's a really interesting thing. I remember the idea of telling a computer what to do was just baffling to me. I can just create my own anything." ~ Matt Johnson [https://www.linkedin.com/in/matthew-johnson-71a059b3/]
[18:26] - "When you are running a business you have to be able to be the right person for the job at any given moment. And you have to have that ability to change your priorities to meet the priorities of the people setting the priorities." ~ Matt Johnson [https://www.linkedin.com/in/matthew-johnson-71a059b3/]
[18:57] - "When you base your decisions on what's right, it's a whole lot easier to go to sleep at night. And getting good rest is very important in the progression of your business." ~ Matt Johnson [https://www.linkedin.com/in/matthew-johnson-71a059b3/]
Links
* Matt Johnson [https://www.linkedin.com/in/matthew-johnson-71a059b3/]
* Midwestern Interactive [https://midwesterninteractive.com/]
* W.L. Weller Antique 107 [https://www.buffalotracedistillery.com/our-brands/w-l-weller/w-l-weller-antique.html]
* Pappy Van Winkle's Whiskey [https://www.oldripvanwinkle.com]
* Maker's Mark [https://www.makersmark.com/]
* Buffalo Trace Distillery [https://www.buffalotracedistillery.com/]
* Old Forester 1920 Prohibition Style Whiskey [https://www.oldforester.com/products/old-forester-1920-style-prohibition-whisky/]
* Total Wine [https://www.totalwine.com/]
* Bart Paden [https://www.linkedin.com/in/mediaphish/]
* Christ In Youth [https://ciy.com/]
* The Jordan Howerton Band [https://www.jordanhowerton.net]
* Myspace [https://myspace.com]
* Extreme Ownership: How U.S. Navy SEALS Lead and Win [https://www.amazon.com/Extreme-Ownership-U-S-Navy-SEALs/dp/1250067057]
---
Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/whiskey-web-and-whatnot/message
7/7/2022 • 54 minutes, 13 seconds
Polaris, Starbeam, and the Future of Ember with Godfrey Chan
In 2022, the future of Ember is taking shape thanks to developers like Godfrey Chan. Alongside Yehuda Katz and other engineers, Godfrey's working on a new edition of Polaris. The project has three main goals: to align Ember with the modern npm packaging system, continue to invest and innovate in reactivity, and encourage universal design principles.
Like many developers, Godfrey came to Ember from Rails. Months after chatting with Yehuda and Tom Dale at EmberConf, Godfrey was hired at Tilde and thrown into the Ember deep end. Today, Godfrey's focused on big picture developments, tackling lofty goals like developing an Ember model to navigate JavaScript classes.
In this episode, Godfrey talks with Chuck and Robbie about what's to come for Polaris, solving major developer headaches, Godfrey's philosophy on frameworks, top use cases for solutions like Starbeam, and why these innovations are necessary in 2022.
Key Takeaways
* [00:29] - A quick intro to Godfrey.
* [01:49] - A whiskey review.
* [09:27] - A sneak peek at Polaris.
* [16:15] - Why Polaris is about easy transitions.
* [20:11] - How Polaris plans to evolve.
* [24:54] - How Godfrey got into Ember.
* [27:30] - What Starbeam is.
* [32:50] - Use cases for Starbeam.
* [36:03] - Why Starbeam is necessary in 2022.
* [39:49] - A hobby and people-watching themed Whatnot.
Quotes
[14:54] - "Tools like TypeScript don't automatically just understand what's up within ember app. At least one of the things for Polaris is to figure out how we can transition to a world where we don't have those little tiny differences anymore so that when you open a project in VS Code, TypeScript just knows what's up." ~ @chancancode [https://twitter.com/chancancode]
[37:46] - "I think conceptually, a reactivity layer that is decoupled from the framework makes a lot of sense to me because there's just a lot of libraries and abstractions that you want to write that eventually, you want people to be able to use them in UI." ~ @chancancode [https://twitter.com/chancancode]
[39:31] - "I think having something like Starbeam where you can express those reactivity concepts or those annotations without making your library only usable in React or Vue or whatever is a good thing to have in 2022." ~ @chancancode [https://twitter.com/chancancode]
Links
* Godfrey Chan [https://twitter.com/chancancode]
* Ember [https://emberjs.com]
* Ember Core Team [https://emberjs.com/teams/]
* Rails Core Team [https://rubyonrails.org/community]
* Ruby on Rails [https://rubyonrails.org]
* Tilde [https://www.tilde.io]
* Lyre's American Malt [https://lyres.com/range/american-malt/]
* Multnomah Whiskey Library [https://mwlpdx.com]
* EmberConf [https://2022.emberconf.com]
* Godfrey's EmberConf 2022 Keynote [https://2022.emberconf.com/talks/keynote-part-2]
* Slides [https://speakerdeck.com/chancancode/virtual-emberconf-2022-platform-state-of-the-union)]
* Yehuda's EmberConf 2022 Keynote [https://2022.emberconf.com/talks/keynote-part-1]
* Slides [https://ember.slides.com/users/sign_in]
* Ember Octane [https://emberjs.com/editions/octane/]
* Ember Inspector [https://chrome.google.com/webstore/detail/ember-inspector/bmdblncegkenkacieihfhpjfppoconhi]
* TypeScript [https://www.typescriptlang.org]
* JavaScript [https://www.javascript.com]
* webpack [https://webpack.js.org]
* Visual Studio Code [https://code.visualstudio.com]
---
Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/whiskey-web-and-whatnot/message
6/30/2022 • 53 minutes, 31 seconds
Reacting to React, WWDC22, and Bun.sh
Robbie has spent years trying to improve his experience in the terminal. Fortunately, he's learned a few things about customization along the way. Meanwhile, Chuck and Robbie have thoughts about Apple's new products, the purpose of React, plus Fig, Hyper, Warp, and everything in between.
In this episode, Chuck and Robbie discuss everything you probably don't know about terminals, why Robbie's eyeing Redwood, what Chuck and Robbie actually paid attention to from WWDC22, why developers are so excited about Bun, and why Chuck's trip to Italy was semi-catastrophic.
Key Takeaways
* [00:48] - A whiskey review.
* [09:07] - Robbie's terminal tips and tricks.
* [15:38] - Why looking cool matters the most.
* [22:28] - A few interesting things from WWDC.
* [28:55] - Chuck and Robbie react to React.
* [34:00] - A whatnot about Chuck's semi-catastrophic trip to Italy.
* [49:11] - An update on the Ship Shape NFT.
Quotes
[15:23] - "Bash hasn't innovated at all. It's the same thing it's always been. It does its job but I don't need to remember all that stuff. Give me some auto-complete and some nice color themes and cool stuff." ~ @rwwagner90 [https://twitter.com/rwwagner90]
[29:11] - "I know Next. I don't even have to know Next and I know it because it's a good framework. React by itself is just a huge learning curve. Because it's like, 'ok we're going to do all this stuff that looks nothing like anything anyone else is doing.'" ~ @rwwagner90 [https://twitter.com/rwwagner90]
[29:54] - "React is becoming more opinionated as its user base continues to grow and becomes more opinionated." ~ @CharlesWthe3rd [https://twitter.com/CharlesWthe3rd]
Links
* Beast Masters Club Private Barrell - Elijah Craig - "Three Tenors, Hogze Carreras" [https://www.beastmastersclub.com/shop/pinhook-gn4pm-92ty8-zpx4f]
* Slack [http://www.slack.com]
* Whiskey Web and Whatnot: A Battle of Two Worlds and Mentorship Above Milestones with Cory Brown [https://www.whiskeywebandwhatnot.fm/a-battle-of-two-worlds-and-mentorship-above-milestones-with-cory-brown/]
* Buffalo Trace [https://www.buffalotracedistillery.com]
* Eagle Rare [https://eaglerare.com]
* The FRIENDS Experience [https://www.friendstheexperience.com]
* 5 Tips to Improve Your Terminal Experience [https://shipshape.io/blog/five-tips-to-improve-your-terminal-experience/]
* Amazon [http://www.amazon.com]
* iTerm [https://iterm2.com]
* Hyper [https://hyper.is]
* Warp [https://www.warp.dev]
* fish shell [https://fishshell.com]
* Fig [https://fig.io]
* Z shell [https://zsh.sourceforge.io]
* dotfiles [https://dotfiles.github.io]
* Homebrew [https://brew.sh]
* Homebrew cask [https://github.com/Homebrew/homebrew-cask]
* MonoLisa font [https://www.monolisa.dev]
* Starship [https://starship.rs]
* Node.js [https://nodejs.org]
* Rust [https://www.rust-lang.org]
* Ember [https://emberjs.com]
* LinkedIn [http://www.linkedin.com]
* Bun [https://bun.sh]
* Discord [https://discord.com]
* Remix [https://remix.run]
* Next.js [https://nextjs.org]
* API Routes [https://nextjs.org/docs/api-routes/introduction]
* Middleware [https://nextjs.org/docs/advanced-features/middleware]
* WWDC22 [https://developer.apple.com/wwdc22/]
---
Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/whiskey-web-and-whatnot/message
6/23/2022 • 53 minutes, 26 seconds
A Battle of Two Worlds and Mentorship Above Milestones with Cory Brown
It's not often that a blog post sets the internet on fire. But a recent post by Cory Brown about async/await led to an uproar and even messages of pity from Hacker News. Who knew a simple post about pattern preferences would cause such controversy?
Today, Cory's here to explain his side of the story for those happily using async/await in various concurrency patterns. Luckily, Cory believes, to each their own, and even welcomes responses from developers like Eric Elliott and Robbie as important food for thought. So which universe do you prefer? Object-oriented or functional?
In this episode, Cory talks with Chuck and Robbie about why he prefers promise to async/await, his response to Robbie's weekly rant on classes, what really makes an engineer "senior", how every tech team should operate, and why Cory recently chose to learn Scottish Gaelic.
Key Takeaways
* [00:40] - A brief introduction to Cory.
* [01:19] - A whiskey review.
* [08:39] - Cory's controversial opinion on async/await patterns.
* [18:56] - How Cory views classes and his defense of Hooks.
* [29:54] - Why time matters with engineer seniority.
* [42:00] - A Dr. Pepper and obscure language-themed whatnot.
Quotes
[26:27] - "I've already seen ideas from the object-oriented world come in and benefit the functional world. And vice versa — the functional world come in and really benefit the object-oriented world. So I don't want to see either of them go away even as I choose to essentially wholly live on one side." ~ Cory Brown [https://twitter.com/uniqname]
[37:10] - "If you have any hope of going to whatever your next job is and entering a codebase that is at all reasonable, then we need to start training our junior engineers. And unfortunately, businesses are not investing in that for whatever reason so it's on us to do that." ~ Cory Brown [https://twitter.com/uniqname]
[40:24] - "A large chunk of the last several years of my career has been a diminished focus on producing stuff directly and more in enabling others to produce more quickly." ~ Cory Brown [https://twitter.com/uniqname]
Links
* Cory Brown on Twitter [https://twitter.com/uniqname]
* Cory's website [https://365jsthings.tech]
* Aumni [https://www.aumni.fund/]
* National Geographic [https://www.nationalgeographic.com/]
* Spiritless Kentucky 74 [https://spiritless.com/products/kentucky-74-non-alcoholic-bourbon]
* Eric Elliott [https://ericelliottjs.com/]
* Why I avoid async/await [https://uniqname.medium.com/why-i-avoid-async-await-7be98014b73e]
* JavaScript [https://www.javascript.com]
* Promise [https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/Promise]
* Async/await [https://javascript.info/async-await]
* Hacker News [https://news.ycombinator.com]
* YAML [https://yaml.org]
* Douglas Crockford [https://www.crockford.com]
* Yehuda Katz [https://yehudakatz.com]
* Ember.js [https://emberjs.com]
* React [https://reactjs.org]
* Preact [https://preactjs.com]
* Stencil.js [https://stenciljs.com]
* Hooks [https://reactjs.org/docs/hooks-intro.html]
* Clojure [https://clojure.org]
* The Coming Storm (Cory's post about emerging software developers) [https://uniqname.medium.com/the-coming-storm-c03ada70b022]
* Backstage [https://backstage.io]
* Dr. Pepper [https://twitter.com/drpepper]
---
Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/whiskey-web-and-whatnot/message
6/16/2022 • 56 minutes, 49 seconds
A Framework for Ember TypeScript with James C. Davis
In 2017, James C. Davis moved to Charlottesville, Virginia to work at a non-profit tech company that used Ember in their original Saas platform. While James had dabbled in Ember previously, an ask to reimplement the front-end in Ember, this time using TypeScript, proved challenging.
At the time, a few engineers were using TypeScript in Ember, but the open source framework James worked on became the de-facto reference point for projects in Ember types. And the unofficial group of engineers collaborating on the project has become the official Ember TypeScript Core Team.
Today, James works at e-commerce company Salsify with a front-end all in Ember TypeScript. Although setting the standard for using TypeScript in Ember, James believes there's a time and a place for types. Plus, he may have a solution for Robbie's monorepo grievances.
In this episode, James talks with Chuck and Robbie about his struggles and triumphs perfecting Ember TypeScript, his real thoughts on monorepos and functional programming, keeping APIs private, and why developing Glint was a type checking necessity.
Key Takeaways
* [01:46] - A whiskey review.
* [05:48] - Two truths and a lie.
* [12:28] - How James discovered Ember and open source.
* [16:28] - The purpose of the dot ember-cli file.
* [22:00] - When TypeScript isn't your best bet.
* [22:53] - How the Ember TypeScript core team is handling private API.
* [25:41] - How James feels about monorepos and functional programming in general.
* [28:57] - What tool James uses to link packages.
* [31:36] - How James created Glint.
* [39:03] - A camping, travel, and steak-themed whatnot.
Quotes
[17:58] - "One of the cool things about the way TypeScript is done now with Babel is we can write stuff in TypeScript and we can use Babel to basically strip out all of the type annotations and just produce JavaScript." ~ @jamscdavis [https://twitter.com/jamscdavis]
[19:38] - "Basically at this point, the only really useful thing that you need inside ember-cli-typescript is its blueprint which is different from the blueprints that generate components and Ember things." ~ @jamscdavis [https://twitter.com/jamscdavis]
[21:53] - "The bigger and more complex your project is, the more that [TypeScript] helps you." ~ @jamscdavis [https://twitter.com/jamscdavis]
Links
* James on Twitter [https://twitter.com/jamscdavis]
* GitHub [https://github.com]
* Twitter [http://www.twitter.com]
* Elon Musk [https://twitter.com/elonmusk]
* Starlink [https://www.starlink.com]
* Ragged Branch Virginia Straight Bourbon (Wheated Bourbon) [https://www.raggedbranch.com]
* It Might Get Loud [https://www.amazon.com/Might-Get-Loud-Jimmy-Page/dp/B002WNC5BU]
* Whiskey Web and Whatnot: Bringing Types to Ember with Chris Krycho [https://www.whiskeywebandwhatnot.fm/bringing-types-to-ember-with-chris-krycho/]
* Chris Krycho [https://twitter.com/chriskrycho]
* Ember TypeScript Core Team [https://blog.emberjs.com/typed-ember-is-now-the-ember-type-script-core-team/]
* Center for Open Science [https://www.cos.io]
* The Open Science Framework [https://www.cos.io/products/osf]
* Ember.js [https://emberjs.com]
* TypeScript [https://www.typescriptlang.org]
* ember-cli-typescript [https://github.com/typed-ember/ember-cli-typescript]
* Salsify [https://www.salsify.com]
* Dan Freeman [https://twitter.com/__dfreeman]
* Babel [https://babeljs.io]
---
Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/whiskey-web-and-whatnot/message
6/9/2022 • 55 minutes, 45 seconds
Mystery Maker's Monday, Testing, and GraphQL
They say if it's not broken, don't fix it. So why are we running tests on tests on tests that aren't business-critical? There's an art to testing beyond just striving to get 100% coverage. In fact, over-testing can actually hamper your progress more than help it. Meanwhile, Chuck's wondering why it's not possible to have a union of enums in GraphQL.
In this episode, Chuck and Robbie discuss some tech frustrations, lessons for the React community, why Ship Shape implemented spam traps, and a whatnot on all things alcohol, sports, Friends, and Robbie's (seemingly endless) truck saga.
Key Takeaways
* [01:50] - A lengthy whiskey review.
* [22:53] - Why getting carried away with tests becomes your downfall.
* [34:50] - Why Chuck thinks these tests in the React community are useless.
* [38:16] - Chuck's GraphQL confusion.
* [40:49] - A browser bug Chuck noticed.
* [44:09] - Robbie's non-sponsored plug.
* [44:50] - A sports-themed whatnot and an update on Robbie's truck saga.
Quotes
[26:52] - "There are things that warrant tests and things that don't and there are good best practices for writing them." ~ @rwwagner90 [https://twitter.com/rwwagner90]
[33:44] - "Sometimes people will just chase the goal of as close to 100% coverage as possible and then you end up with a bunch of egregious tests along the way." ~ @CharlesWthe3rd [https://twitter.com/CharlesWthe3rd]
[34:00] - "You need to test what's business-critical. You can do the other tests if you have the time. But there were a lot of tests that really didn't even check anything. And it's kind of arbitrary — you got that coverage, but you weren't doing anything." ~ @rwwagner90 [https://twitter.com/rwwagner90]
[36:32] - "Cypress is a great example of having integration testing in context where you can get visual progression testing too so [you] have some understanding there." ~ @CharlesWthe3rd [https://twitter.com/CharlesWthe3rd]
Links
* Maker's Mark No. 46 [https://www.makersmark.com/makers-mark-46]
* Maker's Mark Cask Strength [https://www.makersmark.com/makers-mark-cask-strength]
* Maker's Mark Private Selection [https://www.makersmark.com/makers-mark-private-selection]
* Woodford Reserve [https://www.woodfordreserve.com/]
* Jack Rose Dining Saloon [http://jackrosediningsaloon.com/]
* The FRIENDS Experience [https://www.friendstheexperience.com/]
* Mocha [https://mochajs.org/]
* Jest [https://jestjs.io/]
* Ember.js [https://emberjs.com/]
* Slack [http://slack.com]
* reCAPTCHA [https://www.google.com/recaptcha/about/]
* React [https://reactjs.org/]
* Cypress [https://www.cypress.io/]
* Facebook [http://facebook.com]
* Vite [https://vitejs.dev/]
* GraphQL [https://graphql.org/]
* Chuck on Twitter [https://twitter.com/CharlesWthe3rd]
* Elon Musk [https://twitter.com/elonmusk]
* Starlink [https://www.starlink.com/]
* Netlify [https://www.netlify.com/]
* Middesk [https://www.middesk.com/agent]
* QuickBooks [https://quickbooks.intuit.com/]
* Walkabout Mini Golf on Oculus Quest [https://www.oculus.com/experiences/quest/2462678267173943/]
* Holey Moley [https://abc.com/shows/holey-moley]
* Steph Curry [https://twitter.com/StephenCurry30]
* Topgolf [https://topgolf.com/us/]
* Rivian [https://rivian.com/]
</
---
Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/whiskey-web-and-whatnot/message
6/2/2022 • 58 minutes, 17 seconds
Leading From the Top, Creating a Community, and Balancing It All with Tracy Lee
Great things come in unexpected places. For Tracy Lee, an ex-boyfriend's T-shirt sporting the Ember Tomster is what tipped her off to software development. Following curiosity and a three-week bootcamp, Tracy was hooked and ready to take on a career in coding.
Today, Tracy is the CEO of This Dot Labs. She leads a team of 50 developers with a focus on reactive programming, web performance, and developer experience. Her clients and colleagues have become her closest friends and she's always looking to help fellow developers expand their careers. When she's not running an agency, Tracy is part of the RX Core Team (one of her many professional memberships), posting tech content to social media, and raising a new baby boy. So how does she manage it all?
In this episode, Tracy talks with Chuck and Robbie about wearing every hat under the sun and wearing them well, why she loves RxJS, having hard conversations with over-eager developers, what's so often ignored by non-technical CEOs, and what keeps Tracy motivated above all else.
Key Takeaways
* [00:09] - A Cinco De Mayo-themed beverage review.
* [02:47] - An intro to Tracy.
* [06:17] - What RxJS is used for.
* [09:28] - How Tracy balances everything.
* [18:55] - Tracy's life outside of coding, parenting, and business ownership.
* [27:17] - How Tracy first got into web development.
* [38:23] - Tracy's advice for developers and the hardest pill to swallow when you're over-eager.
* [45:05] - An important conversation about whiskey and Tracy's liquor cabinet.
Quotes
[08:24] - "Check out RxJS if you have not checked out RxJS. And then if you like it, I think it takes people a little bit to wrap their heads around it because it's a new way of thinking, but once people do I feel like people just want to RxJS all the things." ~ @ladyleet [https://twitter.com/ladyleet]
[15:19] - "I hope I can turn my life into only doing my hobby again. So that's my goal. Hire enough people to where I can actually not have to do all the things I don't love." ~ @ladyleet [https://twitter.com/ladyleet]
[29:36] - "I love development because it was so challenging to me, instead of business. I think developers go the other way, they're like, 'oh development's easy, let me do business stuff because that's challenging.' For me it was different, I was like, 'man this is so invigorating, this is hard and it's awesome and I can build things and create things.'" ~ @ladyleet [https://twitter.com/ladyleet]
[35:19] - "I always talk about web performance and generally no one really wants to invest in it but performance is such a huge deal." ~ @ladyleet [https://twitter.com/ladyleet]
Links
* Tracy on Twitter [https://twitter.com/ladyleet]
* This Dot Labs [https://www.thisdot.co]
* Cutwater Spirits [https://www.cutwaterspirits.com]
* Bartesian [https://bartesian.com]
* Keurig [https://www.keurig.com]
* RxJS Core Team [https://rxjs.dev/team?group=Core%20Team]
* Google Developer Expert [https://developers.google.com/community/experts]
* GitHub Stars [https://stars.github.com]
* Microsoft MVP [https://mvp.microsoft.com/en-us/]
* RxJS [https://rxjs.dev]
* Angular [https://angular.io]
* Ember.js [https://emberjs.com]
* ember-concurrency [http://ember-concurrency.com/docs/introduction/]
* tc39 Proposal for Observable [https://github.com/tc39/proposal-observable]
* Introduction to RxJS Patterns in React [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qF8XcEwwPpU]
---
Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/whiskey-web-and-whatnot/message
5/26/2022 • 56 minutes, 20 seconds
Bringing Types to Ember with Chris Krycho
In early 2017, Chris Krycho was working at one of the few startups using Ember, searching for a way to bring types to the emerging language. His primary goal became solving semantic versioning for TS. As Chris kept iterating, striving to combine multiple programming worlds, other engineers joined him in the pursuit until eventually, the Ember TypeScript Core team was born.
Today, Chris is a lead engineer at LinkedIn, a father, husband, runner, music composer, and whiskey enthusiast. His current goal is to ensure Ember Polaris has first-class TypeScript support. Aside from offering new dad advice to Robbie, Chris also describes what can become a superpower for new developers willing to work.
In this episode, Chris talks with Chuck and Robbie about best-case uses for TypeScript, a defense of complicated library code, Chris' ultimate goal with software engineering, and his advice for programmers on the rise.
Key Takeaways
* [01:10] - A brief intro to Chris.
* [02:26] - A whiskey review.
* [10:57] - How the Ember TypeScript Core Team originated.
* [19:11] - When Chris believes TypeScript isn't necessary.
* [26:52] - Chris' lengthy experience with programming languages.
* [28:39] - Chris' advice to Robbie as a new father.
* [30:59] - How Chris responds to Robbie's issue with TypeScript.
* [43:50] - What a first-class component template is.
* [52:14] - A music and Hot Ones-themed whatnot.
* [57:43] - The one thing Chris always plugs for developers.
Quotes
[16:27] - "TypeScript support is pretty essential to modern web development. Even if you're not using TypeScript in your web app, you are using TypeScript because under the hood, all of the tooling that exists across the ecosystem, more or less, uses TypeScript." ~ @chriskrycho [https://twitter.com/chriskrycho]
[19:39] - "There's no project in which TypeScript is necessary. There are very few projects in which it might not be useful, but that's going to depend on your team, your coding style, your mental frame, your background, etc." ~ @chriskrycho [https://twitter.com/chriskrycho]
[60:45] - "Getting deep on subject matter as well as having a general breadth is a really powerful one-two punch in terms of being able to grow as an engineer, to actually understand what you're working on." ~ @chriskrycho [https://twitter.com/chriskrycho]
Links
* Chris Krycho [https://www.linkedin.com/in/chriskrycho/]
* ChrisKrycho.com [https://chriskrycho.com]
* LinkedIn [http://www.linkedin.com]
* Ember [https://emberjs.com]
* LinkedIn Learning [https://www.linkedin.com/learning/]
* Kent C. Dodds [https://twitter.com/kentcdodds]
* Old Forester 1920 Prohibition Style Whiskey [https://www.oldforester.com/products/old-forester-1920-style-prohibition-whisky/]
* W.L. Weller [https://www.buffalotracedistillery.com/our-brands/w-l-weller.html]
* The Glenlivet 14 Year Old [https://www.theglenlivet.com/en-US/the-collection/14-year-old]
* Four Roses Bourbon [https://fourrosesbourbon.com]
* runspired [https://www.instagram.com/runspired/]
* Chris Manson [https://twitter.com/real_ate]
* Whiskey Web and Whatnot: Runspired vs. Chris Manson on Solving the Number One Open Source Maintainer Dilemma [https://www.whiskeywebandwhatnot.fm/runspired-vs-chris-manson-on-solving-the-number-one-ember-issue/]
* Discord [https://discord.com]
* EmberConf [https://2022.emberconf.com]
* Ember TypeScript Core Team (Typ [https://blog.emberjs.com/typed-ember-is-now-the-ember-type-script-core-team/]
---
Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/whiskey-web-and-whatnot/message
5/19/2022 • 1 hour, 3 minutes, 7 seconds
Are Monorepos and NFTs Worth It?
Do you use monorepos? Do you love NFTs named after dogs? Chuck and Robbie have mixed feelings on both monorepus and Shiba Inu tokens and they're probably not the only ones conflicted. Developer tools and the metaverse are complex topics that don't always yield solidly positive or negative results.
The beauty of our ever-evolving digital space is the ability to continually iterate and learn from what's not working. Having said that, just because something is new (and trending on Twitter) doesn't mean it's the best tool for the job, nor that it should be used for anything besides its original purpose. Between monorepos and digital coins, sometimes the hype outweighs the benefit.
In this episode, Chuck and Robbie discuss their thoughts on monorepos, the downside to trending languages and developer tools, why the metaverse should be approached with caution, plus a whatnot covering everything under the sun.
Key Takeaways
* [01:22] - A brief whatnot on SNOOs and Robbie's status as a new parent.
* [02:55] - A whiskey review.
* [12:29] - Why Robbie can't wrap his head around monorepos.
* [28:20] - Why Robbie is (semi) entrenched in the metaverse.
* [34:21] - Chuck and Robbie's take on the Oscar slap and the future of comedy.
* [37:16] - A less serious whatnot about podcasts, electric cars, entertainment, and new babies.
Quotes
[21:43] - "I think that there's good practice in saying 'why?' But I don't think everything should always be one way. I think that [you should] just use the best tool for the job when you come across that." ~ @CharlesWthe3rd [https://twitter.com/CharlesWthe3rd]
[22:04] - "There are cases where monorepo could work and be good for people. I'm not saying they suck all the time. It's my argument with everything — people use React because they think it's cool, people use TypeScript because they think it's the hotness, we need to type everything. Monorepos are cool because some guy said, 'hey these are cool.' If it's not solving a real problem for you, just remove that from the code." ~ @rwwagner90 [https://mobile.twitter.com/rwwagner90]
[31:31] - "I still believe in the utility of the technology [of NFTs]. I do believe that there's something there. And people are just going to get more clever in the way that they apply that and there will be more security down the line. There's just way too many rug pulls these days to really make it all worth something." ~ @CharlesWthe3rd [https://twitter.com/CharlesWthe3rd]
Links
* SNOO [https://www.happiestbaby.com/products/snoo-smart-bassinet]
* Calumet Farm 12 Year Old Single Rack Black [https://www.calumetbourbon.com/12yo-singlerackblack]
* Guinness Factory [https://www.guinness-storehouse.com/]
* Jack Daniel's [https://www.jackdaniels.com]
* Sagamore Spirit [https://sagamorespirit.com]
* Safari [https://www.apple.com/safari/]
* Rails [https://rubyonrails.org]
* Lerna [https://lerna.js.org]
* JSON [https://www.json.org/json-en.html]
* TypeScript [https://www.typescriptlang.org]
* Ember.js [https://emberjs.com]
* React [https://reactjs.org]
* Facebook [http://facebook.com]
* Remix [https://remix.run]
* Shiba Token [https://shibatoken.com]
* SHIBOSHIS [https://shiboshis.shibaswap.com/#/]
* The RECUR Portal Pass [https://pass.recurforever.com]
* Netflix [http://netflix.com]
* Darknet Diaries [https://darknetdiaries.com]
* PRO-SPEED Autow [https://www.prospeedautoworks.com]
---
Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/whiskey-web-and-whatnot/message
5/12/2022 • 1 hour, 6 minutes, 16 seconds
Getting Lost in Git and Goodbye tsc
It's been a while since Chuck and Robbie dove headfirst into trending tech topics without a guest to bounce their ideas off of. Today, they discuss the latest in TypeScript and Git, the evolution of JavaScript over the years, developer pet peeves, and what success means on a team, on the web, and on the field.
Key Takeaways
* [01:09] - A whiskey review.
* [10:14] - What Chuck and Robbie think about introducing TypeScript to JavaScript natively.
* [17:10] - A rant on everything except Git.
* [23:60] - Why Robbie's been having problems with Git.
* [33:09] - What's new from ES2022.
* [34:44} - A football, capitalism, and bad vegan-themed whatnot.
Quotes
[13:40] - "I think [tsc going away] definitely moves JavaScript forward as this thing you can use more than just for the web. And we've been doing it for things other than the web forever, but I guess to the people that are outside the JavaScript community they look at it as this thing that's mostly web, and it's really evolving past that." ~ @rwwagner90 [https://mobile.twitter.com/rwwagner90]
[20:50] - "I just wish we could all agree that similar to any other language, not coding languages specifically, reading, writing, there should be punctuation." ~ @rwwagner90 [https://mobile.twitter.com/rwwagner90]
[23:12] - "[Opinions on languages] is such subjective overhead and us as consultants, when you find these differences from project to project, it's just not a thing worth fighting for. And the reality is, as long as there's consistency, all the answers are right and the logic is all that matters." ~ @CharlesWthe3rd [https://twitter.com/CharlesWthe3rd]
Links
* The Senator 6 Year Straight Rye Whiskey Barrel Proof, Kentucky, USA [https://fpwm.com/the-senator-6yr-straight-rye-whisky-barrel-proof-750ml/]
* Buffalo Trace Distillery [https://www.buffalotracedistillery.com]
* TypeScript [https://www.typescriptlang.org]
* Git [https://git-scm.com]
* JavaScript [https://www.javascript.com]
* CodePen [https://codepen.io]
* PHP [https://www.php.net/manual/en/intro-whatis.php]
* Deno [https://deno.land]
* Rust [https://www.rust-lang.org]
* Linux [https://www.linux.org]
* Arduino Project Hub [https://create.arduino.cc/projecthub]
* Stanford University [https://www.stanford.edu]
* CoffeeScript [https://coffeescript.org]
* Prettier [https://prettier.io]
* Mariana Tek [https://marianatek.com]
* Ember.js [https://emberjs.com]
* Gooey Apps [https://gooeyapps.com]
* Dropbox [http://dropbox.com]
* Adobe Dreamweaver [https://www.adobe.com/products/dreamweaver.html?sdid=KKQTJ&mv=search&ef_id=CjwKCAjwxZqSBhAHEiwASr9n9Ec768PwoGjHBRC2UoTJRGF1SPGBg4vsilWKcnwEOKsI4cQZpT6_RRoCuW0QAvD_BwE:G:s&s_kwcid=AL!3085!3!473182599044!e!!g!!dreamweaver!1711729661!69579430720&gclid=CjwKCAjwxZqSBhAHEiwASr9n9Ec768PwoGjHBRC2UoTJRGF1SPGBg4vsilWKcnwEOKsI4cQZpT6_RRoCuW0QAvD_BwE]
* UEFA Champions League [https://www.uefa.com/uefachampionsleague/]
* PSG.FR - Paris Saint Germain [https://en.psg.fr]
* Real Madrid CF [https://www.realmadrid.com/en/football/squad]
* Kylian Mbappe [https://www.instagram.com/k.mbappe]
* Karim Benzema [https://twitter.com/Benzema]
* Tom Brady [https://twitter.com/tombrady]
* Brett Favre [https://twitter.com/brettfavre]
* Boston Red Sox [https://www.mlb.com/redsox]
---
Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/whiskey-web-and-whatnot/message
4/21/2022 • 50 minutes, 48 seconds
Developing as a Developer, Appreciating Workers, and Navigating Framework Wars with Chris Garrett
When someone hands you an opportunity to specialize, to do something crazy with people you like, to learn from people building something before your eyes, it's difficult to pass up. An opportunity like that prompted Chris to leave LinkedIn for Bitski, a digital wallet for buying, selling, and storing NFTs.
Leaving what's safe and secure for what's largely unknown is definitely a risk, but Chris is a risk-taker. Despite loving Rust, Chris wanted to move away from JavaScript in the years ahead and expand his developer horizons. Plus, he's learned from experience that becoming emotionally attached to whatever you're using is a dangerous game.
In this episode, Chris talks with Chuck and Robbie about a lack of resources and corporate greed in open source, the framework eras we've lived through and what's to come, why workers are incredible, choosing a career path, and how to keep developing as a developer.
Key Takeaways
* [00:23] - Introducing Chris and his recent good news.
* [03:20] - An heirloom whiskey review.
* [10:12] - Why Chris left LinkedIn and what he's up to now.
* [17:20] - What Chris learned from React.
* [18:58] - A chat about Classes, Functions, and Tailwind.
* [26:20] - What goes awry with execution in open source.
* [34:33] - Why open source is not sustainable and a brief history of the framework eras.
* [40:40] - Why Bitski has moved away from Ember.
* [46:49] - What Chris thinks about Web3.
* [53:37] - A DC, Disney, and Cars-themed whatnot.
Quotes
[14:33] - "Honestly, I've worked with JavaScript for 10 years now and I don't ever want to become one of those one-language devs. So I would like to be able to transition away from JavaScript at some point. Or at least transition into being able to work in multiple languages" ~ @pzuraq [https://twitter.com/pzuraq]
[28:51] - "We built these primitives so that anybody can do it. Anybody can go and build that functionality. You don't need to RFC it to Ember. You don't need to have it be accepted by the core team." ~ @pzuraq [https://twitter.com/pzuraq]
[44:06] - "I didn't understand workers at first. I didn't understand that it fundamentally changes the dynamics of writing web applications." ~ @pzuraq [https://twitter.com/pzuraq]
Links
* Chris Garrett [https://www.linkedin.com/in/pzuraq/]
* Chris on Twitter [https://twitter.com/pzuraq]
* LinkedIn [http://linkedin.com]
* Google [http://google.com]
* Laws San Luis Straight Rye Whiskey [https://lawswhiskeyhouse.com/our-whiskeys/#rye]
* Netflix [http://netflix.com]
* ABC Stores [https://abcstores.com]
* Rob Jackson [https://www.linkedin.com/in/rwjblue/]
* Tom Dale [https://www.linkedin.com/in/tommothereffindale/]
* Dave Hermin [https://www.linkedin.com/in/davidandrewherman/]
* David Hamilton [https://www.linkedin.com/in/hjdivad/]
* Chris Krycho [https://www.linkedin.com/in/chriskrycho/]
* Bitski [https://www.bitski.com]
* Ticketfly [https://www.linkedin.com/company/ticketfly/about/]
* Julian Tescher [https://www.linkedin.com/in/juliant/]
* Patrick Tescher [https://www.linkedin.com/in/ptescher/]
* Rust [https://www.rust-lang.org]
* JavaScript [https://www.javascript.com]
* Wasm [https://webassembly.org]
* React [https://reactjs.org]
* View [https://reactnative.dev/docs/view]
* Svelte [https://svelte.dev]
---
Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/whiskey-web-and-whatnot/message
4/14/2022 • 1 hour, 6 minutes, 18 seconds
Prioritizing Performance and the Future of the Terminal with Zach Lloyd
The terminal is a constant in the dev world. Every developer will interact with the terminal in one way or another. So what if they worked better? Tools within the Google Suite inspired Warp Founder Zach Lloyd to bring that same ease of collaboration to the world of terminals. And so, Warp was born.
Because you can't avoid terminals, the implications of improving such a widely-used tool are what kept Zach going and building momentum with Warp. Zach believes in tools that solve problems vs shiny new tools winning the popularity contest. And that keeps him iterating on Warp, with the ultimate goal of improving developer workflow.
In this episode, Chuck and Robbie talk with Zach about elevating developer productivity, why Zach chose Rust, how Zach classifies the best engineers, a sneak peek at Warp's new features, and how he hopes Warp will revolutionize the developer experience.
Key Takeaways
* [00:50] - An introduction to Zach.
* [01:57] - A whiskey tasting.
* [09:36] - A final whiskey review.
* [13:31] - Why Zach chose to tackle the terminal.
* [17:02] - Why Zach chose Rust.
* [21:10] - The method behind Warp's madness.
* [29:05] - How long it took Warp to scale up.
* [33:22] - What Zach learned as the interim CTO at TIME.
* [37:28] - A Kanye, dogs, and sports-themed whatnot.
Quotes
[15:13] - "One of the kind of root product ideas behind Warp was, could you build a version of a text-based interface that brings that same power to a much larger group of developers so it makes that power much more accessible." ~ @zachlloydtweets [https://twitter.com/zachlloydtweets]
[29:40] - "My general philosophy for when you're building something like this is to try to pick the tool that's going to get you to the best product experience. And so it's always like working backward from what user experience is going to be best and then how do you pick the tools, and the stack, and the technology to try to achieve that." ~ @zachlloydtweets [https://twitter.com/zachlloydtweets]
[30:33] - "In my experience, the best engineers who I've worked with and who I prefer to work with are people who are seeing the technology as a tool for achieving an end-user result or for solving some problem." ~ @zachlloydtweets [https://twitter.com/zachlloydtweets]
Links
* Zach Lloyd [http://@zachlloydtweets]
* Porsche Experience Center [https://www.porschedriving.com/los-angeles]
* Warp [https://www.warp.dev]
* Google Workspace [https://workspace.google.com]
* Figma [https://www.figma.com]
* Stellum Bourbon [https://www.stellum.com/bourbon]
* Maynard James Keenan's wine (Caduceus) [https://caduceus.org]
* Pappy Van Winkle's Whiskey [https://www.oldripvanwinkle.com]
* Jim Beam [https://www.jimbeam.com/]
* Total Wine [https://www.totalwine.com]
* Seelbach's [https://seelbachs.com]
* Chuck on Twitter [https://twitter.com/CharlesWthe3rd]
* MGP of Indiana [https://www.mgpingredients.com]
* Heaven Hill Distillery [https://heavenhilldistillery.com]
* George Dickel Whiskey Distillery [https://www.georgedickel.com]
* Jack Daniel's [https://www.jackdaniels.com]
* High West Whiskey [https://www.highwest.com/products/american-prairie-bourbon]
* Rust [https://www.rust-lang.org]
* iTerm [https://iterm2.com]
* Google Sheets [https://www.google.com/sheets/about/]
* JavaScript [https://www.javascript.com]
---
Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/whiskey-web-and-whatnot/message
4/7/2022 • 56 minutes, 35 seconds
Setting Standards, Community Lifelines, and the Beauty of Open Source with Jen Weber
As developers, advancing in our careers can feel like the wild west. No guardrails, no handbook, and no standard path to success, everyone has a unique story when it comes to their coding career.
Far from a developer since childhood, Jen's no stranger to the unconventional path. Her Ember education grew within an accelerator while the bulk of her skillset expanded working in open source. While not an ideal path for everyone, the small startup environment and ability to learn from others in the Ember community was integral to Jen's growth.
But what if there was a way to standardize? And what should come first, a standardization of skillset or ethics? At a time when tech is advancing faster than ever and Artificial Intelligence has entered the chat, Jen Weber would argue that a need for some ethical benchmarks is the more urgent ticket.
In this episode, Chuck and Robbie talk with Jen about the imperfect path to developer success, how to standardize an ever-evolving industry, the struggle to measure developer expertise, and why the Ember community is largely responsible for her growth, career, and overall outlook on tech.
Key Takeaways
* [00:26] - An introduction to Jen.
* [01:18] - A whiskey review and freezing the perfect ice.
* [09:32] - How Jen was introduced to Ember.
* [14:57] - What working at a startup taught Jen about developing.
* [19:20] - Why creating a standardized roadmap for developers is a helpful step.
* [23:24] - What Jen thinks about ethical standardization.
* [37:06] - The challenges of measuring developer expertise.
* [42:57] - What hobbies Jen has outside of tech and a food-themed whatnot.
* [53:25] - A midwest chat.
Quotes
[09:47] - "Good coding often follows certain patterns. And there's lots of different terminology and there's tons of blog articles written about what all those different patterns are, and some of them are just kind of baked into Ember." ~ @jwwweber [https://twitter.com/jwwweber]
[10:20] - "The [Ember] community became kind of my lifeline for figuring out how to do tricky things that were outside of what I had already learned so far, that were outside of the intro guides and tutorials. So I spent a lot of time building my knowledge through the help of other people." ~ @jwwweber [https://twitter.com/jwwweber]
[13:07] - "I hesitate sometimes to say, 'work in open source' because it's unpaid, on your own time. That was how I did it, and it benefited me hugely, but also I'm interested in finding out other people's pathways to being successful, to growing their skills, to reaching more senior engineering levels than just this one meandering way." ~ @jwwweber [https://twitter.com/jwwweber]
Links
* Jen Weber [https://twitter.com/jwwweber]
* Ember.js [https://emberjs.com]
* Belfour Bourbon Whiskey Finished With Texas Pecan Wood [https://belfourspirits.com/our-spirits/bourbon-whiskey-finished-texas-pecan-wood]
* Maker's Mark 46 [https://www.makersmark.com/makers-mark-46]
* Watcher's Whiskey Tea [https://www.adagio.com/signature_blend/blend.html?blend=86010]
* React [https://reactjs.org]
* JavaScript [https://www.javascript.com]
* Twitter [http://twitter.com]
* Blockchain [https://www.blockchain.com]
* Dropbox [http://dropbox.com]
* Adobe Dreamweaver [https://www.adobe.com/products/dreamweaver.html]
* Astro [https://astro.build]
* Ember for React Developers [https://www.notion.so/Ember-For-React-Developers-556a5d343cfb4f8dab1f4d631c05c95b]
---
Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/whiskey-web-and-whatnot/message
3/31/2022 • 1 hour, 3 minutes, 12 seconds
Introducing: Whiskey, Web, and Whatnot!
Whiskey, Web, and Whatnot is a weekly podcast from Robbie Wagner and Chuck Carpenter, the founders of Ship Shape (https://shipshape.io).
Listen each week for wide-ranging conversations with developers from across the web. Each episode includes sampling a whiskey, followed by a chat about tech things, and slowly devolves into various whatnot. Unlike some other technical podcasts, our format allows you to see another, more human side of the devs you follow and admire.
You can subscribe now wherever you listen to podcasts, and learn more at https://www.whiskeywebandwhatnot.fm [https://www.whiskeywebandwhatnot.fm/].
Connect with our hosts
* Robbie Wagner [https://twitter.com/rwwagner90]
* Chuck Carpenter [https://www.linkedin.com/in/chuckcarpenter/]
* Ship Shape [https://shipshape.io/]
Subscribe and stay in touch
* Apple Podcasts [https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/whiskey-web-and-whatnot/id1552776603]
* Spotify [https://open.spotify.com/show/19jiuHAqzeKnkleQUpZxDf]
* Google Podcasts [https://podcasts.google.com/feed/aHR0cHM6Ly9mZWVkcy50cmFuc2lzdG9yLmZtL3doaXNrZXktd2ViLWFuZC13aGF0bm90]
* Whiskey Web and Whatnot [https://whiskeywebandwhatnot.fm/]
Top-Tier, Full-Stack Software Consultants
This show is brought to you by Ship Shape. Ship Shape's software consultants solve complex software and app development problems with top-tier coding expertise, superior service, and speed. In a sea of choices, our senior-level development crew rises above the rest by delivering the best solutions for fintech, cybersecurity, and other fast-growing industries. Check us out at shipshape.io [https://shipshape.io/].
---
Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/whiskey-web-and-whatnot/message
3/29/2022 • 1 minute, 51 seconds
Transitioning to Tech and Writing What You Know with Kara Luton
When it seems like everyone around you has worked in the same field for a really long time, making a career pivot with confidence can be tricky. But not everyone's been coding since their early college days like Robbie and Chuck. Kara Luton started on track to become a professional ballerina. After college and a stint in music publicity, burnout prompted Kara to make a hard left and begin a career in tech.
With all the developer bootcamps and online resources now available, making the switch has never been more accessible. Not to mention, the skills Kara learned as a ballerina and a music publicist helped shape the developer she is today. From staying dedicated and detail-oriented, learning to write and learning from burnout, Kara wouldn't change anything about her unconventional path to software.
In this episode, Chuck and Robbie talk with Kara about her experience learning and relearning Ember, why she loves the Ember community, her advice for those looking to switch careers, Kara's cool home office, and why every developer has something valuable to offer.
Key Takeaways
* [00:58] - A brief introduction to Kara.
* [03:16] - A whiskey review.
* [08:51] - Kara's non-traditional path to tech.
* [15:57] - Kara's experience in a bootcamp and her thoughts on bootcamps as a developer launchpad.
* [17:34] - How Kara found Ember.
* [23:10] - Kara's advice for people looking to make a career pivot.
* [28:44] - Why Kara's looking forward to contributing to open source projects.
* [32:30] - How Kara's home office setup has evolved.
* [37:57] - Kara's thoughts on NFTs.
* [40:17] - Why Kara loves animals and a deep dive on her two pet dogs.
* [47:48] - More of Kara's hobbies outside of the web and a chat about Marvel movies.
* [58:48] - A soccer and sports-themed whatnot.
Quotes
[15:20] - "Ballet, it's very detail-oriented and I feel like that's something that's really helped me in my career as a developer, like missing a semicolon or understanding the different syntaxes — it's really helped me a lot. I'm really really grateful for my time doing ballet." ~ Kara Luton [https://www.karaluton.com]
[29:37] - "Contributing to the framework that you use will give you such good knowledge of it, even if it's something small." ~ Kara Luton [https://www.karaluton.com]
[31:59] - "You never know if something you say, the way you phrase something, will just make it click for somebody in a way that they haven't understood it before. I really really recommend people writing blog posts." ~ Kara Luton [https://www.karaluton.com]
Links
* Kara Luton [https://www.karaluton.com]
* CrowdStrike [http://crowdstrike.com]
* Glimmer.js [https://glimmerjs.com]
* Three Chord Bourbon Strange Collaboration [https://threechordbourbon.com]
* Nelson's Green Brier Distillery [https://greenbrierdistillery.com]
* Nashville Predators [https://www.nhl.com/predators]
* Joffrey Ballet School Summer Intensives [https://www.joffreyballetschool.com/summer-intensives]
* Belmont University [https://www.belmont.edu]
* freeCodeCamp [https://www.freecodecamp.org]
* Codecademy [https://www.codecademy.com]
* Ember.js [https://emberjs.com]
* Ryan Tablada [https://www.linkedin.com/in/ryantablada/]
* Rock & Roll with Ember.JS [https://balinterdi.com/rock-and-roll-with-emberjs/]
* Ember Octane [https://emberjs.com/editions/octane/]
* Dev.to [https://dev.to]
* Ed Faulkner</ [https://twitter.com/eaf4]
---
Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/whiskey-web-and-whatnot/message
3/24/2022 • 1 hour, 4 minutes, 21 seconds
Alternatives to Relay, the GraphQL Stack, and Adulthood with Charles Lowell and Taras Mankovski
Just because something is widely used doesn't always mean it's your best solution. Frontside Founder Charles Lowell and CEO Taras Mankovski, stumbled into an alt GraphQL stack simply because the nature of a product didn't mesh with Apollo. After happening upon two up-and-coming technologies, GraphQL modules and Envelope, a solution was born, as was a newfound flexibility with GraphQL stacks.
In this episode, Charles and Taras talk with Chuck and Robbie about their accidental developer discovery, the drawbacks of UI libraries, what a Relay alternative looks like, what in the world Pact is, and why adulthood is vastly overrated.
Key Takeaways
* [00:48] - An introduction to the Frontside guys.
* [02:29] - A whiskey review.
* [08:46] - How Charles and Taras discovered a less-than-ordinary GraphQL stack.
* [18:39] - Why JSON:API doesn't always make sense.
* [23:11] - Taras' criteria for a valuable alternative to Relay.
* [25:04] - What is Pact?
* [28:30] - An NFT chat, and why adulthood is vastly overrated.
* [41:45] - Charles' and Taras' hobbies outside of the web and the best way to bond with your baby.
* [54:38] - A few last-minute mentions.
Quotes
[21:04] - "Relay is complex, it's difficult, and it's not as magical as other things that I've used. So I actually don't think that the primary benefit is to the clients that consume it, ironically. I think the benefit is to the developers that are trying to understand." ~ Charles Lowell [https://twitter.com/cowboyd]
[56:20] - "The combination of testing and simulation and the developer experience stuff, and the emergence of developer experience as an area of focus is exciting and interesting in the same way that web and Ember was when it started. Just that sense of, we're discovering something new and there are people who are actively trying to solve a problem." ~ Taras Mankovski [https://twitter.com/tarasm]
Links
* Charles on Twitter [https://twitter.com/cowboyd]
* Taras on Twitter [https://twitter.com/tarasm]
* Frontside [http://frontside.io]
* The Balvenie Doublewood 12 [https://www.thebalvenie.com/our-whisky-collection/cask-finishes/doublewood-12/]
* The Singleton of Glendullan Liberty [https://whizzky.net/whisky.php?ref=3614-The-Singleton-of-Glendullan-Liberty]
* GraphQL [https://graphql.org]
* Apollo [http://apollo.io]
* Discord [https://discord.com]
* Envelope [https://www.workflowproducts.com/envelope.html]
* JSON:API [https://jsonapi.org]
* runspired [https://www.instagram.com/runspired/]
* Whiskey Web and Whatnot: Discovering Ember, Adopting Orbit, and Unlocking Optimization with Chris Thoburn (runspired) [https://www.whiskeywebandwhatnot.fm/discovering-ember-adopting-orbit-and-unlocking-optimization-with-chris-thoburn-runspired/]
* Ember Data [https://guides.emberjs.com/release/models/]
* Orbit [https://orbitjs.com]
* Relay [https://relay.dev]
* Pact [http://pact.io]
* Swach [https://swach.io]
* Blockchain [https://www.blockchain.com]
* Web3 [https://web3js.readthedocs.io/en/v1.5.2/]
* No JS [https://apps.apple.com/us/app/no-js/id1062685513]
* Rails [https://rubyonrails.org]
* The Guild [https://www.the-guild.dev]
* Hive GraphQL [https://graphql-hive.com]
* CodeGen [https://codegen.eu]
* The Sandbox [https://sandboxgame.gitbook.io/the-sandbox/]
---
Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/whiskey-web-and-whatnot/message
3/17/2022 • 59 minutes, 4 seconds
Machine Learning in JavaScript, Remix Plus Netlify, and Why DX Engineers Matter with Charlie Gerard
Charlie Gerard loves to experiment. Her love for experimentation and JS has propelled Charlie into the world of machine learning and in turn inspired her recent book, Practical Machine Learning in JavaScript.
Forever iterating on her projects and experimentations, Charlie extends that desire for growth into her professional life, even pursuing a Bachelor's Degree in Computer Science and dabbling as a Google Developer Expert outside of her Netlify 9-5.
In this episode, Charlie talks with Chuck and Robbie about her role at Netlify, why DX engineers matter, the real relationship between Remix and Netlify, Charlie's approach to machine learning, and her thoughts on why web3 can be used for good.
Key Takeaways
* [00:30] - An introduction to Charlie.
* [01:04] - A whiskey review.
* [07:53] - Why Charlie wrote a book about JavaScript and machine learning.
* [11:23] - How Charlie comes up with the projects she works on.
* [18:24] - What Charlie does at Netlify and what it means to be a Google Developer Expert.
* [22:43] - What Charlie knows about the relationship between Remix and Netlify.
* [26:23] - Why DX engineering matters.
* [31:33] - A deep dive on Charlie's Twitter and her hobbies outside of tech.
* [41:40] - How Charlie thinks web3 can be used for good.
Quotes
[13:48] - "Every time I have an idea, I kind of tweak it to push it as far as I can or until I get bored and then I move onto another one. But it's never like I wake up and have a great idea. I wish it was like that. But most of the time it's more an evolution of ideas or inspiration that I find online, other people sharing their stuff, and it generates an idea in my head." ~ @devdevcharlie [https://twitter.com/devdevcharlie]
Links
* Charlie on Twitter [https://twitter.com/devdevcharlie]
* Netlify [https://www.netlify.com]
* JavaScript [https://www.javascript.com]
* Jamstack [https://jamstack.org]
* The Balvenie Caribbean Cask 14 [https://us.thebalvenie.com/our-whisky-range/view/caribbean-cask-14/]
* Practical Machine Learning in JavaScript [https://www.amazon.com/Practical-Machine-Learning-JavaScript-TensorFlow-js/dp/1484264177]
* TensorFlow [https://www.tensorflow.org]
* Python [https://www.python.org]
* TensorFlow.js [https://www.tensorflow.org/js]
* Vanilla JS [http://vanilla-js.com]
* Create React App [https://create-react-app.dev]
* Chrome Dino Game [https://chromedino.com]
* Street Fighter [https://www.streetfighter.com/]
* Amazon [http://amazon.com]
* Amazon Web Services (AWS) [https://aws.amazon.com]
* Google Developer Expert [https://developers.google.com/community/experts]
* Google [http://google.com]
* Android [http://android.com]
* Angular [https://angular.io]
* Remix [https://remix.run]
* Vercel [https://vercel.com]
* Next.js [https://nextjs.org]
* Whiskey Web and Whatnot: The Beauty of Remix, Falling for Tailwind, and Why NFTs Are a Scam with Kent C. Dodds [https://www.whiskeywebandwhatnot.fm/the-beauty-of-remix-falling-for-tailwind-and-why-efts-are-a-scam-with-kent-c-dodds/]
* Astro [https://astro.build]
* RedwoodJS [https://redwoodjs.com]
* Backstage [https://github.com/backstage/backstage]
* Discord [https://discord.com]
* YouTube [http://youtube.com]
---
Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/whiskey-web-and-whatnot/message
3/10/2022 • 55 minutes, 32 seconds
Creating CodePen, Tackling Tailwind, and Keeping It Simple with Chris Coyier
Ten years after launching CodePen, Co-Founder Chris Coyier still thinks of his company as a scrappy startup. That's because CodePen, an app and social community for testing and creating web projects, still feels like a company striving to prove itself in a world of jaded developers. Nevertheless, CodePen has successfully reached developers as they're learning to code.
In this episode, Chris talks with Chuck and Robbie about his online opinions that align and differ from Robbie's, the evolution of CodePen, how they've managed to monetize, the advantages of sticking with CSS, why blogging is like grinding, and Chris' parenting advice for new dads.
Key Takeaways
* [02:23] - A whiskey review.
* [11:10] - The beauty of CodePen and a brief chat about Tampa.
* [16:11] - The niche that sets CodePen apart.
* [18:03] - Why going serverless is a wonderful thing.
* [23:11] - How CodePen has evolved and how they have monetized.
* [25:06] - How CodePen uses information for good.
* [27:16] - How CSS-Tricks came to be and Chris' other digital passions.
* [38:38] - What Chris thinks of Tailwind.
* [44:59] - What new things are coming to CSS.
* [49:42] - Chris' dad advice for Robbie.
* [57:31] - A Rick Steves whatnot, complaints about Italian food, and why deadlines work.
Quotes
[23:59] - "Not a day has gone by, pretty much in the 10 years we've been running this, where there isn't some kind of jaw-dropping, interesting creation on CodePen." ~ @chriscoyier [https://twitter.com/chriscoyier]
[45:25] - "If you just let CSS be, just use the language, you get all this stuff. But if you have to wait for an abstraction to come later, maybe it never does arrive or maybe it comes in a way that's too abstracted that's not all that useful. There's an advantage to just sticking to the core language." ~ @chriscoyier [https://twitter.com/chriscoyier]
[49:28] - "The rule is, just leave it alone. Do not open up somebody else's thing and reorder their inputs and commit that. Because that is just noise, and it doesn't matter." ~ @chriscoyier [https://twitter.com/chriscoyier]
Links
* Chris on Twitter [https://twitter.com/chriscoyier]
* Discord [https://discord.com]
* New Riff Single Barrel Bourbon [https://www.newriffdistilling.com/spirits/single-barrel-bourbon-whiskey/]
* Sagamore Spirit [https://sagamorespirit.com]
* Jack Daniel's [https://www.jackdaniels.com]
* Jim Beam [https://www.jimbeam.com/]
* CodePen [https://codepen.io]
* Sass [https://sass-lang.com]
* Next.js [https://nextjs.org]
* JavaScript [https://www.javascript.com]
* Dart [https://dart.dev]
* Bitcoin [https://bitcoin.org]
* Eyeframe [https://eyeframeconverter.wordpress.com]
* Rust [https://www.rust-lang.org]
* Go [https://go.dev]
* Acquia [https://www.acquia.com]
* Ruby [https://rubyonrails.org]
* VS Code [https://code.visualstudio.com]
* CodePen PRO Plans [https://codepen.io/accounts/signup]
* The CodePen Spark (CodePen newsletter) [https://blog.codepen.io/2016/12/08/the-codepen-spark/]
* CSS-Tricks [https://css-tricks.com]
* WordPress [http://wordpress.com]
* How to Fetch and Parse RSS Feeds in JavaScript [https://css-tricks.com/how-to-fetch-and-parse-rss-feeds-in-javascript/]
---
Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/whiskey-web-and-whatnot/message
3/3/2022 • 1 hour, 8 minutes, 57 seconds
Runspired vs. Chris Manson on Solving the Number One Open Source Maintainer Dilemma
As Chris Thoburn (otherwise known as runspired) began prepping for his own Whiskey Web and Whatnot, he found himself driving along to Chris Manson's episode from a few weeks prior. Nodding along as Chris explained his point of view on all things Ember, runspired suddenly slammed on the brakes after hearing one pivotal sentence.
At the center of his break slam and today's fierce disagreement? The value of TypeScript and its place in the Ember community. Fortunately, Chris and Chris have the same end goal: to encourage more developers to use Ember and contribute to Ember projects. But how do we keep Ember contributor-friendly while keeping contributions careful? One of them yearns for a happy medium and the other feels that balance is forever impossible.
In this episode, runspired and Chris Manson battle it out, discussing TypeScript's place in the Ember community and balancing the volume of Ember contributors with the accuracy of developer edits.
Key Takeaways
* [02:49] - A whiskey review.
* [09:55] - What whiskey and NFTs have in common.
* [11:37] - Runspired explains the source of his smackdown with Chris Manson.
* [15:38] - Where Chris Manson and runspired stand on TypeScript.
* [19:29] - Chris Manson's side of the story.
* [20:02] - How runspired and Chris Manson think we'll get more developers contributing to Ember.
* [29:09] - Where runspired and Chris Manson actually agree.
* [37:18] - Where Chris Manson stands on TypeScript.
* [40:56] - How to balance contributor-friendly with contributor careful.
* [44:58] - The problem with Ember sponsorships and Ember advocates.
* [01:02:53] - Some closing thoughts on today's smackdown, Peaky Blinders, and an NFT-themed whatnot.
Quotes
[26:19] - "The more that we've adopted TypeScript, the more I've seen people capable of making a contribution without my assistance that had the right fix." ~ runspired [https://www.instagram.com/runspired/]
[43:20] - "I see Ember Learn, the org, and all of the things that we maintain, as kind of a gateway drug to becoming an Ember CLI contributor, a framework contributor, an Ember Data contributor. It's like a training ground." ~ Chris Manson [https://twitter.com/real_ate]
[44:58] - "What we really need is a developer advocate for Ember. We need, as a community, to find some pool of funding, to hire somebody, to be 100% focusing on that pipeline that I'm talking about: getting people in at the bottom, finding ways for them to get from the bottom to the middle grounds, identifying the projects, project managing people up that scale, and getting them to (runspired's) door when they are ready." ~ Chris Manson [https://twitter.com/real_ate]
Links
* Chris Manson [https://twitter.com/real_ate]
* runspired [https://www.instagram.com/runspired/]
* Chuck on Twitter [https://twitter.com/CharlesWthe3rd]
* Whiskey Web and Whatnot: Ember vs. React, Jamstack, and Holes in the Hiring Process with Chris Manson [https://www.whiskeywebandwhatnot.fm/ember-vs-react-jamstack-and-holes-in-the-hiring-process-with-chris-manson/]
* Whiskey Web and Whatnot: Discovering Ember, Adopting Orbit, and Unlocking Optimization with Chris Thoburn (runspired) [https://www.whiskeywebandwhatnot.fm/discovering-ember-adopting-orbit-and-unlocking-optimization-with-chris-thoburn-runspired/]
* Whiskey Web and Whatnot: Work-Life Balance, React, and Why Accessibility is Everything with Melanie Sumner [https://www.whiskeywebandwhatnot.fm/work-life-balance-react-and-why-accessibility-is-everything-with-melanie-sumner/]
* Jos. A. Magnus & Co. [https://josephmagnus.com/spirits/murray-hill-club/]
---
Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/whiskey-web-and-whatnot/message
2/24/2022 • 1 hour, 17 minutes, 57 seconds
Work-Life Balance, React, and Why Accessibility Is Everything with Melanie Sumner
In this episode, Robbie and Chuck talk with Melanie Sumner, web developer and member of the Ember Core Team.
As a graduation gift from her Uncle, Melanie was handed a computer and told, "learn to write code," because the future is tech. So that's what she did. With a love of language and puzzles, writing code became her thrill and, after years in the Navy, her profession. Today, Melanie is active in the Ember community, serving on the Ember Core Team and advocating for veterans entering web development.
Melanie talks with Robbie and Chuck about the value of empty days, intentional productivity, Ember's evolution, React, and tips for making websites accessible.
Key Takeaways
* [00:27] - A quick introduction to Melanie and her role in the Ember community.
* [01:38] - A whiskey review.
* [08:13] - Web dev "would you rather".
* [12:36] - Why Melanie started learning to write code and her thoughts on work-life balance.
* [20:02] - The philosophy Melanie lives by and why she tracks the domains she buys.
* [24:25] - Robbie's tipping point with Ember and some shiny new toys.
* [29:05] - Why Ember shouldn't try to be React and the importance of accessibility.
* [32:29] - How to make a website more accessible.
* [35:54] - Today's gaming-themed whatnot.
* [43:07] - How Melanie survived the pandemic and news on the next EmberConf.
* [48:10] - What Melanie cares about outside of web development.
Quotes
[01:06] - "It's my philosophy to at least Buy A Coffee for people who work on open source projects that I use. I think if we all did that, the world would be a better place." ~ @melaniersumner [https://twitter.com/melaniersumner]
[14:13] - "I don't know why my brain has made this connection, but it has. I'm good at learning foreign languages and that kind of translated into me believing I was good at writing code and learning new code languages. Because it's all about learning what are you trying to say and how you want to say it." ~ @melaniersumner [https://twitter.com/melaniersumner]
[17:11] - "We develop this very unhealthy culture in web, in tech where it's like, 'oh I have to be rockstar ninja core person who can do all the commits on all the days.' And it's like no, show me your empty days actually. I want to see where you took time off." ~ @melaniersumner [https://twitter.com/melaniersumner]
Links
* Melanie Sumner [https://twitter.com/melaniersumner]
* Ember [https://emberjs.com]
* Ember Core Team [https://emberjs.com/teams/]
* GitHub [https://github.com]
* Buy Me a Coffee [https://www.buymeacoffee.com]
* faker.js [https://fakerjs.dev]
* Microsoft [http://microsoft.com]
* Jos. A. Magnus & Co. Murray Hill Club [https://josephmagnus.com/spirits/murray-hill-club/]
* Binny's Beverage Depot [https://www.binnys.com]
* Buffalo Trace Distillery [https://www.buffalotracedistillery.com]
* Sagamore Spirit [https://sagamorespirit.com]
* Chris Manson [https://twitter.com/real_ate]
* Whiskey Web and Whatnot: Ember vs. React, Jamstack, and Holes in the Hiring Process with Chris Manson [https://www.whiskeywebandwhatnot.fm/ember-vs-react-jamstack-and-holes-in-the-hiring-process-with-chris-manson/]
* Raspberry Pi Touch Screen [https://www.raspberrypi.com/products/raspberry-pi-touch-display/]
* YAML [https://yaml.org]
* Nokia [https://www.nokia.com]
* AngularJS [https://angularjs.org]
---
Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/whiskey-web-and-whatnot/message
2/17/2022 • 50 minutes, 38 seconds
Astro, Dashboards, NFT Memberships, and a TV Roundup
From Astro, Vite, and Snowpack, to VR, and some favorite TV shows, today's episode is the perfect opportunity to catch up on technical whatnots and a few exciting life updates from Chuck and Robbie. Plus, if you've ever wondered what NFTs, co-working spaces, and whiskey all have in common, today's episode is for you.
In this episode, Robbie and Chuck dive into the frameworks they're using, the dashboards they're analyzing, what's new in the gaming universe, and the co-working space to check out if you happen to live near Middleburg, VA. And if you don't, here's how a virtual space can come to you.
Key Takeaways
* [00:09] - A non-traditional introduction.
* [01:35] - A whiskey review.
* [09:00] - What Robbie's working on.
* [14:41] - What it's like working in Astro.
* [18:56] - What Chuck's working on.
* [24:36] - Why Chuck is taking a break from VR.
* [36:00] - What's new in games and TV.
* [47:40] - When Robbie's getting a Tesla.
* [49:53] - An update on Robbie's co-working space.
Quotes
[16:26] - "[Astro] is probably not quite as fast as if you'd literally gone through and written everything in Vanilla HTML and CSS. But it's pretty dang close with conveniences." ~ @rwwagner90 [https://mobile.twitter.com/rwwagner90]
[19:50] - "Apollo Studio gives you some excellent metrics and traces into what's going on and where things are slow and even down to the resolvers for each individual key, things like that, and some interesting cache stuff. But, at the end of the day, you've really bought into their way and their ecosystem." ~ Chuck Carpenter [https://www.linkedin.com/in/chuckcarpenter/]
Links
* Blue Run Kentucky Straight Rye Whiskey Holiday Batch [https://www.delmesaliquor.com/products/blue-run-holiday-rye-cask-strength-rye-whiskey]
* Heaven Hill Distillery [https://heavenhilldistillery.com]
* Willett Distillery [https://www.kentuckybourbonwhiskey.com]
* Seelbach's [https://seelbachs.com]
* Brach's candy [https://www.brachs.com]
* Ember [https://emberjs.com]
* JavaScript [https://www.javascript.com]
* Edward Faulkner [https://twitter.com/eaf4]
* Cardstack [https://cardstack.com]
* Blockchain [https://www.blockchain.com]
* Web3 [https://web3js.readthedocs.io/en/v1.5.2/]
* Astro [https://astro.build]
* Snowpack [https://www.snowpack.dev]
* Vite [https://vitejs.dev]
* SWC [https://swc.rs]
* React [https://reactjs.org]
* web.dev [https://web.dev]
* Lighthouse [https://chrome.google.com/webstore/detail/lighthouse/blipmdconlkpinefehnmjammfjpmpbjk]
* Google Fonts [https://fonts.google.com]
* Next.js [http://next.js]
* next/image [https://nextjs.org/docs/api-reference/next/image]
* nuxt-img [https://image.nuxtjs.org/components/nuxt-img/]
* Remix [https://www.remix.com]
* RedwoodJS [https://redwoodjs.com]
* GraphQL [https://graphql.org]
* Apollo [https://www.apollographql.com]
* Apollo Studio [https://www.apollographql.com/docs/studio/]
* Helios [https://github.com/spotify/helios]
* The Guild [https://www.the-guild.dev]
* Hive GraphQL [https://graphql-hive.com]
* runspired [https://www.instagram.com/runspired]
---
Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/whiskey-web-and-whatnot/message
2/10/2022 • 56 minutes, 20 seconds
The Right Way to NFT, Blockchain, and Making Your Mark in the Digital Marketplace with Juan Palomino
In a world of invaluable yet intangible artwork and every developer fighting for a space on the blockchain, it's hard to sort out what's adding value to our brave new world and what's taking up space. Juan Palomino, founder of Full Speed Media [https://fullspeedav.com], has spent the last year knee-deep in his own NFT experiment. Along the way, he's learned what to embrace and what to forget when it comes to making his mark in the digital economy.
Juan started Full Speed Media as a way to provide live streaming services throughout the pandemic. While it began as a way to simply satisfy a growing demand, through his business, Juan began developing relationships with local organizations in Phoenix and realized the need for other web-based projects geared toward fundraising.
A true lover of building cool stuff and experimenting with the latest tech trends, Juan eventually developed an NFT drop in partnership with a local artist. Since launch day, his community has minted almost 100 tokens and raised just under $10,000 for the Valleywise Health Foundation [https://valleywisehealthfoundation.org], the largest provider of mental health services in Arizona.
In this episode, Robbie, Chuck, and Juan discuss the technicalities of building an NFT, where most developers miss the mark in blockchain, and the real beauty of a growing minted marketplace.
Key Takeaways
* [01:13] - A quick introduction to Juan.
* [02:37] - Two truths and a lie.
* [06:25] - A whiskey review.
* [14:19] - Chuck's two truths and a brief history of Philadelphia.
* [17:54] - Juan's groundbreaking NFT fundraising project.
* [23:17] - How tech trends like NFTs and smart contracts actually work.
* [27:11] - How Juan algorithmically generates NFT images.
* [31:20] - The right way to approach NFTs and why fees.wtf missed the mark.
* [45:40] - What's the deal with DAOs?
* [46:50] - Where the blockchain truly belongs.
* [49:06] - Why Chuck is back on Twitter.
* [52:13] - The beauty of the NFT space.
Quotes
[41:31] - "Blockchain in itself is not this secret ingredient that now makes everything better. It has become this buzzword that people want to do a land grab for but realistically, this is just the building blocks of how we're going to build bigger, better, more decentralized, more trustless applications and systems." ~ @JuanForTheMoney [https://twitter.com/juanforthemoney]
[52:47] - "The NFT space, for all its quirks and mishappenings and lost gas fees, has really turned me onto the art world and has exposed me to a whole different way of creating stuff and connected me with a lot of people I might not have been connected with otherwise. If nothing else, it has been a really great experiment." ~ @JuanForTheMoney [https://twitter.com/juanforthemoney]
Links
* Juan on Twitter [https://twitter.com/juanforthemoney]
* Full Speed Media [https://fullspeedav.com]
* Si Se Puede Foundation [https://www.sisepuedefoundation.org]
* Smooth Ambler [https://smoothambler.com]
* Lost Lantern Smooth Ambler West Virginia Straight Bourbon Whiskey [https://seelbachs.com/products/lost-lantern-2021-single-cask-7-smooth-ambler-west-virginia-straight-bourbon-whiskey]
* Seelbach's [https://seelbachs.com]
* Coffee Zona [https://coffee-zona.business.site]
* Geno's Steaks [https://www.instagram.com/genossteaks]
* Lin Manuel Miranda [https://www.linmanuel.com]
* Encanto [https://movies.disney.com/encanto]
* Viva Muertos! [https://www.vivamuertos.com]
---
Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/whiskey-web-and-whatnot/message
2/3/2022 • 54 minutes, 29 seconds
Discovering Ember, Adopting Orbit, and Unlocking Optimization with Chris Thoburn (runspired)
Runspired's journey with Ember began just like Chuck's, Robbie's, and many who've come before them — with confusion, hesitancy, and gradual infatuation.
The year was 2008 and runspired was launching an app. Somewhere along the way, he realized that if he wanted to build the collaborative web-first application he envisioned, he needed to build in JavaScript.
Sifting through Angular and React, nothing stuck. When he finally stumbled upon Ember, the pitfalls and confusion were obvious and almost immediately he abandoned the framework. But runspired soon realized that features within Ember matched the ideas he began developing in his own framework years prior. Suddenly, everything clicked and today runspired is an Ember aficionado with big ideas on the future of framework and the secrets to cutting edge optimization.
In this episode, Robbie, Chuck, and runspired discuss flaws in the developer community, why Orbit is useful, shifting the approach to API frameworks, and why JSON:API and GraphQL are a match made in developer heaven.
Key Takeaways
* [01:37] - A whiskey review.
* [11:26] - How runspired's journey in the Ember community evolved.
* [20:22] - What runspired thinks about RedwoodJS and API frameworks.
* [24:03] - Why Orbit is flawed but incredibly useful.
* [29:45] - What's missing from the developer community.
* [36:01] - Why JSON:API and GraphQL are a perfect marriage.
* [41:59] - What Ember Data cares about.
* [48:01] - A conversation about whatnot including Chris' dive into professional running.
* [55:55] - A cause runspired cares about in the Ember community.
Quotes
[18:30] - "I've never found a reason to want to re-evaluate Ember as my main framework. Every time I've had a complaint, it's evolved to satisfy that complaint with time." ~ runspired [https://www.instagram.com/runspired/]
[23:00] - "So many of the problems that I see applications encounter late in their life cycles are problems where the API framework just wasn't set up well in the first place. And if they had had a better framework for building APIs and understanding how applications are maybe going to mature, and how that API is going to need to evolve as the application matures, they probably would have been set up for better success." ~ runspired [https://www.instagram.com/runspired/]
[24:42] - "Orbit, in my opinion, is the gold standard of data libraries for the front-end right now. Because it solves every problem that you don't know you have yet. But that's also its big flaw because it has found the end architecture that you've got to evolve to if you end up with those problems." ~ runspired [https://www.instagram.com/runspired/]
Links
* EmberFest [https://emberfest.eu]
* Balcones Whiskey [https://balconesdistilling.com]
* Ember [https://emberjs.com]
* Whiskey Web and Whatnot: Chuck's Origin Story: Career Pivots and Learning to Love Ember [https://www.whiskeywebandwhatnot.fm/chucks-origin-story-career-pivots-and-learning-to-love-ember/]
* Whiskey Web and Whatnot: Robbie's Origin Story: Learning to Code, Learning to Hire, and Taking the Entrepreneurial Leap [https://www.whiskeywebandwhatnot.fm/robbies-origin-story-learning-to-code-learning-to-hire-and-taking-the-entrepreneurial-leap/]
* Whiskey Web and Whatnot: Ember vs. React, Jamstack, and Holes in the Hiring Process with Chris Manson [https://www.whiskeywebandwhatnot.fm/ember-vs-react-jamstack-and-holes-in-the-hiring-process-with-chris-manson/]
* Whiskey Web and Whatnot: RedwoodJS, Develo [https://www.whiskeywebandwhatnot.fm/redwoodjs-developer-experience-and-developing-for-scale-with-tom-preston-werner/]
---
Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/whiskey-web-and-whatnot/message
1/27/2022 • 57 minutes, 56 seconds
Decentralized Gaming, IntelliJ, Twitch, and the Shortcomings of Modern VR with Rob Cary
What do web development, Twitch, VR, and blockchain all have in common? More than you might think. After years as a game developer, Ship Shape's longest-tenured employee Rob Cary was bound to put those unlikely virtual dots together and today he's here to share a few original insights.
After meeting Robbie Wagner in an elementary school play as a couple of accountants, their lives continued to overlap. From a choice in college to a knack for web development, making sweet beats, and ultimately, their careers, an intro to Rob may sound identical to an intro to Robbie. But unlike Robbie Wagner, Rob Cary has years of VR experience under his belt. Not to mention, some interesting ideas about the future of our virtual metaverse.
In this episode, Robbie, Chuck, and Rob discuss the wonders of WebStorm and IntelliJ, what on earth decentralized gaming is, how VR has transformed the gaming world, and the mostly unknown link between Twitch and web development.
Key Takeaways
* [00:28] - Introduction to Rob.
* [01:27] - A whiskey review.
* [06:57] - Rob, Robbie, or both?
* [13:05] - Rob's technical background and the state of decentralized gaming.
* [16:12] - A game of Stumped.
* [24:50] - What Rob likes about WebStorm and IntelliJ.
* [30:16] - A conversation about the VR universe, how it's transformed, and where we're headed.
* [39:10] - Why NFTs are everywhere.
* [43:20] - Rob's hobbies outside of gaming and websites.
Quotes
[26:35] - "VS Code is one of the few examples I've seen of an IDE that's really universally been adopted really quickly." ~ @r0bc4ry [https://twitter.com/r0bc4ry]
[34:50] - "Some of the things you can do on VR, you could just never do in a traditional game. The technology has a ton of promise, there are just fundamental issues that still are being worked on that I think need to be fixed." ~ @r0bc4ry [https://twitter.com/r0bc4ry]
Links
* Rob Cary [https://twitter.com/r0bc4ry]
* React [https://reactjs.org]
* Ember [https://emberjs.com]
* Dojo [https://dojotoolkit.org]
* Vuori [https://vuoriclothing.com]
* Lululemon [https://shop.lululemon.com]
* Widow Jane Rye Mash, Oak & Applewood-Aged Whiskey [https://widowjane.com/whiskey/oak-and-apple-wood]
* Twitter [http://twitter.com]
* Whiskey Web and Whatnot: Next.js 12, React vs. Svelte, and the Future of Frameworks with Wes Bos [https://www.whiskeywebandwhatnot.fm/nextjs-12-react-vs-svelte-and-the-future-of-frameworks-with-wes-bos/]
* Virginia Tech [https://vt.edu]
* StarCraft [https://starcraft.com/en-us/]
* Zoom [http://zoom.com]
* Unity [https://unity.com]
* Blockchain [https://www.blockchain.com]
* Halo [https://www.halowaypoint.com]
* Syntax [https://www.syntax.fm]
* Web3 [https://web3js.readthedocs.io/en/v1.5.2/]
* DoorDash [https://www.doordash.com]
* Uber Eats [https://www.ubereats.com]
* Async/await [https://javascript.info/async-await]
* NativeScript [https://nativescript.org]
* BlueJ [https://www.bluej.org]
* JSON [https://www.json.org/json-en.html]
* IntelliJ IDEA [https://www.jetbrains.com/idea/]
* WebStorm [https://www.jetbrains.com/webstorm/]
* Visual Studio Code [https://code.visualstudio.com]
* Atom [https://atom.io]
* yarn install [https://classic.yarnpkg.com/en/docs/cli/install/]
---
Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/whiskey-web-and-whatnot/message
1/13/2022 • 53 minutes, 16 seconds
Chuck's Origin Story: Career Pivots, and Learning to Love Ember
After diving into Robbie’s backstory in episode 017, today we’re panning the camera to Chuck. If you’ve ever wondered how he ended up at Ship Shape and where Chuck first discovered the world of the web, today’s episode explores his digital origin story.
Like Robbie, Chuck’s foray into software development began in Photoshop. In fact, for a period after graduating college, Chuck considered going to photography school. Unfortunately (or fortunately, if you ask Robbie), shelling out cash for grad school seemed daunting and impractical. So he stumbled into a startup instead.
After gigs at multiple startups, MLMs, a national network, and a non-profit abroad, a new baby sent Chuck searching for something with fewer hours and more flexibility. Spoiler alert: he ended up at Ship Shape.
In this episode, Robbie and Chuck discuss Chuck’s gradual love for Ember, the frameworks that shaped his career, the developers who impressed him, and Chuck’s ideas on the future of the web.
Key Takeaways
[00:27] - A whiskey review.
[08:41] - Where it all began for Chuck.
[11:48] - Chuck’s foray into the digital space.
[15:19] - Where Chuck went post-grad.
[19:08] - A turning point in Chuck’s career.
[21:27] - Why Chuck headed to Europe.
[23:14] - Chuck’s career with National Geographic and the software that shaped him.
[29:33] - When Chuck met Ember.
[33:30] - Why Chuck left the startup world.
[37:56] - How Chuck found Ship Shape.
[46:22] - Where Chuck’s headed next.
[48:30] - How to send suggestions our way and a brief chat on NFTs.
Quotes
[20:25] - “For me, and I think for a lot of people, jQuery was kind of the entryway into JavaScript programming.” ~ Chuck Carpenter
[39:01] - “What was the next rung on the career ladder? I decided that instead of more middle management, getting my hands dirty and building a business sounded pretty great, or at least worth a try. I needed to check that box off.” ~ Chuck Carpenter
[41:55] - “It feels like things are going in a direction, even if it’s not Next, where there’s more opinionation.” ~ Chuck Carpenter
Links
Catoctin Creek
Roundstone Rye
Seelbach Whiskey
MOD Pizza
Adobe Photoshop
GoDaddy
WordPress
Vanilla JS
jQuery
Adobe ColdFusion
Homeless World Cup
National Geographic
LinkedIn
Angular
React
Backbone
PHP
Slack
Ember
EmberConf
Acquia
Droopl
Edward Faulkner
Cardstack
Amazon Alexa
Next.js
NuxtJS
GraphQL
AWS CDK
Kubernetes
Astro
llamajs
Gary Vaynerchuk
Myspace
Facebook
Damien Hirst
Kent C. Dodds
Connect with our hosts
Robbie Wagner
Chuck Carpenter
Ship Shape
Subscribe and stay in touch
Apple Podcasts
Spotify
Google Podcasts
Whiskey Web and Whatnot
Top-Tier, Full-Stack Software Consultants
This show is brought to you by Ship Shape. Ship Shape’s software consultants solve complex software and app development problems with top-tier coding expertise, superior service, and speed. In a sea of choices, our senior-level development crew rises above the rest by delivering the best solutions for fintech, cybersecurity, and other fast-growing industries. Check us out at shipshape.io.
---
Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/whiskey-web-and-whatnot/message
1/6/2022 • 56 minutes, 18 seconds
Robbie's Origin Story: Learning to Code, Learning to Hire, and Taking the Entrepreneurial Leap
If you’ve ever wondered where Ship Shape got its shape and how Robbie became Ember’s number one fan, this episode is for you.
Robbie and Chuck revisit the early chapters of Robbie’s career, including the gigs he loved and the corporate structures he hated. They talk about lessons learned, taking the entrepreneurial leap, and what’s on the horizon. While Robbie’s career has hardly been a linear path, the most exciting and fulfilling journeys rarely are.
Key Takeaways
[00:44] - Whiskey review and a brief overview of Pinhook.
[06:23] - Robbie’s introduction to the digital world.
[13:15] - College and his bridge to JavaScript.
[16:06] - The first startup Robbie worked at.
[18:30] - The start of Robbie’s post-grad gigs.
[21:20] - A proud whiteboard-ing moment.
[24:23] - What Robbie learned at Red Hat.
[30:28] - Where Robbie fell in love with Ember.
[34:56] - The next step in Robbie’s Ember career.
[36:55] - Where Robbie had the stereotypical startup experience.
[37:22] - Robbie’s return to Ember.
[45:25] - The start of Ship Shape and the value of networking.
[49:52] - Robbie’s thoughts on React.
Quotes
[23:39] - “I think all of computer science boils down to understanding the Big O notation of the thing you’re doing. That’s it. If you know what’s most efficient, you can look up how to do it.” ~ @RobbieTheWagner
[25:14] - “It comes back to my approach to hiring anyone. You hire good people who want to learn things and will do well, and they’ll do well at any technology.” ~ @RobbieTheWagner
[45:39] - “Honestly, there were a lot of times, and you’ve been around for some of them, where I’ve been like, ‘alright, let’s just stop and go back and get real jobs because we don’t have enough money and we’ll just stop doing this.’ But it always works out. And we continue to grow and you just have to trust that it’s going to work out.” ~ @RobbieTheWagner
Links
Pinhook Kentucky Straight Rye Whiskey
Pinhook Tiz Rye Time
MGP of Indiana
The Boss Hogg
Pinhook AR
Noli Novak
GDB
Adobe Photoshop
Myspace
Angular
Virginia Tech KnowledgeWorks
PHP
Prototype JavaScript
jQuery
Mail Pilot
Ember
Kickstarter
ListServe
Red Hat
Microsoft
Amazon
Lauren Tan
Create a repo on GitHub
Linux
Fedora
.Net
Geico
Virtana (formerly Metricly)
CoffeeScript
JIRA
Berico Technologies
Internet Explorer
Google Chrome
Firefox
Leaflet
Esri
Shepherd.js
HubSpot
Tether
Addepar
Chris Garrett
pzuraq
Whiskey Web and Whatnot: Kamiki Whisky, Ember/Glimmer updates and whatnot w/ Chris Garrett (pzuraq)
Glimmer
Slack
Ember Shepherd
Diablo
Destiny
Jibe
RSA - Ember Group
Ember Learning Team
Chris Manson
Whiskey Web and Whatnot: Ember vs. React, Jamstack, and Holes in the Hiring Process with Chris Manson
Orbit.js
Expel
React
Next.js
Svelte
SvelteKit
RedwoodJS
Preact
Connect with our hosts
Robbie Wagner
Chuck Carpenter
Ship Shape
Subscribe and stay in touch
Apple Podcasts
Spotify
Google Podcasts
Whiskey Web and Whatnot
Top-Tier, Full-Stack Software Consultants
This show is brought to you by Ship Shape. Ship Shape’s software consultants solve complex software and app development problems with top-tier coding expertise, superior service, and speed. In a sea of choices, our senior-level development crew rises above the rest by delivering the best solutions for fintech, cybersecurity, and other fast-growing industries. Check us out at shipshape.io.
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12/30/2021 • 52 minutes, 46 seconds
The Beauty of Remix, Falling for Tailwind, and Why NFTs Are a Scam with Kent C. Dodds
Kent Dodds spends much of his professional life helping emerging developers learn. Earlier this year, as he began refreshing a stack of educational resources, Kent realized that simply switching to Remix eliminated most of the problems he was teaching his students to avoid or solve. Not long after he fell in love with the framework, Kent landed a job at Remix.
Now the Director of Developer Experience, Dodds educates and troubleshoots. From eliminating loading and error states, easy adoption, and the mutations API, Dodds' passion for Remix is abundantly obvious. He credits the success of Remix to its premium user experience and believes wholeheartedly that (almost) everything is simpler without JavaScript.
In this episode, Robbie, Chuck, and Kent discuss the standalone features of Remix, a new stack on the Remix block, avoiding JavaScript, and why Kent can't code without Tailwind.
Key Takeaways
* [01:51] - An eggnog review.
* [06:20] - Kent's journey to Remix.
* [09:13] - What makes Remix unique.
* [13:13] - Remix's true niche.
* [16:51] - Remix vs. Astro vs. Qwik.
* [21:21] - What you can't do with Remix.
* [22:14] - Why working around JavaScript is the way to go.
* [26:15] - More ways that Remix improves the user experience.
* [27:44] - The beauty of Tailwind.
* [36:56] - Remix's mutations API.
* [41:51] - Kent and Tesla.
* [50:25] - What Kent likes outside of coding and clean energy.
* [53:51] - Why NFTs are a scam.
Quotes
[09:57] - "Right now [Remix] is all server-rendered. And we do that because we feel like that provides the best user experience. It objectively provides the best user experience. It's way better to just see your stuff than to see spinners while you're waiting for your stuff. So if you can just make it so fast that you don't need spinners, then that's a better user experience." ~ @kentcdodds [https://twitter.com/kentcdodds]
[15:40] - "I haven't yet found a use-case for building on the web that Remix isn't really well-suited for. It doesn't have a bunch of abstractions useful for someone who's going to build a game, but neither does any other framework like Remix. It sure has a lot of useful things for you if you want to build an excellent user experience on the web." ~ @kentcdodds [https://twitter.com/kentcdodds]
[22:30] - "I feel like with Remix, we've found another way to make things faster without having to make all these trade-offs on different architectures with having to completely change the framework that you're using." ~ @kentcdodds [https://twitter.com/kentcdodds]
Links
* Kent C. Dodds [https://twitter.com/kentcdodds]
* Kent's website [https://kentcdodds.com]
* Kent's 'Transparency' page [https://kentcdodds.com/transparency]
* Ryan Florence [https://ryanflorence.com]
* Remix [https://remix.run]
* Next.js [https://nextjs.org]
* Redwood JS [https://redwoodjs.com]
* Gatsby [https://www.gatsbyjs.com]
* Jamstack [https://jamstack.org]
* Netlify [https://www.netlify.com]
* JavaScript [https://www.javascript.com]
* React [https://reactjs.org]
* Damien Hirst [https://www.damienhirst.com]
* Blockchain [https://www.blockchain.com]
* Cloudflare Workers [https://workers.cloudflare.com]
* Amazon Web Services (AWS) [https://aws.amazon.com]
* Fly.io [https://fly.io]
* esbuild [https://esbuild.github.io]
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12/23/2021 • 59 minutes, 1 second
Next.js 12, React vs. Svelte, and the Future of Frameworks with Wes Bos
Between constantly changing frameworks, updates, and languages, web dev life is anything but stagnant. Shiny object syndrome is a real thing, and it's easy to feel like there's too much to keep up with.
Wes Bos has his own point of view on the shifting landscape. Wes has spent years as a developer and has created a catalog of courses to help other developers improve their skills. Despite having his favorites, Wes argues there's a place for everything in the melting pot that is modern web development.
In this episode, Robbie, Chuck, and Wes discuss the rise of specialized frameworks, the future of frameworks like TypeScript, and Wes' views on technology outside the workplace.
Key Takeaways
* [00:27] – Who is Wes Bos?
* [01:40] – Wes or Robbie or Both?
* [05:42] – Whiskey review
* [18:46] – The benefits of Next.js 12
* [21:03] – React vs. Svelte
* [26:20] – Wes' thoughts on TypeScript
* [30:26] – Commiserating over IE 11
* [33:52] – What Wes does in his free time
* [39:16] – Wes' vintage road bikes
* [40:54] - Wes' tech-free BBQ saga
* [50:59] - Wes' thoughts on tech podcasts
Quotes
[19:08] - "I don't think that Next.js is the SDK of the web. The whole point of the web is that it's open and it's just the standard language that you can build whatever you want on top of it. But that said, I'm probably the biggest Next.js fanboy out there." ~ @wesbos [https://twitter.com/wesbos]
[19:24] - "Next.js is making things really really simple for us. They're sort of taking a lot of the hard parts of React and doing away with them and making this really nice framework for building websites." ~ @wesbos [https://twitter.com/wesbos]
[20:19] - "That's really important with these tools that it does the code splitting and all the performance stuff for you. Because the average web developer is not gonna spend any time trying to implement these things themselves. They don't have enough time, they've got deadlines to hit, or they just don't know how. So the tools doing it for you really is the way forward." ~ @wesbos [https://twitter.com/wesbos]
Links
* Wes's Website [http://wesbos.com]
* Syntax Podcast [https://syntax.fm]
* JavaScript [https://www.javascript.com]
* John Deere [https://www.deere.com/en/index.html]
* LCBO [https://www.lcbo.com/webapp/wcs/stores/servlet/en/lcbo]
* 1792 Small Batch Bourbon [https://1792bourbon.com/our-bourbon]
* Glencairn Whiskey Glass [https://www.totalwine.com/accessories-more/accessories/glassware/spirits-glasses/glencairn-whisky-glasses-4pk/p/111127920?glia=true&s=1106&&pid=cpc:Core+Catalog+-+Shopping%2BUS%2BCALI%2BENG%2BSPART::google::&gclid=Cj0KCQiAnaeNBhCUARIsABEee8UJejxE6NcLgMFoYR0O21iYJLJr4tqk08DRJIL7QUV0vWLxmiVGTnkaAtNcEALw_wcB&gclsrc=aw.ds]
* Property Brothers [https://www.hgtv.com/shows/property-brothers]
* Income Property [https://www.hgtv.com/shows/income-property]
* Island of Bryan [https://www.hgtv.ca/shows/island-of-bryan/]
* Starlink [https://www.starlink.com]
* Spectrum [https://www.spectrum.net]
* Acquia [https://www.acquia.com]
* Next.js [https://nextjs.org]
* Syntax 405: Hasty Treat - Next.js 12 [https://syntax.fm/show/405/hasty-treat-next-js-12]
* React [https://reactjs.org]
* Rich Harris [https://twitter.com/Rich_Harris]
* Vercel [https://vercel.com]
* Svelte [https://svelte.dev]
* SvelteKit [https://kit.svelte.dev]
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12/16/2021 • 53 minutes, 27 seconds
Ember vs. React, Jamstack, and Holes in the Hiring Process with Chris Manson
They say if it's not broken, don't fix it. But if it is broken...keep iterating? While not everyone may agree on how to solve the technical headaches that come with one language or another, developer and Empress Creator Chris Manson has a few ideas.
As more apps emerge, more problems inevitably appear. Chris has several non-negotiable best practices for keeping it simple and helping the developers who follow in his digital footsteps.
Also a member of Ember's core team, Chris has been working with the framework since December of 2011. After beginning his startup with Angular, Chris threw in the towel and pivoted to its simpler and more intuitive counterpart. Nevertheless, Ember is far from flawless and, as with most things, could always improve for the users who need it most.
In this episode, Robbie, Chuck, and Chris discuss the fatal flaws of several old and emerging frameworks, the breakthrough shifts in the Ember community, why comparing Ember to React isn't always a fair match-up, and holes in the developer hiring process.
Key Takeaways
* [00:32] - Whiskey review and a history of Glendalough.
* [14:14] - How Chris was introduced to Ember.
* [25:10] - Chris's thoughts on Husky.
* [29:41] - What Chris is working on now.
* [32:55] - Why Chris has a vendetta against ember-cli-addon-docs.
* [37:34] - What's changing in the Ember community.
* [54:28] - The complexities of hiring developers.
* [64:50] - The future of frameworks.
* [73:04] - Chris's problem with TypeScript.
* [77:18] - Chris's hobbies outside of developing.
Quotes
[26:42] - "This is one of the things that I don't like about repos or projects where you get to make 1,000 decisions because new people who don't know the decisions you've made, don't know the structure of your app, don't know your repo, go into your repo and go, 'this is too complicated', bounce, and don't contribute, and that's not ok for me." ~ Chris Manson [https://twitter.com/real_ate]
[28:49] - "The amount of times that we get people who are actual juniors bouncing against something that you've built and then you realize, 'oh actually, I did build that in a kind of complex way, I shouldn't have,' and then you internalize that, and then the next time it comes across you go, 'I could do this fancy and save 10 lines of code, or I can be verbose and simple.' Always pick verbose and simple." ~ Chris Manson [https://twitter.com/real_ate]
Links
* Glendalough Whiskey [https://us.glendaloughdistillery.com]
* Jamstack [https://jamstack.org]
* The Essential Scratch & Sniff Guide to Becoming a Whiskey Know-It-All: Know Your Booze Before You Choose [https://www.amazon.com/Essential-Scratch-Sniff-Becoming-Whiskey/dp/0544520602]
* Angular [https://angular.io]
* Ember.js [https://emberjs.com]
* Some Deprecations seem to side-step the deprecation workflow [https://github.com/emberjs/ember.js/issues/19753]
* Alex Matchneer [https://twitter.com/amatchneer]
* Ember Conf [https://emberconf.com]
* Husky [https://www.npmjs.com/package/husky]
* Ember Learning Core Team [https://emberjs.com/teams/]
* ember-cli-addon-docs [https://github.com/ember-learn/ember-cli-addon-docs]
* simplabs [https://simplabs.com]
* Jen Weber [https://twitter.com/jwwweber]
* Melanie Sumner [https://github.com/MelSumner]
* Empress [https://www.npmjs.com/package/empress]
* Embroider [https://github.com/embroider-build/embroider]
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12/9/2021 • 1 hour, 29 minutes, 42 seconds
RedwoodJS, Developer Experience, and Developing for Scale with Tom Preston-Werner
Every developer straddles the fine line between creating a unique space and reinventing the wheel. Tom Preston-Werner has lived between those two lines for much of his career, most recently while developing an app framework for startups, RedwoodJS.
Tom has always pushed himself to think outside the box rather than follow competitors. This aversion to groupthink kickstarted the creation of Redwood. It also helped Tom with the second-hardest part of app development: choosing a name. Tired of the physics names flooding the React world, Tom turned to nature for his framework. Not just a staple of the Bay Area, Redwoods start as tiny acorns and grow into enormous trees – a fitting analogy for an app designed to grow alongside expanding ventures.
In this episode, Robbie, Chuck, and Tom discuss the other ways Tom's outsider thought-process contributes to his creativity, the importance of helping users through the upgrade process, and his tried and true philosophy as a software developer.
Key Takeaways
* [16:46] - The origins of RedwoodJS.
* [22:02] - Tom's approach to the upgrade process.
* [24:26] - The dangers of reinventing the wheel.
* [29:25] - What developers should stop focusing on.
* [30:55] - The relationship between apps and scale.
* [36:14] - Tom's philosophy as a developer.
* [41:18] - How RedwoodJS got its name.
* [51:35] - Tom's creative outlet outside of software development.
Quotes
[19:24] - "Stay a bit naive of how everyone else does it just so that your solutions really are as novel as they can be. I think the risk of being boring and repetitive is way higher if you're spending a lot of time with the competitive things." ~ Tom Preston-Werner [https://twitter.com/mojombo]
[22:01] - "That's one thing that we're not gonna do. We're not gonna stop innovating, we're not gonna stop trying new things, bringing in better things that we've found. We can't. We may as well give up now if that's the case." ~ Tom Preston-Werner [https://twitter.com/mojombo]
[38:10] - "Most people who are building stuff, their primary concern is not eeking every last ounce of render speed out of their app, it's getting something built quickly that the users are going to take advantage of. And so that's been the bulk of our focus so far. That's really where the bar is." ~ Tom Preston-Werner [https://twitter.com/mojombo]
Links
* Tom Preston-Werner [https://twitter.com/mojombo]
* Redwood JS [https://redwoodjs.com]
* Lagavulin Scotch 8 [https://www.malts.com/en-us/products/single-malt-whisky/lagavulin-8-year-old-single-malt-scotch-whisky-750ml/]
* Nelson's Green Brier Distillery [https://greenbrierdistillery.com]
* Penn & Teller: Bullshit! [https://www.sho.com/penn-and-teller-bullshit]
* Mythbusters [https://go.discovery.com/tv-shows/mythbusters/]
* Laphroaig Scotch [https://www.laphroaig.com/en/]
* Octomore Whisky [https://www.bruichladdich.com/octomore-super-heavily-peated-whisky-range/]
* Next.js [https://nextjs.org]
* React Podcast Episode 117: Tom Preston-Werner on RedwoodJS [https://spec.fm/podcasts/reactpodcast/6_mirYS8]
* Meteor [https://www.meteor.com]
* Ruby on Rails [https://rubyonrails.org]
* Ember.js [https://emberjs.com]
* Svelte [https://svelte.dev]
* React [https://reactjs.org]
* Prisma [https://www.prisma.io]
* Jest [https://jestjs.io]
* Storybook [https://storybook.js.org]
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12/2/2021 • 59 minutes
Boss Hog: Magellan's Atlantic, Recaptcha, GraphQL, NFTs, Crypto
Chuck is in Middleburg, in person, for this episode, where we celebrate his Ship Shape anniversary with the WhistlePig Boss Hog: Magellan's Atlantic. We discuss preventing bots from submitting forms with recaptcha, caching with GraphQL and Redis, NFTs, crypto, and various whatnot.
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10/14/2021 • 43 minutes, 16 seconds
Four Roses, Elixir, Flutter, and Whatnot w/ Sundi Myint
In this episode, we try some Four Roses, and chat with Sundi about Elixir, Flutter, cooking and various whatnot.
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9/9/2021 • 1 hour, 6 minutes, 31 seconds
Hughes Belle of Bedford, Ember and Whatnot w/ Robert Jackson (rwjblue)
In this episode of our Whiskey Web and Whatnot podcast, we are joined by our special guest, Robert Jackson, from the Ember Core Team. We sampled the Hughes Belle of Bedford Rye whiskey, discussed how Robert got into Ember, the pros and cons of Ember vs other frameworks, and various whatnot.
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5/26/2021 • 1 hour, 11 minutes, 39 seconds
Uncle Nearest 1856, JSON:API vs GraphQL, Traveling, Mexico, and Middleburg
In this episode we try the Uncle Nearest 1856 100 proof premium whiskey, discuss the pros and cons of JSON:API vs GraphQL, and give updates on our lives post-vaccination, the new office space in Middleburg, and the latest news in the Ship Shape world.
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5/20/2021 • 55 minutes, 5 seconds
Old Elk, NFTs, Crypto, Tech Tangents
This time we accidentally try two different Old Elk whiskeys, talk about NFTs, crypto, and go on various tech tangents.
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4/18/2021 • 55 minutes
Wild Turkey Kentucky Spirit, EmberConf, Next.js, Porsche vs Mustang
This week we try Wild Turkey Kentucky Spirit, discuss EmberConf and Next.js and talk about Porsches vs Mustangs.
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4/2/2021 • 48 minutes, 22 seconds
Basil Hayden's Dark Rye, DevOps, Arcades and Whatnot
In this episode we try Basil Hayden's Dark Rye, discuss DevOps and Kubernetes, Arcades and Whatnot.
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3/19/2021 • 44 minutes, 17 seconds
Kamiki Whisky, Ember/Glimmer updates and whatnot w/ Chris Garrett (pzuraq)
In this episode we try a Japanese whisky from Kamiki Whisky and chat with Chris Garrett (pzuraq) from the Ember Core Team about new things coming in the Ember/Glimmer world.
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3/10/2021 • 1 hour, 9 minutes, 18 seconds
Hudson Short Stack, Front End Frameworks, Italia
In this episode we try Hudson Whiskey's Short Stack, discuss JavaScript frameworks, and explore Chuck's time in Italy.
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In our third episode we try the Rabbit Hole Dareringer bourbon in our new Norlan whiskey glasses, discuss the Serverless Application Framework, learn a bit about Chuck's previous life as a blackjack dealer, and talk about the craziness around GameStop stock and cryptocurrency trading.
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2/27/2021 • 44 minutes, 1 second
Peerless Rye, Monorepos, Super Bowl LV
In the second episode of Whiskey Web and Whatnot, Robbie Wagner and Charles W. Carpenter III try a Kentucky straight rye whiskey from Peerless Distilling. They discuss the pros and cons of monorepos, and talk about their favorite and least favorite Super Bowl commercials. They also chat about the challenges of coordinating while living on opposite sides of the country and joke about their different whiskey preferences. Overall, the episode is a fun and lighthearted exploration of whiskey tasting with some humorous banter thrown in.
00:20:30 - "And what I've determined is that if there is a library or paradigm that has been popularized by Facebook, you don't like it."
00:21:15 - "It's not that react is inherently bad. It's that people don't take the time to evaluate things well and, and choose things."
00:37:25 - "That's also perhaps a separate episode because sous vide is, it's the truth for steaks."
00:42:38 - "If Facebook makes a whiskey, it's trash."
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2/13/2021 • 43 minutes, 6 seconds
Hello World
On our first episode of Whiskey Web and Whatnot we have Sagamore Spirits Rye as our whiskey, discuss Travis CI's latest problems and how GitHub Actions has filled the space, as well as talk about Nintendo / PC games we've been interested in recently.
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