Informações:
Sinopse
Developer Tea exists to help driven developers connect to their ultimate purpose and excel at their work so that they can positively impact the people they influence.With over 7 million downloads to date, Developer Tea is a short podcast hosted by Jonathan Cutrell (@jcutrell), CTO at Whiteboard. We hope you'll take the topics from this podcast and continue the conversation, either online or in person with your peers. Twitter: @developertea :: Email: developertea@gmail.com
Episódios
-
28: Richard Schneeman, Part One - How to Start Contributing to Open Source, and Testing Refrigerators
18/03/2015 Duração: 28minRichard Schneeman, Ruby developer at Heroku and awesome guy, joins me for the longest episode to date. Follow Richard on Twitter, @schneems! @Schneems Testing the Untestable (about Refrigerators and testing) Gowalla goes to Facebook HipHop VM (Facebook PHP stuff) What are Heroku buildpacks? Jeffrey Way Tuts+ Laracasts Charlie Somerville CodeTriage DocsDoctor Dogfooding Derailed Benchmarks
-
Inspiration Episode #4: Learning Like Children through Play
17/03/2015 Duração: 07minChildren learn at an incredible rate. They also play significantly more than the average adult. Many studies have shown the importance of play for children in the learning process - so the question is, why don't we practice "play" as adults? Episode 4: Learning About Learning Support Developer Tea: https://developertea.com/donate
-
27: Ensuring Professionalism - Rules I Practice
16/03/2015 Duração: 14minIn this episode, I discuss some of my personal rules for maintaining a reputation of professionalism. Support Developer Tea: https://developertea.com/donate
-
26: To Generalize, or to Specialize, that is the Question... Part Two
13/03/2015 Duração: 10minShould you be a generalized programmer or a specialized programmer? Generalized programmers learn a wide range of languages and/or frameworks, while a specialized programmer becomes an expert in something very specific. There are pros and cons to both, and in this episode, we'll discuss both.
-
Inspiration Episode #3: The Day the Beatles Were Rejected
12/03/2015 Duração: 06minUnless you're extraordinarily lucky, you'll be rejected multiple times in your life. Whether in your personal or professional life, rejection is a normal part of life, even for the best of the best (like the Beatles). In this episode, I encourage you to move past your rejection.
-
26: To Generalize, or to Specialize, that is the Question... Part One
11/03/2015 Duração: 12minShould you be a generalized programmer or a specialized programmer? Generalized programmers learn a wide range of languages and/or frameworks, while a specialized programmer becomes an expert in something very specific. There are pros and cons to both, and in this episode, we'll discuss both.
-
25: "What Should I Build?" - 5 Tips for Better Idea Generation
09/03/2015 Duração: 14minIn this episode, I answer a question I've received from many listeners: How do I come up with an idea for something to build? This question is somewhat complex, but we'll cover 5 basic tips for idea generation.
-
24: Scott Jehl on Responsible Responsive Design and Progressive Enhancement, Part Two
06/03/2015 Duração: 21minScott Jehl is a designer and developer working at Filament Group. Scott is also an author and speaks regularly at conferences like An Event Apart. In this interview, Scott and I discuss progressive enhancement and his book, Responsible Responsive Design. Mentioned at some point in the interview: ScottJehl.com, Scott's Twitter, Scott's GitHub Filament Group Responsible Responsive Design (book) Designing with Progressive Enhancement (book) Critical (Addy Osmani) Critical CSS (Filament Group) loadCSS
-
Inspiration Episode #2: Coding for Humans
05/03/2015 Duração: 03minToday, I talk about coding for humans in this special Inspiration episode. Remember, computers are only what you tell them to be!
-
24: Scott Jehl on Responsible Responsive Design and Progressive Enhancement, Part One
04/03/2015 Duração: 23minScott Jehl is a designer and developer working at Filament Group. Scott is also an author and speaks regularly at conferences like An Event Apart. In this interview, Scott and I discuss progressive enhancement and his book, Responsible Responsive Design. Mentioned at some point in the interview: ScottJehl.com, Scott's Twitter, Scott's GitHub Filament Group Responsible Responsive Design (book) Designing with Progressive Enhancement (book) Critical (Addy Osmani) Critical CSS (Filament Group) loadCSS
-
23: When to Adopt New Technology: A Simple Value-based Rubric
02/03/2015 Duração: 14minIn today's episode, at the request of a listener I discuss the tradeoffs of choosing to adopt a new technology versus using what you already know, even when what you already know might not be the best tool for the job.
-
22: Why Should Developers Build Their Own "Brand"?
27/02/2015 Duração: 19minIn today's episode, I discuss even further why it's important to create a brand for yourself. Make sure you check out my interview with John Sonmez to hear more about why a developer might want to build their own brand!
-
Bonus Weekly Inspiration #1: Functionality Versus Elegance
24/02/2015 Duração: 04minToday's bonus episode is the first weekly inspiration mini-episode! Today's quote comes from Steve McConnell, author of Code Complete. Thank you for supporting Developer Tea with your listens! We just reached the 200k unique listens mark, and that's thanks to you!
-
20: Thoughts on Unicorns: Answering a Listener Question
23/02/2015 Duração: 13minIn this episode, I answer a listener question about what route he should take in his technical education. Spoiler: I actually do have an opinion and recommendation to this question. For a significant part of this episode, I discuss the concept of the famed "unicorn" developer, and why they're in such high demand. Note: I accidentally called the listener a "guest" - probably because I consider everyone who listens to the show my personal guests 3 times a week. :)
-
19: Ben Orenstein from Thoughtbot, Part Two
20/02/2015 Duração: 29minI'm excited to be interviewing Ben Orenstein from Thoughtbot. Ben is a brilliant craftsman of a developer, and in this episode we discuss what it takes to be a craftsman. This is the second part of the interview, so be sure to check out the previous episode for the first part! Giant Robots Smashing into Other Giant Robots (podcast) Upcase Vim for Rails Developers Vim resources on Upcase Trailmix.life Ben's personal site and writings can be found here: http://benorenstein.com
-
19: Ben Orenstein from Thoughtbot, Part One
18/02/2015 Duração: 14minI'm excited to be interviewing Ben Orenstein from Thoughtbot. Ben is a brilliant craftsman of a developer, and in this episode we discuss what it takes to be a craftsman. This interview is split into two parts, so be sure to check out the next episode for the second part! Giant Robots Smashing into Other Giant Robots (podcast) Upcase Vim for Rails Developers Vim resources on Upcase Trailmix.life Ben's personal site and writings can be found here Ben on Twitter, @r00k: https://twitter.com/r00k and on GitHub, @r00k: https://github.com/r00k
-
18: Listener Questions
16/02/2015 Duração: 11minAround 1:00, Brett asks how to become an “advanced developer.” Programming Paradigms Stanford Course: https://itunes.apple.com/us/course/programming-paradigms/id495054064 Paul Graham’s essays on Lisp Python Django Wordpress Whiteboard Around 8:10, Daniel asks how to make writing tests less boring and more joyful. Justin's article about adding tests to a non-TDD app
-
17: Volt and Isomorphism with Ryan Stout, part two
13/02/2015 Duração: 12minToday I'm joined once again by Ryan Stout, the developer behind the powerful new Ruby web framework Volt. Ryan and I continue discussing why he created Volt, and some of the motivations for developers to move towards "isomorphic development". Check out Volt: VoltFramework.com
-
17: Volt and Isomorphism with Ryan Stout, part one
11/02/2015 Duração: 11minToday I'm joined by Ryan Stout, the developer behind the powerful new Ruby web framework Volt. Ryan and I discuss why he created Volt, the motivations for developers to move towards "isomorphic development", and how Volt addresses some of those motivations. Ryan Stout on Twitter: @ryanstout (note: not to be confused with @stoutryan, the comedian.) Check out Volt: VoltFramework.com Support Developer Tea: http://www.developertea.com/buy-me-tea
-
16: Stigmas, Stereotypes, and Pizza
09/02/2015 Duração: 10minIn this episode, we talk about stigmas and stereotypes. As developers, and as humans, we have a responsibility to treat each other fairly. We also have a responsibility to our craft. In this episode, I discuss the one thing that developers should be measured by.