50 min listen
Jen Weber on imaginary bars
FromFrontend First
ratings:
Length:
38 minutes
Released:
Jul 13, 2018
Format:
Podcast episode
Description
Jen talks to Sam and Ryan about her journey learning from and giving back to Ember, and how she keeps her community contributions sustainable by tying them back to personal goals and rewards.
Topics:
7:00 – Learning Ember at General Assembly
9:00 – How did you go from learner to contributor?
13:25 – Thoughts on Slack, Stack Overflow and Discourse
18:12 – What advice do you have for folks looking to contribute back to Ember?
24:66 – What are some things you'd like to see change about Ember?
30:39 – What personal projects are you working on right now?
35:10 – Why do you think someone should start using Ember today?
Links:
Jen on Twitter: @jwwweber(https://twitter.com/jwwweber)
The Ember Times: site
Topics:
7:00 – Learning Ember at General Assembly
9:00 – How did you go from learner to contributor?
13:25 – Thoughts on Slack, Stack Overflow and Discourse
18:12 – What advice do you have for folks looking to contribute back to Ember?
24:66 – What are some things you'd like to see change about Ember?
30:39 – What personal projects are you working on right now?
35:10 – Why do you think someone should start using Ember today?
Links:
Jen on Twitter: @jwwweber(https://twitter.com/jwwweber)
The Ember Times: site
Released:
Jul 13, 2018
Format:
Podcast episode
Titles in the series (100)
Babel Plugins, Compile-time Components, and Extending Integration Tests: Sam and Ryan talk about writing Babel plugins, components that can be transformed to plain HTML at compile-time, the differences between run-time and compile-time error messaging, and one way to make integration tests more reusable and domain-specific. by Frontend First