Posts tagged with 'c'
Doc Norton talks about the experimentation mindset. This episode is sponsored by Smartsheet.
Show Notes:
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Slides from Doc’s presentation on the experimentation mindset
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Other methodologies that fall into the "agile" category: Scrum, Lean
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Kent Beck, Ron Jeffries, and Ward Cunningham were all mentioned. They are all signers of the Agile Manifesto.
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Chris Argyris was mentioned in regards to single-loop and double-loop learning
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Book: Escape Velocity by Doc Norton - it has increased in price since the recording. It will now set you back at least 5 entire dollars.
Supplemental links from Doc:
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Video: Experimentation Mindset
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From Harvard Business Review:
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link:http://www.edbatista.com/2008/05/double-loop.html[Ed Batista blog post on double-loop learning
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Book: Scaling Up Excellence
Want to be on the next episode? You can! All you need is the willingness to talk about something technical.
Music is by Joe Ferg, check out more music on JoeFerg.com!
Calvin Allen talks with me on a variety of topics. This episode is sponsored by Smartsheet.
Show Notes:
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I think Calvin may have done some rebranding since we recorded. Check out CalvinAllen83 on Twitch.
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Streaming services mentioned: Mixer, YouTube, and Twitch.
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restream.io, which I’m now using for…
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Couchbase Coding with Matt Groves, a show where I’m streaming daily.
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Jeff Fritz’s live stream: Fritz and Friends
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Visual Studio extensions by Mads Kristensen
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Calvin’s Open in Notepad++ extension (GitHub), Couchbase extension on GitHub
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I used the term MVP in this episode to mean Minimum Viable Product
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SSL Labs rating
Want to be on the next episode? You can! All you need is the willingness to talk about something technical.
Music is by Joe Ferg, check out more music on JoeFerg.com!
The podcast keeps rolling in May, with more great guests!
Reminders:
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Be sure to check out my sponsor: Smartsheet! Thanks to them, I’m able to afford some new equipment, more hosting, and the JavaScript game show prizes!
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If you’re enjoying the new JavaScript game show, please send in your suggestions. I’m running out of ideas, and you and your ideas could be featured on this show. I need real and made-up suggestions! The sillier the names, the better.
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I rarely talk about this, but if you would be so kind as to tell a friend about the show, post about it on Facebook or Twitter, and leave a review on iTunes or Google Play or wherever else, I would be forever grateful!
Subscribe now!
Here’s what’s coming in March:
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My good pal Calvin Allen is back, talking about a potpourri of topics on his mind.
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The great Doc Norton talking about the experimentation mindset.
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James Munns talking about embedded programming.
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The legendary David Neal returns to talk about his artwork, which has taken over Twitter lately.
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And maybe, just maybe, one extra special episode this month.
Subscribe now with your podcatcher of choice!
Want to be on the next episode? You can! All you need is the willingness to talk about something technical.
Craig Stuntz is manipulating .NET IL. This episode is sponsored by Smartsheet.
Show Notes:
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Craig Stuntz was the second guest I ever had on the show. Check out Podcast 002 - Craig Stuntz on Idris
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Craig was at CodeMash presenting with these slides
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RuJIT was mentioned
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I dare you to keep these straight:
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I don’t think he mentioned it by name, but I think Fizil is the fuzzer that he’s working on.
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SQLite created by Dr. D. Richard Hipp
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Mono.Cecil, part of the Mono project. DNLib is another similar tool.
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Sure, I’ll plug my book again, since we mentioned AOP. AOP in .NET
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Obfuscation is a technique to prevent people from reverse engineering/tampering with your code. Dotfuscator is one of the tools that comes to mind.
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Blog post: "type erasure" in Java
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Blog post: tail calls in F#
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The "goat behind door number 2" is a reference to the Monty Hall Paradox (which is a great discussion topic for parties)
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Book: .NET IL Assembler by Serge Lidin
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ECMA 335 is the Common Language Infrastructure standard. I’d like to ecma-international.org, but their site seems to be broken at the moment.
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Good ol' LINQPad
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Meetup: Papers We Love Columbus
Want to be on the next episode? You can! All you need is the willingness to talk about something technical.
Music is by Joe Ferg, check out more music on JoeFerg.com!
Jeffrey Miller wrote a children’s book. This episode is sponsored by Smartsheet.
Show Notes:
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The book: SkeeterBooks.com. Buy it and leave a review!
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Published and distributed by Columbus Publishing Lab
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What is a TRS-80? The finest piece of affordable computing that the 80s had to offer, that’s what!
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eHarmony (dating site)
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We mentioned two publishing companies that I got mixed up: Leanpub and The Pragmatic Bookshelf (PragProg)
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Jim Holmes’s book, The Leadership Journey, is on Leanpub.
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Author: Seth Godin who is very prolific. I think I’ve ready a measly one of his books, but I don’t remember which one.
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Sure, I’ll plug my book again: AOP in .NET (I would also appreciate a review)
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There are a lot of Mastermind groups, like Columbus Mastermind Group
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Amazon’s Kingle Direct Publishing (KDP)
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Dale Herron, illustrator of Skeeters
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Book: Bearable Moments, by Christopher Judd (another pillar of the developer community)
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Conference CodeMash
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Book: Hello Ruby (Kickstarter)
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Hello Ruby is by Linda Liukas, who was on The Hanselminutes Podcast (episode #547)
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Book: Lauren Ipsum by Carlos Bueno
Want to be on the next episode? You can! All you need is the willingness to talk about something technical.
Music is by Joe Ferg, check out more music on JoeFerg.com!