stitcherLogoCreated with Sketch.
Get Premium Download App
Listen
Discover
Premium
Shows
Likes
Merch

Listen Now

Discover Premium Shows Likes

Talking Tech with Greg Marine

9 Episodes

52 minutes | Dec 29, 2020
Ep 9 - Talking with TJ Pataria
Greg Marine  One of the common themes of 2020 was change. For some folks that meant change of career. This week's guest, TJ Pataria, is one of those individuals who changed careers into tech. Welcome to this week's episode of talking tech.There's no getting around it. Technology affects us all. It is in everything. But what does it all mean? And how do we interact with this technology? Let me be your guy. I'm Greg Marine. And this is talking tech.TJ Pataria  I'm TJ, from Scotland, recent boot camp graduate. And they currently unemployed and looking for a job.Greg Marine  Well, congratulations on graduating boot camp. Tell me a little bit more about your background where you're coming from before you started to go into tech.TJ Pataria  So before tech had spent about 1617 years and worked in various roles in in retail retail management in the service industry. And one of these people who, who usually gets kind of not bored easily, but likes the keeps keep keep things fresh, if that makes sense. So that's Yeah. So yeah, I mean, in tech, it's interesting, because you're not always doing the same thing, right? It's not always the same remedial tasks they do. There's so many different technologies to work with so many different projects you can build. And so that's kinda how I landed in the lab of technology at the ripe age of just shy of 34.Greg Marine  Congratulations on getting to this point. So you started this year? I assume. So was it a part of the 100 days of code or anything like that?TJ Pataria  No. So weirdly, actually, um, so I grew up in the USA, Europe and scout when I was younger. Actually, I was enrolled in a course by my school, it was like a Microsoft program. And I actually started learning how to code when I was about 1415. Okay, but at the time, I didn't really enjoy it. So I was more into hardware and software. You know, I was one of these weird people who thought you know, software, it's, it's never gonna work. It's all about building computers. Right? That's right. That's where the money is. And I used to say, used to build people, you know, like, building computers from scratch. It costs like half the price, and I was in high school sighs making decent money on it. Oh, that's that. That's why late. That's why I enjoyed.Greg Marine  Okay, so you built computers, so that you did that? at the ripe age of 14? You said about 1415? Yeah, yeah. Throughout and throughout high school. Okay. Yeah, I used to build computers that one of my dad still using his computer that I built about 11 years ago now. So niceTJ Pataria  one, I still got one. And I built it's like a spider man themed one. Okay, it's for for it's tape. It's like top of the range. But I mean, eight Meg RAMs, nothing? is gonna do anybody any papers that are these?Greg Marine  Yeah. Well, that's the thing when you build them yourself. Not only can you do it for cheaper, you can use top of the line parts of the time box last last a lot longer. Yes, true. Yeah, very true. So. So tell me a little bit more about your journey this year through your boot camp, and, and all that.TJ Pataria  So recently, and when I say recently, in the last couple of years, I've been flirting with the idea of getting back into tech. And to be honest with you, if it wasn't for the pandemic, I probably wouldn't have gotten that push. It's just what the pandemic rate is, as most people know, there's so much more free time, you know, since I couldn't work, and you know, had to do something constructive with my team. And I kind of messed around on lane, you know, doing tutorials and stuff like that, and kind of was going around in circles. And I thought, you know, I'm just gonna want to Santa boot camp, I'm gonna get that structure, we're gonna get that help along the way. And then, hopefully, it should work. I did think though, at the beginning that the boot camp was going to be remote. So so I was surprised to learn that when, uh, when I enrolled, I got an email saying, you know, you're coming to your cohort in person.Greg Marine  Oh, really? Okay.TJ Pataria  And I was like, This is the opposite of what was gonna happen. But yeah, that was cool. Like, social distancing. And everything was practice on on campus. So they kept everything pretty clean, had to wear masks and shields and whatever, couldn't sit near anybody or whatever. So it was pretty cool. It was nice though to have like human contact after somebody myself. Yeah, I would say it of the people you live with.Greg Marine  And get out and get out of the house. Yeah,TJ Pataria  I'll get out of the house here. No traffic either, which was a bonus because no Nobody's going anywhere late.Greg Marine  Yeah, that's been one of the most eerie parts about going and traveling in the cities in the early months was there was no traffic.TJ Pataria  No traffic yet. That's Have you ever been to London?Greg Marine  No, I have not.TJ Pataria  No. So London is, I'd say, I've never been to New York. But what I see like, you know, in the media and like on TV and stuff, but in New York, the traffic's really bad. Right? London's all exactly the same. And then, my grandparents still live with me. They were they were stuck in India. And so they were coming back in April on like, government charge fleets. And then I went to pick them up. And I never in my life seen London that quiet. Like, it was really scary to see like, a quiet actually been. It kind of puts things in perspective, right? Like, absolutely. We're justGreg Marine  not the same. Yeah, and I never will be the same again, some things will be better. Now right now you guys are going through kind of another phase and other lockdown. Is that right?TJ Pataria  And yeah, so like Scotland's pretty, Scotland's been pretty strict compared to the rest of the UK through the process to be fair. And especially like the central belt of Scotland, we've been pretty much top tier of every variation of lockdown since it began. So it's not been fun. Well, I would say the one of my friends that day, like I've become really weirdly accustomed to just not doing anything anymore. And like to go out and do activities when things you know, get back to normal. Right. And it's actually more daunting than like staying at home for another seven months. Right.Greg Marine  So one of the things that you're hoping to do is get into a position where you're doing software development. Yeah, for something. So tell me a little bit more about what what kind of job you're looking for right now.TJ Pataria  And mostly anything back end? I'm not, you know, I'm wise to the fact that beggars can be choosers, though, right? And any experience just now is better than no experience. Right? So am I have a plan, whereas for the next few weeks, I'm applying to many roles that interests me before I kind of branch out and just start applying kind of not recklessly but right applying everywhere. And as opposed to being choosy about it. Yeah, that's probably I would prefer, I would prefer something back in or maybe even something kind of, you know, more driven towards data and stuff like that, because data and statistics, analytics, that kind of stuff always interests me, you probably seen on my term, massive sports fan. And I've been for many years and like more than actually playing. And I've gone through phases where like just just knowing the data, just knowing the statistics, and how to get them has been like more interesting than, than anything else.Greg Marine  Do you have any interest in like, machine learning or AI? Because that's, that's something that's a data driven, very muchTJ Pataria  driven. I've actually got a couple of things lined up a couple of weeks short courses lined up over the next couple weeks to do and as a kind of an introductory thing to AI and ml. And so I think I'll enjoy it. Based on what everyone's been telling me, I hope IGreg Marine  so what software development languages and platforms? Are you working with them out of boot camp?TJ Pataria  So when we first jumped into boot camp, our first module was Python. Okay. And I dabbled in a bit of Python earlier in the year, so wasn't too unfamiliar with it. And actually really liked Python. And module two was JavaScript,Greg Marine  no fun.TJ Pataria  And that struggled with another lie, right? I still don't enjoy JavaScript, like if if I have to use it or use it. But after that came Java, and I was still not sure if I'm a Java fan, because I actually enjoy the language, or I just enjoy using IntelliJ. Yeah, there's half of the work for you. Right. But yeah, I'm a big Python. Finally, Python.Greg Marine  Yeah, Python is definitely the number one language for machine learning and AI right now. A lot a lot of it's really good. It's got a lot of modules for basically chunking around on that data. And it does it very quickly, and very efficiently. SoTJ Pataria  that's a positive. Right? Yeah, absolutely. AndGreg Marine  then you said, you've struggled with JavaScript, that's actually a common thing. It's JavaScript has been around since almost the beginning of the World Wide Web in the early 90s. It's evolved. It's gotten better, but at the same time, it's still quite challenging.TJ Pataria  Oh, yeah, I agree. It's, I mean, like, syntax is syntactically like, I'm okay. And it's just putting some things into practice. I struggle with sometimes even like, three fairly with some of the frameworks like view, kind of make it But easier, right and view I kind of, I kind of took too easily. And then we had only a couple of days of react literally two days just before a final project of react and as I struggled. And then once again, if you like view, you know, you love react and I'm still sitting there, you know, trying to work my way through this project. Thank you. Why don't I love this thing?Greg Marine  I've actually gone the opposite way. I've done Angular react. And then now view, I look at view as as much better like an evolution of the two, the other two, and they've fixed some problems. And to me going back to react, I struggle. It's like I I'd rather this would be easier in view.TJ Pataria  view. Yeah, actually funny you say that? Because a lot of my classmates actually felt the same way as though I think a lot more people enjoyed view than they did react.Greg Marine  Yeah. Yeah. And when I started in web development, it was around 90 9096. And there weren't any frameworks. And so I've learned all that. But now that the frameworks exist, I prefer the frameworks because mostly, because all of the the, all the gotchas with the different browsers. It's just they've solved all that in those frameworks. And that's why I prefer frameworks today.TJ Pataria  Anything that makes any job easier is always welcome isn't exactly what Yeah, yeah, it's good.Greg Marine  It's good to understand the fundamentals. But at the end of the day, you gotTJ Pataria  it. It's like, why walk somewhere? If you can drive really what right? Maybe not if it's short distance, but if you're, if you're going somewhere, that's 50 miles away, you wouldn't walk there, you'd rather just cut out the riffraff and just just do the thing that makes things easier for you.Greg Marine  That's right. And technologies exist to make it easy. And now if a technology is the problem, then move on.TJ Pataria  Oh, yeah. Fair enough.Greg Marine  That's why I'm trying to get into view because I like view a lot better. It does everything. I mean, it does the same thing that Angular and react. does. But for me, it makes more sense. It doesn't.TJ Pataria  Yeah,Greg Marine  I would say better. That's it. Yep. So now, you, you mentioned you have mostly interest in back end, any interest at all in front end? Since we're talking about frameworks,TJ Pataria  I don't I don't mind doing front end work. But I just I genuinely prefer doing stuff from the back. Like I'm, I'm not, not like a relatively shy person. But I, in the same way with work as I am personally, like, I do like to keep things like to the background. So back in work just kind of suits me better. Not having to deal with, you know, where something's positioned on a piece as I prefer to work on, you know, the logic of why doesn't it just work in general? Why isn't it doing what it's supposed to do?Greg Marine  Right. So more business logic versus user experience on? Yeah, pretty much. Yeah. No, that's good. And one of the problems with being a full stack developers, I've done it all. And so I say problem is because, you know, I wear many hats. And so it's better to target just a specific thing and get really good at that. So if you target back, of course, and you get jobs like that, then you'll just become an expert. Yes, go back in and take care of that. That business logic.TJ Pataria  That's the goal. That's the goal. I don't mind again, I don't mind full stack. It's just, I'd rather No, no,Greg Marine  I don't I don't blame you. And all these years, that's, I've stretched my, my knowledge, but at the same time, it's it all clashes inside my brain. Okay, how do I do this in C sharp versus JavaScript? You know, they're different frameworks or different languages. And so that's sometimes bounces around inside my head, takes me a minute toTJ Pataria  get it? Well, that's one of the things I learned along in my bootcamp journey was, you know, things aren't always going to be the same. And they, you know, Google is attains my best friend, but also things my worst enemy, so just, you know, be specific and be careful where you're looking for. Right? AndGreg Marine  that's actually one of the differences between a junior developer and a senior developer isn't so much their knowledge of a specific framework or language. It's what they're searching for, you know, how can they formulate their query to be able to get the answer that they're looking forTJ Pataria  now? That's good. I hope that works out well for me, because based on what my classmates have told me, I'm a much better Googler than they are.Greg Marine  There you go. So you're already held that week. So you're already ahead of the game, then.TJ Pataria  Well, fingers crossed. I hope somebody else sees that when I'm applying for jobs.Greg Marine  Absolutely. Yeah. So good luck with that. I mean, one of the things you may have to encounter is, you know, coding problems and whatnot to to show that you have some skills. I think one of the things that the companies are looking for somebody that can find the solution to a problem, not necessarily exist. How, how you do it but more or less how you research it and troubleshoot it?TJ Pataria  Yeah, I've come across a couple of those already. I was doing one yesterday and I really stumped me. And on the there was two coding challenges in the interview. And I, the first challenge I got, I got 50% of the solution to work. And in the realm of running a team, the second one, I think I'd read 25 minutes, I just could not come up with solution even trawling the web just just couldn't find it.Greg Marine  Now, the good thing is, once you get in there, you won't we have a time limit once you have a jobTJ Pataria  now, but yeah, it's a good thing. Yeah. Fingers crossed.Greg Marine  So you had mentioned your passion for hardware in the past. Now you've built computers now Do you have any sort of passion for you know, embedded systems like Raspberry Pi, or an Arduino or any of those?TJ Pataria  I don't am I actually stopped building computers, just after we moved back to Scotland, and probably are in all four or five. And the PI came a few years later than that. And then I remember I was working, I was managing an electronics place. And, and one of the guys that worked there, he'd ordered a Raspberry Pi and kind of Florida flirted with the idea of getting and I thought, you know what, I'm just gonna waste my money, because I'm not going to do anything with it. But recently, and I've been thinking about getting one and messing around with it. But I'm still on the fence. I'm not too sure.Greg Marine  One of the nice things about it is you get to dabble in both hardware and software and software. Yeah, yeah. So you get to do both. And it's all it's very little front end. It's all back end type back end coding. So because you're dealing with buttons and whatnot, but not necessarily a display. SoTJ Pataria  I know I'm one of these people who if I if I can, like if I if I get it, cuz I can't get away something feasibly working on the first day, it's gonna like sit there and assaulted.Unknown Speaker  Oh, yeah, it'sTJ Pataria  been a yearly thing. I should get a new one.Greg Marine  So who's your favorite sports team? I know you've talked about it on Twitter. But go ahead and tell my listeners here. My SeahawksTJ Pataria  on massive Seahawks fan? Oh, yes. The Seahawks actually aren't my first love. My first love. They don't actually exist anymore. Oh, they'd be the SuperSonics. But thanks to our shelves there. They're no longer a thing. So Seahawks was a close second. All right. The mariners haven't made the playoffs in years, so I just don't even don't even follow.Greg Marine  So that's the American football. What about, you know, actual football and soccer what we call soccer here.TJ Pataria  A Glasgow Rangers.Greg Marine  There you go.TJ Pataria  Classic Rangers. Yeah. Very cool.Greg Marine  Have you heard of them? Yes, I have.TJ Pataria  Yeah. It's a very contentious thing here though. Like he. And because there's only really two teams in Scotland. The main ones Glasgow Rangers and Glasgow Celtic. And it's pretty much split that in religious lines. Okay. So Rangers. They were, they were here originally. And then, when the Irish started to immigrate to Scotland, they weren't allowed to play with a lot of the other clubs and teams. So they created their own team called Celtic. So people always harp on that, you know, Celtic are the team of the immigrants. And I'm kind of the opposite of that. I follow Glasgow Rangers. Very cool. It's, it's like you, I always take a lot of people and because I was an Uber driver for a while, so people would always ask, you know, why do people people have asked us you know, what he used for me tell them and they get really angry. You know, it's, it's not something you want to talk about openly in this gray. Okay, kind of like it's kind of like skaaland shame. Like, it's pretty bad. can be pretty bad. Not everyone, it's getting better. No. And I think you asked a lot of people you know, why do you dislike this person? Just because they support it and they don't they don't even really No, it's just because the family have been that way for generations. That way soGreg Marine  yeah, we we don't have so much of that here in the United States. One of the things we do have rivalries but it's not like it's more fun than than anything there's not a whole lot of anger there.TJ Pataria  Yeah, I miss the I miss miss rivalry in the US it's a lot less intimidating.Greg Marine  Yeah, the only thing we have that are is more of a hatred is more Polish politics and stuff like that. Yeah, that's Yeah, that's definitely split here on that. But when it comes to sports, it's more fun than, than anything. So like my, my grandfather and my one of his sons, my uncle. They had rivalry teams. My grandfather was for green bay packers and my uncle's the Minnesota Vikings and so? Oh, yeah, yeah. So for a while they would have those little bickering fights, not just for fun, you know, but uh, but yeah, that's uh, that's something that's uh, I grew up with and it was kind of fun.TJ Pataria  Whatever you call it seemed theGreg Marine  Indianapolis Colts. Yeah, that's where I'm from. SoTJ Pataria  I'll cool one of my cousin's is a cold fan. Although he's from Vancouver, BC. There we go. My dad was actually a redesign. Okay, cuz he's, so he was in LA when they were originally in LA. Yeah. And then they moved to Oakland. And when my parents got married, they moved to their original living in LA but then they moved to Stockton, California. So not far from Oakland. Right. And, and I think he always wanted us my brother and I to be like, prayer science, but I just never had. Yeah, it's just never was in me. I can see the appeal. A reader signs are nuts. ButGreg Marine  yes, they are. very passionate.TJ Pataria  Yeah. That's when I started to like, enjoy sport. It was the Seahawks. I think it was about nine years old. Yeah. But 999 years old when I started properly get into sports, and it was all but the Sonics at a time, you know, during the NBA Finals and all that kind of stuff. Yeah. And then we just moved to Seattle. And everything was you know, obviously, you just couldn't top it for me at the time. You still can't know something. Yes.Greg Marine  I've never been to Seattle. I hear it rains a lot. But I've wanted to travel out there to Washington. SoTJ Pataria  a bit say, Oh, yeah, it's bad in the winter. It's people think because I live in Scotland. The weather's worse here. But actually, I taste the opposite. The winters are harsher in in Seattle than they are here. It's cold here in the Bay here. But it doesn't snow. And we don't get storms like like we did in Seattle, because of the earthquakes here, which is a positive.Greg Marine  Oh, yeah. That's nice. Did you have many earthquakes when you live in California?TJ Pataria  And I don't remember we, we moved out of California when I was six, okay, six or seven. Like I was born in Scotland, okay, and grew up in California. Tobit, yes, six or seven. Then we moved to Scotland, then we moved to Seattle. And then when I was about 16 and a half 17. Then we moved back to Scotland. I was born here, because my mom was visiting her parents, okay. And when she found out she was pregnant, she was here and she wanted me to actually be born here. So I could have right both British and US citizenship. Right? And which I do so. Great.Greg Marine  So you're looking for a job right now? What other jobs have you been doing? I mean, before the pandemic, you said, you're in retail and all that. But um, what happened was that the pandemic that got you into this position where you're looking?TJ Pataria  So yeah, basically the two, three years before the pandemic I was a was a private hire driver. Okay, so you not do what to like mostly Uber or like my own private stuff. And, and when the pan I could tell just before the pandemic, I think it was around December, when the news broke of like, there's something happening in China. And then in January, it was like, it's actually starting to become a little bit of a worry for everyone else. February was, this country's now got it in their countries, but it's so like, around mid January pain, and I could tell something was off when things were really quiet, like, business wise. I'd never seen it that quiet. Yeah. And even the streets like around the city and the airports and stuff were really quiet. And you kind of got the sense that something was up. So like I said, like I had, I had been flirting with the idea for a couple of years of like maybe jumping into a boot camp or taking another route, maybe even going back to you know, your college or university. And, but it definitely was the pandemic that kind of pushed me to, you know, jump in with both feet. Because of the things that really get quiet and then and I'd stopped working around the third week of March. And technically, I mean, how it works since March 23. Actually, again, today's what December 23. So this will make exactly nine months. Yep. Yeah, nine months into this longest I've ever been to be here for was for just over four months, four and a half, maybe five in the in boot camp where everything has kind of been a blur. And because every time I say to people, you know, three months ago there, there wasn't any one single that was like eight months ago.Greg Marine  Yeah. It's been a crazy year. And the timeline you mentioned was kind of interesting, because here in the US most of the news didn't really break until late February, early March like in December. Nobody was talking about it here. And it turns out there was a lot of folks who were getting sick in November and December last year here in the US. Yeah, but we didn't know what it was. And then then by March, that's when everything released, got tore what you were saying kind of became quiet, you know, businesses started shutting down. And then by late March, we were full lockdown.TJ Pataria  So like, I, I read the news every night before I go to sleep, because it helps me fall asleep. Okay. So the way I have like, the tabs organized in the app is first of the World News. Okay. And then it's like, Asia, Pacific, you know, US and Canada. And then UK, and then more specifically, Scotland, in the west of Scotland, and then sports. And so yeah, I usually kind of catch on to these things before they kind of hit the mainstream, if you will. Okay, yeah. Just I'll see something. And I'm like, Oh, that looks interesting. See what it's about. And then monthly on the Yeah, I already knew, but it's because remembered a few weeks ago.Greg Marine  That's very good. And that's actually a good way to approach the news. Because by the time it becomes mainstream, there's a lot of bias in it. So it'd be better to read the earlier story. So that's a good idea.TJ Pataria  But I always remember what they say any other But yeah, I know I read.Greg Marine  Yeah, especially since you're using it to go to sleep. You might.TJ Pataria  That's Yeah. Positive and negative. Yeah. Well, that'sGreg Marine  the cool thing about technology, though, is today we can organize our news that way. And that's one of the benefits I think in having a pandemic now is like we have all this technology that'll help us get through it you know, you you're doing you did the did the but boot camp and and everything. So like that help time go by faster, I assume, kind of gave you something to do while on lockdown. And I think a lot of people have approached this year, that way, you know, they make new hobbies and whatnot, too.TJ Pataria  I think so. Yeah. And one of my best friends is taking a boxing. Oh, nice. I don't think he ever would have if it wasn't for the, he's naturally quite sporty. Anyways, he does play a lot of football or soccer. And usually, like, in an organized team for the league. But boxing is something that's new to him, I don't I don't think he would have done it. If it wasn't something you can do on your own, right you don't need and you don't need a gym, necessarily. You can have any equipment at home and you can, you know, be up a bag in your kitchen if you want so. And I've got had other friends you know, upskilling into upskilling into other areas of relational learning new skills, and forging new career paths. And I would say to take as well, and for some people, because like I described the pandemic and it might sound odd to some people healing in this way, but as a blessing in disguise, right. And because if it wasn't for the pandemic, I wouldn't have had that kick up the butt to really, you know, get back into high gear and get going again, because it's not gonna live for a few years, I was kind of losing motivation. And then I was making okay money as a as a private hire driver. I'm not gonna, you know, pretend like I was grief stricken or anything I was I was doing okay, like, the money was good. It's just the hours were really long. And it was working almost seven days a week and like not being at work so wrong. Like if I ever came home and tried to relax. I just couldn't switch off. Oh, yeah. So now I'm like, I've learned to kind of just take it easy, a little bit. You don't take a deep breath, just walk outside, just chill out.Greg Marine  Right? I think that's been the take for a lot of people that I know is that they're learning how to relax, finally, because it's always been Go go go and the sheer. It's like hitting a brick wall. He stopped. What is he gonna do so?TJ Pataria  Well, that's it. Especially mentally, there's nothing more important than your mental health, your physical health, maybe, but your mental health is a big piece of who you are. Right? And you got to look after it. Whichever way you can. And you have to rest your brain from time to time. Like it's it's you just can't keep it switched on all the time.Greg Marine  Yeah, I'm hoping that, that me personally, I continue to use the new techniques of relaxing, going forward once this is all over. And we're kind of back to a new normal. Yes, that, that I can still take what I've learned this year to relax and continue to apply that in the future.TJ Pataria  What are you doing just now for your mental health yoga, hot yoga?Greg Marine  No, no. Both mostly what I'm doing is writing and doing like this part, this podcast. The nice thing about this is I'm getting out and talking to people that I wouldn't have. Otherwise talk to. And so I'm learning about backgrounds and about personalities from people all over the world. Like Like I mentioned, and actually the reason you reached out to me for this interview is I was already talking to folks all around the world. And you're like, Hey, how about you and I chat. And so this is a new thing for me. I'm branching out, I'm more of an introvert. I can, you know, talk to people, but this is a lot easier having a camera and a microphone to talk to people. So, yeah, this is one of the things that's helped me get through it. And again, writing blog posts and talking about my experiences and whatnot and sharing with the world. What I'm doing has been a big help this year.TJ Pataria  That's really cool. Cuz I'll be Honestly, I wouldn't have taken you as an introvert, you don't come across as one. So, you know, I don't know if you're masking it, or you just kind of jumped over that hurdle. But well, well done either way.Greg Marine  Thank you. Yes, it's much easier to be to seem like an extrovert. When on the computer, you know, I'm behind a keyboard and I talk about what I'm doing. But when I'm out and about, I don't necessarily talk to people to strange it. That wouldn't have ever known. I don't always just sit and chat with people.TJ Pataria  I'll tell you a funny story. Some I'm kind of the opposite. Like, I, I just when I'm I could be in the doctor's waiting or in a restaurant or a bar wherever they go. I always tend to strike up conversation with strangers basically, like, fly by myself, or you know, there's nothing else going on around us. Like it's it's awkward sitting in silence. Right. Right. And by famed like doing interviews on zoom, and especially job interviews, like I lock up quite a bit like I could feel myself like I start dripping in sweat. I get nervous. I'm stumbling over my words. I don't know what I'm talking about anymore. I start rambling. And then I look at them. And I'm just thinking, do you actually understand any of what I just said? Or are we both know very confused?Greg Marine  Yeah, I'm the Yeah, I'm the exact opposite on that. I'm more like that in person. Yeah, doing I've done interviews. You know, I've been in this business for almost three decades. And so doing face to face interviews has always been a what's been nervous, nerve wracking to me. Doing this all on a computer this year has been kind of nice.TJ Pataria  That's good.Greg Marine  Get to relax. But But yeah, like when I'm out and about, I like to people watch. If I go to a bar or something like that. I'm sitting by myself. And I'm watching other people and just kind of interacting in my head. And, like, I'll send a text back to my wife saying, hey, this person just said this funny thing. And I won't even acknowledge that to the person who said it.TJ Pataria  I've been there too, to be here. A couple of days.Greg Marine  Yeah. Yeah, recently went to back to Walt Disney World in Florida. And this is a couple weeks ago. And I'm glad the numbers are down, they've reduced how many people are allowed in the parks. So that's helped and everybody has to wear a mask, but it allowed me to sit and just kind of observe people without it being so chaotic. You know, there's not people going everywhere, like in the past where the streets of the the park would be packed. Now it's just you know, people here and there just kind of scattered throughout and distance and it makes it easier for me to observe those those folks.TJ Pataria  Oh, that's cool. How was the trip?Greg Marine  I was very good. It was very relaxing. did a lot of firsts. You know, I've I go to Disney World a lot. That was the first part of the trip. The second part of the trip, we actually went to the Florida Keys. And that's a set of islands down the South very southern tip of the continental US and I did some snorkeling around the barrier reef there in Florida, and then went out to a fort Fort Jefferson on the Dry Tortugas. It was just neat to see all that and since there's reduced numbers of people doing these things, it was just kind of nice to relax and it didn't feel like I was constantly bombarded with the virus. like everybody's distanced and so it was fun to do those also did jet skiing and never done that before and parasailing was fun. No lifting up, you know? 300 feet in the air. Yeah, yeah. And it was just it was really nice.TJ Pataria  I'm afraid of heights. I want to do parasailing Yeah, actually, like, like over water. I think it'd be more comfortable within like some like skydiving. Yeah. Oh, and I get really I get really weird. Like, even if I go up like an escalator, or even you know, you get like the glass elevators and you can Oh, yeah, yeah. And I always turn my back just so I can see smart my legs get really shaky and weird. And going up an escalator. I can't even look over the thing because I can't I just get really weird. I can fly no problem. They put me on an airplane 20 minute, window seat. Look, that is not an issue. It's just something like about being over war that's like really, really calming to me is like, oh, maybe I don't know if it's like a survival thing like that. I feel as though subliminally somewhere like, and I'm going to I'm going to survive if we hit war as opposed to crashing into a farm or field somewhere.Greg Marine  Right? My buddy I was with he has a fear of heights as well and he talked himself into going on the parasailing and he actually when we got up there. He was very real. So you know we're overwater, like you said, we weren't anywhere near land, you could see the island off in the distance. But when you're up there, it doesn't feel like you're 300 feet in, there's just sees nothing but ocean. So yeah, it's very common for him toTJ Pataria  the example I always give people the the best example, I was getting my fear of heights as the Space Needle in Seattle. Oh, yeah. Because as a child, when people used to visit, there's only a couple of places and see how you can feel them. The best place is the Space Needle. Because once you get to the top, you get a view of, you know, like the Puget Sound. And you can see the city and beyond, and you can see the mountains in the distance it as a really nice view from it, I won't deny that. The problem is once you step out, like once you take the elevator to the top, and you step out into the actual platform, it's slightly slanted. Okay? And, and you can feel a breeze. And it just kind of knocks me off balance. So what I do is, I kind of hug it inside real. And I look back like this now, and I kind of creep around and do a 360 tour. And then I go back and save. And you'll see people, the young kids, and they're laughing, and they're like, I can understand why it's funny. Because if I was a kid, and I seen a group, and instantly, it would be funny to me also. And but now I still I still leave when I'm back and to try and go by choice to like, conquer the fear. Because when I was younger, like I had to go up. And you know, because no one's gonna leave a 12 year old downstairs by themselves. Right? You know, I'll probably run off to the fear as opposed to anybody taking me. Because that's the kind of kid I was, and not run away, but you know, run off to the right. Right. So yeah, like, I've tried to do it. And the last time one of the Space Needle was actually one of my cousin's, and he's afraid of heights, though. I didn't realize until then that he's actually more afraid of heights than I am. And I see makes me feel better about my fear of heights. Because he just he just couldn't hack at all. Like, he pretty much almost passed out as soon as we got to the top. Oh, wow. It will, you know, we're trying to feed him beers Will you know, just relax everything we find just nothing works. Really, let's just go straight back. It was let's try something closer to ground level. That's right.Greg Marine  Now, that's the thing. There's nothing wrong with a fear of heights. Obviously, they've got it. You're not gonna fall out or anything. But I mean, it's a real thing. And I used to have a fear of like enclosed spaces. I used to be claustrophobic, you know, elevators bothered me, and everything. And I had to face my fears a few times, and that there were times when I'd be at the grocery store. Somebody would be on one end of the island, somebody would be on the other and then I'd be in the middle. And I would panic and want to climb over the over the shelves. Oh,TJ Pataria  wow. It's not like that anymore. No, no, you don't feel that way anymore.Greg Marine  No, I faced some other fears in my life and realized I can overcome that one because overcame the other fears that I've had. You know, I've been in places that just scared me to death. And I'm like, Okay, now I can handle elevators. That's cool, though. So yeah, it's, it's, it's, it's something that if you don't get over it, that's fine. There's nothing wrong with it at all.TJ Pataria  I'm a little bit better now. Well, I want to portray that a little bit better. Then Then I was before, and I like to feel that I have, but I guess I'll only know when I get to go back out into the world and try activities that can require me to be at height. Yeah. And as opposed to sitting at my desk talking about being a lot easier to do.Greg Marine  Exactly. And that's the thing this year, the pandemic has has been one of those things where you can, it gives you a kind of a chance to reset and face those fears. I mean, at first, the world was afraid of the virus, and it's still there, and we got vaccines and all that now, but the problems not over yet. So it's it's like, Okay, we got we still have some time to evaluate these kinds of things and, and figure this stuff out. And for me, I'm still continuing to face other fears, like, you know, talking to folks like said, I'm by nature, I'm an introvert. So trying to talk to new folks constantly is has been one of those fears that I've had, and I'm trying to overcome those this year, and hence the podcast. And so that's the nice thing about this pandemic is the positive is that we can face these kinds of things and get through it. You have to get together.TJ Pataria  Yeah, yeah, I agree. wholeheartedly. And like I said before, like I'm glad, like you feel comfortable. Well, I hope you feel more comfortable talking to people, strangers. Yes. I mean, you can talk to someone like on Twitter or you know, by email, but how much do you really know someone to actually get to write back and forth with them, like somehow, whether it's a phone or on a video conference or wherever?Greg Marine  Exactly. And that's, that's one of the things I've loved about doing this is, you know, back when I was a kid, you know, we dreamed about having video conferencing and stuff like that and it just wasn't a reality. Now, here, we are 2020 and this is the reality. You're in Scotland. I'm in Indiana in the United States. We're talking real talking. Yeah.TJ Pataria  And I said, I said that a few weeks ago, someone has a you know, if you, you said to me when I was even in middle school that and you know, I can live in one country, I can video calls somebody in another country, because I mean, video calls have been around for how many years now? and Apple had FaceTime since we're gonna see 1112 Yeah, someone? Yeah. And, you know, so like, I was in middle school and 9880. Okay, so like, if you had told me that 1314 years later, you could, you know, call someone across the world and see each other face to face like I really cannot get my face.Greg Marine  Yeah, yeah. And most of the listeners for this podcast will be listening to it via audio. But for those who are doing that, we're actually talking face to face via video cam. SoTJ Pataria  I thought this was going, like as a video,Greg Marine  well, it will be on YouTube. But most of my listeners are on podcast like Google and stuff like that. My mom will actually be watching this on YouTube. That's her preference. So she will be seeing us. Hi, Mom. Yes. Hi, mom. So um, but yeah, that's, that's, that's the cool part about this. And, you know, I, I enjoy doing it. You know, look forward to continuing this in 2021.TJ Pataria  That's cool and long may be successful.Greg Marine  Yes, thank you. Do you plan to do other podcasts? One of the things I want to do as a Disney based one, since that's one of my passions is Walt Disney World and Walt Disney himself. And so I got a couple friends that, that we're probably going to be doing a Disney podcast next year.TJ Pataria  What can I what what is it that draws you into Disney? What's your favorite thing about Disney?Greg Marine  I think the biggest thing is that I don't feel like an adult there I go in and I feel like childhood memories just flood into my brain. And I can relax a lot of the trips I take there, I prepay everything, so I don't have to worry about money even while I'm there. I'm sure it hurts expensive. And I think about it before the trip. But once I'm there, that's out of my mind. Terribly fearful. And they they have this. They call it Disney magic. There's just something about the place that's different than any other theme park. Things happen there that don't happen anywhere else. All of the cast members are the people who work there. They're very friendly, and they answer all the questions you can ask them anything. If you have any problems, they'll take care of it. So it's just one of those places that's that embodies, you know, the spirit of relaxing. So speaking, Walt Disney himself is somebody I look up to his example. I don't know what he was like personally behind the scenes, but on the open a lot of his philosophies are things that I want to apply to my own life.TJ Pataria  Not fairplay. It's nice to have someone like that, that you can can look up to for ideas and philosophically where you said, and it makes, you know, walking down any new path that a little bit easier. Because you right, you have sort of a blueprint. And as a blueprint, yeah, kind of a blueprint to do things. And when you're down, you know, you go back and you're reading. Okay, so I can't do this. But how did he do this? Oh, he did it slightly differently. Maybe I'll try it that way. And that may work.Greg Marine  Exactly. Yep. SoTJ Pataria  Disney for me is an odd one. Because I know I've been to Disneyland in California. And I only know that because I've seen it in pictures. But I don't actually remember being there. That makes sense. Yeah, I think I must have been around, or three, four or five. And I went by just I have no memories of it whatsoever.Greg Marine  Yeah, and I've never been to Disneyland itself. I want to get out there and experience that as well. But yeah, that's the thing when you're when you're that young pictures are the only thing you have and yet you may not have the memory appear until you've to go back it may trigger once you go back but but and that's what it has been for me like when I go to Disney World. That's where I went when I was a child was in Florida. And I walk in there and all sudden that memory that I had from when I was three or four floods into my brain. That's cool. So let's let's do this. It really is cool. InTJ Pataria  fact, that's actually really cool to you.Greg Marine  Yeah, so that's, it helps me and then now my share that with the kids. My son remembers his first trip to Disney World. And so every time he gets to go back, he'll say Hey, Dad, do you remember this? Do you remember that? It's a lot of fun.TJ Pataria  That's awesome. How old is he when he when he first whenGreg Marine  he was six? So yeah, so he he remembers it really well. You give details that I that? I wouldn't think that a six year old would remember.TJ Pataria  You know what's funny, though, is in my family like we used to go to Reno I remember going to Reno a lot like I actually have memories From Reno, from being around the same age, I just have, I don't know if it's maybe I just didn't enjoy it. Maybe I wasn't well, but I do remember going to things in Reno, and you know, especially going to see the circus and stuff like that.Greg Marine  Oh, yeah.TJ Pataria  So not totally devoid of memories from that kind of age. But yeah, it's just it's the Disneyland one that always kind of, I just can't figure out why I don't know or why I can't remember it.Greg Marine  Yeah, it's interesting. You mentioned a circus. That was one of the childhood members. I remember. We had Ringling Brothers and Barnum, Barnum,TJ Pataria  Barnum and Bailey,Greg Marine  they would come quite often, I think they're, I don't think they operate anymore. But they, they would come here every year, and so my parents would bring us was Market Square arena at the time. And that place doesn't even exist anymore. Well, but um, Leah, those are some of the fondest memories I have of childhood as well as the circus. grayling brothers, I'mTJ Pataria  pretty sure I seen when I was in either middle or just entered High School. Yeah. And I think I won tickets through a raffle at school. Oh, that's pretty cool to go and watch. And yeah, even that circus in general, I don't know what they really operate anywhere anymore.Greg Marine  Now, they probably aren't right now, especially this year, because of the pandemic. There's data you can't do. Now, that's the thing. And I really feel for the for the folks who do the entertainment industry, because there's no longer movie theaters. Those have all shut down around here anyway. You know, sports, there's hardly anyone in the stands because of those same restrictions. And it's just, I can't imagine trying to perform and not have an audience.TJ Pataria  Yeah, it's even watching sport like from home. It's been really weird. And so I don't know if you follow soccer, football or soccer.Greg Marine  The American football I do when not, not sorry. Not, not international football.TJ Pataria  Nine international football. Yeah. Not the one you play with your feet.Greg Marine  Right. And the actual football.TJ Pataria  Yeah, seems to be fairly, I'll often have conversations, people are both football. And sometimes it can be misleading because I can mean one or the other. They can be they're both about it. Because that's just the way I grew up. Right. And but sometimes I forget, like I'm talking to you. And then I'm like, I better differentiate, you know, which one, sometimes with football. And I'm like mentioned teams, like the Seahawks and patriots, some people here get confused, because they're like, What do you mean? And same, like vice versa, like I'm talking to my family from North America, sometimes they confused. But the thing was, so like the English Premier League, one of the biggest leagues in the world rates, followed by millions all over the world. And so when they restarted the league had no fans obviously. And, and it was just really strange. And so what they started doing after a few weeks was they started using fake crowd noise,Greg Marine  right?TJ Pataria  Yes, in the broadcast, so you could watch it on one channel without the fake noise. Or you could watch it on the channel with the fake noise. And I couldn't watch it with the fake noise because it just, you know, the cheers were delayed, the boos were delete, and, and you could it just felt really fake. And whereas I kind of got accustomed to the no fans, because you can hear everything, you know, like them arguing, you know, what they're arguing about? why they're upset with their teammates, why they're upset with the opposition, what the coaches are saying. And so I find that really cool, but I'm actually glad because recently they've started letting I think it's around 1000 or 2000 fans back into the stadiums in England anyway is not in Scotland. And so there's a bit more of an atmosphere to the games, which had certainly been lacking during the year now, which I think most most people are happy about. But it looks like the UK will probably have to put that by once again for a few weeks. It seemed right. Well, this mutated stream of Coronavirus lingering around.Greg Marine  Yeah, I heard about that. And the fake noise did bother me at first to when I've watched the the opening game of the NFL this year, they had the fake crowd noise and it just didn't make any sense. I mean, the crowds were cheering for every play. I was like there's no crowds, and that play wasn't worth cheering about. So it was very distracting and I just couldn't watch it. And so it's much better without the the fake crowd noises now but but yeah, that's an I'm back to this. The second that new strand strain over in the UK. You know, I really that's that is devastating news and hopefully, hopefully they can squash that and hopefully it doesn't mutate other places as well.TJ Pataria  Then with the vaccine rollout, hopefully things will get there. And it's like the cold right there. There are many variations of the cold. There are many different treatments for it many variations of cancer, there are various different treatments for it. It's just to tame things. More than anything, right? Right. And I think as long as people managed to stay safe in, in the short term, and it'll be bad for the long term,Greg Marine  and stay patient, that's the thing with any of this kind of stuff we have to that's the other 2020 lesson this year is patience. You know, justTJ Pataria  patience itGreg Marine  take time, let it let things happen. Don't try to rush, anything, just be patient, and get through this.TJ Pataria  Like I said before, is everything got messed up? I feel like I've missed like, the second half of the year, because of boot camp. So for me, I guess I've kind of been patient but I like unwittingly. Right? And unknowingly. And but yeah, it's Yeah, it's, it's, it's the thing is like it is what it is at this. I know, there's a lot of people up in arms with things like for various different reasons. But it's it's a case of it as well as you know, make the best of the bad situation, which you would probably want to do in any situation, any of these right, you make the best of any situation that or any hand that you're dealt,Greg Marine  right. Absolutely. All right. Well, thank you, TJ for your time today. I appreciate this conversation and, and best of luck to you as you continue to explore technology and apply for those jobs for for software development.TJ Pataria  Thank you, Greg. I've had a blast. It's actually been really fun. It's my first hour, we've been taking on a stumbling thing again, this is my first time being on a podcast. And actually I thought was gonna be a lot more nervous than I was. Because like I said before the job interviews and stuff on zoom, I was sweating buckets, but I'm glad man, you made me feel really at ease. So appreciate that.Unknown Speaker  Thank you. Yeah, it'sGreg Marine  been a great conversation, and I look forward to many more in the future.TJ Pataria  I hope to be on your Disney podcast one day.Greg Marine  Oh, yes, absolutely. Thank you for listening. This has been talking tech
54 minutes | Dec 7, 2020
Ep 8 - Talking with Matt Netkow
Matt Netkowhttps://twitter.com/dotNetkowIonichttps://ionicframework.comCapacitorhttps://capacitorjs.comStencilhttps://stenciljs.comGreg Marine  As a software developer, I find one of the most important aspects of my industry, in terms of vendor support is Developer Relations. This week I talked with Matt net CO, the head of Developer Relations at Ionic.If you would like to learn more about building a great mobile app with ionic, my good friend, Mike Callahan has introductory courses available right now. Select either Angular or react and start building your app today, you will find these great courses using the following links.Developing Mobile Applications with Ionic and Angular - Idea to App Store:https://gumroad.com/l/FyZHiDeveloping Mobile Applications with Ionic and React - Idea to App Storehttps://gumroad.com/l/KJvnUMatt Netkow  Yeah. Hey, Greg. Well, first, thanks for having me on. I'm really excited to chat with you today. Yeah, so I am Matt natco. I am head of Developer Relations at ionic. And thrilled to be talking with you today. So we ionic for those that don't know, in the web development, you know, ecosystem and the sphere, we create tools and products that basically help web developers just take their skills to the next level, and specifically reuse their, you know, HTML, CSS JavaScript skills to build web apps that can be deployed to mobile desktop, and of course, the web and beyond. So yeah, great stuff.Greg Marine  Very much. Looking forward to hearing more about that. And also you recently a new father. Haha,Matt Netkow  yep, that's why I've got my diet coke here. Um, excuse me. Now I need a bunch of caffeine to keep going here. It's been such a blast. My little buddy is seven weeks old, as of a couple days ago. So still in the beginning? Yeah. Thank you. Thank you. I am back at work down here in my lovely basement office setup. Yes. Mm hmm. I know it's a bit of a mess. Now. I should have cleaned up. That's not good. No,Greg Marine  I cleaned up just before we started this.Matt Netkow  That's the the zoom way these days are the pandemic right? That's right. Um, but yeah, newborn at home, during a pandemic, and you know, everyone's got their unique challenges, but let's just say, yeah, it's been, it's been particularly tough, but, you know, rewarding and fun still, you know, I've got a lot to learn about being a dad, for sure.Greg Marine  Well, be sure to follow all of my dad jokes on Twitter, those will come in very handy.Matt Netkow  You know, I gotta say, I really enjoy those and seeing them leading up to becoming a father was was something I have. I'm excited to build out my dad joke game myself. I like to think I've been trying for years, but now it's the real deal.Greg Marine  Yeah, I've had a great, great teacher from my dad, and glad to pass that along to folks like you. And so before you started ionic, where did you come from? What's your background? What brought you to, to being Dell Developer Relations at ionic? Sure.Matt Netkow  Yeah, I've had a great and varied career so far. So let's see, it's been about 1010 1213 years or so that I've been a software developer. And I actually started and came from more of a consulting world. So I had a couple roles in that realm. The first role I was at was as part of a SaaS company building. technology that basically helps sales and marketing folks find their content better. So this goes back a number of years, it's that's pretty table stakes, and a lot of things like Salesforce and Microsoft products, and you know, all that kind of stuff. But at the time, they were they were pretty innovative. And what I was, I was part of their consulting org. And this was 99% project manager. So you know, walking enterprise clients through setting up the software for their particular needs, and loading up their content into the site and all these other things. And what was kind of cool, though, is I was one of just a handful of developers on the team that was responsible for integrations, and really, a jack of all trades type work. So if we had, you know, maybe some automations to create, to help tie systems together, we would do that. So a lot of like scripting, working with third party API's to bring in data to our main products, all sorts of work so that that was something that you know, I really cut my teeth having to work fast, pivot fast. And learn fast. And I really love that the variety was there, I wasn't working on any particular software product at the time, it was kind of just a mix and match of things. And additionally, what was really cool compared to more of a traditional software developer engineer role is I was exposed to the business side of things. So some sales and marketing, but even just from the sense of working with clients directly, so building up people skills, a little bit of I might talk through a technical white paper on a call, like we're having now. I remember when that was incredibly scary to me, this Junior kid out of out of school, you know, talking through to IT professionals about single sign on something or,Greg Marine  you know, whatever I can, I can imagine. Yep.Matt Netkow  Oh, it's so scary when you start out, right?Greg Marine  Indeed it is.Matt Netkow  And now that's like, full time job is being out in public learning, and public's doing a lot of speaking. SoGreg Marine  it's definitely been a journey. So yeah, it's good to get those soft skills to be able to do that. Let's build those over those years. Yeah,Matt Netkow  yeah, I mean, it does. It didn't take years, for sure. I've definitely am more of an outgoing person, for sure. But regardless of that, personality, there's you there's a lot behind, you know, of course, building those those skills up and really being comfortable, because a lot of times, it's still nerve wracking to speak to others be interviewed on a podcast, whatever, you know, whatever. Yeah. And so that was really, really great, had a good exposure to that I liked working directly on solving problems and seeing that impact. Oftentimes, like on the phone, or again, over over email, we didn't have this kind of zoom setup. So that would have been interesting to really celebrate wins a little bit more with clients. Right? But absolutely, yeah. And then I moved over to a company called slalom, who does, I absolutely love them to this day, and spent a couple years there. And that was a little bit more dedicated engineering roles where they take on, you know, major, major projects and augment teams, engineering, resources and teams basically. So think about, really where that comes from and why they've been successful is, you know, every company is kind of being forced into becoming a software company, right as, regardless of the enter in industry, you have to compete with software. And so, you know, I worked with clients like Starbucks, who else I'm trying to think, well, some other little, little not as well known brands and things like that, but all kinds of customers in different verticals like manufacturing retail, that, you know, realize they're really just starting to build up their developer teams, so that that company was kind of neat, I would actually, before I would be more on the phone, but this, I would actually go on site and sit with other developers, with the development team, you know, for weeks, months, even years at a time for some of the projects. And so that was really fun. Got to, you know, kind of grow more into like a team lead and architect role, kind of guiding them. Because oftentimes, you'd have more, as teams are not, you know, you're juggernauts like Facebook or Google that you might think of finding talents hard, right? Because they're right there, they might be an insurance company out of some small town or, you know, some other spot and finding and attracting talent is hard in tech anyway. But especially so when you don't have that recognizability. So we kind of learned a lot of talent to those to those teams and things like that. And then I was, you know, kind of on the side, I've always loved tinkering with different with with software, right? Like, it's my software is my full time job and being a developer, but I've always enjoyed it as a hobby as well. So tinkering with different things, exploring different apps and API's building stuff on the side. And even over time, writing about it, right, so putting out blogs. I actually, believe it or not, I found in some of the slalom roles that I was liking, documentation more and more, which is we know software developers and Doc's are not always, you know, it's a necessary evil but not exactly.Greg Marine  Right. Exactly. Yeah.Matt Netkow  Have you done a lot of documentation work yourself, Greg in here.Greg Marine  Do not enjoy it. Yes, I have. But I do not enjoy that part. I like the building.Matt Netkow  Mm hmm. No, I understand. I do. But I found some what I was finding with some success with that is I would, you know, being deployed to these other teams and companies. We didn't really have any issues integrating or being like accepted, quote, unquote, by those teams, but at the end of the day, you will you were still kind of an outsider, right? You kind of had to even like as at a company level or individual level, there's everyone had different perceptions of why you were brought in, what your motivations are. You know, sometimes if you think about it, if you're a developer on the team, and you have other companies devs brought in, like, how does that reflect on you, you know, you could have some feelings there. And it's usually wasn't like a problem of their talent or skill or something, it literally was always, like, they just need more help, and more guidance on things. Right. So that's a side note. But where I was going with that, is they, I actually found that building up good writing skills, and the communication skills that go with that was crucial to some of my success there for being getting ideas heard, bought into being able to craft and summarize like, maybe it maybe it's an architectural decision, like let's go with so and so for an authentication provider, or even just some of the process, you know, how do we do code reviews, pull requests, things like that, you know, it's, if you try to do it one on one, like we're talking now, that works, maybe I convince you, Greg, but what about the whole team, right? And so stealing that, it's not always feasible to have these convos? Or have to go through the whole spiel over again. And then to management, right, it becomes exhausting when you're trying to drive change, especially like we were? If so, that kind of led me to love writing more and more. And I had on the side, over the years been working with Cordova and the web, stack JavaScript, etc, to build hybrid applications. Those are hybrid mobile, I should say. So iOS and Android apps. And that ultimately led me to ionic.Greg Marine  Very cool.Matt Netkow  Yeah. And kind of what's neat about that kind of technology spaces is I actually started more in the dotnet. realm. So building more, again, automations ASP. NET MVC websites that were more back end heavy and database driven, right. But going back a few years, I realized that there was this language called JavaScript that was really taking off. You may have heard of it. Yeah. Because I was going, you know, back in, I don't know, 2010 2012. That's a long time ago now. But not really. But yeah, it feels like it. You know, I love going to conferences and talking to other devs. And it was so much JavaScript content and things online with it. Twitter was starting up and, you know, getting more of folks in developers on that. And I kept seeing that and thought, like, wow, I really, I'm more of a back end person, but I should not ignore the web, you know, I should really build up those skills. So what ultimately led me did more and more JavaScript things and at work, trying to build more interactivity into my projects, and really started enjoying that, especially from if you think about it, the I love backends, and API design and things like that. But it's not as snazzy or sexy as building out a UI that someone might interact with, or complete a job or get some tasks done. So that can be really fulfilling to see that work visually. out there in the world. Right.Unknown Speaker  Exactly.Matt Netkow  Mm hmm. And so what I ended up getting into was I found this project called Cordova or PhoneGap, basically synonymous, that allowed you to use web tech and build mobile apps from them. And so speaking from that, kind of hobby mindset and kind of side project approach. And working alone, right, I didn't want to, I wanted to, I remember, I just gotten my first Android phone. And what blew my mind was the ability that you could potentially build an app for it, like write software for the phone. That was, you know, because up till that point, so much, so many of us had just built websites, etc, for desktop computers, right or lab era, but to actually, this potential to have something that you're holding and phones over there that you're holding in your hand and carrying it throughout the physical world was just I think, I don't know, it still blows my mind. If you think about it, you know, just, that's only been a little over 10 years that we've had the iPhone and everything that came from that probably Yeah, so just just incredible.Greg Marine  And be able to To use a technology like web technologies, and then like you mentioned Cordova slash PhoneGap, gave you the ability to write once and run it on either iOS or Android. Exactly.Matt Netkow  Yep. Yep. And the Cordova project basically is, provides that kind of native runtime layer provides the scaffolding for creating what those native projects look like. And the compelling part of that to me was, well, oh, gosh, I want to build mobile apps. I have an Android phone, and you know, great Android, I can build for Android. But I want to go on iOS to you know, I want to be on both and not have to learn Objective C, or swift on iOS, or Java and kotlin, whatever it is now, for Android, right? There's a whole, just so much to them. Even Of course, it's grown and grown and grown, like any platform, you know, the type of things you have to learn for them. Right. And so that was really compelling to me. So I built a number of apps, some of them did, all right, and, and really loved that technique. And along the way, came this company called ionic, based in who I had kind of just found, I think, through reading about Cordova, and just that hybrid approach, right, that was what they were about to, and I kind of kept them in my back pocket. I used remember not use, I read a bunch of their blogs and their thought leadership and always thought they were really cool. You know, they were doing really slick stuff. Unfortunately, I never had the bandwidth or just didn't make the time to try ionic was always in my as I told him when I was interviewing, um, I was always just around the corner from rewriting my app, and ionic and stuff. And it's like, oh, gosh, I hope they believe me and, and hire me. So here we are today. So I guess it worked. But what was kind of the turning point there is I've just really enjoyed this kind of app stack and writing, speaking, I've done a little bit of speaking at different conferences. And they had a position open up a couple years ago for a technical product evangelist. And it really, I remember I because I turned to my wife. And I was like, I think I found my dream job. Because they combined development, software development skills, with all these other skills that I've slowly been building up over the years, writing public speaking, to some extent, not as much, but interacting with communities and teaching other developers. And that was exactly what they were looking for. They had been they've been starting to, they have built up a over many years, a successful open source product there Ionic framework, which is a library and framework of over 100 Mobile components that help you build these these apps that are, you know, specially styled for Android and iOS. So really great for web devs. And something that you didn't have back when I was building apps. I think I used jQuery Mobile and some other other things. But they you know, the apps never really looked great. I wish I had a little picture for you. But you'll have to take my word on my design skills not being so hot. SoGreg Marine  well as part of your company's history. You probably already aware jQuery was kind of something they started using what was drifta ko, and then they came up with Ionic framework. And that has now snowballed. It may have started out slow in the beginning, but now it has snowballed into a framework that can be used using react Angular view was your latest. And I'm sure there's gonna be more down the road. But so you know, they may have started with jQuery, but now they're using all the top three. And using components, like you said, over 100 components that are all styled for either Android or iOS using the tiller material designer, the iOS stuff, look and feel. And so now that snowball is, is becoming its own thing. And you guys are doing some great stuff, including capacitor if you should not really replace Cordova it's it's well I guess, in a way you have now but now capacitor is something that can be used to build to compile to use these on both iOS and Android, as native. Basically, web native, I think is the newest term that Max has coined.Matt Netkow  Oh, you caught that? Yep. I'm starting to write some of the messaging for that. So you're way ahead of the game. I like it. I'm gonna reach out to you, Greg, on ideas for that. No, no. Um, yeah, that's a great. That's a great summary. Absolutely. That's what I found so compelling about joining them. And this space is there so much. It's a friend Being a alternative approach to traditional native mobile development. Now using those native platforms, why should say as a, as a result of that, there's so many tools, techniques, education, so many different things that need to be done. So I, myself and the rest of team have a full plate constantly,Greg Marine  constantly, Jason, I can imagine. So.Matt Netkow  And you've probably seen, we've had a number of different products come and go over the years, and a lot of different innovations come out of it. And that's what makes it so exciting. Because what they what they maximize Ben, the founders, you know, found even many years back as you just had these, the web in terms of accessibility, the platform that is ubiquitous on mobile, desktop, tablets, whatever. The web has been around for multiple decades, and, you know, shows no sign of slowing down. Right. Right. Um, I mean, honestly, most I realized like, especially with streaming services, or even video games, all kinds of content, most of the time we're consuming and in a web browser, if you really think about it, you know, maybe there's some native apps that are to the whatever platform you have, but at the end of the day, it's such a great proven delivery mechanism for content, productivity and work. You know, really, the sky is the limit there. So we're, we like to say we bet on the web, because of all those things. I love that I love that phrase, I think it encompasses so much of what we do. Absolutely. It's, I never thought that I would be on this kind of switching stacks from back end front end. But it's just so much fun to be involved with that. And now, kind of what I'm doing today is just an evolved role. running our developer relations program. So just building up lots of content, partnerships, I do a lot of if anyone knows me at all, it's probably because of our The, the usually monthly webinars we run, teaching and promoting some of our products, and teaching different web development concepts. And it's just been absolutely rewarding type of role that I really enjoy and recommend for sure.Greg Marine  Well, Andrew, a very people person, like you're very approachable, they're easy to talk to. So hosting these, these webinars makes perfect sense for you and a few of the others that I've gotten to meet over the course last few years. And so kudos, you're doing a great job there. And I think you're on to the people that wrote a series of posts on the new view, you wrote a tutorial that's available on the ionic website, I'm not going to ask you, which is your preference of you react or Angular? Because in a way, that it's it's everybody's choice, you know, whatever stack you want to use. But now that you're in these three major things, what what do you find the biggest benefit to having that much coverage?Matt Netkow  Uh huh. Now? Well, it's, you know, we. So the quick background, there's the Ionic framework was originally built on Angular one, angular j. s, and then moved on to Angular two and different versions of Angular. And we love Angular, it's, it's going stronger than ever great ecosystem and community and Google's backing cannot be, you know, understated, is incredible. But what we're seeing is, the JavaScript and web ecosystem moves fast. There's new incumbents all the time, I think, you know, and I'm a fan of this things have slowed down a little bit. It feels like in the web development world in terms of churn and new projects taking over. So from a developer anxiety and my personal anxiety trying to keep up with learning, you know, that I think I'm, I'm fine with that. Honestly, I think it's great for innovation to have new tools and things. But so many of us, you know, we work regular jobs, and you can only have a life, and you can only do so much at a time. So I'm fine with that. But what we realized is, particularly react and view are growing. And react is really dominating today in terms of, you know, usage and developer love and whatnot. And, but to be able to support those developer communities, we just feasibly wouldn't be able to rewrite the framework from scratch to target those, right? It's just so many reasons. I mean, what chief among them is, we're a small company about while we've grown a lot lately, probably 5060 people and up. And even but even if we had a Google size organization, keeping up with all these frameworks would be really challenging. You know, like doing it right. You know, Putting out, we really pride ourselves on putting out high quality work, and giving the time and space and letting it breathe, you know, kind of given that time for that. So, long story short there, we ended up rebuilding the framework on using Web Component technology. So the base core of Ionic framework is built with web components. And the gist of that is we are then able to provide thin wrappers, right libraries on top of those, to provide syntactical sugar for those three frameworks. And what's great is we get to support and you know, from a community and business perspective, growth, and attract more developers, and devs, using us get the familiar tooling and syntax and all that stuff that they're used to, it's not some custom ionics way of doing react or view or whatever. It's just, it's just react, it's just view I love, I love being able to say that. Oftentimes, we've all used proprietary tools, especially in software is a consumer or a developer. And I've had frustrations with them being going out of under life support or just having to learn that specific skill set that you might not take to other jobs, or like part of your career, which can be risky, right for when time is limited. And what's great about what we do is in being focused on web development is it's all what I'm getting around to is it's all just modern web techniques. So you kind of asked like, what my favorite is, and I'm not, or you know, it is a contentious thing we get asked a lot about which of the three I should go with. And really, there's no clear cut answer there. It really depends on your background, and where you're at in your career and, and what your skill set is what I realized. So I, I built, I built our first app tutorial kind of guide that you go through, if you start in our documentation that walks you through, kind of like a lightweight tour of our products and all the open source, things we have. And having built it. Now, the same tutorial three different times for Angular, then react and view. Honestly, it, I got faster and faster at building them, which I was definitely a fan of from a workload perspective, but quality and just you know, being able to offer a great experience that there wasn't a hit there, there wasn't a sacrifice, becausewhat I'm finding, especially for I've been really I had I had done a lot of Angular development professionally at slalom, so I have a great larger background in that, and a much newer to react in view. But what I'm loving about both of those two is just a focus on modern JavaScript development techniques. So meaning, while they do have their own UI and library type of concepts and their opinion away opinionated way of building things, there's there's a lot of overlap, especially between react and view these days, would you would you agree, Greg, I know you're a react yourself, right? IsGreg Marine  that true or started out Angular moved to react last couple of years. And then now that view is supported by Anke, by ionic, I'm starting to delve into it. And I'm realizing views actually sort of like the, like the lovechild. Between Angular and react, there's a lot of similarities from the two that are baked into view that that actually, I love, I'm absolutely having a great time with the view experience. I haven't done anything that's out in the open wild for work or for personal yet, but I've just been playing around with it when I've had time. And I absolutely love your guys's support of them. Yeah, but like you were saying, you know, the tooling and everything. One of the decisions that was made by you guys a few years ago, was to Yeah, you've got a c li, you've got your own command line interface. But it's a wrapper sort of on top of the tooling available for Angular react and view so that the teams that are using it can actually use the angular react and view tooling without really learning anything. So that's one of the beautiful things about the way ionic has been evolved over the years is now you could take your ionic skills to any company or any client that's using any of those three major frameworks and and be able to use them without losing any time. Exactly.Matt Netkow  I admittedly it was right before my time at ionic I came at kind of an a spoiled sense because they were making all these great architectural decisions like web components, or in that case, embracing whatever frameworks tooling. So I kind of missed some of the more challenging days. It sounds like from when I talked to the have older versions of ionic. But yes, I it's my understanding that in the past, we had custom build scripts and tooling that we created to to augment some of the angular tools make them. I don't wanna say better, but just more robust for mobile development. That was our kind of main target use case. And exactly.Greg Marine  I was using it back then. So, yeah, yes, I know exactly I'm talking about.Matt Netkow  And what, what we found though, is, the more especially in the open source world, the more you have to well, the more ideas to, you know, thought, leadership, whatever, the more great stuff you put out into the world, the more folks you attract, but the potential drawback there is, that's more to support from the software,Greg Marine  exams,Matt Netkow  community issues, triage, whatever. And again, when we're, when you're a small team, it's very easy to get overwhelmed. Even even large teams, I mean, it's just it's really, I've tried to say this gently before, to folks where it's just like, gotta have some patience. Sometimes, because, you know, it's, it's a potentially a million developers to one, you know, at that scale. Regardless, if you're like, us, or Microsoft or something. And, you know, we we're not robots. So, you know, especially with development work is hard. So it takes time to get really quality answers and figure out issues. So long story short, I think the those custom tools and scripts were hard to maintain, as Angular would change, things would break, for example, they'd have to like patch things or make it work with new versions. And with this new kind of mantra, where we're use under, we might wrap them in some special commands and put some sugar on top and do some mobile specific things. But yeah, at the end of the day, it's it's just using their CLS under the hood. So with with full, you can see the output of what's going on as well. So there's really full transparency. So like when I was learning react and Vue, you might I might not necessarily know, what create rat react app or web pack is really are what it's doing. But at least it gives you a starting point to to troubleshoot, sure. And find answers in a in a supported way. Because it's not the ionic web pack something something, it's, it's just the official one. And we're leveraging that. And that also means when you're encounter challenges, when you're isolating and debugging issues, it's really easy to quickly divert like, well, is this an Ionic framework type of issue is your Cordova capacitor one, or this tooling? Right? And modern web development has gotten very complicated. So that is very important these days, because honestly, I don't know if you agree there, Greg, but half the battle seems to figuring out issues is like, Okay, what are who is causing the issue? Is it me, the developer, or is it my tooling? The browser, my mobile device, like iOS 13, versus 14, or something like all these different layers? And yeah, it makes for? There's no good answers there. Because it's still challenging today, and probably will be for ever,Greg Marine  honestly, honestly. Yeah, look, the markets kind of fragmented when it comes to the amount of devices that are out there. And of course, the versions, like whatever version of Angular or react or view you're using at the time when you first start a project, and then have an upgrade along the way. Of course, some of that's getting easier to upgrade. But of course, there's going to be new challenges tomorrow. So yesterday's challenges, or today's solutions, and so on. SoMatt Netkow  that's true. Yeah.Yeah.Greg Marine  So yeah, I thought that's one of the things I think that goes along with that as capacitor was created to solve a problem a little while ago. And then now, in 2021, Cordova support ended. capacitors now sort of becoming the go to for hybrid, or web native development. So you know, tell me a little bit more about what capacitor does for the developer. Sure, sure.Matt Netkow  Yeah. So as you kind of mentioned, it's a, you know, something that, you know, over time, so we had built up a really great UI toolkit with Ionic framework. We had our own. That's a whole nother topic. We have a web component compiler and builder called stencil that helps us build that framework. So again, lots of lots of tooling on To the hood, or more open source work there, we have a mobile ci CD cloud service called app flow that helps you automate the process of going from idea to the app stores and, you know, submitting builds and native builds and things like that. And we were using Cordova for many years, great project, love the team, we contributed back to it even to this day, and an open source fashion. And but what we were realizing is as a, as it was something that was we have some influence over, but not part of our, you know, kind of suite of offerings. There was challenges there, which is getting things moving features, fixes, stuff like that. And as well, as, you know, I think it was released initially in like, 2008 or so. So, you know, over a decade, it's it's definitely a, it's been around for a while. And, you know, there's, there's, of course, challenges from a legacy perspective of like, you know, taking on modern tooling, different, you know, of course, let's see, that'd be 12 years or so that's a huge, huge amount of time in terms of the software development world, right. Six months, it could be a lot of time, let alone 12 years. So Right, exactly. really reflecting on it was, you know, we, it was a hard choice. You know, do we continue to put all of our efforts into Cordova slash phone gap, or do we do our own thing, and ultimately, that's, you know, kind of spinning off into something new and different was what we went with. And it's been, actually, some of the, especially the last year or so, has been growing like crazy. It's been quite a ride, because the the adoption and excitement from the community is really palpable, in terms of just the the love out there. So if anyone's used it, we really appreciate that and appreciate all the feedback and whatnot. But it what it allows us to do is embrace more modern tooling. And, you know, essentially what that means is you, you take your ionic app, or really any, almost any web or single page application app, those are really great for that, and, you know, take that code and bundle it into a native app. So at the end of the day, for your end users, it's a native app that you can publish on the App Store. So it's, you know, discoverable there. And the bonus of being built with webtech is you also can build a progressive web app and run it like a web app or site. So naturally, there's difference between those platforms. Some of that is, you know, responsive design wise is handled for you with different breakpoints and the way our components style themselves automatically across those different form factors and platforms. But ultimately, what capacitor is meant to do is just provide that native layer and that container to publish on the different, you know, really take your skills and publish them on to iOS and Android.Greg Marine  And to give you a common API between all those two. So you can also use a camera API on a desktop, or mobile, and it's one API that you've talked to, from your app standpoint,Matt Netkow  definitely my favorite part because a lot of folks that are coming to like exploring this technique where we say, we make a lot of promises, right, we say, one code base and multiple platforms. And you know, I understand it's, it seems a little a little dicey, right? I'm offset if you don't, if you're kind of new to that technique. And while I'm certainly biased have being part of my job day in day out, it is the real deal, because the the web platform has evolved so much in terms of the features like Bluetooth notifications, the camera, you mentioned, all those hardware features we can access now, and have been able to, for many years now they've just keep advancing and the browser platform gets better over time. And as you said, for some of them, we have core API's or plugins, that ramp and give you that one API, that one interface into those different native functionality, or you can build your own, which is really cool. So one of the things I love to call out in some of my demos, or when we're talking to companies is is we can you know, the proof is in the pudding sort of thing I can show you doing a lot of open source work has been a lot of fun, especially coming from that more of my corporate background where none of my work will ever see the light of day, or it's just not even probably in production anymore. open sources is learning in public, it's, it's, it's, you know, the proof is right there you can for better or worse you can validate our claims or anyone's as to the validity and how easy it is to use and all that kind of stuff. It's it's All out there for you. So one of the things I love to do is pull up some code samples, like with the camera, and show like, Hey, we're not actually writing platform specific spaghetti code, which would be a nightmare. I think that's what a lot of folks think of is like, okay, yeah, they say, we can write for every platform, but is it like, you know, if iOS go to line for, you know, run this block, if Android if web etc. And while you certainly can do that, and occasionally you might have to, for variety of reasons, you know, really just your business logic needs to do different things, or there truly are differences that are Stark in the platform offerings. It's pretty rare. It's, it's fairly rare. So one of the things that I love that, really that look on, when I when I've been back in the old days before, fantastic, where I could be in person, seeing someone light up where they could run their, their, their ionic app on their device, you know, and just a few steps and see that interactivity like what that tutorial I talked about, is fairly powerful. And I think, fairly convincing, for sure. But that's capacitor in a nutshell. And, you know, it's something that we, we've seen, just take off this past year heading into 2021, we're going to be doing even more with it. We have capacitor three ruptor, version three now coming, hoping to start a beta soon, which we are, haven't really been talking about too much. But that is, you know, really just a lot of like performance optimizations, they're getting the bundle sizes of the code that you ultimately shipped to your users down. So that's kind of something that benefits all developers, improve tooling, we're always we've we've, in addition to being the web company, or based on that we do so much with tooling, and try to make that like a really great developer experience happen with these, you know, when you're building these types of apps, so there's always more we want to do with that. So last, last to come there.Greg Marine  And you'd mentioned a couple of other products that you that you guys have just kind of in passing. First one of those being stencil. Now stencil, you basically can build these web components. design systems even tell me more about stenzel. And how it can benefit potential clients.Matt Netkow  Yeah, and so that's a really, really neat stuff. So the idea behind it a they're called, I think, officially custom elements is the is the official name. I'm not a huge expert in this, but I think I can explain it well enough. But you know, the idea here with a web component is the web gives us buttons forms, all these UI controls out of the box, right, that are built into it. And, you know, at the end of the day, they're just HTML tags. They're just components that you use a cross platform and that sense of you know, all the browser's support them and whatnot. So I imagine someone at some point said, why the browser gets these, but why don't we, like other companies, other indie devs? Get them? Where we can, again, instead of having to rewrite them in every framework, like the React specific one, jQuery, you know, whatever. What if we could use them across different platforms and different browsers. And so that's the idea there, you're essentially able to publish your own UI components and element tags and just drop them into your project like you would a button, or a form or radio buttons, all that kind of stuff. And to your developer, as the end user, they don't need to know the details or see the implementation, they can just import and consume that component right on the page. So that's really the secret sauce to how we rebuild Ionic framework, as we've said, For the last time, because they're using this web component technology, and stencil specifically is theirs out of the box, the browser gives you custom elements slash web components, a way to build them. And as we've said, we're pretty fond of, you know, layering more tooling, making that developer experience, you know, we're very opinionated, hopefully in a good way. So what essentially what it does is just adds makes the process of building web components easier. If I had to say at a nutshell, this, the details of that I'm actually I'm actually as well versed to talk about it, but that's kind of how that how that works. And it's what we end up using to build Ionic framework, so What I love about us is we have this feedback loop, and dogfooding of our own products to build on our products. So, you know, some companies are kind of like siloed different, different offerings, but we really use day in and day out our own products to make everything better. So it's really quite incredible to see both from myself and like marketing slash dev REL to give that feedback and, and do that, but also our developers, in and out interacting. And, you know, making things kind of be more cohesive is always the goal.Greg Marine  Yeah, that's a that's quite important, especially for someone such as myself, a developer, or a company that's hiring developers to have those kind of tools, and then the fact that you're dogfooding it, if I were to come to you, for information on how to use it, you know, your company, you guys can easily talk about it, because you're using it yourself. And then another sort of a big thing that's happening right now is ci, CD, continuous integration, continuous delivery. Now you have app flow, that's evolved over over some time. But now it's quite a strong tool to allow the ability for teams and companies to build their apps and get them delivered to the app stores for Google Play, and the Apple App Store. Tell us a little bit more about that, and how that benefits companies besides what I just said,Matt Netkow  Sure, sure. So typically, you know, you build your ionic app, you'd create it for and deploy it to the app store's, you know, kind of manually to iOS and Android, the Play Store and App Store specifically. And there's a, you'd use the native IDs, development environments for those. And and Apple's tooling, Google's tooling for that to upload the binary into the your Play Store, your Google Store, right. And that works just fine. But at scale, if you're on a team, or a large, you know, really, of any size, a spot, but especially larger companies, you know, doing maintaining those builds, and especially the native binaries is really challenging. Because you have, you have different versioning, you have to account for, and what if you have, you know, Bob and Sally submitting different you know, what they think is their right, the right app to the app store's like you could imagine there'd be a disaster there if the right features or the wrong features, getting out. Maybe things not being coordinated well, between developers, QA, project managers, and whatnot. So the idea behind Apple is to kind of help scale that last mile delivery to the app stores. So and really meant for certainly useful for even even hobbyists or solo devs, like automating their workflows, because of course, time savings in any part of the development process have just monumental payoff, right. So that's definitely important. But we really see the impact with you know, teams, of a handful of people and up. Because what you get essentially as a centralized hub or dashboard, where you can coordinate your iOS and Android releases, and builds. And then we also have some cool things with different branches and channels, for example, where you can we hook right into your GitHub, get lab, get repositories, and build the code for you deploy it, and whatnot, and then unlocks a lot of different options like setting up different environments. So you know, a lot of teams will have development, staging, QA, production, all those things, and you can keep your mobile apps moving through those stages without kind of kind of fumbling through that or having mistakes come up from someone owning it manually, you know, you might have like, Bob is the person that submits to the App Store and has to manage the keys and certificates, which is like a security concern, or just the bills themselves, right. And one other kind of neat thing that that unlocks is we have something where it's the it's called the live updates feature where you can actually submit and deploy changes to your app without going through the app stores. And how that kind of works is we it's it's absolutely allowed by you know, we think of Apple is kind of the most strict when it comes to App refuse. Putting it lightly. And what's kind of neat about that is because we're our apps are built on web technology. You can ship web updates, web based updates to apps, because of just the way that the architecture and the way they're design. So that's your CSS, JavaScript, business logic and even images, you know, kind have that kind of content, what, what we're seeing teams do it. And the impact of that is substantial. Because if you think about it, we, my favorite example is I actually could really have used this feature back a few years ago, when I had a Cordova app and building some of these hybrid apps. I hadan app out there that used a third party provider to sign in and connect your account from them. And I was on vacation. And they changed. They changed one of the login URLs, they maybe the hash or some one of the properties was renamed, I think it was probably a mistake, or maybe, you know, they didn't version it right. And it broke my app, because I was pointed, you know, the hard coded to whatever URL and that whole author, excuse me, authentication flow. So I had to scramble, pull out the laptop, which, you know, when I was on vacation was not not the most fun thing, and submit a fix, and deploy it, especially to Apple. So Google Play, updates are a lot simpler, they're a lot more lacks in terms of deploying and releasing apps in terms of their guidelines and review process. But Apple is notorious for taking days or weeks to let your updates through. And this was just more of a personal project for me. I wasn't but not like my company app, being down, but I still got emails about it. I still I it was a paid app. So I was losing money, you know, and other other concerns there. Oh, I mean, not a big deal, because it was like a side project. But the point is, if I had had live updates, I could have shipped that change. Because really, it was just a simple parameter that I needed to change. That was also what really was irritating is, you know, sure the company changed something and probably shouldn't have done that. But that I mean, what real What better real world example. Yeah, there's humans involved, right, we all make mistakes, or like, maybe I missed, maybe I missed something I actually don't know. But it wouldn't have mattered because I could have fixed that bug, you know, within honestly, 1010 minutes or so. And then users get the update. And they're none the wiser. What happens is, when you pull up the app, there's a bunch of different options, but you can essentially download it in the background and then apply that new code, essentially, effectively patching the app with the new version, without going through that review process. And I love that because you know, if you're just really fixing a bug, maybe running an A B test, an experiment that you want to have beta users opt into, doesn't really need a multi day review. I mean, especially in these days, when we're trying to move fast, and company revenues on the line. And your velocity is it's just a no brainer.Greg Marine  So an app flow does all this for you. That's the power of app flow.Matt Netkow  It is Yeah. So I don't know, I just always love sharing that story. Because they we've all even if you're not like I'm not a DevOps person, I don't have that background. But and that's another reason to go with a platform like that is if you don't it's a it's an entire discipline, there's so much you can know, from that over, especially the past few years, the tools that have built up. So the other aspect is just really putting that responsibility on our shoulders, you know, to keep up the the tooling, the support for all that kind of cloud back end stuff. Let us do it and just focus on building your app, which is plenty of work for anyone that's been a software developer for for a day or so well know that that's you always have enough to work on, let alone deal with infrastructure. And these App Store releases, which are like, as I said, can be pretty hairy to deal with.Greg Marine  Absolutely. Well, Matt, I want to thank you so much for being on the show today. And thank you so much for your insight and, you know, highlighting all these wonderful tools from ionic, and I wish you the best of luck being a dad as well.Matt Netkow  Yeah, yeah. Thank you so much, Greg. had a blast. Cheers. Cheers.Greg Marine  Thank you for listening. This has been talking tech
55 minutes | Nov 23, 2020
Ep 7 - Talking with Jason Alba
Jason Albahttps://twitter.com/jasonalbaJibber Jobberhttps://www.jibberjobber.com/Pluralsight Courseshttps://pluralsight.com/profile/author/jason-albaGreg Marine  So you've landed your dream job, only to find out two months later, it wasn't such a dream after all. This week, I talked with Jason Alba, and he has some great advice to manage your career. Welcome to this week's episode of talking tech.If you wouldn't mind, start off, introduce yourself and tell my listeners, who you are and what you do.Jason Alba  Hey, so thanks for having me on. My name is Jason Alba. And I do a number of things. When people ask me what I do. I usually say I don't know. Or it depends on the mood. And then I'll tell him I either Do you know my jibber jabber, which is a CRM for job seekers, or that I make courses for Pluralsight or that I'm an entrepreneur, I, I have a lot, a lot of plates spinning that I work on. So that's me in a nutshell.Greg Marine  Very cool. And it's interesting, your analogy of the spinning plates. I've heard that quite a bit this year. It's a crazy year. So a lot of people are spinning new plates.Jason Alba  Yeah, oh my gosh, I mean, I'm talking to people who, you know, you go to a, you go to an A work at an office, right. So you commute you have, you have podcast time, on the way there you have unwind time on the way back, and then you go into whatever family environment you're in. And, and kids or if you have kids, you know, if you have a family and kids and they're, you know, they're they're at school, and they have homework, and then they have friends to hang out with. And now you know, since March or April, or may or whenever you started your quarantine, you're working at home, trying to figure out how to have a good connection and the right technology, right? Your kids are at home, and and they're tugging at you saying hey, I can't get on my zoom class, can you help me? Or you know, or they're, or you watch them on their zoom class. And they're like doing acrobats and not even paying attention? Exactly. They can't play with their friends, you know, the whole world has shifted from everybody being able to do what they're used to being able to do to oh my gosh, I need to play, you know, both sets of parents and teacher and babies. I mean, and I still have to have a career and a job. It's been just an amazing amount of stress and change for the average person.Greg Marine  Sure. And with that stress and change, they have to be very flexible. Because it's an evolutionary process. There's, it's constantly changing. We'reJason Alba  constantly changing. And then, you know, things that are weighing on people's minds are, I just lost my job, but nobody's hiring or, you know, 660 percent of my department just got let go. What does that mean, for me? Is the writing on the wall? And I'm going to be let go soon? Or am I going to be covering everybody else's work? And you know, it's, it's been a crazy year, it's been, and I mean, I've had a good year. But I totally recognize that. I mean, there's been some good stuff that's come out of this, like I've been able to see my family I haven't I have not seen my kids. Previously, the way that I have been able to this year like it, we've been able to slow down. But man, I just recognize that there's just so many people out there that are that are scared, and they're hurting. And they're in a position that they've never had to be in before. I mean, I remember when I first got laid off in 2006, which really started my whole, like, it gave me a 90 degree turn on my journey. It was it was lonely. It was scary. I felt like a failure, why me? There's just a lot of emotions that go through it. And the interesting thing is now it's not like one person that's going through that it's not even one community. It's like the whole world is going through this industries have been devastated. And 10s of thousands of people in single industries have been put out of work. That has a huge impact on everybody else. Right. So that's been weird, and really weird.Greg Marine  Yeah, exactly. And speaking of the 2006, where you've been in this position before, 14 years ago, tell tell tell me about what that process was to get back on your feet.Jason Alba  Um, it was long and painful. I can imagineGreg Marine  so. So IJason Alba  got I got let go from a company that you know, the industry was facility maintenance. They say you know, total facility services, but it really was was like a janitorial company that did some construction. And the reason why that's important is because you know, construction is like a 30 40% margin industry. janitorial is a 3%. Industry, right. And so when when when somebody gets laid off from a janitorial company, they're typically not getting out placement. Now placement back in the 80s. And 90s was, you know, it could be three 510 thousand dollar package. Now, it could go up for sure. Like, if you're hired for me, it wouldn't have been bigger than that. But, you know, when I got let go, it was the first time that I was in a job search that I didn't plan on, like I had changed jobs before. But it was always things that came to me and I would evaluate it and talk to my wife about it. And then we'd make a decision and move to another company. But this was the first time where it's like, you are going away. And good luck. You know, don't let the door hit you. And, and so I didn't know at all how to do a job search. I mean, this was 2006. I literally went and looked for newspapers to open the wanted ads. That's what I knew to do. And honestly, there's people I work with today and jibber jabber, you know, people in their 60s who get laid off after having worked at a company for 30 or 40 years, they've never even thought about looking for a job. And they go down and buy a newspaper to write, because that's how you did it back in the 1900s. And so I had no idea what I was doing. I did all the wrong things. I'm actually fairly introverted. I love people. I love talking with people. But I don't like going into big networking events where I don't know anybody. It's just uncomfortable for me. And so I thought, you know, I want to do this in the most efficient way possible. So I'm going to, I'm going to jump on job boards, like indeed, it will indeed wasn't really around back then it was really like monster, and careerbuilder and dice for the technology people, kind of how you segmented out which job boards you were going to spend time on. LinkedIn was around, but I remember going to a job club meeting one morning, and this guy was like, I landed a job Jason, you got to get on LinkedIn. It's so awesome. I'm like, what's that? Like, I really don't want to get on another thing where I have to have a login. That's such so obnoxious. So anyways, that's where I was at in 2006. And I started and I just banged my head against the wall, doing the most ineffective things you could do, which was looking for openings and applying to openings and hoping right? And then I remember there were times where I was out. And I was like, I can't wait to get back home and see if any new job postings have been posted in the last two hours. I mean, how stupid is that? And so anyways, that's really where I started out. And about six weeks in I wasn't making any progress like I was, I was. And I could talk for a long time about why that is that one of my friends, Nick corca, dillos runs asked the headhunter website and he there's a statistic that's been floating around for since I think the 60s that 14% of jobs are found through job boards, well wanted ads, I should say, like, posted jobs. And Nick came out a few years ago, and he said 2% of jobs are actually found through job boards.Greg Marine  Oh, that's incredible. To purple. Oh, yeah. 2%.Jason Alba  You know, I mean, 14% is already low. Right? But 2%. So anyway, that's what I did. I spent 10 hours a day, six days a week, I spent 60 hours a week on my job search, but it was very ineffective. Wow. And after a while, I was like, Okay, this isn't working. Let's stop, let's analyze what's going on, go read some articles from the experts and see what they say to do. And that's when I started to kind of realize, okay, I'm doing all these things wrong. I'm not doing any of these things, right. But as I'm understanding what the wrongs and rights are, I found this this. This constant bit of advice to everybody said, the experts said, you know, make sure you follow up, make sure you keep track of what you're doing. You don't want a recruiter to think that you're aloof or that you don't care just because you're disorganized. And so you don't record what you're doing, who you're talking to make sure you're doing all you know, the follow up is so important. And I kept reading that I thought, Man, you know, how do you do that? Have a spiral notebook. I've sticky notes. I can write stuff on my hand. Sure. But what if what if job seekers who were really treated like third class citizens and in the world? What if job seekers could have a tool that first class citizens had and that's the idea that's where the idea for jibber jabber the job search CRM came from. And and so I started this entrepreneurial journey and I decided to not look for a corporate job anymore, and I was gonna become super wealthy by Making a startup and then selling it like all the other super successful people have done?Greg Marine  Well, yeah, exactly. Sounds like quite the journey. And you'd mentioned some of the things that you were doing wrong. And I remember last month you wrote an article, basically don't give up. And so you kind of, there's things you don't give up on. But sounds like there are some things you should give up on.Jason Alba  Oh, absolutely. Seth Godin wrote a book about pivoting. It's called the dip. And he talks about culture sacks, where you go into, you go down a process, and like, you know, he, the whole analogy is like streets, right? You're going down this one road, and you realize it's a call to sack it's a dead end, essentially. And so you have to figure out when to stop and what to stop doing. So let me jump ahead of your question here. In my early job search, what I did was a lot of job boards, a lot of job board and, and that meant looking applying. And and you know, I told you the statistics on that they're just heartless, horrid, they're, they're discouraging. And it actually led me into a depression, right? And so and when you're depressed, you can't you don't think straight, right? You don't understand how to communicate your brand. Well, you don't network? Well, because you come across as kind of beyond sought and like, it's just not a good place. So anyways, let me fast forward a bit. I actually, you know, I started jibber jabber, I wrote a book, I became a professional speaker, which means people would pay me to come speak, which was really amazing. And I was in Austin, Texas, in a church basement, there's probably 40 5060 people in the room. And I had not thought of this line before. It just came to me in the moment. And I thought of it just really quickly as it came to me, and I thought, Man, Is this true? But but it was, and I said it. I said, If Jason Alba, we're starting a job search today. And I don't talk too much about myself in third person. So I probably switch back to First, I would spend 90 something percent of my time on informational interviews, okay. And so informational interviews are like a phenomenal, it's not a thing. It's actually a collection or a series of things. But if you take all the right things that you should be doing in a job search, it's an informational interviews. So I'll say, going on monster and a PA or LinkedIn now. And applying is easy. And you can feel productive. You can say I applied to four jobs today. Like how productive was that? Right? There's a metric, there's a statistic that you can track over time, informational interviews is like, I'm going to go have lunch with that person, or I'm going to go I'm going to have a phone call. It just didn't feel metrically successful. Right. Okay. But what I've realized over the years is that informational interviews, which is networking, and some of these other things, that is where it's at for job seekers. Okay.Greg Marine  And yeah, and I think one of the reasons that I reached out to you for this interview was because you're reaching out on Twitter, to get to, to basically give away your time, 30 minutes at a time, to job seekers, to kind of them and mentor them. But tell me a little bit about that.Jason Alba  Yeah. Ah, this is really a phenomenal. So there's some people that I've been following on Twitter for the last couple years that have been really inspirational. Christopher Johnson is one. And Chris says on on Fridays, I think it's on Fridays, says, What are you doing? On a note my calendar reached out to me are very giving person right and motivational and, and helpful. And I thought, I want to do that, like I want to, I want to give to people and help and inspire and give hope and ideas. And, you know, I wish somebody would have spent 30 minutes with me when I first started my job search and said, Jason, you're doing all the wrong things. Like what you really need to do is stop this and start this. And I know it's hard, but this is the right stuff. And so I'm actually in the process right now of redoing some around a dozen PluralSight courses, which is which is incredibly difficult. Like if I rushed through it could take a month to redo a course, right because I'm redoing the whole thing. And and I'm just really crunched for time. And I'm thinking I don't have any time. On the flip side, Fridays are like dead. Like, I don't get hardly any emails on Friday. I don't see much action on social on Friday. Like I could really sit around on Friday twiddling my thumb, just kind of waiting for something to react to. And I thought you know what, I'm going to open up my calendar. See how this goes. I mean, we're in mid November of 2020. And so I Thought, right? Let's schedule this out to the first part of, of 2021. So the first part of January, and see what happens, and I'll put it out there. I haven't put this up to my jibber jabber people yet I've just put it out to my Twitter, friends or audience or whatever. And so I've had people sign up. And it has been awesome. I've talked to brilliant people, people who are very, very high in their career, people who are just starting out in their career, I've talked to people across the world, I've learned about I go on the maps and, and I'm like, Oh, I thought that was part of India. And it's actually it's his own country by India, but it's not a part of India. I'm talking to people who are saying, I don't know what I'm doing right now. Or they'll come and say, here's a very specific issue that I have. So I talked to somebody who's looking for a promotion, a really, really awesome promotion within the same company. And I talked to somebody else who's like, I'm a problem with my LinkedIn profile, and other people who are like, I don't even know what I want to be when I grow up. I remember this one girl I talked to in I'm pretty sure it was you gone the. And she is very educated. She's getting a master's in machine learning. She has just really, really sharp lady, and she wants to help people. And I'm like, man, with your education and your experience with robotics and all that other stuff. You can write, you can write your own ticket, you can kind of go wherever you want, and do whatever you want. And she's like, I want to stay here in my country and help people and educate people on on technology and a man talking with people that are super ambitious, and people that have super big hearts. And it's been a lot of fun. It's been really cool.Greg Marine  Well, that is great to hear. And that's one of the encouraging things is that you're talking to people throughout the entire globe. And anywhere from people just starting out to those who want to do what you're doing being a mentor to. You had mentioned your PluralSight courses I saw you have 30 some, I think it was 36 total. Time and and so what what all do you teach? I mean, I saw what it was, but go ahead and describe to the listeners. What is it you teach through your courses on Pluralsight.Jason Alba  So when when Pluralsight first reached out to me back in, I think it was 2012. I had been on the road speaking about LinkedIn, mostly LinkedIn, did a lot of career management stuff. And I actually had nine courses on jibber jabber, I had a DVD on how to use LinkedIn. And so they said, we'd love for you to do, you know, back in 2012, they had a lot of programming courses. And, and, and they had a few soft skill courses. But they came and said, Hey, we would love for you to do a course on LinkedIn, we don't have anything on LinkedIn. And this is really, you know, obviously a growing thing. And everybody wants to learn more about LinkedIn. And so I did my LinkedIn course. And then a little bit later, I went back to my nine courses that I've done on jibber jabber, and I said, Well, let's do those on, on Pluralsight. And so I started doing those courses. And they were for job search, right? They were informational interviews and personal branding and career management and stuff like that. And so one day, though, I was talking with somebody, and I realized that there was an opportunity to start talking about soft skills, and then later where I would start to call professional development. And so I started doing courses on how to become a better listener, which is one of my more popular courses, probably, because managers of developers are saying, hey, before you go into a meeting with that customer listen to this course on listening, right. And so it's an easy way for managers, instead of them to coach and mentor, for a long time on how to become a better listener. It's like, go watch this course. And then let's talk about it in our next one on one. I have courses on working with one of my favorite course working with people who have personalities that are different than yours, right. So I remember an experience I had where I was working with somebody who had a very different personality than I did and what he was not warm at all is very business. He seems kind of cutthroat he. And and when I, when we interacted I was like, Man, this guy hates me. Turns out he didn't hate me at all. He liked me quite a bit. And he liked what I did. He just interacted different than I did. And and I thought, how many problems could be resolved if we recognize that at work? And of course, even in the job search, you're going to be communicating with people that communicate different than you do. If we recognize that just because somebody says something a certain way doesn't mean they hate us. They hate our work or anything. But that's just their personality, right. And so I really wanted to raise awareness on the differences and how we interact. So I, I have Team teamworking courses, I'll tell you one of my most favorite courses of all time, is on emotional intelligence. So I had the opportunity to start a course on emotional intelligence. And I was like, Alright, that sounds easy enough. Emotional intelligence to me seems kind of fluffy. Like, it's just one of those. I don't know, like, okay, whatever. Like, we can talk about this in a meeting and, and feel good about each other and say nice things. But then we all go back to work and like, I get paid to program or I get paid for my hard skills. Right? Right. So I had this lady come over to my house, and she teaches,I don't know, health and awarenesses, and stuff like that at my kids High School. And she's a family friend. But But I learned that she'd been teaching about weekly on emotional intelligence to the kids. And I was like, Well, I don't know anybody else who knows more about this. So come over, and let's chat. We talked for probably two and a half hours, and I took tons of notes. And I was like, this is the most amazing topic out there. And after I was done going through the course, which is a learning process for me to figure out, you know, what I want to include and how communicate it and what I want to exclude and stuff like that, there was two things that really jumped out at me One was that if you have narcissistic or sociopathic tendencies, you could use the principles of emotional intelligence, to manipulate to the nth degree like this, this really could be dangerous, if you don't have good intentions. And so there's five pillars of emotional intelligence. And I added the sixth concept that you have to have good intentions in order to use those appropriately. Right. And so that was one thing that really stood out to me. But the other thing, and I tweeted this, you know, right after my course went live, I said, if you if, if the world increased our emotional intelligence, just a little bit, like if we became more aware of ourselves, and others, and empathetic and you know, the elements of those five principles, if we increased anywhere at any of those, how amazing would this world be where there was more tolerance, and more love and more acceptance and, and all that stuff. So that honestly, you know, they look at my catalogue of my 36 courses that I have right now. And hopefully, I'll be able to do more courses in the future. That's the one that I'm kind of hanging my hat on saying, this is how I'm going to touch the world. If I can help people increase their emotional intelligence, I can feel good about having created, you know, any content anywhere.Greg Marine  Oh, that is that is an excellent, not only story, but encouragement and inspiring chorus that you're referring to there. And you've mentioned a few times so far, jibber jabber, go ahead and tell me more about what you do with that. And I know you got it started because of your job search in 2006. But tell me a little bit more about what jibber jabber is, and how, what kind of a tool it can be for for other people.Jason Alba  Yeah, so I mean, jibber jabber is almost 15 years old, right? So what an app is out there, that's 15 years old, that looks good. It's kind of ugly, because it's like a 15 year olds going through, you know, hormonal changes as we're going through some changes, right. But the principle of jibber jabber is that I can organize and track what I'm doing, right. So one time I was in a, I was at a job club, and we would go in and have these weekly trainings and weekly accountability. And the people who were putting on this job club said, they found out that the spouses were saying, Well, why aren't you applying for jobs? You Why aren't you do it? Why don't I How come you're all you're doing is going out to lunch, right? And they thought, you know, we give these job seekers a lot of training on effective tactics. But we really need to help the spouses understand what was happening in the job search and why we are or aren't doing certain things. So we pulled together, they pulled together a dinner, invited all the spouses, so the spouses could have an exposure into what the systems and programs were. And this one guy was up talking about, you know, here's what we're doing and we're networking and following up and getting introductions and informational interviewing and all these things. And this one very sharp lady says she raised her hand and she said, this is so complicated, like complex as you meet one person and they introduce you to two people and then you talk to those two people and they introduce you to four people and and then you got to go back and circle up and follow up and all this stuff and and now you're interviewing with this company. Handle interview with four people and then, like, is so complex. She said, How do you keep track of it all and people in the room just started giggling because I had already launched jibber jabber by that point. And they're like, well, we got an app for that. Like, there's a tool for that. And that's really what jibber jabber is about, when we go back to the idea of informational interviews being very, very effective. You know, you really are going in and talking to somebody and saying, Hey, who should I talk to? Like, who can you introduce me to every informational interview can lead to one to 510 introductions, right? And, and so, you know, I can keep track of that, in my mind for a few minutes. I can keep track of it on Excel for a few weeks. But after about two or three weeks, if you're really networking, and you're really following up, and you're really being proactive about what you're doing, you're going to get turned upside down, and you're going to forget stuff. And that's exactly what happened to me out of spreadsheet. And I was looking at my to do column, I had all these names and companies and stuff. And I had this next next thing that I got to do. And and I remember Friday morning, I looked at it and I was like, Oh my gosh, yesterday, Thursday at 10 o'clock, I was supposed to have called this hiring manager. And it was like one of the only few calls that I ever that someone ever agreed to have with me during my job search, right? And I completely missed it. And I emailed the person I'm like, I'm so sorry, Mr. Call, can we reschedule and I never heard from him again. And I thought I need a tool that will flick me in the brain, you know, whether that's an email alert, or an SMS or whatever, but I need something that is not that's not going to fall apart. And so I thought I thought about, you know, the CRM that I had used previously, or seen my sales teams used previously. And I thought I need to make a CRM that dumb, like dumb down. And it's simple. And it's not pipeline, and it's not revenue. It is simply about networking and job search. And so that's, that's what jibber jabber has become a team that works on it full time, we still work on stuff. We're doing some really big stuff right now. And then we got to go back and work on little stuff. But I've always had developers on this since 2006.Greg Marine  Very cool. And speaking of job seekers, or what kind of job seekers, are they? Does that include like freelancers? Or are these just people trying to get jobs in the corporate corporate world?Jason Alba  Um, so my message is, you're not going to land a job and keep that until you retire. Right? Like, I want you to internalize career management and networking and branding, and taking care of your career because no one else is going to, I want you to internalize that. And even if you do land, your dream job, I want you to think, Okay, what am I doing now, to secure my finances in the future, whether that means I go to industry, networking events, and meet people from other companies, or stuff like that. So that's really what my message is on on Twitter. And I think LinkedIn, my, my background image is an image of a stream, because I'm a real big proponent of multiple streams of income. And as you digest more of my stuff, hopefully you start saying, Okay, what what can I do to have another income stream, right, other than a job, which can come and go for so many reasons. So that's really what i what i want to grow my audience and my users into thinking that I need to have gigs I need to have side hustles I need to have you know, rentals or saw whatever my other side, whatever my other multiple streams of revenue are. But having said all that, most people that initially come into jibber jabber, actually, I'm gonna, I'm gonna break this into a MB. Most people that came early in 2006 to 2015, were the corporate person, it was like one PR it was what person looking for their next job, I just got laid off, I need to organize my job search spreadsheet wasn't working. So I'm now here and I'm looking for my next job. That's what most of my users were somewhere. I don't know if it was 2015. But somewhere I started getting people who are like, I need something to help organize my stuff. And I am never going to be in this position. Again, like I will create another revenue stream, whether that's consulting, or I'm making a product that I want to sell. And if you're consulting, guess what you network, you need to follow up with the all the same stuff that the job seekers do is what a small business owner does, right. And so that that's one thing I love about these principles, and for me, it's under the Career Management umbrella. Whether you're a job search Your job seeker and your networking, or you are a consultant and Freelancer and you're networking, you're doing the same stuff, and you still need to follow up. And you still need to ask for introductions and all that stuff. And maybe you'll outgrow jibber jabber, maybe there'll come a time where you say I need to go pay, you know a lot more and get Salesforce or something like that. But I have people who have gone from job search to real estate agents. And they say on jibber jabber, because it's their tool where they have all of their contacts and their follow up and their conversation and stuff like that.Greg Marine  And you hit a few nails on the head here, you're talking about multiple revenue streams. Now, because you don't want to be in a position where you're, you're laid off, especially in a year, like this year 2020. But you need to have multiple revenue streams. And this is a tool that someone in any position could utilize, to be able to maintain the communications with all your contacts, even if it's not a necessarily a revenue stream, but it could potentially be oneJason Alba  absolute, I mean, I mean, people the job search experts to say network, whether you have a job or not like it networking is not just for job seekers. What so let me let me tell you this pathetic story about when I started my job search, I'd been a general manager of a software company. And then before I was General Manager, I was still at the executive level in the software company, trying to, to, to, to grow and become profitable, right, like, this was a bit of a mess of a company. And so anyways, I was heads down. I don't know, I would say, I was a workaholic, because I had a pretty good, you know, work life balance. But I worked a lot and I did a lot and I was focused on on fixing this problem of a company, right. And so it was good, right? It was good wall lasted, but then then it wasn't good. And I got laid off. And so I got laid off. And I knew nobody, I had just moved from a small town and moved another state away to a larger area, which is good, because you think there's more jobs, more opportunities and stuff like that. But I didn't know anybody in the town. Right? I had really no, no network. I had never gone to industry events or anything like that. I didn't volunteer for anything. Because I was busy doing my job. I was heads down. Hundred and 10% loyal at my job. Right? Exactly. Right. Then I get laid off. I didn't know Nobody. Nobody knew me. I didn't have no brand. I had no reputation, right. And so that's what I want to help people avoid. When when they come into jibber jabber, and they're like, I'm gonna get my job. And then I'm going to wash my hands of this job search thing, and I'm going to go just bury my head in the sand again. Well, I had this one person come to me and they said, Jason, thank you so much. jibber jabber was a great tool for my job search. And I just landed my dream job. Will you please delete all of my stuff? Oh, wow. And I was like, Yes, I will. Like you can do it. Just go into this place and click on delete my account, everything goes away. I said you can do it. I'll do it for you. I said, but there's no charge if you leave it sitting here. Because according to the federal government, we all know love and trust the federal government, right? So according to the federal government, every two to five years, we're in transition every two to five years. You're in transition. And early in my career, I thought cool. I'm getting promotions. But after 2006 I was like, wait a minute, transition. This is painful. I don't ever want to do this again. And if I do do it again, How awesome would it be if I had a network and the brand to be so different? Right? So this person's like, yeah, this is my dream drop dream company. Nothing's gonna happen. Two months later, they came back and they're like, hey, me again. Things didn't work out. You know, it turned out that there was some bait and switch the culture was completely different. Can I can I get my stuff back? And I'm like, I'm sorry. Like, I didn't want to, but you really wanted me to delete your stuff. And you're starting off. You're starting over from scratch. And so one of my big things is, you know, with job seekers and I when when you go in and you delete your account, say, hey, Atlanta, my job, please delete all my information, I say, Are you sure because it's free to keep it here. And you might be back in two to five years. And it's a lot more fun to come back into something that's already built than to have to start from scratch. Exactly.Greg Marine  Yeah, and I think one of the things you're encouraging people to do here is not even necessarily from two to five years from now, but to keep it up you get you land that dream job or that dream client, still use the tools you know, still do the networking, still communicate with with other people. And yeah, because you can't just rely on say Twitter or Facebook or anything like that. You've got to convince Newly build your brand?Jason Alba  Yeah, absolutely. And honestly, one of my favorite ways for you to transition into a new job is to, you know, you're not doing job search networking anymore. But I guess we can call it career networking now, like you have a new job, go meet people at your company, you know, go go sit down with them at lunch, or, or, or ask for 20 minutes on their calendar and get to know them. I actually took a job a couple years ago, because just because weird stuff was going on and, and I needed a change of scenery. And I was, I was ready to kind of, I don't know, I was feeling kind of stagnant, really. And so I went and took a job and, and I met people then back in 2018, that I'm still in touch with today, and not going to say that it's really been helpful for my for my career, or my company, or many of my revenue streams. But I know that if I were to go to any of them today and say, Hey, and a lot of them have moved on to other companies, go back to them and say, Hey, I'm actually looking for a role. I now have ends at probably a dozen companies, you know, that I didn't have before. Because I took time to get to know people. And like I said, I'm an introvert, right? So the way that I come to terms with that is because people are like, Oh, you're an introvert, you don't want to talk to people. It's like no, and you know, people say, well, it's how you recharge your batteries. The way that I really come to terms with me being an introvert and, and being around people is I love going deep with a person. Okay, you know, not not for like a deeper relationship necessarily, but I want to know about you. I want to understand who you are. And so so I get over any of my social anxiety or whatever, by just thinking, Hey, man, me and Greg, we're going to learn about each other like, right, and I'm going to figure out how I can help him and where he wants to go in life and all these other things. That for me is that next level of after you land your job, that's what you should be doing. Don't bury your head in the sand, and hide from career management. Keep doing that stuff.Greg Marine  Exactly. And like I said, you're an introvert, you don't have to be an extrovert to do any of this. And a lot of ways you just have to sit and listen to somebody lunch, sit and listen to their story. Because you're gonna learn from them. And then they might ask you questions. You don't even have to drive the conversation. So you can be an introvert and still do all of this.Jason Alba  Yeah, for sure. Absolutely. There's books on like, networking for introverts and stuff like that. And I think really where introverts really get hung up as they're like, Oh, my gosh, I have to go into that meeting or that room, you know, and it's like, no, you're just going to go talk and get to know somebody, you know, no obligations. But I don't know, for me, I love humans, I love I love this, the backstories and where you came from, and what you've overcome, and what your hopes and dreams are. And that's really where, you know, I don't look at this, like, we're gonna have a 20 minute meeting. And that's it, you know, and maybe I'll decide if I like you or not, it's like, I want to get to know you at a deeper level. And that's really where I start off my, where my mind is out on these types of relationships.Greg Marine  Now, are there any other tools that you would recommend with us? Do you still recommend LinkedIn and stuff like that for networking? Or is this just a face to face kind of networking that you're you're talking about?Jason Alba  I mean, I wrote a book on LinkedIn and actually wrote a book on Facebook didn't do very well. LinkedIn, the LinkedIn book did really well, I think it sold over, I don't know, 20,000 copies. So let me give you well, and then I'll say one more thing. I was on Twitter early on. I don't remember how early but I was early before the wave of like pop culture got on and kind of muddied it all up. And so I fell out of love with Twitter, walked away from Twitter for a while, and I got back a couple of years ago. And so I've been you know, LinkedIn, Facebook and Twitter, the big three as they were. But really, the answer is go to where your audiences. Okay, so right now, I have tapped into this really cool group of techies on Twitter that I'm not seeing anywhere else. Like, I will go post stuff on Twitter. That's techie related that I can't post on Facebook, because most of my Facebook friends and family are not technical writers. They're not techie at that level. And on LinkedIn, I have a completely different group. Like those are more job seekers that are across the board of what they do and what level level they're at. So I go to where my audience is, and I think that's really the most important part. technologies are going to come and go right like MySpace went, you know, Facebook and Twitter and LinkedIn and been around for a long time. But LinkedIn has changed a lot, right? And so if you want to go on LinkedIn, there's good stuff there for sure. But the key is to find who your network and your audience, I actually talked about this in my courses, this idea of space. Yeah, I want to connect with a network of people who are in my space, and my space is my profession, my geography and my industry. That's ands, or ORS, right? So if you're in technology, I don't really care what industry you're in, and I don't care what your geography is, you're in technology, and Pluralsight would be relevant to you, my courses would be relevant to you. If I can find somebody that's in tech in my profession, and my industry and my geography, that's a really, really strong connection. Right? So what I'm saying is, let me let me narrow this down even a little more. Let's say you're like, well, I really want to go to LinkedIn, because that's what everybody is saying. Great. Go to LinkedIn. But the next level is to go into LinkedIn groups that are in your space. Yes. Right. So that's what that's what you really want to do is find out where people are hanging out in your space. And for some people, that's only face to face monthly meetings. And for other people. It's like right here in Twitter or right in this LinkedIn group.Greg Marine  Gotcha. Well, that's good advice. And I think for me, Twitter's been one of my things for this year. But I've also got LinkedIn, Facebook, but each one of those are a separate space there. They're definitely different audiences. So I speak differently. They're some of the stuff I cross post, like this podcast. I like the cross post, because it's a general podcast. But we'll talk about all kinds of technologies that affect everyone. In this case, the primary audience would probably be technical people, but some of your courses and some of your advice would definitely carry over to any industry. For sure, of course, this episode will then get published on all those platforms. Something I wanted to ask you about is one of the articles you wrote last, and I say article, but as a blog post last month, was on a bad reference. So I've had some experience as a CTO, where I had let somebody go, and they asked me for a reference, of course, in my mind, I was thinking that's, I may not necessarily be a good reference for you. So I'm not sure I could do that. But I nodded my head as they walked out the door. In the case of the article, you wrote about other types of bad references, what kind of advice do you have for people who may or may not have or may have a bad reference at one of their positions?Jason Alba  Um, well, and so when I when I come in here, I have advice number zero, like the basic bit of advice and advice number one, the think, I think the most important thing about a bad reference is, it might not matter. Right? I remember back in, hold on, let me think, probably 2004, like, this is a long time ago, this isn't something new, this is something that may be decades old. So back in 2004, ish, the HR manager sent out a memo to email to everybody saying, if somebody calls for a reference check, you can't say anything. Right? Send them over to payroll, and payroll can verify the dates they worked and their title or something like that. And that's it. Right? So, companies have been have become very sensitive to the idea of somebody saying something bad about a previous hire. Right, right. Um, it still happens. But I don't think you need to worry about it as much as you might have worried about it in the 70s and 80s, and maybe the 90s, right? So So what I'm saying is, if you have a bad reference, you know that you burned a bridge or somebody was a complete jerk or a turd, or they just didn't like you, it might not make that much of a difference. And so you might not have to worry about it. Right. The The other thing, though, is, is my advice number one on the blog post is just to address it head on. And what that means is, you have to figure out in an interview specifically, but maybe in a networking conversation, if somebody says, hey, why Why'd you leave that place? Or Hey, I heard some stuff about that other place, like what will happen to you? If you spout off, right? If you say, Oh, my gosh, my boss was such a jerk. And they actually got fired because of it, but I was part of the carnage before they got fired, right? You're not doing yourself a favor, you feel vindicated, right that you can save that your boss was a jerk and you weren't the bad person. But the problem is you come across as Having a grudge, not letting it go like all these things, right? And so what you want to do is have a line or a couple of lines. And so let's see. So I actually wrote this in the blog post, I said, Oh, this would be in an interview situation. Oh, you're referring to the separation of performance on my record, because this person that asked the question was from a city, right? And I said, Yeah, that was an interesting situation. Turns out my supervisor regular, regularly marked her team members with that, and abused it to the point where she, she got terminated for it. So there's not like, spite, like, My message is not I'm being factual, but I'm not like trying to dig into her right. And so what I found is too often, job seekers feel like they have to justify or validate why they lost their job. Right? And you don't you don't you don't exhaust A lot of times, it doesn't matter what you do, what you should do is come up with a really gentle, soft, like, yeah, it was it wasn't really that big of a deal. Here's kind of what happens. Yep. Let's move on to the next topic.Greg Marine  Exactly. Yeah, that's some that's some gold advice. So I'll call it gold advice. Because that applies to everybody. Everybody, especially especially in the first world, any corporate environment, that is golden advice,Jason Alba  you know, you know, my wife had some inspiration years and years ago, she was talking about somebody a lot. And she heard her inspiration was stop talking bad about this person, because it doesn't matter. And what she found was that when she held on to it, and she talked about it, she internalized it and and harbored bad feelings. And it impacted her quite a bit. And people around her were like, Oh, there she goes again. Right. And so that became part of her brand, right. And so I see this with job seekers and and like I said, you feel like you need to be validated or vindicated. And you really don't people don't care. But what happens is you you harbor that badness inside of you, and you just don't let go of it. Number one, number two people around you see you as toxic really, there's not a there's not a other word that I can choose right now. They look at you and they're like, Okay, I got to watch out for that person, because they really hang on to things, you know, so you just got to let it go. I know it's hard. I'm still upset about what happened to me back in 2006. And I harbor bad feelings. I actually saw the guy at a restaurant a year or so ago. And I had a little bit of an anxiety attack like it attack it was. I was like, I don't want him to see me. I don't want to see him or I'm going to eat, keep my head down and sneak out the door. You know, and this was over a decade later. I mean, I understand those feelings. But the more you communicate those, the you're just kind of digging a hole for yourself. No, exactly.Greg Marine  We're Well said. The last question that I wanted to talk to you about is actually one of your latest blog posts, if not the lightest, is do the thing. Now, in my case, I'm glad you wrote about that, because something you had said months ago, and a few other folks on tech Twitter said, you know, get out of your comfort zone, do the thing. You know, worst case scenario is it won't work out this blog post or this I'm sorry, this podcast is one of those things for me.Jason Alba  Good for you.Greg Marine  This is the seventh interview. This is the seventh episode of a blog, Pat, of sorry, podcast. I can't say that correctly. A podcast that I'd never even dreamed of before this year. Oh, I thought what's one of my core competencies that is talking to people getting some information out of them, sharing that information with other people? What better way to do that than a podcast? So here I am doing the thing. Tell me what? What other encouragement do you have for people with that in mind? The do the thing?Jason Alba  Yeah. So my The thing was my Friday, you know, 30 minute career consultations, I actually I've been thinking about it for years, and Christopher inspired me. And every the sun, moon and stars came together. But really, it was like, I just need to push the button and do it. Right. So. So let me let me marry two ideas. So early on in the job search. I was with a guy who was also in this job search and he got up and he started talking about the chicken list. And I was like, what's the chicken list? I don't have a list of chickens. And he said, No, no, the chicken list is a list of things that you're afraid to do. You're at Chicken, you're afraid to make this call to this person, because for some reason they intimidate you, or you're embarrassed to make that call, you're afraid to email that person, right. And so what his message was, was, look, you got 20 people, you need to reach out to three of them on your chicken list, do the chicken list First, get that out of the way, it's the hardest thing mentally get it out of the way, right, and then everything else is just going to be easy. And your day is gonna fall into place. And so I've really carried that idea for a long time. Actually, I want to marry three things. So then, so that's thing, one chicken. Last thing, too, is understanding what your priorities are. And so I have this program called the job search program, which is based around informational interviews. And it's a phenomenal program. And I borrowed with permission ideas from a brilliant business coach named Mark LeBlanc, who's in the Minneapolis area. And Mark LeBlanc talks about he talks about so many cool things, one of the things he says is you need to choose three high value activities to do every day. And if they might take five minutes each, it doesn't matter how long they take. But if they're the highest value activities that you could do that day, I don't care what you do the rest of the day, you will have had a successful day. But get those three things done. Right. And, and so there's a there's a concept from him, where I thought, Oh my gosh, we need to really figure out prioritizing, because a lot of times we'll go and start our day with 20 things on our list, and work our way down our list alphabetically or some, you know, however, they came to us, and we're not getting the most important thing done. Right. Okay. So let me let me take another idea that I got from Mark LeBlanc, because he talks to a lot of small business owners, and he says, talks about the idea of identifying your niche, right. And and, and so for me, I love multiple streams of income, I have multiple streams of income, but and so when he was talking about the niche, I was like, that's cool. I got my niche here, and my niche chair, my niche, my niche here, I'm gonna work on all my niches. And he's like, no, pick one, focus on your niche. And he says, I don't know how it works. But all of the others grow when you focus on the one and you have success in the one the others grow. And I'll tell you right now, Greg, I don't know how it works. Either. The math doesn't work. For me. It's fuzzy logic. But it works. Like when I focus on one or the other things do grow, as opposed to giving a little bit to each of them. And none of them grow. Right. And so, okay, so marry those three concepts with the last airbender cartoon with aim, not the one with Korra. But one thing, which is a brilliant series, watch it with my 11 year old, fell in love with the show. And, and and do the thing. There's a character who says that who has an assistant, he says, Julie, do the thing. And he never tells her what the thing is, she always does it the right thing. We never tells her what it is. But she does a thing. And that had this in my mind, like do the thing, do the thing, do the thing. And I married those three ideas together. And it's like, you know what, we need to make sure that we get over our fear. That's the chicken list thing. We identify where we really need to be, which is the niche thing. And we do the thing to help us accomplish that. And that's the that's the prioritizing the high value activity thing. And so if you do the thing, now know what your thing is, like for you, it's the podcast and probably breaking through that mental barrier of starting your podcast has just kind of freed your mind a little bit and then allowed you to be like, I can do stuff I can. So I don't know doing the thing is so powerful. So that's where that blog post came from.Greg Marine  Very Excellent. Well, Jason, thank you so much for being on talking tech today. And, and good luck with all your all your endeavors, the PluralSight courses, jibber jabber, and everything else that you're doing. Thank you so much for giving back to the community, especially this new venture that you're doing every Friday, mentoring individuals on their job search.Jason Alba  Yeah, my pleasure. Greg, thank you been a pleasure.Greg Marine  Thank you for listening. This has been talking to
40 minutes | Nov 16, 2020
Ep 6 - Talking with Dan Hauger
Greg Marine  Do you know what happens behind the scenes when you call 911? Have you ever wondered how first responders work well under pressure? This week, we learn the answers to those questions and more as I chat with Dan Hauger, a firefighter and first responder. Welcome to talking tech.Dan Hauger  My name is Dan Hauger. I am a firefighter. I have been a firefighter for going on 20 years now. I have been involved in some of the trainings, some of the product development that we use for the fire department, and just an all around grunt. But other than that, I'm just what's called a blackhat. backseat. I do the work that needs to be done.Greg Marine  Excellent. Excellent. Well, thank you so much for being on the show today. On behalf of everyone, thank you for your service to the community as a first responder, you, you help save lives and and that greatly appreciate.Dan Hauger  Thank you.Greg Marine  And one of the reasons I am today is to talk about the technology that you deal with day in day out in the job. And I say day in and day out. You actually have a you go on shifts, 24 hour shifts. Tell us a little bit about that.Unknown Speaker  All right, not every fire schedule is the same. But the most common schedule is you work 24 hours on shift and you're off 48 hours. A lot of people look at that and think wow, you have two days off. Technically, yes. But the older you get that first day off of shift is a recovery day, depending on how how much time you spend out in the field the night before, I just got off shift this morning. And I think we got a total about three and a half hours of sleep last night, on and off. Multiple runs, different scenarios, different situations. But you get used to it after a while ish. But then the next day, but a lot of us will work a part time job on those two days off. So many times we'll work 24 hours go straight from our fire job to our part time job. And so I lovingly call those my 32 hour work days. Now, when we're on shift, we're not one runs. The whole shift. We're not out from the firehouse the whole shift. A lot of times there have been times that we have been but there are times to rest and eat occasionally. And very rarely we have times where we do not see our bunks until the very very end of the shift.Greg Marine  Now you said that you came off a shift this morning. So this is your recovery day. Today is my recovered and here you are recording a podcast.Unknown Speaker  Yeah, it this is a this is a pleasure. I'm glad I could help out. Not working a part time job right now is good. It was a choice. My wife and I made for me to prepare for my retirement coming up in a few years.Greg Marine  Okay, speaking of retirement, what do you plan to do in retirement?Unknown Speaker  my retirement plans. I am a musician, I'm a trumpet player. Prior to being a firefighter, I was a school teacher. I was a band director. So I'm very heavily involved in music. I plan on upon retirement, or planning on moving down to Florida and I will be going back into music full time playing my horn, possibly teaching and working for either Disney universal freelance work, basically being a trumpet player and getting a tan. Oh, very nice.Greg Marine  That'll be a good retirement, I think I think you mentioned that Disney universal. That's one of the passions that you have is Walt Disney. And it is the parks and the movies and and basically the lifestyle that comes with being a Disney fan.Dan Hauger  Right?Greg Marine  Right. So yeah, that'll be that'll be fun. And But before that, you're still going to be a firefighter for a couple more years. So tell us a little bit about some of the technology with stuff by talking about some of the newer stuff. Today's age, there's a lot of digital software and stuff like that that goes into any kind of industry but in this case, what kind of tools do you have at your disposal? When it comes toUnknown Speaker  smartphones are one of the one of the things that for for us from it that that is one of the newer things is our dispatch. Typically what would happen is when a person worked a call, when a person calls 911 they talk to another person. Okay? They get that person gets them. They put them on hold, then they dispatch us. And we have a verbal dispatch, for example, what would happen is, let's say my son fell and hurt his ankle. I would call 911911 dispatcher would say, what's what's going on? This is a total paraphrase. And this is not how it really happens, what's going on, hey, my son hurt his ankle, what is your address 123 North Main Street, okay, stay on the line while I dispatch someone, then that person would get flipped, which is how we like to flip a switch, and then dispatch the fire. So the tones of our house, then that person would actually say engine one, medic 1123 North Main Street for an injured person into one medic, one North Main Street for injured person. How that has changed is we now have gone totally digital. And we have what we lovingly call digital Debbie. Just okay. So what happens if someone calls 911 they are talking to a person, as they're that person is getting the information, they're punching into the computer, hit send, and then a digital voice will dispatch us, okay to that address telling us what's going on. While the human person is still talking to the person online giving them direction giving them instruction, if they need it, be that shock management, CPR. You know, dislodging something by doing what has changed the Heimlich maneuver, but they change that. So they are actually still having that contact. And many times we get there when they're still talking to the person online. Very cool. And so they can dispatch multiple companies without having to break contact with a person.Greg Marine  Yeah, that sounds very interesting. What used to be where they had to break contact, now they can continue stay in contact with the the injured person or the person taking care of them right without without having to disconnect. And then that kind of hopefully makes it go by quicker, but also eases the, the panic.Unknown Speaker  That that's one of the things that we have developed as fire companies, we practice so many different types of scenarios and things one of the ones we do is called a mayday drill, where if I get separated from my company, I get into have no idea where I am column A through my radio, we all carry radios. And then what happens is, other companies will hear what's going on. But one person who's in charge of that that scene will maintain contact with that person and tell them don't worry, we're sending people your way. Can you look around, see where you are. And so that one on one contact is a way to keep that person calm. And so that is carried over to our fireground operations. Very nice. Yeah.Greg Marine  And that makes me feel even better. I've never had to go in the event that I have to now I know with confidence that I'll still be talking with the 911 dispatcher, because they're just pushing buttons and it's all being electronically sent. Exactly to your location. Okay,Unknown Speaker  one of my favorite stories ever. I, you know, we joke about many, many things. But we got dispatched to a car accident and one of my partners at the time, the guy is as big as a house. We go up to this guy in a car, he's still on the phone. And he sees people that got hurt in the accident. windows are still up. So my partner knocks on the window and says hey, roll down your window and open your door and knock it the guy looked at him said I'm on the phone with 911 my partner didn't kindly says some 911 so that was one of our funny stories. True story. And it really reminded me of Princess Bride. When Andre the Giant says I'm on the brute squad and Billy Crystal says you are the brute squad. Because that that was very appropriate.Greg Marine  That is a funny story. Now, as far as technology that's been carried over throughout the decades, some of the technology that I'm interested to hear about are things like what was called Jaws of Life and all that kind of stuff. That's technology to it may not be controlled by computers. But tell me a little bit about some of the equipment that you use to help get into vehicles or if you're at a house to buy a house or certifiersUnknown Speaker  handle including extrication tools, breaching tools, even hose lines and we just got new technology on our upper Ryder day for our department. We got new new nozzles for hoses. There are different types of nozzles, different companies, different beliefs in which kind you should use because they're The nozzles that are called combination nozzles where you can turn the nozzle one way and it creates a what's called a fog stream or fog becomes a fog nozzle, you can turn it another way becomes a straight stream, the kind we have are called solid bore nozzles. And the best way to describe that is if you were to go to any type of amusement park or guess or or Disney or whatever, you see these fountains with the solid streams of water shooting up in the air, right? It's that concept, the tighter the the water that we have, the easier it is for us to control and to go where we aim. The new nozzles we have now is new technology that we didn't create. They were created in laboratory or with scientists for people who are much smarter than what we are. But we know how to use that. And what happens is, the more water we're pushing out of that nozzle, the faster we can get the fire out better control, but the vote these nozzles in such a way that is putting less pressure back on us. So we can advance the hose a lot quicker and a lot easier to go through a house because many times we'll do training, try to simulate a house. And we cannot do it in a way that simulates every house because some people may have a couch right in the front doorway that we will have to go around. Some people may have just a long line of empty space that we can just take the hose right through. The less pressure we have in that hose, the easier it is to bend it around things. So they think they take that consider create the technology. But that's that's our newest, newest thing. you'd mentioned Jaws of Life. Jaws of Life is actually a brand name and I was very clear. I'm going to be very careful at not mentioning brand names. Initially I since I just got off shift like yesterday, I was looking at a lot of the things that we use the different tools we use and decided I'm not going to write anything down because I do not want to bring a name and make it sound like I'm endorsing. But extrication tools, we do have cutters and spreaders and we have Rams. There there. There are different tools for different functions. I the last two years, I have been at a firehouse where I'm on an engine now and my house does not have any extrication capabilities. For the last 15 years I was on the extrication team at the Firehouse and so my job was the spreaders. I was the spreaders guy, my partner's job was the cutters. spreaders are what many people call the jaws of life. Okay. The original spreaders that that you could see on old old pictures are hydraulic spreaders. Okay, well, we still use hydraulic spreaders, but the difference is back then they use a hand pump. Okay, that doesn't spread. Now we have either a small compact pump that we that's ran by gas, or we pull the hoses straight off of a truck and use the hydraulics from that. And we're able to use the the spreaders and the cutters. And each spreader and cutter have different torque amounts and they vary from manufacturer they vary from size, because you might get a set of spreaders that you know weigh significantly more than other that cannot spread as much because of the design. So that is another thing that that we have. Always wise open for things like that. more torque, more ability to to spread things with the new technology in vehicles with the new metals that are being used. The metals do not cut like they used to. They shatter and add a force for them to shatter. And a lot of the tools that we carry will not cause them to shatter. So we have to reconfigure our thinking and thinking what do we need to move. So if you're involved in a vehicle where we have to what we lovingly call cut you out.Unknown Speaker  That is where I really had a forgiving for things. I had a lot of fun, because I'm a puzzle guy. Sure. And if I said you were trapped right there and the dashboards down on your legs and your legs or ankles that they shouldn't be, I have to move that dashboard in a way to keep your legs from getting crushed even more I have to keep you as comfortable as I can and move everything else away. And that's that's what we do. So that that technology has improved over the years since I I've been on in 20 years significantly different size of ramps and use a ram to let's say the roof is crushed down. You can put a ram on the floorboard, extend and start pushing that roof up to give more headroom, things like it's just the only limit is your imagination many times but You start to use a safely why you can't use a ram for something that you need to use cutters for.Greg Marine  And that's actually one of the you mentioned you kind of have some fun with it. Loosely you say that but at the same time, that's the type of person that I would want coming rescue me because you're a puzzle, you'll be like puzzles and trying to navigate through a fire smoke. Or if it's an accident, the the different angles at which the metal is been bent. You have to work through that. So one way, I think it would take the kind of mindset to be able to say, Okay, here's a puzzle, how am I going to do this to most effectively do it and find the right tools to make that happen? Right?Unknown Speaker  Right. If the team I was on we were a team, typically, when how we operate, one crew takes one side of the vehicle, the other crew takes the other side of the vehicle and my crew would take the primary side. If it was just a driver, we take driver side. Sure, they will, the other team will start coming up with Plan B. If our plan A is not working, they're ready for Plan B, we step back, we start coming up with a plan C or D. Because in that that's the way we operated. Many times. We would adjust Plan A to become plan 8.1. Plan A. But when we would practice what would happen is we'd go to junkyards and the junkyards that allow us to come in and practice wonderful people, they had more almost more fun than we did, because they would come in with their fork trucks with cars. And we would say, hey, look, turn, you know, inverted, smashed up on the roof, this this with a side thing here, let's put the dummy in there. Because we would put dummies inside the car. That's the driver go at it, and they would ram cars together and stack them and do different things like that. And then we'd have competitions, we'd have two scenarios set up exactly the same way. When you mark, get set, go and do the other crew would go at it and see who can get the patient out. Not only the fastest, but with the least damage to the patient, or dummy. And we had certain we had worked together for so long, and it worked so, so well that we became silent. few words were passed between us because we knew what the next step be when we always had our tools in ready position. And when a tool would fail, because it's technology technology fails. We had the third person reading or sending our crew was always or officer he typically would step back. Fortunately, all three of us were at the level, we could sit back and assess the situation and give instruction. So my tool would fail, I'd step back, my officer would step in with the tool, I get another tool Get ready, give instruction if needed to be but we were we were pretty much in a quiet way. And we would hear the the other guys who many times were the younger bulls that, you know, beat their chest and gave some grunts over there telling each other what they needed to do and this and that. And by the time we had the whole side of the car off, they were just opening up the front door. A little bit of an exaggeration, but not too much of an exaggeration in that. But when one piece of technology that was used in still is used more, let me rephrase that. There's a piece of technology that was used way before I got on the fire department that basically one person or two people mad and that was the radio. If you remember the old TV show emergency, okay, Johnny and Roy would contact the hospital through their police. Basically they had a suitcase and that's how they contact hospital. Now, everybody carries a radio, okay, and we haven't on straps with a lapel mic, we can talk to a hospital we can talk to dispatch, we can talk to one another we can talk to command, we can basically talk to anybody that we need to and that is the technology has improved our fireground operations immensely a fire ndms One of the things that each radio has is a panic button. Okay, and so if I get it put in a situation in a fight, I can hit that panic button, it clears everything out and just has an open channel for me and roll and they can hear what's going on. I can do my Mayday if I need to. Or if I'm in a situation. I'm in a house medical situation. AndUnknown Speaker  something happens that doesn't need to happen and I'm in imminent danger I can hit the panic button and it knows exactly where I am and knows my address and will immediately if I do not respond back they immediately Sending officers and things like that vary. And so it kind of gives you a little bit of security. Sure, a little bit more security, I guess you could say, well, that's good because then you don't that's one less thing you have to worry about. As you're going into a situation, we we still are concerned our heads on a swivel. But many times we do get into situations where we are told seen as not safe wait for police. Okay. So our relationship with police officers are, it's a valuable relationship. It's, it's a symbiotic relationship. And we converse with them on radios do we just go to different channels, we can talk to the police officers. And that's really valuable in Swat situations, when there are SWAT situations, we will show up there and be in staging with a SWAT team, and we have communications with them.Greg Marine  Now we'll be in movies, paint a different picture of that, that, that that is really neat. I didn't realize that, that your communicate that efficiently with the other first responders really cool.Unknown Speaker  And our radios are digital now. And that was an interesting switch. We went from analog to digital and just like with anything else with the fire department, any change, you're going to have your guys that grumble and complain about it. They're like, there was no need, it worked really, really well. And, and we're happy with the change.Greg Marine  Very cool. Very cool. Now what is one technology over the course of the last 20 years, made the most improvement, it sounds like radios have Is there any other technologies that have made a vast improvement in the evolution,Unknown Speaker  I would have to say, our own board computers, we did out with for my career, we started out with these little yellow screen monitors, and keyboards that you would receive, where you are going the coordinates because every thing is on a coordinate system. If you live on Main Street, that's usually zero, east and west, or north and south. If you live like meridian stream, zero, east, west, north south, and then you go coordinates down that way. 100, South is one block that and things like that, right. And that's what we would get 123 Main Street 100 South 20 West,Greg Marine  okay,Unknown Speaker  like that. That was the information we got. And when you needed to information, your times because right when you get in the truck, you hit f4, which means you're responding f5 you're on scene f8, you're back in service. And if there are any other firefighters going to listen to this, I am just those are numbers I'm just making up out of my head because it changes for everybody. And those, it's been so long. So we use them, I can't remember what numbers we use. But now we actually have laptops, okay. And on our laptops, what will happen is we get dispatched for one, it will not only have the address, it will have the coordinates it will have what's going on if our scene is safe last night, or I should say, I think it was like 330 this morning 530 this morning is actually when this was it said garage door will be open, the garage door was not open. So the officer was able to contact control controls, they will call them like hey, they're there, they can't get in. And the reason why we had to go through the garage door is because the injured patient was laying by the front door wouldn't meet it. And so we had communication like that. But sometimes they will have the garage door code for us. It will also give us information prior run. So let's say I'm going to your house, it might give me information of pre run patient stated key was in this lockbox with this code, okay? You didn't give them that information that time, but they were able to pull that up, which will then help us to get to the house. Because if you're not letting us in, and we can look through a window and see in your unconscious we stopped to get in, right? We do not want to break anything. Sure we love breaking things, but we do not want to break anything. So if we look at that information, go to the key code, punch it in without breaking anything, we will do that. Okay. Another thing will also give us his maps. Oh, and we do turn by turn directions. But there are still glitches in that picture. In one of the things that we we laugh about. Due to the fact that I'm on the southwest side of Indianapolis, we might get a dispatch to a run. And it will say that the run is actually on the northeast side of Indianapolis about 25 miles away. And we know that's not true. Okay, because we know address. And we know it's only two miles away from us. Okay. Yeah. So we still have those that we still work through, but that's just part of the goodGreg Marine  and that'll change over time. it'll improve it will.Unknown Speaker  It will another part of that his cell phones are battalion chiefs have a cell phone behind cell phone, and what will happen on scenes, what they cannot put on a screen, because a lot of that information is, you know, anybody can see if it's sensitive, they will actually call the battalion chief and say, Hey, we have this going on in an example of that is if we have a patient that was going mental, emotional patients at times, we're not going to go there and try to excite the patient in a way to cause them more harm, or anguish or anything like that. They will call the battalion chief, a battalion chief, especially that run and say, Hey, this is what's going on. Here are a few triggers, here's what usually come just to let you know, the battalion chief with information to us. And an example of the importance of cell phones, and happened to us yesterday. And due to HIPAA, I cannot give very specific things. But what I can say is, we were in a situation where the patient was injured in an area off the grid. So one of our crew members pulled up his cell phone, got on the maps, did a pin drop of where we were took a screenshot and send the battalion who was outside of the area, the battalion was able to use that get on a four by four, and bring the other crews to us, we were able to load up the patient, get them out of out of the area, right. So we were able to do that we were not able to access that on our computers on the effects because the trucks were parked away from the scene, okay. But we will use the computers in the mapping system for that too. And especially with us, because many times we go on runs outside of our normal fire area. And so my officers given our driver, just say by play, when you get up here, you're going to turn a right second turn left. And that should be a dirt road here or let's say a gravel road that turns into a pavement here. And he can see that off the mapping.Greg Marine  Very cool.Unknown Speaker  It is it is cool. It's nice. It's really nice. Because one of the funny things that I always heard growing up for my dad, he would say, look at those idiots, my dad's works. Look at those idiots, they don't even know where they're going when you have to fire him or the ambulance or the ladder trucks. And when I got on the department, I told Dad, I said, Dad, they're going where they're told me to go. And that changes when we're on our way there. And so this has actually come down a little bit of the confusion of where to go. And also with going back to what I really said, with a dispatcher still talking to the person they can update and we get updates continually. Which is really, really nice.Greg Marine  Yeah, they can update you while they're still talking to him. patient.Dan Hauger  Nice. It has helped us tremendously.Greg Marine  Very cool.Very cool.That's very fascinating. And I appreciate the insight into the technology that goes into being a first responder and saving lives. And earlier this year, because of the COVID pandemic, there was it wasn't necessarily a shortage of personal protection equipment as much as it was the need skyrocketed compared. And one of the things that you and I had to work with was we have a 3d printing business. And so we work with you and your, your department to get some of that 3d printed, right compete available to you guys. And so can you tell me about that and, and that equipment was used? Right?Unknown Speaker  It was interesting, because along with every part of government, no matter how big or small, there's a bureaucracy and many times you'll get things in it will be shelved. However with the items that you made for us, which we greatly appreciate, they were used immediately, they were dispatched to the different houses face shields in, in the holders for for masks and it was credible because instead of the things being instead of service receiving the items and being told well, you'll get them when you need them. The need was immediate, it was given to us it was dispatched to us and it was used almost instantly. Whatever run because still on runs, now we are wearing masks, be it the cloth masks or the N 95 masks, the shields, the ones that you made. Those are now our protection when we are doing cardiac arrests to protect our or wholesales or faces from bodily fluids or if there are any any other type of trauma things We still have some that we are using for those situations.Greg Marine  Very nice.Dan Hauger  So we appreciate it. Thank you so much. Oh,Greg Marine  you're welcome. It was those times were like, what, what can we do? And that was one of the suggestions when we were looking at the forums for printers. And now we've got, we have 10 printers that were pumping out this PP and so it was easy to make hundreds we made hundreds of face masks, we made over 5000 year guards for the masks. So it was it was a it was a challenging time for the for the community around us. And so we were so glad that it went directly to helping save lives here in the Indianapolis area, especially here in South Southwestern. So.Unknown Speaker  Now,Greg Marine  aside from the technology that we've talked about here in first responding and firefighting, the things that brought us together was disc golf, right. And before we met, you are already playing it. So what got you into the leisure of outside of your job to wind down and play this thing called disc golf.Unknown Speaker  My family and I were attending mountain Gilliam church in Morrisville. And one morning when we arrived, I noticed a basket, a disc golf basket. And I had seen it before. I had thrown a frisbee at one before sure, but never played around a disc off. And I told my wife Hey, that's fun. That'd be fun for us to get him. I think we'd like to do that. So my birthday, it was close to my birthday. So for my birthday, I got a starter pack. Okay, that came with a driver, a mid range and a putter. So our first round of disc golf My wife is not a disc golf person. She she's decided that it's not her her bag, she came out and tried to play with us and she said no. But my son, my daughter and I went out and played around the desk off and I had this great idea of not knowing anything about disc golf, per se. I had this great idea was okay first hole, you throw this disc, you throw this, this and this disc, okay? And so that led to a little bit of frustration when this would have to tee off with a putter okay, because our beginning our beginning drives with typical drives of a new person playing disc golf where they go straight up and come right back down, right. And with a putter it even less distance than the driver with my daughter decided it was okay. But it's not her bag, either. My son and I, we started drooling when we realized this is fun. Yeah, we get to walk we get to throw things in and have a blast. And so then that started our disc golf adventure and about, I'm just going to guess and say let's just say 30 discs each later, we now know the difference between a driver putter mid range.Greg Marine  And the to explain this to some of the listeners who may never have heard of this golf or didn't know what it was. Basically the the rim of the desk is a different shape for different types of throws, and says that you can throw a disc and it's like a typical frisbee that you would just toss to your dog or back and forth at the beach. You know a driver is more streamlined, thin on the edge can cut through the air as it's spinning, whereas a putter is very dull on the edge and is designed to grab the chains of the basket. And so the mid range of course is different shapes on the on the edge to have it go certain directions as you're throwing it with it left or right or depending on the spin that you give it. Just like ball golf, youUnknown Speaker  have your your Woods your irons and your putters, right. And that's what we have there. It's just the carts that that people use in disc golf for the kind you pull behind it. Not the kind you're right in such a big difference.Greg Marine  Yeah, this is good exercise, which is actually what got me into it to begin with is I needed to lose weight. And then I heard about this. This league and Mongolia. I joined it met you guys.Unknown Speaker  So for now, but you can't get rid of this and IGreg Marine  can't get rid of you.Unknown Speaker  And that's all right. Yeah.Greg Marine  And we also share our love for Disney. Not to go into too much detail. But one of the things that we use there from technology is my Disney experience, the app and one of the things I find interesting about you is that you have the app installed, not just for Walt Disney or you. Right You also have the parks in other countries and California, right so you can see the wait times of all the parks thatUnknown Speaker  I am a self professed geek. I love it. And I also found out that another guy that I'm on the fire department with is also a Disney freak. And his name's Brandon and Brandon, Brandon and I have some good conversations about about Disney. And he's a great firefighter, great guy. And we've talked about the different apps too, and in his kids love Disney, and so on. So I say no, wait time. Shanghai right now is outside that the morning he just shakes his head because he comes in as I'm condemned for his shift as I'm getting off shift. So yeah, my geekness will cause some head shaking and things like that. Yeah, I it's interesting. I like I like looking at the different layouts of the lands and the different ways that they present the same story.Greg Marine  And then 10 years ago, we didn't have that, right. Like these apps were just being introduced, let's say about nine to 10 years ago, but it wasn't across every Park. So right. It was very fascinating the difference now that you can have that Disney magic in your pocket, yep. Regardless where you are, where you are in the world.Unknown Speaker  Yeah. And what's interesting, also, going to Disney and doing a bridge between Disney and in the fire department. We, part of our another part of our technology that we use at the fire department is we have different detectors. So might have a co detector we might have, we have sectors, and we have thermal imaging cameras, where we use in situations where we need to find heat signatures within a fire for bodies or hidden fires and things like that. But we got called for carbon monoxide in the home, there are carbon monoxide detectors going off. And so we arrived and, and the homeowner was standing outside with four kids, a husband was at work. And as we started talking, you know, button, the monitors calibrate outside, come to find out she was a Disney freak, which was pretty nice. And so I was able to talk to her about Disney the whole time while her house is getting checked out. Yeah. And so the technology of the fire department was being used inside the technology of Disney was being talked about outside and forth, we were able to find the leak to the help of the gas company and, and in able to take care of the bad situation that could have happened. Yeah. But through Disney and in the technology of Disney talking about the differences between the technology technology they use in California and Lando kept her nice and calm and collected. Well, the technology we use to save their lives were being administered inside the house.Greg Marine  That is very cool. Very interesting. Awesome. Yeah,Unknown Speaker  I am, I enjoyed it, I enjoyed it. The the new, I'm calling them toys that we have. I just said we got a grant to get new co detectors, so all of our products are gonna have co detectors again. Because what will happen just like anything else that uses that test, air filters will go bad internal filters will go bad. So if you are wondering if you should change your, your smoke detector, it has filters, change it, if you're wondering, they're relatively cheap, or you can a lot of times you can get ahold of your fire department and say, Hey, I need new smoke detectors. And many times they're free. And how we do it is if you contact the headquarters will come out and install them may just put them up right back up where the old ones were, because there are specific areas that where you want to. But if you've ever had a fire in your house or anything like that, that filter is probably has some some residual smoke or Ash on it and it would need to be replaced. SoGreg Marine  that's good advice. Very good.Unknown Speaker  Technology, technology will will save you or cause you to scratch your head and go What am I doing here?Greg Marine  Well, thanks. Thankfully the technology we've been talking about today is mostly the good kind of saving. Exactly. So versus the scratching head kind so yeah, no, that's great. And I appreciate your time today, Dan, and thank you again for for your service to our community. Thank you and, and everything like that. So thank you for being on the show.Unknown Speaker  I appreciate it. Thank you for invitingGreg Marine  Thank you for listening. This has been talking tech
40 minutes | Nov 9, 2020
Ep 5 - Talking with David Dal Busco
David Dal Buscohttps://twitter.com/daviddalbuscoDeck Deck Gohttps://deckdeckgo.comIonic Zurich Meetuphttps://www.meetup.com/Ionic-Zurich/Zurich Indie Hackershttps://www.meetup.com/Zurich-Indie-Hackers/Greg Marine  This week I had the pleasure of talking with David Dal Busco. David is a freelance developer currently residing in Zurich, Switzerland. He leads meetups as a blog writer, and as one of the creators of deck deck, go, welcome to this week's episode of talking tech.If you wouldn't mind, go ahead and start off by telling me telling the listeners a little bit about yourself and what you do.David Dal Busco  Oh, so yeah, first of all, thanks for having me, Greg.Greg Marine  Thank you for being on.David Dal Busco  Yeah, I'm really looking forward to the chat. It's always a pleasure to speak with you. And yeah, so I'm David. I come from the Swiss French part of the country. So that the small French accident and really small, and I live in Zurich, and I'm a freelance software developer.Greg Marine  Excellent. Sh, today, one of the reasons I asked you to be on the show today was to talk a little bit about a project that you started. It looks like it's been around for just over a year now. But Deck Deck Go. Tell us a little bit about Deck Deck Go, and what inspired you to begin that project?David Dal Busco  Yes, thank you. So actually, I think it's around since two years, two years. The editor is live since one year. Okay. So basically, two years ago, I think I had to make a presentation about web components and ionic v4, something like that. Okay. And when I was developing my, my, my talk, I thought, yeah, that's a bit dumb. I'm talking about web component, and I don't use web component to to make the presentation. So I thought, Yeah, I just gonna build that little library quickly. Sure. That's for one forward two years later rights and nidito. And, and a bigger, big project. So I mean, like, after a year, so I was kind of a king around that that's more library. One evening, I had dinner with my friend Nicola matcha, which also collaborated to dictate book. Okay, we are having pasta and a glass of wine. And then we said, maybe, you know, maybe we can build an editor around it. Okay. Okay. Yeah, we're gonna do it. And I probably would have not been jito alone. Because the three a big, big project on earth for absolute, because my friend was doing a quiz me was like, a fancy things to do for a couple of months. SoGreg Marine  yeah, very nice. And so you basically got inspired to do it because you were doing a talk on web components with ionic. So is that the technology that you built a decade ago with? Was it ionic? Yeah.David Dal Busco  I would say to them, did we Stenson okay.Okay, why are you using ionic for like, for the UI component for the design system, like for the, the batanes, or the router and so on,Unknown Speaker  thatDavid Dal Busco  everything else is built with stencilUnknown Speaker  over.David Dal Busco  We have also that kind of inspiration to try to be a bit as much agnostic as we can. So when we need a component, even though sometimes we find really great component for the challenge or something like that, we try to be deep by ourself. Okay. Like, I don't know, we have a component which is made to drag, resize and rotate elements. And, yeah, it's like, a lot of mathematics just to make everything stick in the right place and stuff.Greg Marine  Sure. Okay.David Dal Busco  Yeah. We just spent a couple of nights on it, because it was fun to do you know,Greg Marine  yeah. Okay. Yeah, that's what some of the best products that are in existence today are built by people because they're having fun doing it.David Dal Busco  Yeah, I hope so. I hope so.Greg Marine  And then yeah, that's, that's great. And I, you're one of the few projects that I know other than ionic itself, that's using stencil, is that fairly easy to work withDavid Dal Busco  I would say yes.I saw when I when when we speak from front end development. I Yama and I was mostly a non Gouda developer. Okay.So when I jump into stencil,he was kind of easy, but I have to be familiar with a JSX, which is the same syntax as vs. React. Right. Okay. So I would say, yeah, it's not like an HTML page, it takes a bit of, of time. But once you, you get that all the rest is really easy, I think. Because it is, oh, sorry. Yeah, sorry. It's just like stencil is a good mix between ankura and react, you got JSX. So that functional way of building component. And those aside, you got all the decoration properties, you know, if you want to add a listener on it, and so, yeah, I really like it.Greg Marine  Yeah. So that's, as one of the fascinating things that's come from the ionic folks is that they've built a tool to be able to build web components. And it's something that works equally well, in most of the modern browsers today. Have you found any difficulty working with the various browsers such as Chrome, Firefox? edge? Has there been any things that you had to tweak to make it work on all those? Or has everything just worked?David Dal Busco  So not really, actually, when it goes to the Web Components themself, it just works, and also, stencil, you can plug a polyfill poly file and still compatible with all the browser. So not that there isn't much problem regarding the session, then when when you book like competitive programming more because that browser didn't implemented that API or as an nosorh implementation of that API, and so on?Greg Marine  Sure, okay. Yeah, that's one of the things that I find to be really neat about stencil. I've not used it myself. But everything I've read is that when you're using stencil, and creating those bindings, it just, it just works. And I think that's one of the powerful tools to allow developers like us to do what we do best. So we don't have to worry about compatibility between the browsers.David Dal Busco  Yeah. And I've kind of really confirmed that it works also everywhere, because, like I said, I've made a couple of components, and I use them quite everywhere. Like in my website, which is built with Gatsby, I'm using stencil component. Okay, I've got a couple of Angular apps where I'm using stencil component. Okay. It's really, I think it's really the right tools to build components, because then you can use them everywhere. And you don't have to think about art, that's that technology to do that, and so on.Greg Marine  So I need to spend some more time working with stencil. It sounds like because I use I don't I've kind of drifted away from Angular, but I still use react. And I'm delving in view now as well, at work. So it's, it's kind of nice, that if I just build a component and stencil I can use it with whatever framework the clients wanting to use.David Dal Busco  Yeah, I mean, if you know, react, I don't know if you because I never, like just literally spent like one hour interview, but speaking, you should know react, then it's gonna be easy to jump into. Even more easy, I think. Because then you got like, you know, you're gonna find you, you function with a random Ito then then then it's the same syntax. So it Yeah, it's gonna be it's gonna be nice. Very nice. After so for me, it was I did a new react. So because I spent a lot of time in stencil, then I think it was for me easier to jump into react, because I already knew JSX and JSX. You know, okay. So, it makes things interesting to jump from one technology do I do there and so on?Greg Marine  Yeah. And it's nice that those what skills you already had allowed you to transition a little easier between those?David Dal Busco  Yeah, exactly.Greg Marine  Okay. Now, one of the things we had talked about being on the show a little over a month ago, but then in talking with you that we decided to wait until now and the reason being hack tober fest. You had a big month during October in a hashtag October fest. So tell me a little look into it before we got on to this recording. It looks like you had closed 34 different items on your Oktoberfest you have a few that are still remaining waiting for prs, but tell me what Was that like, and what kind of new features have you added to deck that go? Because of the October hack? tober fest?David Dal Busco  Thanks for asking. Yeah, I mean, he was really, I was really surprised that we had so much interest and have really to sync all the best songs and contribute those who took the time to help. Because I really felt like it, push it the the project forward, they provided really create fear trees or bird Pixies, and that was really a nice app. And so we have added, we have added more styling options. So now you can in our editor, mostly you can add book shadows border reduce, you can vary a bit more the text and so on, then the results are new functions where you can plug or generate random waves and plug them in the background of your slides. Okay, you know, it's quite common now, when you are the landing page to have this waves between section. So you can do the same with with, with slides. Very nice. And that works really well because we are currently working on something we call puppy riffs. And so it's like, instead of swiping your slide, like vertically or horizontally, we basically publish your presentation as a landing page. Okay. So it's kind of nice. So it works quite, you know, you can add the ways in a presentation, which is actually a landing page. That's that's kind of, yeah, it's fun to see. Then there was also a new components because the holy Tito is based on templates. So for example, you have the templates where the teacher is in the middle, or the teacher is on the left side, or you got the templates for the QR code or charts or you can also have ports to your charts where you can interact with your audience. You can also showcase code and so on and someone provided a new component to generate automatically worlds of clouds.Greg Marine  Okay, yeah. So, remember that feature came about because of a tweet that Mike. Michael Callahan tweeted? Yeah, one of our mutual friends. Yeah, he had made a comment about it. And that that born that gave birth to this idea for your, your words of clouds, or cloud?David Dal Busco  is is that the origin of that? That it's a nice way to present when you have multiple eyes? These I mean, yeah. And, yeah, we have also a couple of fixes. And no, we also because everything is built with our editor is a PVR. And when you publish your slides, the slides are pre shared as standalone progressive web apps to Yeah, okay. No, Akash provided a PR where, you know, you got the reload bar when there is a new version. So you can click and it automatically updates to the new version.Greg Marine  Oh, very nice. Yeah, I think one of the, that's a powerful feature to be able to create your presentation as a progressive web app, so that you can share it with anyone on social media, or even when you're doing it live, but you're able to share those slides with anyone. And all it takes is a web browser to power that they don't have to download any special apps to look at the presentation that is generated by deck deck. Oh,David Dal Busco  yeah. So I mean, of course, I'm agree with you, I know.The single season. When I get the presentation, somehow, I don't want to download something and wait for the right. I want the presentation. So that's why also in our slides, everything is lazy loaded. So we use the intersection of several and then all the images which are coming and not loaded when you start the presentation. SoGreg Marine  okay, so it can start right up. And yeah, wait for everything to download. Yep.David Dal Busco  Which was a bit tricky to do, because there is also an offline mode in technical so you can alter like on a bit like on Netflix, you can go in your in your slide and say I want that presentation offline. So we kind of have to trigger all the images to be downloaded before going in the floorplan Yeah, that was also fun to do.Yeah.I probably forgot other factories right now.Greg Marine  Well, there was a lot added during the last month. I was going through and seeing the list and what you had already mentioned one of the things that I was going to ask about the waves. I think that's a brilliant little one. addition to, to the to the slides, like you said, you can turn your slideshow into a landing page. And I mean, so that makes the presentation software in Dec that go just that much more amazing to me that you can not just presentations, you can build a product landing page and talk about your new product just by using basically desktop software.David Dal Busco  Yeah, exactly. Yeah.Greg Marine  So one of the one of the cool features I was playing with it today before this, this recording is the remote control. And basically, you have the ability to after you've you're ready with the presentation with a QR code shows up on your screen with your phone, you can just hit a little the QR code and pull up remote control so you can control your presentation from your smartphone or a tablet. Tell me a little bit about that and how that came about.David Dal Busco  Oh, I'm not sure. I think someone suggested the idea like, but before they did exist, that was one of the first things I did. Because there was an interested to be teased because I was interested to use web RTC never use that technology before. Okay, so that was again, something more technology driven at the begin. And then I noticed that that actually the UX future was really interesting. Yeah. So we made several iteration on that remote control to because, for example, know, when you sync your presentation with the remote, like the aspect ratio in preserve it. And also, since a couple of months, the content is also sync with the remote control.Greg Marine  Yes, I noticed that as well.David Dal Busco  And I think it kind of the best solution is not even having like a remote control on your mobile phone. But maybe like having a tablet, you know big because probably you're gonna be behind the desk, but can't happen for your presentation. And when you have no screen in front of you just have like a tablet in history, see all your notes, both the actions and all your slides. And moreover, you can also draw on the remote control and it cannot be then gonna be drawn on your, on your presentation on the big screen, you know,Greg Marine  okay, I did not realize that, that's very cool.David Dal Busco  So you can have our rows and so on. So that was also interesting too.And we try to have thisit's maybe more more fun again. But like we have the remote control where you, you see, you see a QR code and then you scan it and then you multicultural upon. But likewise, you can add ports in your in your presentation. And on the same slide, you're going to have a chart, which summaries the votes of your audience. And next week, you've got a you've got a QR code. So your audience can scan the QR code. It starts the dig up on their phone, it's a TDR. So start straight away. And then they can vote for what they want.Greg Marine  Yeah, I noticed that you can have a poll right there inside your presentation. Like you said, a QR code comes up and they can scan it with your phone, sitting in the audience and can start voting. So during your presentation, it's all calculated on the fly. And instantly, I noticed that I was playing around with it. Soon as I click my vote. The The results showed up on the on the screen immediately.David Dal Busco  Yeah.And yeah, the only thing I see is that the next thing I have to build in terms of either direction is, as I told you in the remote control, you can draw over you slide. And I think that would maybe be nice if you can do the same in the ditto. Because notice there are a lot of lot of presentation are made online, right? Yeah, he was. Yeah. This there is. So there is a chance that you're going to present it on your laptop. So then the presentation is going to be displayed on your laptop and you're going to stream it so it would be nice that you can draw on. So that's probably one of the next things I gonna I'm gonna drop.Greg Marine  Very cool. One of the things that I noted is sort of I don't know if I want to call it marketing or not. But one of the phrases that you you've repeat is that you can build simple presentations. And I immediately had a question mark over the words simple. It is simple to build them. But there's nothing simple about the presentation in my opinion. You have so many advanced features, like being able to embed polls. like we mentioned, graphics, you also have the ability to embed an entire website, and like as a web app, inside the presentation, and YouTube videos, which can be controlled from the remote control. So you have all these advanced features. You know, this, this feels like a very advanced tool, almost better than something like a PowerPoint.David Dal Busco  Sir teresting, thank you.Maybe I think in terms of simple because we've got this approach that you have templates, and some extension, you cannot make everything you want. You can tweak a lot of things that you cannot make everything where in more standard tools like PowerPoint, and so on, you can destroy everything which you want. So that's why I think it's simple because it's kind of driven what you can do. Okay. But, yeah, that's a that's an interesting thought.Greg Marine  Thanks. Yeah. So so. So it is, I see your point is that it's simple in that you have a very finite way of presenting. But of course, I look at it as advanced because of what those finite things are. So many options that I haven't seen in other other software, similar software. So. But kudos to you. I mean, I applaud what you guys are doing. And I think it's absolutely amazing. Something else you do besides deck deco? You had mentioned your freelance web developer, project manager as well, you do project management as well.David Dal Busco  Yeah, it's like,I think I used to work for company when I was doing project management and so on. So now it's kind of the added value. I add, sometimes when I take over project by my own or something like that. Sure. Then I kind of part of Yeah, I my client to a bit schedule his project or to make it aware when it's possible, when there is no change can happen. And Sure.Greg Marine  So yeah. And then you also take that on, do you a UX, user experience. And then other types of consulting as well?David Dal Busco  Yeah, but the UX expensive, more intense. I bring that developer point of view and the UX and had the chance to collaborate project which started from zero. So where we had to think about what we're going to build, we start up what we can put pretty neat. And then I bring that experience of the interactions from the developer point of view.Greg Marine  And you're also a community leader, in that you run a few meetups. That's actually one of the things that allowed us to meet when we conversed on Twitter. But then I joined a few of your meetups, and then you ended up inviting me to speak at one of your meetups. And so tell me a little bit about how you got involved in organizing those and and how those are going.David Dal Busco  So I organized the ionic meetup in Zurich, since was three years, I think, three years. I'm not sure anymore. So the big chance I had, I go to a co working space here in Zurich, which is called the impact of Zurich. And they try to, they push their member to organize seems to be together to come together to exchange it.Greg Marine  Okay. AndDavid Dal Busco  they do that. And we had through that we had the chance to have like a room for free in a space where we can meet once a month. So that was kind of the right match. You know, I was sure beginning to develop a lot of things in ionic, and I thought maybe some other people too, and there is a room for free. SoGreg Marine  let's do it. There we go.David Dal Busco  Yeah, exactly. So we have built that small community. And yeah, it's like it's a small community. Sometimes we have 10 people going to the meetups and stuff, too. But it's kind of idea it's kind of like France or something. Tissue has been a bit more quiet because I have to say, because it's a really small community and we were used to meet the maybe have a drink together and stuff like that. kind of make all the every single bit more slow, but we try to catch up. Sometimes we summon like a run Anda bit in the samesame spirit, beginning of this year with my friend dashana, we started the India meetup. Okay, where we had the chance to have youth became one of you wonderful project. YouGreg Marine  know, I appreciate that. Because of COVID. I know a lot of the stuff goes online. So you were able to have that one online. And I was able to join you for that. So I appreciate that.David Dal Busco  Yeah, that was really interesting. Andthat's what so for me, which basically spend all my time more like, in a technical way, it's like that. It's, it's interesting to have that meetup where not, not everyone is a developer, you know, there is also like, designer marketing guys. Oh, yeah. I mean, three, like, people coding things and people using no code. So it's an extra chance to, to have like, all the side. So, yeah,Greg Marine  yeah, it's nice to meet people from different backgrounds. And it was one of the other presentations on that particular meetup was sort of a design system. Where they were able to say, okay, they could sell to their clients, here's how you can build a website, and use that same thing for print material. And so basically had, you know, set up templates. And that was pretty powerful. And actually, one of the things that brought me into being available for that was I started building a tool myself, and I come, I had come across one of your blog posts about how to use markdown, because I was looking to use markdown technology in react code. And so that brought me to a blog post that you'd written. So that's something else that you do you also do a lot of writing, how often do you write Do you is a weekly or I've read several of your of your blog posts, but I'm not sure what the cadence is on that.David Dal Busco  So I don't have a fixed kidded. It's more one. So like, in October, I really had too much to do, like between the my clients project and October 1, I was kind of intense. Yeah. But otherwise, I try. every couple of weeks. She was a bit special, because when there was the first lockdown in Switzerland, first and on Sadat. And then I say, Okay, I gonna write one blog post every day until the lockdown is finished. So I had to write like something like 32, or something like that blog post in a row.So that was kind of intense.Greg Marine  can imagine. So yeah.David Dal Busco  Now the idea was, when when we have when we have good dig, they go, we saw that we're going to use it to learn something. So I was thinking that maybe I can share what I learned from some blog posts. So that's why you often got, I often write a blog post, I build that. Here's why I did it. Yeah. It's kind of kind of the ID. And it's maybe the engineering way or like, practical stuff. And I like to see. No, that's, it looks like this. You can do it like that.Greg Marine  Yeah, I think it is really cool to share that knowledge. Because we're all learning constantly, if we're doing it right, I should say, because technology is constantly moving. It's constantly improving. So we have to do the same. And it's great that you're sharing that knowledge through blog posts. And, you know, that's, that's one of the reasons that attracted me to you to begin with, start following you on Twitter was because of that, now, freely sharing your information, because you make money from from working with clients that hire you for your expertise, and you're giving back to the community. And I think that's great. And that's one of the reasons that deck deck go i think is so successful today is you opened it up to being open source kind of shared that and now you have contributors that are making it even better.David Dal Busco  Yeah. Thank you. Yes. Like, I don't know, you know what, I'm like a try. I want for my client like 8% hundred percent a week, like, like, it would be like a normal job. Right. But maybe because I'm a freelancer, I got a bit more flexibility in my wall shirts, like it helps also to have a bit more time or more flexibility to write blog posts and stuff like that.Unknown Speaker  SoDavid Dal Busco  So it's a it's a good way for me to, like you say to to keep learning because yeah, I mean, especially as a freelancer, it's not like, yeah, it's the fascinating part and the art part of development, some of Yeah, so senior thing, because you always learn new stuff. And the other side, you always have to learn. So it's kind of Yeah.Greg Marine  Well, I'll tell you what, as a recently, I became a freelancer. And I've been following a lot of other freelancers online. I'm kind of throwing this at you and didn't prepare you for this question. But it just came to my mind what what kind of advice would you give to somebody who's just now starting get into freelancing? Or who is considering doing a freelance opportunity? What kind of advice would you give to such a person?David Dal Busco  I don't know. It depends. Like, I tend to think that what's really important is kind of to build the network. If you have to be read, but I got other friends, which are freelancing, freelancer, and they just find geeks online, you know, they go on platform like Upwork. And they gonna, they're gonna find geeks, because they are really specialized, specialized in what they do. Okay.But, to me, that doesn't work. It's really like,I heard and I have to builda network to find you about.Greg Marine  Yeah, I think networking is quite important myself. Yeah.David Dal Busco  So that would be that would be something because at some point, if you decide to become a freelancer, and you say, okay, tomorrow, I cannot be a freelancer, and you don't have a contract or anything. But what you can do, you should write to all your friend and say, yeah, as of tomorrow, I'm a freelancer. If you hear something, tell me, I'm looking for a client, you know, if you if you if no one knows what you are doing it, then it's gonna be hard to find something.Greg Marine  Yeah, as a matter of fact, you mentioning that reminded me when I, when I started this journey this year, I had just lost a job. And within a week had a freelance gig because of my network, because I had had those relationships. And I was able to find work within a week, simply because of that. If I had not had a network, yeah, it could have just dropped off the map and been unemployed for months. But instead, it was just a week. Yeah.David Dal Busco  I mean, it doesn't mean that if you don't have a network, it's not gonna work. But somehow, you have to try to find a way to reach more people again. And for the rest of the knowledge, like, not really advice, I think it's like, again, it's not my job to, especially if you like coding, then it's easy. You find things to code, and then you complete them.Greg Marine  Now, I've been doing this for nearly 25 years, I've actually been coding since the 80s. So about 34 years or so. One professional 10 years later. How about you? How long have you been doing this?David Dal Busco  Oh, yeah, it's been a while. I think in the 90s. I began, okay. I think I finish then generic engineering school around 2000. Something. Okay.Yeah. Most probably more than 20 years.Greg Marine  Yeah. Very nice.David Dal Busco  That was the good years now.Greg Marine  For me, it was the young years, I feel likeDavid Dal Busco  but yeah, then most of my career that was like more Chavo wanted, and it's since a couple couple of here that I transitioned it to be like a web developer.Greg Marine  Yeah. Yeah. Did web development the mid mid 90s, but mostly Java, which is what got me into full time development of mins dotnet as well, C sharp and all that. What other? So you've worked with Java and web technologies, any other technology stacks that you you've dealt with?David Dal Busco  No, not really. Oh,yeah. We shall find a little bit more time to try something heads. But currently sleep spray difficult to find more time? Yeah, it's not a problem. And justGreg Marine  yeah, just curiosity though.David Dal Busco  Yeah, exactly. Yeah. I know wanting to ask, why is it going with your project?Greg Marine  It's actually slowed down a little bit because I've considered rebuilding it all in view. My son started looking at view A lot of the gotchas or a lot of the hurdles that I came across working with the React code. They don't exist in view. And it's kind of strange how that works. But it's basically the implementation of ionic, the components are the same. The web components are all the same. But the way that view handles, being able to render the views is so much more advanced than react. And so I'm actually starting to think I could be, I could build better templating in view than I am in the React version. So I've considered actually not scrapping it, I'll probably keep the React going. But I'm trying to decide if I want to rebuild it and view the kind of have more than one option. Now originally, my, my goal was to build it in react and angular and view. But now that I've dealt with views, like, oh, man, I think I might just just go with you. But yeah, I was gonna reach out to you in about a month or so after doing that and seeing if we could talk again, because I, I just think you've seen it, the presentation everything, and I thought it would be kind of cool to share what I found. So that's to come. Let's, yeah,David Dal Busco  yeah, anytime. Sure. Yeah.That sounds interesting. I mean, it's like, and then you also gonna improve your use case? Yeah.It's like, it can be like a win win situation.Greg Marine  Exactly. And it's kinda like, what you were saying with deck that goes are some technologies that I've been wanting to, to learn. And a project like, this allows me to be able to do that a project. Like I said, topical will allow me to, to do that. say, Okay, I have this new feature I want to add, and I want to use this new technology that I've never played with. And since it's my own pet project, I can do it.David Dal Busco  Yeah. Why not?There is alwaysso something to read the blog post, try it out quickly. Then to apply a technology to a real application, you're always gonna end up on different scales or different problems you might not face when you do a test. So I think it's always a win to try to build something great.If I can say,Greg Marine  exactly.David Dal Busco  Just take time,Greg Marine  next time. That's right. And I've actually had more time this year than I've ever had, because we don't what my wife and I, we like to travel. We do a lot of traveling all within the United States. But we're actually hoping to branch out and start exploring the world. I think we're going to start this year, we definitely have plans for next year to visit Greece, but all that fell apart because of the virus. So this year, I've just been spending a lot more time at home getting projects done at the house and and I do have more time than I've ever had. What's the difference this year?David Dal Busco  Hopefully, hopefully do the trouble gonnacome back toGreg Marine  Yeah, I hope so too.David Dal Busco  I never been to the states. So I hope I can come one day to the stage to youGreg Marine  now. You don't want to come right now. The numbers are rising. The vs. Is, is rising. But I know we wanted to go to Greece next year for my wife's 40th birthday. And it's just not going to happen is that even if they have a vaccine and won't be widespread yet? You know, maybe not everyone will have it and travel will still be restricting.David Dal Busco  Let's do that.Let's keep hope.Greg Marine  Yes, I do have hope. But it doesn't have to be the two years from now. I think what's going to happen? We'll just postpone it to 2022 because we still plan to do it. We're not gonna cancel everything.David Dal Busco  Yeah, you're my hype. The time to rewrite everything one more time.Greg Marine  That's right. That's right. Very true. Well, uh, David, I really appreciate your time today. And I wish you the best of luck with with deck deck go. And also with your, your freelancing. I think it's great. And I appreciate your time. And and thanks.David Dal Busco  Thank you very excited. Thank you for coming. And likewise, I wish that your financing things gonna go further as it already going. Well, I mean, I'm looking for what the next step of your project and yeah, anytime you got a question or want to show me something, I would be happy. Always nice to have a chat with you.Greg Marine  Yes, it is. Thanks. Likewise,David Dal Busco  same with you. My pleasure.
17 minutes | Oct 28, 2020
Ep 4 - Talking with Michele Hansen
Michele Hansenhttps://twitter.com/mjwhansenGeocodio:https://www.geocod.iohttps://twitter.com/GeocodioSoftware Social Podcasthttps://softwaresocial.devhttps://twitter.com/SoftwareSocPodGreg Marine  This week, I've got a guest, who is the co founder of geocode. Do and is also the co host of software, social podcast. Michelle Hanson. Michelle, how are you today?Michele Hansen  Good. How are you, Greg?Greg Marine  I am doing quite well, thank you so much for being on the show today. Happy to do it. And tell me in the listeners what what is geocode do,Michele Hansen  Geocodio is a software as a service company. And we do data matching for location data. So basically, whenever you want to make a map online, a computer doesn't understand an address, it only understands coordinates. So at a very basic level, what we do is converting addresses to coordinate so computers can understand them, and then also coordinates to addresses so that humans can understand them. And then our niche in the market is with, there's a lot of data that you can only get if you have the coordinates. So the coordinates act as sort of a doorway to other pieces of information, like the time zone, for example, for a location, or census data. So we also act as a facilitator to help other people get other pieces of data that they might need, even if they're not mapping, but they're looking to enhance their location data.Greg Marine  And how did you guys get started and doing this?Michele Hansen  It came about because it was a need, we had ourselves. So my husband and I had made a mobile app in 2012. That helped people find the grocery store and coffee shop hours nearby. So the idea was that if you needed milk at midnight, or a coffee at 3am, you could just pull up the app, and it would tell you what was open. Google didn't really have as advanced features around store hours as it does now. And so the problem with this was that we the whole app, and the central feature of it was a map showing the nearby stores. And we were using Google geocoding. And at the time, you can either get 2500 free locations per day, and you couldn't, you could only cache them for 30 days. Or if you needed more than that. So if you needed 3000 a day, your only option was to get an enterprise enterprise annual contract that was about 1020 $30,000 a year. And we just needed a couple more a day, not that level. So we ended up having to build our own geocoder. And as we talked to our friends about this, your friends who are developers, they had similar problems. And so about six months after we created it for ourselves, we released it to the public.Greg Marine  What is really, really interesting. And so you've been doing this for eight years now.Michele Hansen  Do you go to lunch in January of 2014? Yeah, so we so we launched the app in 2012. I want to say and then Okay, um, it was sort of over the course of the year as that app grew. I want to say it was June of 2013 that we built the geo coder, and then the sort of testing period what was over that fall, and then we launched in January of 2014.Greg Marine  And so you basically built or launched a business out of core feature of the original app, then. Yes, exactly. Yeah, that's, that's, that is really, really interesting and really cool. And tell me, I assume that you weren't doing this full time at the time back in 2012.Michele Hansen  No, they were all side projects. So we basically rolled one side project into another. And then from there, you didn't went full time?Greg Marine  Did you both go full time at the same time? Or did one of you go before the other?Michele Hansen  No, I went full time in October of 2017. And my husband went full time in art. He went part time in February of 2018. And then full time in October of 2018.Greg Marine  And now when you did this, was there a specific reason why you both didn't go full time would have been something like health care related or anything like that? Yeah,Michele Hansen  absolutely. It was risk mitigation. And so when I went full time, you know, he was still working full time. So we were able to switch over to his health insurance. We had been on my health insurance previously. And then when he went part time He'd actually gone to his boss and told him that the business was growing enough. And he needed to step down. And his boss basically said no. And so we ended up negotiating that he would, you know, go down to working three days a week and partial salary but full benefits. So that allowed us to, that bought us some time to research health insurance options and manage some of that risk.Greg Marine  And that's, that's an interesting scenario. And I recall, recently, he did a podcast with calling on software social, where he described sort of a saga that you went through researching health care, and what it would take to do that now that you're both full time with God, Oh,Michele Hansen  it's such a mess in the US. And I don't think policymakers realize that the Byzantine us healthcare system, and insurance market holds so many entrepreneurs backGreg Marine  Yeah. And that's that's actually a really sort of a what I would describe as a sad situation, because there's so much innovation going on, in in America, and it really does hold us back from being able to truly innovate to our full potential, when something like a risk of health insurance is such a big risk. And you had mentioned that the transition with you going full time first. And then Matthias going second was a risk mitigation. So I'm curious, do you both? Or do one of you have a business background so that you have the insight to consider that?Michele Hansen  Yes.So we both I would say we both have a business background, just in very different ways. So first of all, both of us have the experience of our parents being entrepreneurs. So in my husband's case, his parents run a party rentals business together. And in my case, my dad was a self employed consultant when I was a kid and my mother had an art business. So we were both around business a lot as kids. And my husband had his own business as a child and teenager as well. And then I started my own business with friends at 19 for the first time. And so by the time we started Yokota, we actually had some some understanding of what goes into running a business. And what that means on a practical level, so we had some of the systems level understanding, I wouldn't say we had all of it though, um, and actually, I ended up going back to school to get my MBA in 2017, to fill in some gaps I had around accounting and finance and other sort of system level topics, which I just finished in mayGreg Marine  Congratulations. So May this year.Michele Hansen  Yes.Greg Marine  Congratulations. And then along the lines of that business background and achieving your MBA, I assume you both have software development experience. So to be able to develop such a product. Tell me a little bit about the history. And what brought you into software development.Michele Hansen  Yeah, so my husband started coding when he was a kid. I think he was seven or eight or so.Greg Marine  Really cool.Michele Hansen  Yeah, yeah. Um, and, and then I, so I, I think as a, you know, teenager, I think, like many people, my introduction to coding was MySpace, and doing HTML, yourself as a kid. And so I also had the experience of my dad and my mom are both software engineers. So I was around conversations about software from a very early age. So even though I didn't study anything remotely related to software in college, I did international affairs and economics. There was always an understanding of technology there. And the business that I started with friends when I was 19, was run off of WordPress, and I was the one who was managing everything related to, to that website. Um, so it's, I think I have a more non traditional path. And then my husband did you know, he started coding early and majored in this and in college, but But yeah, so it's always something we've been around,Greg Marine  thankfully, my cell phone, I can relate to your husband, I started developing software at the ripe age of seven. Nice, what my dad got me started with that on Microsoft BASIC back in the 80s. And then in the 90s, is one of my took off with web development, and I've been doing it ever since. So that's, it's really, really a neat path. As you said, his was more traditional. So it was mine. So but it's very fascinating to hear how you happened upon it, you know, with your parents, having software development background, and then kind of enriching your childhood with that so that now you're doing the same for your family and so on. The next question I have is like, how do you manage doing a business and having a family at the same time,Michele Hansen  it feels like the most natural thing in the world to us. And so often people are shocked that we run a business together, and I get this sort of reaction of how do you run a business with your spouse? Like we would kill each other? And I, it's the best job I've ever had. There's no workplace drama, there's no I know, there's, there's no those insecurities that come with working in a company I find. It's, it's wonderful. Of course, it's not for everyone, and there are a lot of spouses that shouldn't work together. And, and, you know, I think we've all heard horror stories about working for spouses that shouldn't work together. But But for us, it really works.Greg Marine  Well. That's great to hear. And I know, with my software background, being mostly the MVC pattern, you know, model view controller, I like separation of concerns. So like, for me, personally, I like the idea of having, you know, business and, and work separate from family life. And it sounds like that works well for you guys. And that is excellent. That is great to hear. And, and I, I would see this being something that would instill in your children as well, to be able to do the something similar in the future, since since you both have that in your backgrounds from your parents passed on to you. I think it'd be really cool to see how that turns out for your children.Michele Hansen  Yeah, who knows? Right? And, you know, I think our daughter will hopefully absorb some of it. It's certainly a frequent topic of conversation in our houses, there are things going on with the business, and that's talking about work. And we'll see what direction she ends up taking that in.Greg Marine  And do you ever have a moment when she's like, please stop talking about God? Oh,Michele Hansen  Oh, sure. All the time. But but at the same time, we also have times I think, last night being where she wears her God o t shirt to bed, because it's you're huge on her and, and to be like, I want to be a Juco do girl tonight and like you're always a god. Oh, girl.Greg Marine  That's, that's great. Now, you're also the co host of software, social podcast. Tell me, how did that come about? When did you start doing that?Michele Hansen  So it came about out of conversations that Colleen and I were having having already. So Colleen moved to the same town, or sort of county as, as we were living in, in 2019, for spring of 2019. And through some mutual friends, we learned that, you know, we're both living in the same place. And and and they suggested that we meet up because it turned out, we live five minutes from each other. And so we started having weekly coffee chats at a local coffee shop. And once the pandemic hit, we of course, had to stop doing that. And sort of separately at some point in the spring, one of our friends was saying how there aren't many podcasts about bootstrapped entrepreneurship by women. And in fact, women aren't even often guests on those podcasts. And they were suggesting that we should do something. And I think Coleen and I had both been missing our weekly conversations with each other. And so it was just kind of like, Well, alright, why don't we just do this? And, you know, worst case, you know, nobody listens to it. And it's forcing us to talk to each other. And so it's been, it's been such a great thing. And, surprisingly, people want to listen to it. But really, we're just having fun and just continuing the conversations we are already having, but hopefully trying to help and inspire others in the process.Greg Marine  Yeah, I think you hit the nail on the head there. You're inspiring others through their processes, whether it be bootstrapping, or just trying to navigate the world as it is today. And I would have to say, that was actually what brought me to know you and, and geocode do and Colleen is that I started listening to your podcast, I made a tweet about what do people wear? What are people using for their platform for for podcasts, and you guys had mentioned, you used transistor FM. And so I started listening to your podcast weekly, and it's one of the things I look most look forward to every week. There's very few things that I look forward to every week and that's one of them, and I really enjoy your guys's podcast. I love the conversations and the insight that you guys provide. One of those most recently was the tiny MBA. I have since purchased that book and starting to apply it to my own business. So I appreciate that you guys have discussions about those kinds of things. And, and so thank you.Michele Hansen  That's really kind of you to say,Greg Marine  Well, I appreciate your time today. This is going to be a short conversation, but tell tell us more about how we can get in touch with you with the geocode do and where can we listen to your podcast?Michele Hansen  Sure. Um, so you can listen to software social, wherever podcasts are distributed, I'm supposed to say what sold but they're not. You can find us online at software social dot dev or on Twitter. Software social pod is our handle. You can always reach me on Twitter, which I'm on probably too much. At MJ W. Hanson and do co do is Stu cod.io. I sometimes say do cod like the fish.io not the easiest domain and the name is not the easiest domain to say. But if you also if you just search for to Cody, it'll come up.Greg Marine  Alright, and I'll be sure to put those links in the show notes. And Michelle once again thank you so much for being on the podcast today. And I wish you the best of luck both NGO co do with your husband Matthias and with Colleen on software social.Michele Hansen  Thank you so much, Greg, thank you for having me.
45 minutes | Oct 19, 2020
Ep 3 - Talking with Claudio Del Valle
Learn what inspired Claudio to create WordFeed.app and where he sees it going next. Learn about the amazing work he is doing at OpenForge and hear about his tinkerer spirit landed him a job!Here are some resources discussed in this episode of Talking Tech!Claudio on Twitter:https://twitter.com/ClaudioTrainsThe App:https://wordfeed.app/homeThe Tech:https://ionicframework.comhttps://firebase.google.comOthers Mentioned:https://stenciljs.comhttps://www.raspberrypi.orghttps://socket.iohttps://www.pwabuilder.comhttps://openforge.ioGamification:https://snowball.digital/blog/gamification-in-product-design-make-enterprise-software-suck-lessGreg Marine  Well, this week, I've got a special guest, Claudio, who's the brains behind word feed dot app. Claudio, how are you today?Claudio Del Valle  Doing great. Thank you so much for having me.Greg Marine  I'm glad to have you. And thank you so much for being a part of the show today. And tell me a little bit about yourself. Who is Claudio?Claudio Del Valle  All right. Well, Claudio, I'll get the value supposed to be pronounced. I'm a developer from Mexico. I've been in the United States for close to 10 years. And for the last three years, I've been working for open forge where we do mobile apps.Greg Marine  Excellent. That's, that's I've heard of open forge have been a few of your meetups and enjoy it quite a bit. And I believe the is the owner. That's jenai. That's right. Jedediah. Okay. Excellent. And so, you know, besides working for them, what what is it? You do without going into too much detail? I don't want to give up any IP here any secrets from from open forge? But tell me what do you do there?Claudio Del Valle  No, let me tell you actually about how I got hired. So I got paired up with them when I was doing my co op rounds at Drexel University, where you get to do three rounds of internships with companies. And one of them happened to be the precursor to open Forge, which was what Giunta and at the time when I interviewed for what jundo actually had no, well, some programming experience, but none that would actually qualify me or me for the job. But what caught Jenny's attention, who happened to enter Ruby was that I was quite a ticker. You see, I also have a passion for 3d printing. And any things involving like, engineering, mechanical engineering, electrical computers, so that I think caught their attention. And then they got me started working on on on a game developing framework framework called the Corona SDK. So that was my first my first real foray intoGreg Marine  programming. And that's Corona Not to be confused with errors, correct?Claudio Del Valle  Exactly. Yeah. And, and right after that, I got my first taste of web development when they got me learning Angular JS, back then, back with ionic one. And then from then on, I just, I became better and better at using Angular and ionic. And that's what I do today. Basically, I work and client projects as both a developer and as a project lead. AndGreg Marine  essentially what I do, okay, so as far as your background in ionic and Angular JS, we have similar backgrounds. And I appreciate that you're also a tinkerer, I am as well. And 3d printing, as you know, is a part of my passion. And so it's it's great to hear a fellow 3d printer and being able to get in chat with you about that.Claudio Del Valle  could actually show you mine right here. It's good. It's a little spot Mini. Okay.Greg Marine  Yeah, I don't have mine behind me anymore. My old office. I had 10, Ender threes behind me that we use them for business, but they're down down in the basement where my old office is now I'm upstairs. I have a total of 1110 are operational. One is basically the 11th. One is, is now sort of a skeleton, spare parts. Gotcha. So but so we're here to talk about today, word feed dot app. It is a sort of a social media app that allows local files to present to other local files words that they've come across in their day to day life, and be able to post on there and they can share and comment just like any other social media. So tell me what inspired you to create word feed?Claudio Del Valle  Well, that's the word for it's actually beenquite a long time in the making. It started off as an analog version. I actually have a journal right here where I used to do what I do on morphine, which was, as I came across a word that I didn't know I would look it up in the dictionary, write it down with with pen. On paper, and then eventually as the as the, as I kept filling the pages, something about it just made me. I don't know, it seemed like it was reminiscent of like a, almost like a work of art in a sense because like, there is really no rhyme or reason to how those words came to be on that page. It was very serendipitous for me just reading and happening, happened to stumble on a word that I didn't know, over time I did, I stopped coming across words that I didn't know and instead started writing down definitions that I thought were very appropriate for the context in which they were being used, or words that simply had a nice ring to it. And all those use cases got me thinking, Well, I'm sure there are other people who feel this way. Anyway, what I first did was on my website called either via.com, there is a section actually called Word feet, where in which I would post the words that I would normally write down on my journal. And then the next step from there was let's just open this up for everyone to do. And, uh, and then that's basically how it came about. And that's where we are today.Greg Marine  Yeah, that's perfect. You posted you tweeted about this new app that you'd come up with. Earlier this year. I believe it was during the pandemic right before it got to where it really flared up. I'm not sure I can't remember exactly. But it caught my eye. Because just like you were doing on pen and paper, I would see a word that I didn't know I'd look it up, or a word that I thought was creatively used and so that I would just, it would just kind of fall away in the back of my mind, then came along word feed, and I'm like, oh, here's a place that outlet that I can use to keep not only keep track of things, not only for myself, but to kind of share with folks like you.Claudio Del Valle  Yeah, no. And the first iteration of word feed actually took me just under two weeks, it was very, very quick, I just wanted to get something out there. And the MVP was essentially just the ability to upload a word and be displayed on a feed. And then after that game features such as pronunciation, which was the first actually requested feature, I had someone messaged me and say it would be great if I could have the pronunciation on there. And I believe after that, came the switch to Merriam Webster's official dictionary, which I thought would make it more official. And it also allowed me to display the image when you're adding a word, which I think adds a lot of credential to the app makes a little more noticeable. And then the latest features that I've added. I think the last one I added was the detect the word and an image, which I thought that really consolidates word feet as the perfect reading companion. Oh, absolutely. That was because that was the last step. You got to record the word and the definition. You could even add an example there. But I noticed many of the first posters wouldn't include a comment or an example. Sure. Just because I mean, it's a little cumbersome to have to type it yourself. You do have word dictation, but not a lot of people use that feature. But with the detect image that really takes the work out of it. And if you have like one big paragraph that you wouldn't have one, copy down, why people do the job, therefore you can detect it and pick it out of the page.Greg Marine  Now that sounds like a really cool feature. And all these features you've mentioned, I remember seeing them as they came about. So it sounds like I actually used one of the earlier versions in the beginning. And so that's, that's exciting. And this latest feature, like you said, taking a picture, being able to pick the word out of there and have a transpose transpile it into text in the app is genius, pure genius. And, and I do want toClaudio Del Valle  say you noticing over time, these new features as they came, you'll notice that there is that's the difference between a mainstream commercial app where on every update, you would get a modal with what's new section. That was that sort of in the back burner for me, mainly because word fi was and still is a tool that is very personal to me because it's something that came about a daily practice that I held. And so all of my It was a very self centered approach. So I prioritize features that would make my experience and the experience of the users would like to better features like that once new modal They are they do have their place. And they have their their value, Sherpa. To me it was more about just making the app as best as it could be.Greg Marine  And that's the thing of getting an app out as quickly as possible, using the bare minimum features that you need today is a great idea to get an app out there. And then you can get user feedback start to grow it that could be out there for a year or two before you start needing the have the need for the here's what's new, modal that pops up. So kudos to you for having having done that. Because again, it started out as something that you felt was a good tool for you. And now you've got how many users do you think you have today?Claudio Del Valle  on record, I have 100 or solurkers, people who like to view the definitions, and around 15 or 20,intermittent posters.Greg Marine  And so now you're going to have 15 to 20, intermittent posters, we're going to start requesting features. And then as people start to talk about this app, you know, those numbers will start growing. And this could possibly be, you know, a bigger app. Now that said, I say that, but where do you see it going? Do you see it growing like that? I'm just speaking? I don't know, out of that a turn, probably. But what do you think?Claudio Del Valle  Well, it's great to see people actually requesting features. That means that they like the app, and they would like to see a pro. I have a running list. And it's getting to be quite large, about now. So I'm going to have to do some triaging to figure out what's going to be in the next release. The one feature that I was trying to get before I released version two, which I believe now on two dot three or two dot two. But before I released version two, the first major feature from after first was a feature similar to Twitter's embed tweet feature, which allows you to take the Twitter UI of a tweet and embed it in a blog post or a web page, for example. Okay, this actually came about a writer who I contacted, I showed him the app, he liked it. And he said that he wanted to use on his website. And just that one feature was thing that he really wanted to use. And I spent a lot of time, but after a week or so of fiddling with it, I couldn't get anything to work. So I scrapped that and still in the back burner.But for now, the main goalI think for for the app is like I said to be the perfect reading companion. So anything that makes anything that enhances the reading experience, which is my number one goal is to make the looking for definitions and posting them as easy as possible. But after that, I mean, there's a whole door open to new possibilities. I mean, one thing that I envisioned for the future is to have a sort of a micro service running, constantly looking for words that users have posted. And then trying to try to either scrape or glean from whatever other sources I can examples of that word, so that they see it. And familiarity, and repetition helps them actually learn the word. And not to mention that it could also make for a new feed of it could add to the to the current feed of words in the app itself. Oh, yeah. Like then. And then other than that, there's a whole aspect of writing FF inquiries about how to make this a writing tool. Which some of the, of the of the first suggestions were an area for synonyms make it sort of like a thesaurus? Okay. The one that was requested and most recently was sort of like a challenge or a prompt for people to submit examples of the work. So let's say if I submitted a word and I wanted people to submit examples to it, make it a different car to beat that users could click and submit their examples of y'all could see them. Okay. Those are the main two goals, make it the best reading companion, and maybe in the future, make it also a writing tool.Greg Marine  Yeah, writing companion would be great for someone like me, now that I'm blogging weekly, and writing, I've actually been a part of a book project, looking at 2021 as more books to write some of myself. I'm looking for something like this. So that was would be fantastic not not challenging you to get it ready by 2021. But, but certainly I like the idea. I like what I'm hearing about it becoming a writing tool next to a reading companion.Claudio Del Valle  I mean, all these requests or features of noting them down on my, my journal, and when the time presents itself, I'm gonna buckle down. And really good, good to work on that.Greg Marine  Now, what sort of technology is behind all this? as a, as a fellow developer and any developers who are listening to this? We were definitely interested. What's the technology behind word feed?Claudio Del Valle  Well, we're feed started out is a ionic Angular project, I originally envisioned to make it just a pw a, I'm a big fan of everything pw a thinkGreg Marine  it's pw a that's a progressive web app. For those who don't know what that is?Claudio Del Valle  Correct? Correct. Angular hasbeen making pw ways. There's a lot of advantages to them.Number one being you get to reach as manyusers as you can, because it's access access to the browser, you don't have to compete with other apps in an app store. But then, as I started noticing that more and more of my users were accessing it on iOS, I eventually caved in and decided to add capacitor in mix, which is ionics native bridge for making a web application into a native application in order so that I can add features such as notifications. And I figured, well, one other one, I needed to find ways. But yeah, I made it available as an app on the App Store. And for the Android site, I decided to just keep it as a pw a because I noticed that all of the API's that I was already targeting work just fine on Android on. I didn't have to make any changes there,Greg Marine  including the notifications, those work just right out of the box natively on Android, even for a progressive web app. It doesn't have to be an app in a store to get it to work. It just works.Claudio Del Valle  All right. And also, I'm using Firebase for the back end.Greg Marine  Oh, Firebase for the back end. That's a that's where you store all the basically? Is it using firestore? Like the document or using the Firebase database?Claudio Del Valle  Using firestore? I don't think I've actually used the real time database before.Yeah, yeah. firestore for the database by Firebase functions, or my back end, so to speak. And, you know, they have authentication through Firebase as well, analytics, all that good stuff.Greg Marine  And I've since gone from I started using it from the Android version as a pw a. And I've transitioned to iOS and Macintosh for Mac OS for all of my web development. And so when I made that transition, of course, I had to get the iOS app. And it works quite well. I get the notifications when someone likes my my posts. And any comments, you'd commented on one the other day, I actually posted a logo file because I was, I was actually trying to share this with my brother to get him to, you know, to know about it before this before this recording. And so I posted that word, so I could share it with him. And then you commented on it. But some of the other words in here, you posted back of the envelope, which is done quickly, to provide a rest estimate not exactly and permissible. That's not an uncommon word. nefarious is a word that I posted today, because it wasn't used in a conversation. And I hadn't seen that word or heard it in I don't know, decades. But of course, it means frequently, Frank, flat plate. I can't even speak too much about flagrantly wicked or Impalas say I need to use this to pronounce as wellClaudio Del Valle  for ideation feature there. Exactly.Now, listen, as you're listing off on a chronological order, no, that is one. I wouldn't call a limitation. But a constraint is that right now the feed is just going in chronological order, when the time that the user uploads a word, I'd like to expand that. And another way of browsing and if you'll notice, right next to the search bar, that is a button that you can press. Yep. This was, yeah, this was originally and I think it still works. But it's switches from chronological to trending. And the trending feed uses a very simple approach. It just takes a look The common count the like count, and it sorts it by those two attributes. Okay? In the future, I'd like to extend that and add new ways of actually, I guess what's what's the right word for curate a feed for the for the different users. That's, of course, once more users actually began began posting, I'll have more of more data to work with.Greg Marine  Sure you use the word that's not commonly spoken and day to day conversation, curate. So I'm going to go ahead and add that to the feed. While we're doing this recording. There are several definitions here. So I want to try to look at the definition that most is most appropriate for your use of curate, let's see.Claudio Del Valle  Now, while you do that, I do gotta say, making an app that revolves around definitions and vocabulary, that can be a double edged sword. Because there's a fallacy there that you think that by learning more words by expanding your vocabulary that would make you a better writer or, or, or Raider. But I can't like I, I noticed that a lot of times I find myself trying to shoehorn a lot of words into sentences. Words, were an easier word or a more common word will do the trick. And I think if if you're someone who is aiming to be more personable, or trying to reduce the friction of a conversation, that's something that you shouldn't do, you should always go for the more common when you're writing, I mean, you can knock yourself out and go as crazy as you want with the vocabulary.Greg Marine  Yeah, no, no definition, did you end up choosing the act of curator of I did, I was listening to you intently. And I just kind of picked the verb version of it, but and then I forgot to actually make a comment as to why I was adding. So. So again, that's that's one of those features that I accidentally ignored, that you can actually use it in a sentence, give examples,Claudio Del Valle  you shouldn't say that I never want to make my usersfeel like they're at blame for not trying a featuredesigner. Yeah,let me that's what that's what designGreg Marine  is for, you should make a product as easy and as mindless as possible. And if users have to wonder, like, what's this that I'm seeing on the screen, and that's a lack into design, which I named to improve over? You, you make an excellent point there. And I appreciate that. One of the things that I think is common in at least common in my past of the 24 years I've been doing this is that a lot of developers think that every problem an app has is a user error. And I feel the opposite. I feel like it's my fault for not designing it. Right. Or, or didn't, I didn't ask enough questions during discovery. And I think you made a good point there that, you know, a design like this, it's really up to the designer to provide the ability to, for user not to have to think about it.Claudio Del Valle  But we need the user feedback. I mean, I designed the the app, and I it fits my needs. But what I really want is user feedback. Yeah. So we talked earlier about the more secondary features such as the What's New, modal, but I think that in the near future, I might have to prioritize a feedback feature, and make it as easy and evident for users to be able to reach me by submitting a either a feature request or a bug report. Right there wending experienced, whatever caused them to, to have this urge. Okay, there's a couple of tools out there that do this sort of thing. One of one of them that we recommend a lot of open forge is instabug, which actually has a feature which allows a user by shaking the device to prompt a model to come up, which will allow them to submit a bug report or a feature request. And it will also attach all the system information that it can so that you can debug it. But I think that's actually gonna make me impair the app much faster. Because as soon as I can gather more user feedback and start seeing what users want to see and the difficulties they face, it will make for a better product eventually.Greg Marine  Yeah, I could not agree more. And I think as you add something like that another viable piece of the puzzle is getting more users. So as you work with user feedback and get more users are you looking to expand And open up to other developers to contribute to the project so that not all of this is on your plate. So some of these features that may not be, you know, the focus of how you use it, it may be the focus of that one other developer might use the app. So have you considered that?Claudio Del Valle  Well, the firsttime I considered it was actually when you asked about it, but before that, not really, I mean, I never saw a word feed as some of the more popular open source projects that are out there. Just because I don't necessarily think it much of a technological feat and more accomplishment, I don't think is necessarily a hard hat to make. So I'm not I'm not against it. The only thing precluding me from actually opening up opening it up to more support from other developers is that I haven't gotten around to removing my environment keys from the repository.Greg Marine  Yes, yes, you definitely need to do that first.Claudio Del Valle  Yeah, but once I get around to it, I mean, I'll open it up and let anyone contribute an open pull request as they want. And another thing with open source software, I always saw that as belonging to as a realm of the upper echelons of developers. I always I fought we follow a lot of great people on Twitter. And we always see Oh, I did so and so many contributions over the weekend to this open source project. I always thought, wow, they must there must be in a different league. You know, which one was like I was thinking like his board feet even even worthy of being an open source project.Greg Marine  Yeah, I hear you there. And then sometimes what they're doing is they're, they're contributing a typo fix? Yeah. So it's like it'd be doing 20 of those on a weekend and, and touting about that on Twitter, I would not want to do that. I don't mind proofreading things. But I wouldn't want to brag about something like that. But yeah, that's the thing. You know, you have all these projects out there. And yeah, I mean, my little project doesn't mean anything in the in the world. I don't know. But it makes it makes me nervous. So hopefully, hopefully, you're not nervous, though. I mean,Claudio Del Valle  no, it's just thatI wouldn't I, I have to describe myself as a developer, because it's what I do. But developing for me programming is a tool is a means to an end. So I admire people who get really, really into computer science. And I agree with algorithms are great at implementing such things. But I just sort of view it as, as long as I have, as long as I'm aware of what tools are available, are available, and I can get around documentation to using it, then that's all I really need. Because I just want to know what's available so that when the problem arises, and I know the right tool for that problem, I can really go in depth, or reach out to people who are more knowledgeable, and go to work on a solution. Because that's actually one of the reasons why I'm struggling a bit now that we're using react in open Forge, I finally went ahead and started using it. But just all these different approaches. React is not as enforcing as Angular is as a framework. So I see some things that one of my co worker does, he does things one way, then my other co worker will do it then other way, I'll do it another way. So it doesn't feel as safe as I felt when I went when I'm doing Angular development.Greg Marine  Now with Angular, it's very opinionated you do it this way. There's an Angular way, I think is one of the ways that's been said and react is the opposite of that. It's whatever the project needs or whatever. But the problem with that is, is you know, like, you have three different ways of doing it. Yeah, I'm starting to react this year, myself.Claudio Del Valle  Yeah, go ahead. I'm actually I'm actually gonna I'm gonna have to start looking into view. Because yes, Mandy, yeah. The ionic community has been going crazy over this view of beta release.Greg Marine  Yes. That's, that's the big news this week.Claudio Del Valle  Yeah, we're gonna be our neck. That's gonna be the next topic for the meetup.We're going to be looking at view with ionic.Greg Marine  I look forward to that meetup. Because it's, I took a look at it at the meetup the other day, it's with ionic, and looks very view itself looks very much like a Angular and react had a baby. It's, there's a lot of similarities between the two. But the best of one of each came into this one.Claudio Del Valle  Yeah, but the thing, the thing that helped me learn Angular was that I could look at one project and I couldn't do another one and see the similarities, right. I sort of started looking at what fits where and what is free for you to mess around with sure what reactive view projects I mean, you can look at another one and not give you any sense as to how view itself actually works.Greg Marine  Yep. Yep.Claudio Del Valle  Wasn't, it'll be fun. I think we're gonna look into doing a Google Maps demo project.Greg Marine  Yeah, I did an Angular. Yeah, it was an Angular project with Google Maps. And just as an example tutorial I went through, it's really fun. And I think this weekend, I'm going to be playing around with you. I've got a, one of the projects I've been working on for, for one of my clients is a Watson assistant chatbot. It was written in react, did that one in react. And so it was, it was to handle some in the influx of calls to the call center, instead of going to the call center, they wanted their users to go to a website. And they deal with the COVID situation. And so there was a huge influx of customers calling in. And so now they're using this chat API. And so I thought, I'll take that knowledge of Watson assistant and kind of play around with view, and see if I can build a chat bot and view using ionic view.Claudio Del Valle  You mentioned Watson, I was actually looking at Watson for its natural language processing features, which there is not much right now from word feet to glean with a natural language processor. But as I eventually encourage people to comment more and post more examples, I think there's some information there that could eventually help me build another feature, or build some valuable data.Greg Marine  Yeah, that's an excellent idea. I didn't even think about that myself. But yeah, that sounds like and Watson can handle that. It does a pretty good job. And soClaudio Del Valle  besides, sorry to interrupt, but besides like, the angular framework world, what else do you like to look into when it comes to development?Greg Marine  I'd say anything that's new, when Firebase first came out, I was excited about it, because I played around with some no SQL databases. But you know, Firebase before was even bought by Google was just a fascinating database, a data store that was document based. And so I thought, well, there aren't there's, there's still a strong use or need for SQL, structured, rational, relational data models to be done with SQL. But I really think that a lot of the stuff that I've been working on over my career of 20, nearly 25 years now has all been that could have been handled by documents and documents storage. And so that's a fascination for me. design systems are the new thing. Now, since Angular, since ionic went to move to the move with stencil, they've done a lot with design systems, I want to learn more about that, I would love to come up with, you know, similar products, not not to sell, but just to, just to play around with those, learn it, see how it works.Claudio Del Valle  That's, that's a rather ambiguous term at design system. But I think you I think, if you wanted to simplify it, I would be like, like, if I'm building an app, I don't want to think about how much padding I'm using on the certain type of elements, the font, the type, so I'm assuming it's like, having set values for these different attributes. Right?Greg Marine  Right. That's part of it. Another part is to say, okay, we want all of the buttons in this particular design system to do to look a certain way, but also to do a certain thing. So like, within a corporation, and enterprise, infrastructure, they might want all of their apps to behave and look similarly, I'll use, say, at Disney World, for example, since you're in a Disney shirt, they may have a need to say, okay, that client fit or guest facing applications and cast member facing applications. But all of the buttons, all of the, you know, look and feel has to be the same. So yeah, there's the padding and all that. But then when they click that button, they might need to do some internal analytics and stuff like that. So they might want to wire all that together, it goes into a central database. Instead of having each team have to develop that I have a design system where they can just take from a component library and say, hey, I want to use a button here. And it does does whatever the upper management business logic needs to be. And they the developers won't have to worry about that. That's one of the things that I see that I'm not speaking from experience. That's what I envisioned could be possible with with a design system, especially for using something like stenzel to build itClaudio Del Valle  and there's an assetVery soon, hopefully this weekend, I get to play around with socket IO, I was looking into, into making a sort of like an Uber clone, just any app that tracks location of a vehicle and broadcast it to a client, isn't it. And I mean, the options as far as your backend implementation goes are endless. I mean, you can have, you can have just like one instance running, which will support X amount of sockets. But then if you want to make that scalable, you can introduce something like Redis. And use a pub sub system. To that end, I just saw that all that is really fascinating. And it's all because I have an itch just to get around to get around the how an ionic web app and then a Firebase back end, you know, those two pieces, they work really well for what they do. But I want to I want to experience and start putting more stuff in this oil.Greg Marine  Absolutely, likeClaudio Del Valle  microservices and whatnot, all these things that you can do.Greg Marine  Yeah, you bring up a socket, io reminded me of a time before all that existed. But I was working in an environment enterprise environment where we weren't allowed to, at my level to use developer tools as they are today. Not Visual Studio or nothing. And but I was allowed to use Office applications. And so back then VBA, Visual Basic for Applications was allowed. And so as long as I kept it and say, I think it was a Microsoft Access database is what it was. And I had to implement a TCP IP stack within VBA. It had to answer connection calls from the client versus client side. And they had to answer like, 200 or so per second. And but there was a limitation on the OS at the time, only allow, I think it was 20 connections at a time. So I'd have to queue those as they were coming in, answer them and freed up for the next one. And I had to do all that with VBA. So So when sacado came out, I was like, oh, that would have been great to have hadClaudio Del Valle  I now. Luckily, I haven't run into into that yet. I think the closest of a situation that's happened to me like that is when graph qL really became mainstream. Just because I started noticing, especially when really big responses, just delay and see starting to walk. And that interests me a lot, because I'm very much invested into the person, the people aspect of making apps, the psychology behind it, okay, and man, people hate any waiting, any waiting time at boot up getting a response back. If they're not constantly informed, they drop, they drop your app fast. Yes, and they stop using it, they'll go look for something else. There's always something better free that they can use. So all of that anything that'll improve performance is of great interest to me.Greg Marine  No, speaking of that, what do you think about gamification? game? While you wait, here's something you couldClaudio Del Valle  gamification, Oh, you mean it that way? You meant like, a gamification while you're Wait, well, Google has a that URL game you can play when website goes down, right? Yep.Greg Marine  little dinosaur game. Yeah, that's a good example of it.Claudio Del Valle  That'd be good. A little easter egg to implement. Hopefully, all the loading times that word feed are really really fast. So people don't have to resort to that. Yeah. But I do see, I'm always interested in gamification, because I think users respond really well to it.Greg Marine  Yeah, I need to come up with the URL for the article, but a friend of mine, he moved to Norway. And while he worked there, or he's still there, one of the things he wrote about was gamification. Because one of the things that he was doing while he was there. I don't think this is exactly what it is. But this is kind of what he was describing. He was talking about basically, like having something happen while you're waiting. And it could be something as simple as a move your your cursor around and the little icon would start to follow you and make little jokes or not and stuff like that, while you waited. It was it wasn't even something where you'd have to play anything. It was just interaction that was taking place while you were waiting.Claudio Del Valle  See, I wish it was easier todo things like that. With ionic, I mean, the closest thing I can imagine is a interactive loading screen where you would use some some sort of Web GL technology where you can just track the pointer and then do whatever animation you want it to do with that. I think I mean, I think it's fairly possible. I don't see why not. I mean, we've integrated phaser, which is another game development framework with ionic. It worked really, really well. To our surprise, we know of a couple other attempts, documented on sites like Reddit and such for people expressed a lot of different Getting it to run well, but we managed to make it work for the project we're releasing shortly this year. But yeah, and gamification, one thing that I wanted to do with wordfeud, actually was when I was working with local notifications at the last meetup, I thought of scheduling sort of example prompts for users who either their words or words that their friends have submitted, have a local notification pop up that says, hey, think of an example for this word. And I submit again, I like it. I'm still thinking about it, just because I personally, as a user, I'm not a big, big fan of notifications, I think. They make you use your phone more, which is something I'm trying not to do as much, right? I have a, I have a strict policy, both at home at the office, where I have to leave the phone somewhere else physically, right, just to take away that, that that temptation, you have to hack your surroundings. And also for going to sleep. I tried to stop using it an hour before I intend to go to sleep. And that helps because you don't have the blue lightGreg Marine  stuff. Yeah, absolutely. And I know some that who aren't on call, when when they're on on call, they'll leave it in the living room when they go to bed. They'll have the wine downtime in the bedroom, but they'll leave the phone out in the living room even and not even touch it till the next morning.Claudio Del Valle  It's actually a great effect. You know, do you know if i Raspberry Pi?Yes. So one Raspberry Pi project that I actually wanted to do was like, just like an alarm, like a DEF CON three, alarm that so that when I leave my phone in my in the living room, someone could either through an app, or it could be like they text a number on Twilio or whatnot. It triggers that alarm in it. It's a physical light and sound that goes off in my room and says, Hey, someone's really trying to teach the reach you. It's an emergency. Otherwise, I'm not. I'm not gonna hear it if it's out here.Greg Marine  Oh, that's a good point. That's a great idea. Actually.Claudio Del Valle  It's happened before. One time I went to bed early. And my girlfriend who works at a restaurant, she came back really late. And I was already asleep. And she didn't have her keys. And then I'm having to sleep over one of her friends. Because she seems like he's not wake up. And I was talking with him. Oh, yeah. So and as I said, it's, it's good to have hobbies outside of it. I mean, it makes me not lose. I don't know, I guess the passion behind it. Because the real passion is, like I said before, it's the people as the users wind up using it. It's good to also have an interest in general with All Things programming and maintain my Tinker spirit.Greg Marine  Yes, I hear you there. That's good to have hobbies, it's good to get away from the computer, sometimes. But it's also nice to take some of the passions you have for your you know your day to day life and apply them through software to so I'm very excited about word feed dot app and everything I want to put a link to the to the app and the App Store. link in the show notes for this particular show. So that everyone listening can see what it's all about, sign up and contribute to the word feed.Claudio Del Valle  Yes, one one more thing, because we were talking about technology behind word feed. And one component that really helped. And the early user adoption of the app was the Install button. Which if you don't have the app installed, it'll display on iOS and Android. And what it does is it displays almost like an App Store listing within the app, where you have a description, you have screenshots, and you have whatever whatever other content you want to add. And it also has a install app button, which on Android, it'll just install as a pw a but an iOS, it'll redirect to the App Store. So I think that piece of technology, which by the way was brought to me by the pw a builder team, which you mightbe familiar with Justin Wilson on Twitter. Yes, IGreg Marine  am. I follow him.Claudio Del Valle  So for anyone who's doing a pw a that's a number one recommendation.Greg Marine  Yeah. And it's almost a requirement these days to give that option to people. Mm hmm. Yep. All right. Well, thank you, Claudio. Appreciate your time today. And I'm looking forward to seeing further enhancements to word feet and I and I appreciate the contribution you have to the community. You filled a gap. And I really appreciate that.Claudio Del Valle  Likewise, please keep doing this. I want to see where this podcast goes. And maybe in the future was version three of word penis. Maybe we'll be back again.Greg Marine  Absolutely, and I look forward to having you again.
42 minutes | Oct 12, 2020
Ep 2 - Talking with Michael Callaghan
"Don't Say That At Work!" is available at the following.Kindle Edition at https://smile.amazon.com/Dont-Say-That-Work-Lifetime-ebook/dp/B08K5ZF23B/Paperback Edition at https://smile.amazon.com/Dont-Say-That-Work-Lifetime/dp/B08KH3R3YC/Mike's books and courses on Gumroadhttps://gumroad.com/walkingriverMike's Pluralsight Courseshttps://www.pluralsight.com/authors/michael-callaghanMike's "Slow Down" example on YouTubehttps://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLZZ99z3xZ52h6hFZ2v7nhApmM_3xPcVCTGreg Marine  Today I have a guest who has written the book. Don't say that at work. Mike Callahan or Michael Callahan, as it says on the cover, Mike, how are you today?Michael Callaghan  I am excellent. Greg, How about yourself?Greg Marine  I am doing quite well. Could you do me in the listeners a favor and tell us a little bit about yourself?Michael Callaghan  Oh, gosh, what is there to say?You know, the big one, and that's that I am a technology cast member at the Walt Disney World Resort. Yes, technically, I work for Disney parks, experiences and products.Greg Marine  Lots more to say than a Walt Disney World, isn't it?Michael Callaghan  It is a lot easier just to tell people I work at Walt Disney World.I am in my 26 27th year of professional software development. I started my professional development career about 10 years after I graduated high school, and I started learning to program in ninth grade. I've held a variety of jobs, almost all of them in tech since 1995. I've worked for little tiny startups. I've worked for big companies like Disney like Dell, Compaq, HP, Compaq, and HP was actually the same desk.Greg Marine  So that was during the time when HP purchased come back.Michael Callaghan  Yes, they called it a merger. But for those of us who lived through it, it was a takeover.Greg Marine  Yeah, I can imagine. So. without going into too much detail as far as IP with Disney, oh, what is it that you do today?Michael Callaghan  Well, let's see. Mostly I work on what we call cast facing applications. So not something you'd see in the park,oranything, you know, I don't work on ride, or show mechanics or anything like that. There's a lot of software that as you can imagine drives everything that we do here. I'm sure you've seen or heard the story that I've given about my work on Disney's magical express a few years back, it was my very first ionic project at Disney. Something you probably have seen. I did get a chance about a year or so go to work on my Disney experience. Oh and mobile app?Greg Marine  Yes. I have quite a bit of experience using my Disney experience.Michael Callaghan  My Disney experience, I think I can say this safely. Yeah, publicly is it is a native app. So there is an android version. There is a a an iPhone version. The project I worked on, is not native. So there's a portion of the application, I'm not going to tell you which one sure that if you click a button, you're actually using a an Angular, I believe it's an Angular five app. And I won't go into any more detail than that.Greg Marine  No problem. I appreciate any detail that you can offer. As you know, I frequent the parks down in Walt Disney World. My wife is there as we're recording this. And I will be there come December here in 2020. Very cool. So tell me what inspired you to write don't say that at work.Michael Callaghan  It was a tweet, actually, I made a kind of an offhanded tweet one day about, hey, the next time you want to say something about you should just do this. Instead ask the question, What if we do this? I think my example was, why don't you just do that in CSS? Instead of asking it that way? Imagine if you went to your coworkers and said, What if we try doing this and CSS?Greg Marine  Yeah, the tone sounds quite a bit different.Michael Callaghan  And somebody responded to that tweet, and said, if you ever make a course, I'd like to buy it. Okay. I thought well, I don't know that that would be a course. Maybe. But you know, at the time, we were in the middle of early portions of the of the pandemic. And I didn't have access to my recording studio at the time. My recording studio is my son's bedroom. Okay, and he was sent home. And so for about two months, I didn't have access to a recording studio. So instead, I just thought, I wonder if I could gather up enough stories like this. Turn it into a book.Greg Marine  Yeah, sort of as a side question here, something else you do besides writing a book such as this, you also do a mini video courses. And so so as you mentioned, you had a recording studio at your son's bedroom, that you basically do video courses on technology, a lot of it being Angular, and react for ionic. So, so in a way, the fact that you had to give up your recording studio kind of gave you incentive or motivation to switch mediums, so to speak.Michael Callaghan  No doubt. I suffer from restlessness, I can'tjustsit. That's a good way to put. So if I don't have some sort of a side gig going something to occupy my, my downtime, if you will,Greg Marine  I go a little stir crazy. I can imagine. So, especially with being in an environment where we're constantly, I'm also a software developer. So we're constantly being challenged day in day out, Hey, can we do this with this technology? Can we do that? It's hard to sit still, because that's kind of in our, our wheelhouse is to always constantly be moving. Absolutely. Now, the book, again, it's don't say that it work. However, it's kind of it's divided up into three parts. First part being, your thoughts can mislead you. The second being, your words can betray you. And of course, the third being your deeds can condemn you. So from from that, can you tell me a little bit more about each section of the book, and what each will teach us?Michael Callaghan  As you say it was originally simply don't saythat. And the first thing I did when I thought of the title is I went to Amazon and typed it in. And there's already a book called Don't say that. So I said, Okay, I'll look for how about Don't say that, at work. Don't say that at home. I'm gearing it more towards professionalism. I can't imagine that the techniques would fail at home, or at school. But my mindset was, these are stupid things that I've done at work at work throughout my career. So I just added don't do at work to the title don't say that at work. The reason it's divided the way it is, I was trying to think of a way to group the stories in some sort of a logical fashion I did just didn't want a bunch of random essays. And I thought that would be a really cool way to organize the book, things you should not be thinking about things you should not be saying and then things you should not do. And that they tend to lead one into the other. Your thoughts influence your words, and your thoughts and words combined can often influence your actions.Greg Marine  Oh, absolutely. I could not agree more.Michael Callaghan  If you get angry, you could say something that you regret. And if you're angry enough, you could say and then do something you might regret. One of the stories in the book is about a time there. I got a little angrier than I should have. I call it throwing a temper tantrum. I didn't get my way at work. And I believe my exact words wereI did what I thought was right.I wrote the code, the way I thought would be best for the project. I will never do that again. I'm sorry. And I hung up the phone. problem was I hit initiated the call, which disconnected everyone immediately, including the senior architect for the company. As you can imagine, it didn't go over well,Greg Marine  I can imagine it didn't go over well at all.Michael Callaghan  I did not have a software development job for the next three years.Greg Marine  Oh, wow.Michael Callaghan  That was kind of my choice. But once I hung up the phone, there wasn't a whole lot ofrecovery.I could have apologized. In fact, I was given a chance to apologize, I was given the opportunity to stay on with the company in a probationary manner for at least or I believe it was no less than one year. But at the time, I was a little burned out. Didn't want to stay with a company that wasn't going to let us use not necessarily the latest and greatest software technologies. But in this case, it was one that they were insisting that we use a dying technology. So I use the opportunity as a really bad exit strategy.Greg Marine  Now you could say your hands were tied at the time and with that coupled with your burnout. You felt like it was time to go. Sure it was a temper tantrum. But like I certainly can understand. Even though it wasn't the best exit strategy, it was probably a strategy that probably worked out best for you.Michael Callaghan  One of the lessons learned from that temper tantrum is there was probably a better way I could have handled it.I could havewritten the code that they wanted, and written it the way I wanted to, to be able to showcase the different difference. Sure. But instead, I knew best and I just ran forward with it. And that got me in a lot of trouble. Okay, I often wonder this was at Hewlett Packard. And I often wonder what my career would have looked like if I had stayed at HP. I heard many years later that a lot of the developers stuck around were moved by the company to Austin. I was in Southern New Hampshire at the time. And a lot of them that stuck around ended up getting moved by the company to Texas. I'm in Florida now. Texas is different. But I do like Texas, and I like the Austin area. So I think I could have made something out of my career there. ButGreg Marine  you can't tell right? There's no way to know what's right. And who knows if you would end up but at the Walt Disney World Resort, you know, 10 years ago. Right. So now that's a story from your section. your deeds can condemn you. I recall, one of the best chapters in your thoughts can mislead you. The first section of the book was don't succumb to prejudice. Now, as I understand it, when you say prejudice here, you're not really talking about bigotry.Michael Callaghan  Correct. I'm using prejudice in the more pure sense of the word as in prejudge. So you and I have a pretty good relationship. We've, I think we've become friends over the past six months.If I were to suddenly hear a story about you thatseemedoff my knee, my initial reaction wouldn't be Wow, I Greg's a horrible person, I can't can't, you know, can't believe that. It would be my first reaction, because because I've gotten to know you and have a positive affinity towards youissomething must be wrong with that statement. Something must be wrong with the allegation. Or maybe there was a misunderstanding. On the other hand, if it were somebody that I didn't necessarily get along with, and I heard something bad about them, some sort of a gossip. Probably my first instinct, would it be good would be something like, yeah, I always knew that guy was something wrong with him.Greg Marine  That makes sense. Well, it absolutely does. And I can totally relate. I've had those very similar circumstances happen in my career as well. So I can certainly relate and reading the stories that you present in that section of the book really brought up into my mind those stories and thought, okay, now, this is how I can do it differently next time. And so I really appreciate the advice that you provide in this book. Don't say that at work here. And in that section, so. And also, in the second section, your your words can betray you. One of the and it's even a popular topic on Twitter today, as several tweets that you've made, even this very week have been about TL A's. What's the TLA?Michael Callaghan  I have hated TL A's. All my career. There's I have a blind spot around them. I don't see them. So TLA is a three letter acronym. In these days, it can mean a four or five or six letter acronym. Sure. One acronym You and I are both very familiar with is Epcot. It originally was experimental prototype community of tomorrow. I believe ESPN is another acronym. And honestly, I have no idea what it stands for. Do you? I do not. I'm sure we could look it up.I think it's something sports programming network.Greg Marine  I don't know. I'm sure it's related to that. But honestly, like you said, I don't know because it's become what it's called, like everybody knows it as ESPN. That isn't always the case with the TLA.Michael Callaghan  Not Not at all.One of the stories from the book is that I wasat one point here at Disney I was asked to participate in a JADRGreg Marine  What's that?Michael Callaghan  JADRAnd if you go and look it up at the acronym dictionary, nothing is relevant. But the one I really liked was the I believe it's the Japanese association of dental researchers, researchersGreg Marine  on I can't imagine that's what they were talking about.Michael Callaghan  That is not what they wanted me to do to attend. No.It was a joint architectural design review.Greg Marine  Yeah, that's that doesn't that would not have come to me naturally.Michael Callaghan  And once they told me what it was, I still didn't want to attend.Greg Marine  Yeah, you know, and in my long career, I've been doing this for 24, almost 25 years myself, and I've come across a lot of three letter acronyms, or now, as you said, they've gone into multiple letters beyond three. But there's a lot of that going around. And we always have to ask, but based on some of the advice from your book, in that chapter, it's probably a good idea to kind of spell out what it is, and then put that in parentheses or something like that. So that the reader who's may not be used to it, if they're on an, if new to your team, can know what those are, or even have a running dictionary, in a git repository that says, here's what these acronyms are on this team or on this project.Michael Callaghan  If you ever want to see a really good example of this, Jimmy Kimmel, whom, as you know, has a show on ABC, and ABC is owned by Disney. He read a letter on the air that he got from Disney corporate, that was nothing but it was just filled with acronyms. And in reading it. his point was, this is indecipherable. Because I don't know what that means, you know, and if you hear people talk about HR, human resources, you don't tend to think too much about it. Right. But this gets down into the nitty gritty. I don't know if you're aware, do you ever use a software package called SAP?Greg Marine  I have in the past, yes.Michael Callaghan  As far as I know. That's just what it's called. Now. I don't even know what it stands for. Yeah. And if I can give you one amusing one that happened to us a couple of years ago, you and I are both in software. So I'm going to go out on a limb and guess that you know what ci CD means?Greg Marine  Yes, I do. It's a continuous integration, continuous development or delivery.Michael Callaghan  Correct.Early on on a project, one of the business owners of the project, asked what ci CD stood for. And one of the guys in the room said constant interruption constant delay.I guess nobody laughed.Greg Marine  Okay.Michael Callaghan  So our business rep thought he was serious, and mentioned it in a meeting days later with senior leadership.Greg Marine  Oh, my.Michael Callaghan  So they thought that he was insulting them. So it's amusing to look back on and chuckle about it now. But it didn't go over. Well, at the time.Greg Marine  We're sure on I remember. Story, someone told me once where they had used the acronym id 10. t. If you write it down, it says spells idiot. But they sold somebody they were working at a like an Office Depot. And the customer was explaining the problem and, and he said, sounds like an ID 10 tier. And of course, the person knew what they were saying. And they were upset and walked right up to their manager explained the problem. This person just called me an idiot. And thought I was an idiot, since I thought I didn't know what Id 10 T wasMichael Callaghan  nice.I learned one back at HP called PEBKAC.Greg Marine  Oh, yes, problems existMichael Callaghan  between keyboard and chair.Greg Marine  That's right. That's my number one problem. On another one on that section of your words can betray you, you talk about don't talk so fast. And I deliberately said that slightly slower. Because in that particular example, and that particular story, you talk about how, you know, if you talk too fast, it's hard for your listeners to listen and understand you. Tell me a little bit about where that came from.Michael Callaghan  The history of that one actually goes a lot farther than what I mentioned in the book. So I'm going to give you a little bit more here. Excellent. When I was in high school in college, I spoke so quickly, the people didn't really understand what I'm talking about. My natural inclination was to stop quickly. And I can still do it if now if I really want to. Sure.But I've trained myself over the years not to do it as much as I used to.And it got so bad I was in sales. I used to work for a store in Laurel, Maryland. And it was hurting me professionally. Because you know, the quick talking salesman. I had that image, okay, at the time, I was probably only 20 or 21 years old. So people coming into the store seeing this quote unquote, kid trying to fast talk them into selling, you know, into buying a $2,000 television. It was tough. And I remained in sales for a number of years after that before I broke into software development, so I had to school myself until talking slowly really hit home though. I was in a meeting at church. And it was with the older teenage boys or young men's group. And so I was in a room with a bunch of, say, 16 and 17 year olds. And it's difficult to get them to concentrate, as it is, as you know, teenagers can be.Greg Marine  Absolutely I remember those years, not only as a teenager, but my two kids as teenagers now.Michael Callaghan  So this will probably sound familiar. I don't remember exactly what the scripture passage was. But I asked one of the young men to read it, and he blew through it. And looking around the room, no one's paying attention. And this is not a big room, there was maybe five or six boys in there and a few adults. And I said, hang on a second, would you read that again? as slowly as you possibly can, without feeling awkward? And I said, I want the rest of you just to close your eyes and listen. And surprisingly enough, they all did. So he read the passage again. And it was almost, you could almost feel the difference in the room. It didn't sound forced. It didn't sound awkward. It didn't sound monotone. It just felt that he was speaking with feeling. I say, and I asked him,did you feel the difference? And everybody?They said, Yes.So let's try a little experiment. Let's do it again, let's each one of us do that. And I turned to them. Because a lot of people think that if I talk too slowly, that I will take too much time. And I believe it was about 20 to 25 seconds, when he read it naturally, just I'm going to do it and see what it sounds like. And then when he did it as slowly as possible, it jumped to 35 seconds. Okay, as a percentage, that's not insignificant. But in actual time, we added five to 10 seconds to what he was saying. But the difference in how it came across was night and day. And so in the book, I'm sure you saw that my recommendation wasn't to read a religious passions, but I read the preamble to the US Constitution. And I put the three readings, I read it my normal speed as fast as I could do it without tripping over myself. And then as slowly as I could, and I put those on YouTube.And I believe it makes a difference.Greg Marine  Yeah, I believe, too. And I totally agree with you on that. And I'll put the links to that in the show notes so that the listeners can get a little taste of that, as well as the link to the book. But yeah, what happened next after that with those, those kids?Michael Callaghan  I asked them to start doing itall the time. Okay,maybe for the next week or two. I said when you have to go and talk to someone particular, particularly here at church. Slow down. Don't be in such hurry. So if someone asks you a question, look them in the eye, answer as clearly and as slowly as you can. And a few weeks went by, and somebody commented to me, I don't know what you've done with those boys, but they are they seem to be more respectful. They seem to be just better behaved. I, I can't put my finger on what what you've done, though, but it's different.Greg Marine  Well, it was quite interesting. IMichael Callaghan  didn't have the heart to tell him I just told them to slow down.Greg Marine  Now, that's excellent. And as a matter of fact, I did something similar. After reading that portion of the book, I started to do the same with my interactions with my family. And because this is all taking place during COVID-19, we don't aren't going on a lot of places right now. So I've decided to practice this on my family. And believe it or not, I was I was surprised and shocked at how well this worked, that they stopped asking me to repeat myself. And that that's a huge time saver because that five or six seconds of time that I extended what I was saying reduced how many times I had to say it to one, therefore saving me time and saving them confusion. I can see thatMichael Callaghan  definitely see that. Another interesting thing that happens when you speak more slowly and I'm not sure why this is you tend to not speak as loudly. I know there is a saying if You will.I'll tell you what it is. And I'll tell you where I got it.The the quote, is he strange to hear a whisper who refuses to hear a shout. If you've ever been in a room with someone who doesn't speak loudly, when that person speaks, everyone kind of shuts up so they can hear him. Hear him or her? Indeed, yeah. Are you? Are you a fantasy novel fan?Greg Marine  No, I'm not in particularly.Michael Callaghan  Okay. That is from I don't remember which novel in the series, but it's from the Robert Jordan Wheel of Time series.Greg Marine  Okay, I'm familiar with that. have not read them. Okay, now the book is don't say that at work. Now, I understand that you have other books. But besides this book, and the other ones, the reason I haven't mentioned them by name is because you've actually started those books, as video courses. Tell me a little bit more about the other projects that you have, such as the video courses.Michael Callaghan  As I think you are aware, I have four video courses available at Pluralsight. And they are all ionic based in one way or another. The very first one, I think, has been retired. So technically, there are only three now I have one on the use of the ionic COI. And I believe it was based on version three. So I don't know how much much value you're gonna get out of it these days. The second one was ionic and electron. So using the Ionic framework with Angular to make desktop applications that you can put, you know, install onto Windows, Linux and Mac. And that one's done pretty well. The third one was making progressive web apps with ionic. And that one, they told me they're going to retire very soon now because they have a progressive web app track learning track at Pluralsight. And they didn't think that the ionic specific version fit in with their track. And when I told them that ionic was really just the, the UI portion that it was really pw a with Angular.They got a little annoyed.Because they, they thought that I had kind of snuck something in. But that wasn't the intention. It was pw with ionic. As I went through it, and completed the course, I realized there's very little ionic here. This is this can apply to anything. So to me, it was a happy coincidence.So probably aboutthe beginning of 2020. Someone had suggested or someone had asked if I had a react version of any of my ionic courses. And I said, You know, I don't because I've never used react.I've always just been Angular since AngularJS. One, two, I think. So it never really occurred to me to look into react. But then one day, I needed to upgrade one of my one of my minor little payment ionic apps. From ionic three to five, I thought, Well, you know what, this isn't a real complicated app. Let's go ahead and see what it would be like if I use react instead. And that led to a blog post that was a Confessions of a reluctant ionic, React user. And once I had done that, I realized that, you know, there's something to this, there's, there's probably an untapped market out here. Because everything that I've seen for ionic to that point, was Angular based. And ionic react wasn't I don't think officially released yet. It was close. And so I talked to a couple of the guys that ionic and they were, as you can imagine, they were excited about the idea. And so I went back to Pluralsight. And I pitched it, and was turned down pretty quickly.Greg Marine  Oh, wow. Interesting.Michael Callaghan  They said that's not part of our strategy right now. So I don't know if it was the ionic portion, or the React portion or combination of both, you know, maybe they thought it was not widespread enough. But for whatever reason, they turned it down. And so I decided, I'll just give it a try. There, you know, I don't necessarily have to do this through them. I could, I can create content and put it anywhere. I can put it on YouTube. I could put it on gumroad. I could put it on Udemy. Let's, let's see. And I found a few sites that are willing to try it out on and so I started throwing lessons together. And I think at the time, because I knew I wouldn't have the team that I had a Pluralsight the quality assurance team, but I decided to enlist some folks from social media. And I think that's where you and I met Put up the call and said, Hey, if anyone's interested and willing to help QA course, I'll give you the course content for free. Yeah. AndGreg Marine  I saw that, and I instantly hooked onto it. for a few reasons. One, I had been following you for about a year prior to that I saw your love for Disney. And then also, this is a react course. And I was very interested in how ionic was was merging or using implementing their their ionic react, as opposed to their Angular, which I had been using for years. So yeah, I was very interested in that. And, and you're right, that's how you and I started our friendship.Michael Callaghan  And I believe it was even you who suggested one day one I do and I and angular version at the same time in parallel, because they're going to share a lot of the same content.Greg Marine  Exactly. And I think the reason I suggested that was because that would give people an opportunity, not only to subsurface subscribe to both lessons, but be able to see the comparisons between Angular and react using the same UI framework and ionic.Michael Callaghan  Exactly. And so I did that, I actually created a Google Doc that had three columns in it. The content from I took the content from the React all the text from the React version that I hadn't finished, I think I'd finished the first complete course write chapter one, as I called it, yes. And then I copied and pasted into the second column, and just went through and started making changes, well, this code will be different, This command will be different. And in the end, it turned out that they were very 70%, the same, the concepts are the same. The component names are the same, the attributes of the components are the same. The COI commands are a little bit different. Angular gives you that really robust ccli for doing scaffolding and project generation. React doesn't have any of that, or doesn't have as much of them. Angular seems to be a lot more heavily focused on pure separation of concerns.So my components look different.Angular also, if I'm, if I recall correctly, it's been a few months, is much more geared towards making sure that you have unit tests for all of your component code. And I don't believe the React version has that. Yeah, I believe you're correct. Honestly, the unit testing was kind of immaterial to here's how you use the components.Greg Marine  Exactly.Michael Callaghan  So I didn't really touch on that. One of the things that I found pretty amazing. Once I got past, setting up the application and doing a little navigation and putting some data on the screen was, I jumped ahead to Okay, how do we get this on the app store? That book is identical. There's no differences between the React version and the angular version. So I changed my strategy a little on it's now a second book. So the first book is part one, creating a UI and getting it getting data on the screen. The second book is, okay, I don't care how you got here, but you've got the application. It's an ionic app, don't care what your technology is. Here's how you get it onto Apple's App Store.Greg Marine  Yeah, you make use of capacitor JS for that, is that correct?Michael Callaghan  I do. I got into capacitor very early on with my electron course. And, in fact, I had to submit a pull request to capacitor to work with electron version four. That was the first official, Mike Callahan is an open source contributor.Greg Marine  Very nice. And that contribution helps make electron be just as equally supported. I know it's still kind of in a beta phase for ionic. But the nice thing is, is that capacitor allows you to glue all of these skills that you have in web development, to be able to work both in mobile platforms such as iOS, Android, and then also on the desktop of electron. Right. Right.Michael Callaghan  Once I'm finished with don't say that my plan is to go back and do the next version in that series. So the next volume in that series, which will be okay, you've got the app. Now, let's put it on Google Play. I knew that there would be some similarities there. But a lot of the nitty gritty how to get it onto the App Store is different than how to get it onto the Play Store. The capacitor portion is the same. But I wanted to tackle them separately. So those books are a lot shorter, and they're a lot less expensive.Greg Marine  Now I know that those became books, originally video courses became books because of with the COVID-19 affecting everybody and everybody going back home. You lost your recording studio that kind of plunged you under book writing, which then led to don't say that at work. But that's just amazing. As a way of coping with the situation of the year, that is affect billions of lives. And so that kind of brings me to today. What's next for Mike?Michael Callaghan  What is next for Mike?One of the more surprising things for me, was the reception of the various titles. I've always considered myself a techie. I'm a geek, I'm a nerd, whatever. Whatever derogatory term you want to use for computer programmer. That's me, I, I fit a lot of the stereotypes. And I've always embraced that I've never tried to run from it. So yes, Mike Callahan creates techiebooks, and techie courses.And so I have, I think, 33 ionic courses available. There are 123 of the three books available. That goes along with those courses. And then there's another book that I wrote, kind of as an experiment. Before I started with it with the ionic stuff. I took the presentation, I was going to give a dev intersection this year. It was supposed to be about an hour long talk on Angular progressive web apps. And I turned it into a bookand ended up being 80 pages.You have an Angular app. Let's deploy it in such a way that mobile users can install it as a progressive web app. How do you do that? Okay, so for books, a few courses? Finally, don't say that. On day one, don't say that outsold everything else combined. Oh, wow. That's incredible. So the question I have to ask myself is, do I want to continue writing textbooks and tech courses? There's obviously a larger audience for business communication failures.AndI hate to say it, I have more material, because I've made a lot more mistakes than I've written ionic apps. So when you combine those two facts, I really think that my next thing after I really finished Don't say that. And there's there's a couple of things I still want to do here. But after don't say that is completely done and released, including the print version, the ebook and the audio book that I'm working on. The two titles that are rattling around in my head right now are my working titles, our scout law of leadership, and that is applying the 12 principles of the boy scout law, to leadership. Because regardless of what you may think about the Boy Scouts, or about what you think they do, the entire program is about leadership, building leaders. And I learned a lot about being a leader being a professional, from what I learned in scouting. And I was never a scout as a child, I was only a scout, a Scouter as an adult.Greg Marine  Okay, and that sounds like it's gonna be a very interesting read.Michael Callaghan  I hope so. And the other one, my working title is reluctant recitation,how to give a talk when you don't want to. Okay.And that one also grew out ofcoaching the youth at our church for public speaking. Okay. Many of them follow into the same patterns. Hi, my name is Mike. I was asked to talk to you today onbird watching.bird watching is cool.The Webster's Dictionary defines bird watching.Greg Marine  Yeah, now I have to say but at this point, I've already tuned you out. So it doesn't sound like you're interested in watchingUnknown Speaker  my site.Michael Callaghan  I flew myself out soand so that book will be all about how to prepare for a talk, how to deliver it, what not to say what not to do. When I used to give presentations, in sales, I had two really bad habits that I had to break. One is that I would take a sip of my water, but my water always had ice in it. Okay, we get Eisen in my drink and I would chew on it while trying to give a presentation.Greg Marine  I was thinking you were gonna say the clean cleaning in the glass on the microphone, but it's no worse.Michael Callaghan  I Rick crunch crunch crunch while I'm trying to talk. Oh, and I didn't realize IGreg Marine  was doing it. That'd be very distracting.Michael Callaghan  The other thing I would do is if I had anything at all in my pocket keys change.I would rattle theAnd I did it withoutany awareness whatsoever,Greg Marine  sort of a nervous tic. Very similar.Michael Callaghan  Yes. So there will be that sort of thing in there. Okay, there will be, what your should your talk consist of, and a lot of this, this isn't going to just be for youth. This could be for anybody who's got to give an oral presentation, or even a PowerPoint presentation. The PowerPoint presentation should be an oral presentation.Greg Marine  Absolutely. TheMichael Callaghan  slides aren't for them. They're for you.Yes. And if you're reading a slide full of paragraphs,you're doing it wrong.Greg Marine  Oh, absolutely. I could not agree more. SoMichael Callaghan  I'm still looking for a better title than reluctant recitation.So if you have any ideas,Greg Marine  if I have any ideas, I will let you know. I know where to find you.Michael Callaghan  Sorry, speaker.Greg Marine  Well, the the current book that we discussed most of the time, and this talk was don't say that it worked. It's currently available on gumroad, soon to be available on Amazon. But a time you're listening to this, it probably will be on Amazon. And, Mike, I want to thank you so much, not only for being with me today on this talk, but also for inviting me to be a part of this project. I was able to write the foreword, and also write the chapter Don't interrupt. I'm the author of that chapter. So I want to thank you for that as well. And again, thank you for being on talking tech.Michael Callaghan  appreciate you having me sir.
45 minutes | Oct 4, 2020
Ep 1 - Talking with Andrew Marine
Greg Marine  I have a special guest today, who's a high school teacher, and Ivy Tech professor, and a media director at church. He is not only a professional in his community, he's also my brother, Andrew Marine. Welcome, Andrew. How are you today?Andrew Marine  Doing wonderful. Thank you, Greg, for having me.Greg Marine  Can you do us a favor, for all of my listeners, tell us a little bit about yourself.Andrew Marine  I'm a man who's passionate about telling stories, and using technology to tell those stories. And so I think that's kind of what brings us into this conversation. And so when you look at my background, I'm a compositionist, I just finished up my second master's degree and that was in English through IU east. And I also have a journalism Master's through Ball State University, and an English education bachelor's degree through ISU (Indiana State University). And so all of those backgrounds that I have there, point to storytelling, and I have embraced the technology to help me tell those stories in the various modes that exists out there, whether that be video, audio, in the the regular text, print format. So when you combine them together, you've got multi-modes, and I just absolutely love telling stories.Greg Marine  Excellent, excellent. And that is something from our childhood that I do recall. I've known you for four decades. That's that's experience I have with you. So again, I thank you for being on the show today and being a part of this brand new podcast. And so as a storyteller, tell me a little bit about your time at ISU. I recall there being not really the dawn of the internet. But as far as your experience with the Internet, and technology. It really began at ISU with a computer that you check the email on in the lobby of your dorm room.Andrew Marine  Well, yeah, it's actually in the lobby of our dormitory. And so down on the first level, that there was one station with the CRT computer, and it was nothing but that green Look, there's no graphic user interface or anything like that. So it was very bland, just all text based. And that was how I checked my email for classes and for any other communication with my peers.Greg Marine  Yeah, imagine that the text only no images. No, what we call emojis today. Oh, no, the emojis were simple text. It was colon dash smiley face for, for for a smiley face.Andrew Marine  Yeah. And to give you context, I mean, the laptop computer wasn't around yet. There was one central computer lab for for students to go to if they wanted to type out a paper there. But I had a daisy wheel printing brother.What you know, printer, basically aGreg Marine  type ofAndrew Marine  word processor with that green, it was a very small, like you only had like three or four lines on it of text at a time. And then when you're ready to hit print, I went into the into my dormitory lobby on my floor, closed all the doors around and then it would start Ting Ting Ting Ting Ting Ting Ting Ting Ting running out the whole paper.Greg Marine  Well, you're definitely taking me back. I remember that. And it was like a floppy disk. I think that store. Yes. Yeah. You didn't have a hard drive a hard drive? Well, I'll tell you what. Those were the days and I remember I quite remember it well. And from there. You graduated Of course after four years of college there and then you went into your early years of teaching. And at that point. Were you were you were there a lot of computers in the classroom, or were you still working with pen and paperAndrew Marine  is pretty much pen and paper as an English teacher. My students were submitting papers via regular paper, we weren't, we didn't have the computers, you know, readily relatively available, especially at the junior high that I first started teaching at. We just didn't have that fact, as far as technology was concerned, I had a computerUnknown Speaker  that I could,Andrew Marine  you know, use a little bit but as far as technology in the classroom was concerned, we only had an Elmo projector. And so I was using dry erase markers to take notes and for students to be able to see projected up on the screen. That was it. That's all we had.Greg Marine  Interesting Elmo projector light bulb projected onto a screen that you pulled down in front of the billboard or the Blackboard.Andrew Marine  Yeah, so that I mean, that's all we had. I mean, the chalk dust was still around when I had the chalk dust on my arm, you know? For for some of my classrooms. So yeah, I come from that old school time. It's been interesting, transitioning from that to where we're at today.Greg Marine  Okay, speaking of that transition, one of the things that you did, during your transition, as you started working with broadcast journalism, or television news, journalism, within the classroom, tell me a little bit about that transition.Andrew Marine  Wow, that transition. that opportunity came to me a little bit about my background was, I was scared to death of computers, as far as opening them up. And, and, and seeing what's underneath the hood. I just was tech scared. So for those of you that are watching this, and you're thinking, well, this guy just just loves tech. I mean, he's been around tech all his life. And he, he loves this stuff. Well, yes, I do. But I started out as that person who didn't want to touch it, I might break it kind of person. And so I can really relate to, to both students and to my peers, who are scared to death of it, because I had to overcome that in order to become a tech savvy storyteller. And so this is part of my story. The first lab that I was in for broadcast, it had a single computer that was collecting dust on a shelf. The the method of that was being used in there at the time was not was linear editing, which was taking two VC VHS tape players. And you play one, and then you go to play the second one, and it records to the masterGreg Marine  third one. So this wasn't even DVD or digital. This was Oh, no VHS or my VHS, VHS. Wow. AndAndrew Marine  it's splice. There's a I actually had a console that could jog shuttle toggle, and would splice at the at the exact moment that you wanted to onto the master.Greg Marine  But all analog basically,Andrew Marine  it was analog. And it was very manual. It was very slow. It was dinosaur in it. Oh, it just it was difficult. But the the one computer that we did have shelved. It was called Casa Blanca. It was large and black it to make it look like a VHS console. So I thought there's irony in that. But the principle was pretty bent that it was sitting on the shelf from my predecessor. So I, I brought it out. And I started using it. And, and so we had this linear with a nonlinear. And so I showed the principal, here's what we're doing with it now.And then I usedone of my computers at hometo do some more editing. And I showed him. Okay, so this is what we're doing currently with Casa Blanca. Here's what we can do with Casa Blanca, and another computer. He got us another computer. And I started using Casa Blanca in that other computer, and I showed him what we were doing with it there. And then another one of my computers, and I said, Imagine what we could do if we had a whole lab. Oh, wow. And we got 16 computers.Greg Marine  Excellent. Okay,Andrew Marine  and so and that that opened the doors for us to really launch into the the nonlinear digital age of broadcasting.Greg Marine  That that's that is incredible. And I'm curious though, now that you have 16 computers for your broadcast class, how does that affect the rest of your education as you're teaching Your English course and your literature courses. How does that advancement in broadcast journalism affect those classes?Andrew Marine  Well, I mean, that was a little microcosm of its own within there, but about that time, you're starting to get computer labs in the building to the computer labs in the building as those started popping up. Then my English classes, my students, I would, I said, No more paper, you can use paper to do your early drafting, that final draft is coming on printed paper, from the printers in the lab. And so we would, we would have certain drafting days in the classroom, and then we'd have certain drafting days in the computer lab. And so I had to schedule my timeout in the labs in order to make that possible. And so I had to become a lot more organized as far as scheduling locations and such for students to be able to use those tools to write their papers.Greg Marine  And then as that was taking place, as a teacher, what kind of tools were you starting to, to adopt? Whether it be from your personal finances or from the school finances? What kind of tools were you starting to adopt, to make it easier for you to grade those papers as they were doing them in the lab?Andrew Marine  Well, at the time, there was still a lot of paper cuts.Unknown Speaker  I was sure I still,Andrew Marine  you know, I at this point now where I'm at, it's a paperless environment. But at the time with the labs, it was still a lot of paper involved. And that was going to be the case until the students started having their own laptops. Okay, when, when the netbooks came along. This is before Chromebooks. When netbooks came along, that became the potential game changer. And I'll say potential because as I started having some sections of my courses having those netbooks they started with, I believe, the seniors, and then they went to the juniors, and it started working its way down. As I was having some of my classes with those netbooks. I saw the great potential there of, Hey, we don't have to have a lab anymore. I can do it right here. I don't have to schedule it out the different rooms, we can do it right here. And then they could submit it directly to me without any paper. And I saw the potential in that. But the problem was those netbooks were terrible.Greg Marine  Oh, okay.Andrew Marine  They were awful. They would fall apart. And and they they weren't connecting Well, what you'd call our our Wi Fi routing networks were very weak at the time, it was cutting edge. And so I saw the vision of where it was going. I wanted to get it there. But there's a lot of frustration with the students because it's not working with me. I'm a troubleshooter, so I'm going to keep working it, working it and working until it works. And so the students with me, they would get a little more comfortable with it. But those netbooks were terrible. But when the Chromebook came, then we were in business, okay, how to with the Wi Fi, connectivity in the building had grown enough. And the Chromebooks were stable enough to get that job done. And it did become a paperless environment at that point.Greg Marine  So for you and your school district up, in particular, your school building, you became one of the pioneers that kind of pushed the technology to its bleeding edge. Yes, still, the technology the hardware was able to catch up.Andrew Marine  Exactly. And I was pretty much the only one in the English department doing that, pushing it to that level. Now, I do have a couple of colleagues that now pretty much run paperless as well. They will grade on iPads and such. And that's what I started with. Actually, when I wanted to be totally paperless. Even for my feedback to the students. I would use an iPad. There was a there is a program still out there. It's called I annotate. And you can use your Apple Pencil on it and mark it up. It also has stamps on it. So if there's the normal things that have got to put down like awkward phrase, or, or insert comma, whatever, I could just add it like that. But I discovered doing stamps was kind of slow for me. Especially when I end up investing In another technology more recently, I'd say it's been about three years now that I've been using this onyx, Chinese company makes books b o x. And it is an E ink tablet that you can put, it's the size of a piece of paper, basically, it's a 13.3 inch screen. And it's an E ink tablet, it saves my eyes. That's why I got it. Because it's not backlit, it uses the the ambient light around and, and then I'm able to write on using a Wacom pin. Okay, and so I'm able to, to do it, it's black and white for me, but I make the pin color blue for the students, when I export that PDF, and send it back as a comment through our anyway, it's it's the type of interface that you can use for having online classes and such.Greg Marine  And that them on their ChromebooksAndrew Marine  learning management system. That's itGreg Marine  learning management system, they see what you've annotated on on your tablet. Yep. Your eating tablet goes to their Chromebook they see it in color, regardless of what you see on your Yes, ink. Okay,Andrew Marine  yeah. And I use blue ink. Because red ink is just blood on a paper. So I use blue blood on a paper. There you go. So and I mean, that's just totally revolutionized how I teach English.Greg Marine  Excellent. Now as go ahead and bring that back onto the screen here, you've got this E ink tablet, it's a paper size 13 point. What was it again, 3.3 13.3 inch screen. It's basically a piece of paper that's electronic. So you can have all of their papers in your hand, without a stack of physical papers on your desk. Exactly. And you can take it home with you from from the from your classroom, to your home, you don't have to deal with all that paper, paper cuts are a thing of the past. Yep. And you do all of it on this on this device, all electronic. And eventually, of course, it gets sent over the Internet to their their students machines. They can make any updates in the back to you. Yeah, and there's no paper involved. Speaking of that, one of the things that has happened to our students this year, and this is 2020. We're recording this in October of 2020. And needless to say, it's been a rough year COVID-19 has spread across the entire planet. It began in late 19 or 2019. And which is why it was labeled COVID-19. And it has wreaked havoc all over the planet. And one of the things most affected by it not only is the closing of businesses and our economy, but its schools. And so that is affected you and your students back in, I would say march of 2020. A lot of the schools closed and thereforebecame virtual overnight. Were you prepared for that?Andrew Marine  I would say absolutely. I was ready to go on day one. When we closed. Now there were some serious challenges, especially for my broadcast class. Here we are. We're, you know it, you know, fast forward several years, we have another computer lab that's got 25 max in it. And and all of our tools that we have at our disposal, were automatically one day just shut off.Well, what do we do now?I mean, how do we function?And so I want to I want to talk about my broadcast experience first and then I'll get back to my English class experience for broadcast. I'll be honest, those first two weeks that we were out, I won't say I was flailing as a as an advisor. But one thing that I discovered real quickly is just studying other videos, you know, how do other broadcasts handle basketball games? What are the different camera shots? What are the commentators saying doing? What are the graphics that are going into it? Sure, studying other film as it might apply to our own because I mean, literally, we had just finished covering all five sectional basketball games from our arena neutral sight, our team was only in one of those five games, yet our broadcast team covered the entire event, multi cams, with commentators everything, we had a blast, the place was rocking. And then all of a sudden, next week were shut down. And and so what does a broadcast team do? And so at the end of that two weeks, we went on a spring break, and I had to do some serious soul searching. How are we going to do this? I have to create some momentum for our team, to gel to be together. Because we needed this. We needed to be with each other, because we were isolated from each other. How do we get together and make this work? And so I created a new rhythm with them. We met every Friday, to discuss the next week. So it was a full staff meeting, we got on a zoom conference, the whole team, and we would brainstorm to create a weekly show.Greg Marine  That would air every Friday. Okay, we wouldAndrew Marine  meet on Friday after all of the pieces have been put together and planned for the next week. And so we would plan together and then we would break. And one week later, we had a show.Greg Marine  That is excellent. See that? That tells me that you were your team were prepared as prepared as the national news was you were doing the same thing that the American news or even international news, we're doing daily, you were already prepared to do that at the high school level.Andrew Marine  Yeah, it was Google Drive. That was that was the technological piece that was able to get us to, to gel it all together. So that we each worked individually, and then pieced it together using a Google Drive shared Google Drive folder, where our executive producer, he would put them all together and would host a show from his house. Kind of like what we're doing right now. And, and it was amazing. It really, it was amazing to see how the students work together. I mean, you know, cooking with Kelsey, that segment was so cool. Because she would use these homemade remedy recipe things and share it with the general population. Okay, it was it was a fun thing. As part of our, our, our broadcast every, every week.Greg Marine  Yeah. And I want to make sure to make a focus on the fact that these are students, these are those in their prime of high school, who were thrown into something that you and I did not experience in our high school years, coming up with new ideas to make do with the current situation they were in, they were stuck at home, they were putting together a broadcast that included new material, but they hadn't even considered it before. And all of a sudden, they're doing this cooking with Kelsey or whatever else they were doing. As students, these are teenagers. Yes. And yes. And that that's, that says a lot about them as people, I would say it also says a lot about them as their their parents and their teacher. I mean, so this is exciting. I mean, this is an exciting topic that in the middle of a global pandemic that's affected billions and billions of people. You've got a set of students who are making the most of it.Andrew Marine  Yeah, I mean, we even had a tornado that hit our town in the midst of all of this COVID-19. And I had a student that loves photography, that's in the broadcast program, he went out and took some, some pictures next day, you know, it had the, you know, the caution tape in the shot and everything. And we ended up using it as part of, of that week's show, you know, it just, they were just amazing in that circumstance, that they were able to take whatever resources they had at home, but it was their cell phone or a camera of some sort. Their Chromebook or if they had a desktop computer, whatever they had at home, they used it and linked it together through the Google Drive. And it was it was something special. It really was. And as part of our broadcast program, we also do a senior slideshow for our graduation ceremony. And behind the scenes, we were preparing for two graduation ceremonies, one that would have been all virtual, which hurt Jones was going to be running that but we still had to have our senior slideshow to give to them and then doing it live and it turns out That in late July, we were able to have our live commencement when it comes to the my English Composition courses, and at the time, I was also teaching English 11. teaching those kids in this environment, I was already prepared, already had my LMS had Canvas, I'd already been using Canvas long before the pandemic hit, I'd already been using what are called modules where I, I put the lesson for the day together. Those are things that the rest of the staff had to learn to do. As far as doing daily lessons, I wasn't quite doing that. But as far as my units were concerned, all of my units with their requirements in the assignments, I was already doing that. And so my students were already familiar with it. And so that there was a familiarity there. What was different was, I had to create a whole bunch of videos. And so I became the king of five minute videos, and introducing things doing tutorials. And using zoom quite a bit. Using loom loom was my main tutorial using a software I was using. And I'm still using it Actually, it was important, those loom items I was using for the graduation slideshow pieces, because I had four students working on making the slides and doing photo editing and so forth. And so they were using photo editing with with Photoshop through a virtual machine, they had a VM client that they had to log into, to get to Photoshop, edit it in there, and then share it to the Google Drive with me. And then I would review it. And then anytime I had a to do a critique, and send it back to them to continue working on it, I would record a loom video for them and send them the link. And so they watched the loom video where I shared my screen showing them what they did well, what I still see as being an issue for them to to correct that. And then they send it back to me. So that's how my dialogue and communication went with especially advanced kids on that. But I would also do that. For other things, such as the, their their papers, I decided this was something I saw a couple of my professors doing while I was working on my English master's degree that they would have the written comments, but they would also do audio comments. And so I started doing audio comments back to my students. And I'm still doing that today.Greg Marine  Okay, so you started doing audio comments, because of the COVID-19 situation.Andrew Marine  I was starting to dabble with it just before in seeing how it was playing out seeing what the kids thought I was doing that about a semester before. We actually you know, the, the, the spring of 2019 is when I started doing that. I continued it into the fall 2019. And then by the time we hit pandemic time, man, that was definitely the way to go.Greg Marine  Okay, so what I'm basically understanding here at this point, is that you and your students are ready for COVID-19 didn't sound like all of your colleagues were doing the we're prepared as prepared for it as as you are, or as you were. But now coming into after post graduation, you had a graduation in July. Now take us to present day. I mean, you were in the fall of 2020 of the new school year has started, the school systems across America had basically scrambled to see what they would need to do coming into the August to the fall semester of 2020. It's my understanding that you have both hybrid, both physical and virtual students. So you have a hybrid situation. What is that? Like?Andrew Marine  It's chaos. It's so difficult to juggle all of these different roles at once. You can't do any one of them well. And that's very difficult for me because I want to do things with excellence in all that I do. And this current situation with what we have, even nine, almost nine weeks into it, I mean, total of eight weeks into it so far. It was overwhelming at first and eight weeks later, it's still overwhelming. And so it's it's not sustainable. As far as I'm concerned. There may be Some teachers that will be whiz bang at doing all of it together, I know that I will not. And so I'm going to share with you a little bit a little insight of what it looks like for me right now. For my traditional in class time, I do have two, well, actually two regular segments, a sections of Ivy Tech composition in the, in the high school. Those are dual credit courses. I also have two sections of interactive media, which that introduces students to all of the major some of the major programs such as Photoshop, Illustrator, InDesign, the, you know, documentation, software, print software, there's all kinds of different software's that they can work with Adobe Premiere, those are some of the basics that they learned in that class. And I've got two in class sections of that. And then I also have Radio TV course, which is dual credit as well. And so that's what they look like in traditional classroom. So that sounds like a lot there. And it is, is a lot of great in, in person instruction in learning going on. But I also have one section of my composition course that is hybrid, there are students in my classroom, about 19 of them in my classroom. And I say about 19, because that ebbs and flows, based on COVID-19. Sometimes students are in there, and sometimes they're out for 10 days. And so it does ebb and flow a little bit, not a whole lot I, I was actually surprised at how little ebb and flow there is there is but it's not too bad at this point. my online students in that same exact class time in that same place, here's how it works, we have a web x system going on. So it's very much like the zoom, only I have access to this camera that's in the back of my room that follows me, or at least it tries to follow me, because it's face recognition. And I'm wearing a mask. So it doesn't work most of the time. But it's there to work,Greg Marine  internet. So the thing that's supposed to protect your students from you having it in case you had it, and you don't want to breathe it into the air in your classroom is actually preventing the technology to follow you. The camera technology follow you throughout the classroom.Andrew Marine  Yeah, so some irony there,Greg Marine  you are more prepared than that camera was exactly.Andrew Marine  Now, the there's also an HDTV in the room, that I can put up a mosaic, or have the student unmute themselves, and it can show that one student up. And then all the others on the smaller box. I usually just do the mosaic so I can see them all and monitor them at the same time. Because part of my job now is to monitor the students who are at home to make sure that they're engaged with the learning. And so they have to have their camera on if their camera is not on. They're not present.Greg Marine  Interesting. Yeah. So very interesting.Andrew Marine  Yeah. So there can be disciplinary actions taken on the student who's not doing the right thing. Unfortunately, I've got senior, so in a college class, so it's not as much of a classroom management issue for me. But for those teachers that are doing the same thing with freshmen and sophomores. Yeah, there's been issues,Greg Marine  I can imagine Oh,Andrew Marine  and and, and, and those had to be taken care of with the assistant principal,Greg Marine  taking care of that. So in reality,Andrew Marine  it gets very weird when when you're dealing with a virtual and in class at the same time hybrid. Now, my job is not done there. I have some students in my interactive media class that are all online, they have to use that VM client and their Google Drive to make this work. Now, what I do is I have seven major projects, and I've created modules for those seven major projects. And each day in class, what I do is I will do a tutorial, a five minute tutorial during class in record myself online. And then I'll post it in Canvas in the module for that for that project. So there are certain elements that they have to meet and and show proficiency in. And I will do a tutorial for each one of those. And so, each day in class on each day, I will produce two of those because I have two interactive media courses, and then I'll upload them as we go. So students We'll only see half of them when they're in class. So that means they have to watch the videos on time.Greg Marine  Interesting.Andrew Marine  And so my in class and my out of class, you know, all my students are getting the content, they're just getting it at different times. Now, if that isn't weird enough, here's how my classes work. My in class students are synchronous, right? I have them third, and fourth and fifth periods. Well, they're able to do the seven projects asynchronously, I allow them to choose whichever ones they want to do at whichever time as long as you get all seven in, in this semester. my online students on the other hand, they're asynchronous, because they don't meet at a certain time with me, they can do it at any time during the day, right. But they all have to be synchronous with the project that we're doing.Greg Marine  Okay. And so,Andrew Marine  so it's, so what I do is I create the tutorials for the ones for the one that they're on. Or I try to get ahead of them, so that it's ready to go when it when I get I'm at the point now where I'm ahead of them. So the tutorials are ready for them when they start that project. So that's how I've learned to cope. And that's using technology to help instruct.Greg Marine  And it's interesting that you use the phrase or the word cope, you're coping just like every one of us has to cope with this, this interesting situations interesting year. One thing's for certain 100 years ago, when the last global pandemic occurred. We didn't have this technology. Back then we barely had the telephone, there wasn't even a television in every home. I'm not even sure radio was a was a big thing at the time. And so what we have today, to be able to cope, as you said, in this new day, and age is interesting technology, it could be far worse than it really is. And I'm glad to hear that you're able to work with these students, and be able to continue their education in spite of what's going on in the world today. And so one of the questions that I have for you, okay, it's October 2020. Where do you see technology going for the classroom?Andrew Marine  I see. The that WebEx classroom that I described where we're a hybrid in class and out of class, I know the school has invested in it. And that is something that I think will be an expectation for us going forward, that we will have an online student presence. But I think that that will be much smaller, going forward. After the pandemic is over. I imagine that more students will be in the classroom, physical classroom than out. And so will that technology become obsolete? follows a betting man, I'd say yes, in the next three years. It won't be in use, except for rare occasion. Because that splitting of the the classrooms, it's very difficult. I don't think that public education is going to be in the business of all online. And if it is, there will be a separate school for it within the public schools. that there will be some teachers that there's no going back now that they've tasted the waters of of all online, they'll want to continue doing that. And, and I think that the school, public schools will probably catch up a little bit with some of the private schools on that and use that in a smaller cluster. But it won't be a prominent one. I think the students who really thrive in an online environment, asynchronous environment, they're going to go to those. I don't think there'll be any stopping them at that point. But I don't think it's going to be in huge droves. I think we are social people. And to be social. I think a lot of a lot of students and I think a lot of teachers realized that lockdown. We can't sustain that for the long term. Do we want to be safe? Do we want to be healthy? Absolutely. But there is an understanding that if we were to stayed at home, another six months, there would have been some serious problems. And so I understand my role in in keeping education going in the classroom. You know, I know that will likely be two weeks too late, if we have to shut down. But I'm grateful that we do have the technologies that we have to be able to, to weather this pandemic. I've been paperless for a long time. But, you know, it's been over a decade now that I've been paperless. But I've got a few of my colleagues saying, you know, this is the first time I've ever had them submit papers digitally. And I kind of like it. I kind of like having my laptop as being the my stack of papers. I said, You're just a step away.Greg Marine  Let me know when you're ready, just to step off from having a e ink tablet in your hands, like you do.Andrew Marine  Yep. Yep. And so I said, let me know when you're ready. I'll, I'll give you my recommendation.Greg Marine  Yeah, so imagine someday that'll be one of the things on the budget for your type of physical school that you're you're a part of. So the course of your career from college to today, you went from a computer in the lobby of your dorm to check email, to now you have it on your phone, in your hand. Yeah. And then from analog, VHS tapes, when you started in broadcast journalism, to now fiber optics that allow you both video feeds, and communication to your camera operators. The technology that has grown over the course of that time, not only has helped you become a better educator, but it's also helped you be able to be that educator in 2020, where the craziness of the of the situation with a global pandemic has allowed you to be able to, even though it can be frustrating at times be able to work in a hybrid classroom where you've got students at home, students and physical, being able to do all of thisand not lose your mind.However, in all that said and done. My final thoughts on this is what I'm taking away from what I'm hearing is it may not necessarily be sustainable. But the technologies that are being invented today will definitely shape our future. But at the end of the day, all of this is just an appliance, it's a tool. We are social people, we will get back to what is considered a normal someday. And these technologies will just help us get there. And so that's kind of my final thoughts. What what are your final thoughts on on what's happening today, here in October 2020. As we close out this year,Andrew Marine  we have a serious global crisis. And in the midst of that global crisis, we do have resources at our fingertips to help us cope with it as best as we can. And after this crisis is over, I think we'll all have grown from this, in that that's as people as consumers of content. And as producers of content. As I said at the beginning, I'm a composition just, I'm a storyteller, and the tools that we have before us. I'm excited. I'm excited to be able to tell amazing stories. And in my role as an educator, I'm able to bring a whole lot more people along with me to tell those stories. And that is exciting to me, and I thoroughly enjoy it. I enjoy bringing people along the journey to tell those stories. And so, technology, it's here to stay. I embrace it as it comes along. In the more in better ways of telling those stories, the better for me, and I enjoy it. Love it.Greg Marine  Well, Andrew, thank you so much for joining me today. Again, I've known you for four decades, for more than four decades. And I appreciate your insight into technology in today's classroom, and on behalf of as a parent, I want to thank you for what you do for students like my son and my sons, my stepsons. I appreciate everything you do. And thank you so much for coming on this episode of talking tech.Andrew Marine  My pleasure. Thank you.
COMPANY
About us Careers Stitcher Blog Help
AFFILIATES
Partner Portal Advertisers Podswag Stitcher Studios
Privacy Policy Terms of Service Your Privacy Choices
© Stitcher 2023