Fredrik talks to Balint Erdi about the web framework Ember. Where did Ember come from, what stands out about it today, how do new features get into the framework, and how is development being made more sustainable?
Plus: Balint’s experiences organizing Emberfest, and quite a bit of appreciation for the Ruby and Ember communities in general.
The episode is sponsored by Cursed code - a half-day conference with a halloween mood taking place on October 31st, in central Gothenburg.
Thank you Cloudnet for sponsoring our VPS!
Comments, questions or tips? We a re @kodsnack, @tobiashieta, @oferlund and @bjoreman on Twitter, have a page on Facebook and can be emailed at [email protected] if you want to write longer. We read everything we receive.
If you enjoy Kodsnack we would love a review in iTunes! You can also support the podcast by buying us a coffee (or two!) through Ko-fi.
Links
Balint JSP • - Java server pages
ZODB • - Python object database
Ruby Ruby on rails Convention over configuration ORM Active record Ember Angular Yehuda Katz Emberfest Balint’s (first!) book • - Rock & roll with Ember.js
Ember data Support us on Ko-fi! Classes in Javascript Internet explorer 6 Handlebars Glimmer Controllers in Ember Ember addons Ember RFC:s Codemods React native Tree shaking Webpack Embroider Vite Cursed code • - sponsor of the episode
Poppels cursedcode.se • - to read more and buy tickets
The Embroider initiative The Ember initiative Ember CLI Ember core teams Emberconf devjournal.balinterdi.com Ember community links Ember guides Ember checkup • - Balint’s productized consulting service
Titles
• These two decades
• I’m a web guy
• Just one thing
• It’a always useful
• Rails carried me over
• Ember was in flux
• Javascript didn’t have classes
• Emberisms
• Nowadays I like explicitness more
• Everything needs to be imported
• A change they would like to see in the framework
• (The) Emberfesting
• Fellow emberino
• We don’t do drama
Fredrik talks to Balint Erdi about the web framework Ember. Where did Ember come from, what stands out about it today, how do new features get into the framework, and how is development being made more sustainable?
Plus: Balint’s experiences organizing Emberfest, and quite a bit of appreciation for the Ruby and Ember communities in general.
The episode is sponsored by Cursed code - a half-day conference with a halloween mood taking place on October 31st, in central Gothenburg.
Thank you Cloudnet for sponsoring our VPS!
Comments, questions or tips? We a re @kodsnack, @tobiashieta, @oferlund and @bjoreman on Twitter, have a page on Facebook and can be emailed at [email protected] if you want to write longer. We read everything we receive.
If you enjoy Kodsnack we would love a review in iTunes! You can also support the podcast by buying us a coffee (or two!) through Ko-fi.
Links
Balint JSP • - Java server pages
ZODB • - Python object database
Ruby Ruby on rails Convention over configuration ORM Active record Ember Angular Yehuda Katz Emberfest Balint’s (first!) book • - Rock & roll with Ember.js
Ember data Support us on Ko-fi! Classes in Javascript Internet explorer 6 Handlebars Glimmer Controllers in Ember Ember addons Ember RFC:s Codemods React native Tree shaking Webpack Embroider Vite Cursed code • - sponsor of the episode
Poppels cursedcode.se • - to read more and buy tickets
The Embroider initiative The Ember initiative Ember CLI Ember core teams Emberconf devjournal.balinterdi.com Ember community links Ember guides Ember checkup • - Balint’s productized consulting service
Titles
• These two decades
• I’m a web guy
• Just one thing
• It’a always useful
• Rails carried me over
• Ember was in flux
• Javascript didn’t have classes
• Emberisms
• Nowadays I like explicitness more
• Everything needs to be imported
• A change they would like to see in the framework
• (The) Emberfesting
• Fellow emberino
• We don’t do drama
Nyd den ubegrænsede adgang til tusindvis af spændende e- og lydbøger - helt gratis
Dansk
Danmark