text
stringlengths
0
1.17k
• The team's personal growth and emotional journey, including the loss of a founder
• Discussing the top five stories of the year and open source industry trends
• Reviewing the history and evolution of the Changelog podcast, including its early days and notable guests
• Tagline of the changelog is to shine a spotlight on what's fresh and new in open source
• The team has changed over the years, but the mission remains the same: to serve the open source community
• The show has a new co-host, and the change in dynamics has been a positive one
• The changelog has a great group of supporters and listeners who provide valuable feedback
• The site was originally on Tumblr, but outgrew it and was rebuilt on a WordPress multi-author platform
• The membership program was initially successful, but slowed down and was eventually revamped
• The changelog now leverages sponsors as partners, offering exclusive benefits to paying members
• Partners include Code Chip, Max CDN, Honey Badger, and others
• The changelog offers a unique value proposition to members, including exclusive offers and discounts
• The membership program is being revamped to offer better incentives and benefits to members
• Open source philosophy and support
• Love-hate relationship with WordPress
• Limitations of platforms and exploring alternatives
• Possibility of building own membership and CMS platform
• Blame avoidance and accountability
• Sponsorship and support from global audience
• Future plans and projects
• Centralized repository on GitHub (Ping) for community engagement
• Expanding content focus to other areas beyond Ruby, JavaScript, and web development
• Gratitude for interactions on Ping
• Success story of show on Pearl, sourced from Ping recommendations
• Discussion of Ovid and his connection to Pearl, potential for future podcast
• Introduction of Ping and its purpose, contrasting with email conversations
• Benefits of using Ping for open-source conversations and collaboration
• Example of a listener submitting a guest idea for the show
• Invitation for others to contribute to Ping and help with covering open-source topics
• Discussion about inviting Rob Eisenberg to talk about his concerns with Angular
• Problem-solving and the community rebounding from issues
• Helping developers make informed decisions about framework choices (e.g. Angular vs Ember)
• Thanks to Aaron for editing help and making the show sound better
• History of the show, including past hosts and editors (Jared, Andrew, Drew Wilson)
• Partnership with Five by Five and Dan Benjamin
• Versioning controversy (Semantic Versioning)
• List of notable guests from the past year (e.g. Jeremy Sands, Chad Whittaker, Tim Caswell)
• Recap of the year's episodes and shows
• Discussion of an enjoyable and uplifting message to keep a change log
• Parker's involvement in the Jekyll project and his takeover
• Parker's background and current work at Visco
• Jared's experience of watching Parker save the Jekyll project
• The topic of Weekly's change log and its impact on the project
• Burnout experienced by Jared while shipping Weekly issues
• Context provided for Jared's burnout, including hand-coding and a high volume of issues shipped in a short period
• Burnout and the need to automate weekly summaries
• Use of collaboration tools, specifically Trello, to manage content
• Development of a custom Trello board for creating and editing the weekly newsletter
• Benefits of using Trello, including improved collaboration and efficiency
• Success in using Trello to publish a weekly newsletter, including specific examples and results
• The host's experience with Jekyll and the challenges of publishing content
• The use of Trello for content creation and collaboration
• The potential to open-source the code for the newsletter system
• The benefits of using a web-based tool like Trello for collaborative content creation
• The host's gratitude for the idea of using Trello for the newsletter and its impact on the process
• The mention of other topics to be discussed, including GitHub and DotNet Core becoming open source
• The end-of-year thanks and appreciation for listeners and supporters
• Node.js and its recent changes, including a fork into io.js
• Corporate drama and sponsorships in the Node.js community
• Ember 2.0 roadmap and community engagement
• Rust and its upcoming 1.0 release
• Yehuda Katz and Steve Klabnik's involvement with the community
• Docker vs CoreOS and their drama
• Backward compatibility concerns for Angular 2.0
• Passing of community members Jim Weirich and Ezra Zimatovich
• PHP and Facebook's contributions to open source
• Upcoming shows on PHP, Hack, and other topics
• Debian being forked
• Limited time and scope for the show's coverage
• Plans to cover more topics, including emacs, linux, and functional programming languages
• Expanding the team and needing help with coverage
• Discussion of the growth of Rust and C++ in the programming world
• Request for listener feedback and suggestions for show topics
• Overview of the team's efforts to cover open-source topics and community involvement
• Call to action to support the show through membership and subscription
• Plans for future content, including video releases in 2015
[0.00 --> 14.60] all right everybody we're back this is uh this is an unusual show for us because it's just me
[14.60 --> 23.30] and jared um this is i guess code name eoy for end of year 2014 because this is a pretty awesome
[23.30 --> 27.78] year for for the change logs so you got me here you got jared here so jared say hello
[27.78 --> 34.94] what's up man how you doing uh you know just just winding it down you know winding it down it's it's
[34.94 --> 40.42] it's almost christmas time you know it's getting real close it's a friday so it's an end of a good
[40.42 --> 46.30] week um you know day job wise ship some awesome stuff the whole team's doing great we're all
[46.30 --> 53.86] preparing for um the christmas holiday next uh next week and just the new year and a lot of things
[53.86 --> 58.66] a lot of things happen you get sort of sentimental at this time of year you get a little thankful
[58.66 --> 62.44] this time of year and not that you're not thankful other times in the year it's just you kind of
[62.44 --> 68.06] reflect you you know you do a retrospective of of what that year was and it's you know there's
[68.06 --> 72.58] positives there's negatives there's things that you know surprise you and people you're thankful
[72.58 --> 76.82] for so i figured it would be good for you and i to hop on the show and just you and i because we
[76.82 --> 81.08] actually had some scheduling conflicts and had some shows planned that just didn't work out so we'll do
[81.08 --> 85.42] them in the new year i thought it'd make sense for us to come on and to say hello to all of our
[85.42 --> 88.46] awesome listeners and talk about what's going on with the changelog what we're doing and who we're
[88.46 --> 94.60] thankful for so so do you read just random question do you read all those end of year top lists is that
[94.60 --> 101.14] something that you're into or do you frown upon those things uh well i guess what do you mean do you
[101.14 --> 107.36] mean from individuals or or for just in general i mean they're everywhere uh you know the best top albums
[107.36 --> 113.72] of the year the five biggest mistakes celebrities made or whatever it seems like we always have
[113.72 --> 119.14] these year-end roundups you know the favorite this the worst that i will say they have a place but i
[119.14 --> 123.70] would say i read the i read the ones that are most relevant to maybe what i'm feeling so if it's like
[123.70 --> 131.00] um you know top worst mistakes you know product managers made this year i probably might read that
[131.00 --> 136.00] one or you know top ones podcasters you know so depending upon how relevant is to me you know i don't
[136.00 --> 141.18] care about celebrities i don't i'm just not gonna read that um anything around what we're doing here