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• The impact of junior developers on the community |
• The challenge of running teams with a mix of junior and senior developers |
• The influx of new open source contributors to Ruby and Rails |
• The need for community members to adapt to changing circumstances |
• Difficulty of entry into the Rails community due to misconceptions about its complexity |
• Importance of contributing documentation to open-source projects |
• Benefits of documentation for new users and established maintainers |
• Challenges of understanding the perspective of new users and the value of their contributions |
• Mentoring and supporting junior developers, including initiatives such as Code Newbie |
• Discussion of open-source contributions and mentoring |
• Introduction of a project called Ruby Bench and its goal to collect metrics on Ruby performance |
• Mention of Google Summer of Code and involvement of a student who will be working with the speaker |
• Overview of Open Academy and its program for computer science majors to work on open-source projects, including Rails |
• Reflection on the challenges of mentoring, including providing guidance without giving away the answer |
• The host recommends watching a specific show and provides a link in the show notes. |
• The sponsor, Code School, is introduced and its features are discussed, including free courses and coding challenges. |
• The host asks the 2015 Ruby Heroes about what initially drew them to the Ruby language and community. |
• Each of the heroes shares their individual story, with one mentioning Why the Lucky Stiff's blog and another thanking Constantine Haas for introducing them to Sinatra and encouraging their involvement in the community. |
• The conversation is paused for a sponsor break, and the host thanks the sponsor, Code School, for providing educational resources. |
• The speaker's journey into Ruby programming |
• Challenges faced in transitioning from Java to Ruby |
• The role of Ruby conferences and community in the speaker's adoption of Ruby |
• The speaker's transition from Ruby to Java and back to Ruby |
• Eileen's introduction to Ruby and her experience with it |
• Jeremy's experience with Ruby after working with PHP and Python |
• The elegance of Ruby's blocks feature |
• The speaker's interest in Minitest and its ease of use |
• The ease of switching from RSpec to Minitest |
• The role of open source and the Ruby language ecosystem in the speakers' work |
• Minitest vs RSpec: pros and cons of each testing framework |
• Hybrid testing mode for Minitest and RSpec |
• RSpec's "magic" and how it can be overwhelming |
• Retrofitting tests onto older code with RSpec |
• Legacy code and the need for mocking and stubbing |
• The importance of testing implementation details |
• Ruby community's take on RSpec vs Minitest |
• Show of hands for RSpec fans (none present) |
• Discussion on deploying Rails applications in production |
• Docker is the only supported way to install Discourse |
• Controlling dependencies through Docker |
• Shipped app vs. shipping Ruby code |
• Techniques used in Discourse Docker deployment |
• Pulling OpenSSL out of the standard library |
• MRB work |
• Ruby Together project |
• Sinatra 2 features and plans |
• End of discussion and goodbyes |
[0.00 --> 16.88] welcome back everyone this is the change log and i'm your host adam stankowiak this is episode 154 |
[16.88 --> 24.00] and on today's show we got six awesome guests we have all six ruby heroes on the show today |
[24.00 --> 28.92] it's a jam-packed episode jared lives called did a great job leading six guests through a show |
[28.92 --> 35.26] it's not an easy task and it's also not very often we have six guests on this show so great job jared |
[35.26 --> 41.88] for leading this call we have three awesome sponsors code ship top towel and also code school |
[41.88 --> 47.50] in addition to what code school is most known for which is educating developers on the developer |
[47.50 --> 53.24] world of course they're also known for putting on ruby heroes each year at rails call so kudos to |
[53.24 --> 59.56] them for doing that and also for sponsoring this show our first sponsor is code ship a hosted |
[59.56 --> 66.14] continuous delivery service focusing on speed security and customizability you can set up |
[66.14 --> 70.98] continuous integration in a matter of seconds and automatically deploy when your tests have passed |
[70.98 --> 76.64] code ship supports your github and your bit bucket projects and you can get started today for free |
[76.64 --> 82.18] with their free plan should you decide to go with a premium plan you can also save 20 off |
[82.18 --> 88.42] any plan you choose for the next three months by using the code the changelog podcast again that |
[88.42 --> 95.84] code is the changelog podcast head to codechip.com slash the changelog to get started and now on to the show |
[95.84 --> 105.58] welcome back everybody jared here adam's here too but i'll tell you what this show is so packed with |
[105.58 --> 110.60] guests that adam is just hanging out in the members only slack room he's probably in there posting |
[110.60 --> 117.38] emoji smiley faces and fist bumps because we are pumped for this show and i'll tell you why this |
[117.38 --> 123.30] week avengers age of ultron may be top in the box office but it ain't got nothing on the changelog |
[123.30 --> 130.46] we have on the show all six of this year's ruby heroes so take that avengers and say hi everyone |
[130.46 --> 139.42] hi hi hi welcome welcome for those of you don't know what ruby heroes are each year at rails conf which |
[139.42 --> 144.70] was just was it last week or the week previous our friends at code school help the ruby community elect |
[144.70 --> 151.94] and award trophies to outstanding contributors to the ruby community this year's six winners are here |
[151.94 --> 157.50] all six of them from all parts of the earth and we are excited to talk so here's what we're going to |
[157.50 --> 162.60] do we're going to go around the circle i'll introduce each hero with a quote or two about |
[162.60 --> 167.00] what their nominator said about them and then i'll ask each of them to explain in their own words |
[167.00 --> 173.40] why they think they won the ruby hero award and then we will kick off with some conversational |
[173.40 --> 184.94] questions everybody ready all right let's start with nobuyushi nakata uh said of him if he was a fish |
[184.94 --> 192.26] then patches would then patches would be water because he lives on them also he's a tireless |
[192.26 --> 198.94] contributor it's unbelievable how fast he fixes ruby bugs nobu welcome to the show congrats on the |
[198.94 --> 209.10] ruby hero award and please tell us why you think you are a ruby hero yeah it was |
[209.10 --> 221.02] uh surprising and amazing thank you well it wasn't me it was the whole ruby community |
[221.02 --> 225.76] and we i hear you are called the patch monster can you speak to that |
[225.76 --> 245.76] uh the meaning yes patch monster what what's that all about uh it's uh uh |
[245.76 --> 262.20] uh is that long to explain okay fair enough a man of few words i like that let's introduce our |
[262.20 --> 269.18] next hero this is eileen you should tell um people who nominated eileen said things like she's |
[269.18 --> 275.38] deprecated things she's removed code refactored confusing or brittle code we need more people like her |
[275.76 --> 281.00] also saying she's mentoring students to start to contribute to oss specifically to rails we need |
[281.00 --> 288.42] people like her to keep our community growing eileen congrats welcome to the show and uh in your own |
[288.42 --> 295.74] words why did you get the ruby hero award this year uh thanks for having me on the show uh i don't know |
[295.74 --> 302.10] it was it was well it was it was surprising uh mostly because i kind of just started contributing to |
[302.10 --> 315.40] the rails last year and uh i i guess i would probably people were like oh this bizarre bug that |
[315.40 --> 318.44] nobody wants to go anywhere near eileen to go near it |
[318.44 --> 327.16] that's all that's all it takes now you just have to go near those scary bugs that uh that other people |
[327.16 --> 335.20] don't want to touch yeah i guess i don't know i don't know it's well i mean everybody got i would |
[335.20 --> 338.30] i think that's like kind of like everybody is like a little bit of a different reason |
[338.30 --> 345.60] sure absolutely all right well up next is sarah may you may remember sarah from episode 146 |
[345.60 --> 352.48] uh where she was on and talked about minding the uh the gender parody gap sarah welcome back to the |
[352.48 --> 357.74] show and a few things said about you uh during the ruby heroes award presentation is that |
[357.74 --> 363.26] she is one of the few female role models we have in the community also that she contributes to the |
[363.26 --> 369.20] open source and ruby communities in ways that at a glance uh at a github profile would even fail to |
[369.20 --> 376.50] communicate so congrats on the win and can you speak a little bit about it yeah absolutely thanks |
[376.50 --> 383.24] for having me again uh now inflicting me upon your users a second time um i you know i was actually |
[383.24 --> 387.10] i'm going to echo what everyone else said i was very surprised and partially that's because a lot |
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