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[2988.48 --> 2989.94] Oh, they wanted to know about... |
[2989.94 --> 2990.82] Well, where is Alex? |
[2990.88 --> 2991.66] Is he home yet? |
[2993.02 --> 2993.72] Probably not. |
[2994.18 --> 2995.16] He's probably listening. |
[2995.54 --> 2996.28] On his drive. |
[2996.36 --> 2998.62] Neither of us know anything about... |
[2998.62 --> 3001.42] Well, Michael probably knows something about server-side rendering. |
[3001.42 --> 3005.66] Um, I don't. |
[3006.66 --> 3010.60] How about we do two minutes of random picks, and Rich, you can begin. |
[3010.88 --> 3011.46] What do you think? |
[3012.22 --> 3018.38] Uh, my random pick is actually going to be, um, a CFP that's open that people should apply |
[3018.38 --> 3020.30] to, because it seems neat. |
[3020.68 --> 3021.74] And it's in Tokyo. |
[3022.54 --> 3025.08] Uh, so it's NodeFest Tokyo. |
[3025.58 --> 3026.42] And, yeah. |
[3026.88 --> 3027.22] Apply. |
[3027.86 --> 3028.30] I don't know. |
[3029.16 --> 3029.68] What else? |
[3030.22 --> 3030.82] I've been there. |
[3030.92 --> 3031.46] It's great. |
[3031.78 --> 3032.46] Everybody should go. |
[3032.88 --> 3033.84] I've also been... |
[3033.84 --> 3036.38] Well, you've been to NodeFest Tokyo, or you've been to Tokyo? |
[3036.96 --> 3038.00] No, I've been to NodeFest Tokyo. |
[3038.10 --> 3039.90] I went to the first two or three. |
[3040.16 --> 3040.66] Something like that. |
[3040.66 --> 3040.88] Nice. |
[3040.88 --> 3043.32] It's one of the oldest Node conferences, actually. |
[3043.48 --> 3043.80] People don't realize it. |
[3043.80 --> 3044.68] I did not know that. |
[3045.30 --> 3047.28] But, yeah, it started the same year that I started NodeConf. |
[3048.50 --> 3048.86] Wow. |
[3050.18 --> 3050.58] Cool. |
[3050.96 --> 3054.14] Um, I guess the other thing, I actually was looking at... |
[3054.14 --> 3059.70] There's this cool procedural generation subreddit where they just talk about procedural generation. |
[3059.98 --> 3060.88] Hold on, I'm going to burp. |
[3061.96 --> 3064.16] I muted myself for the benefit of you all. |
[3064.16 --> 3070.70] Um, so there's this library that I just linked in the channel called Too Loud that, uh, |
[3070.70 --> 3072.70] lets you do noise functions. |
[3073.42 --> 3077.48] Um, there's like Perlin noise and Simplex noise and a bunch of other stuff. |
[3077.48 --> 3084.62] And it's really good for generating tile sets or any other kind of, uh, random procedural stuff that you need. |
[3084.66 --> 3086.06] And it makes like canvas tiles. |
[3086.30 --> 3087.50] It's pretty cool. |
[3088.10 --> 3088.60] Cool. |
[3089.04 --> 3089.70] Really cool. |
[3090.24 --> 3091.26] And now I'm leaving. |
[3091.26 --> 3092.26] Okay. |
[3093.88 --> 3094.36] Bye, Rachel. |
[3094.84 --> 3095.88] Have a good weekend. |
[3096.10 --> 3096.38] Bye. |
[3097.32 --> 3097.58] Bye. |
[3098.58 --> 3099.52] What about you, Michael? |
[3100.78 --> 3102.60] Um, let me think. |
[3102.84 --> 3103.32] Uh, okay. |
[3103.50 --> 3106.76] So there's a project called Leaflet.js. |
[3107.16 --> 3112.48] It's a pretty amazing JavaScript, um, library for doing everything you ever wanted to do with maps. |
[3112.48 --> 3119.10] So embedding maps that work on mobile and desktop, all the interactions, putting points in all that cool stuff. |
[3119.10 --> 3131.90] Um, there's this great company, uh, Mapzen that's, uh, like a, a sort of cheaper and, and, um, slightly easier to use, uh, alternative to Mapbox for embedding maps and things and interacting with them. |
[3131.90 --> 3134.84] And, uh, they use this library as their, their base. |
[3134.92 --> 3140.04] And then they, they provide a bunch of tiles and services for doing, um, like smart routing and stuff. |
[3140.14 --> 3149.24] So I've been building a little, you know, app in my spare time for fun with that library, uh, and was just really, really impressed with how far along this Leaflet.js thing is. |
[3149.32 --> 3152.62] Like it, it does literally everything. |
[3152.92 --> 3157.34] Um, and I mean, for, for a task this huge, you kind of have to be a big framework. |
[3157.34 --> 3166.58] Um, but as far as, you know, big frameworks and, and big, big piles of code go, um, it's, it's really actually easy to use and not very, uh, obtuse. |
[3167.90 --> 3168.38] Yeah. |
[3169.02 --> 3174.00] Well, my, uh, my pick will be something to tease up some future content for us. |
[3174.00 --> 3178.72] So there was a blog post on the Heroku blog talking about the rise of Kotlin. |
[3178.94 --> 3185.62] And we just recorded an episode this week, which will go out in about three weeks because we have a small backlog. |
[3185.62 --> 3189.54] And, uh, I'm pretty excited about this. |
[3189.58 --> 3191.34] It's a, it was, it was a fun conversation. |
[3191.96 --> 3195.76] My son's crying in the background cause it's, uh, it's time. |
[3196.60 --> 3209.32] And, but, uh, but the, the, the fun thing about Kotlin is it's very interesting in terms of how it's come about from a, a third party product company, so to speak. |
[3209.32 --> 3212.50] Like it comes from JetBrains and we talked about ID, IDEs earlier. |
[3212.94 --> 3215.76] They're like the experts of creating IDEs. |
[3216.02 --> 3222.10] And so rather than Kotlin become being like Swift is to Apple, Kotlin is to Google. |
[3222.24 --> 3223.08] It's not that way. |
[3223.12 --> 3225.50] It's, it's actually JetBrains, a third party. |
[3225.50 --> 3236.26] So it's a really interesting how this language came about really interesting about how it's solving some interesting things on the JVM and the powers giving to Android developers to have an alternative to, to Java. |
[3236.42 --> 3237.72] And, uh, it's a fun show. |
[3237.84 --> 3239.94] So that is a good article. |
[3240.06 --> 3245.36] I'll link it in the show notes to go and check out and prep for our show coming up on Kotlin. |
[3246.02 --> 3246.50] Awesome. |
[3247.02 --> 3247.68] All right. |
[3248.16 --> 3249.04] Good stuff. |
[3249.04 --> 3255.96] And with that, that is the ask me anything random live show of JS party. |
[3256.08 --> 3258.16] This was probably the most random show we've done so far. |
[3258.28 --> 3259.92] So thanks for tuning in. |
[3259.92 --> 3262.76] And for those in Slack, thanks for hanging out. |
[3265.40 --> 3266.14] All right. |
[3266.20 --> 3268.78] Thank you for tuning into JS party this week. |
[3268.94 --> 3272.80] Thanks also to our sponsors, top tile century and hired. |
[3272.96 --> 3277.34] Also thanks to fastly, our bandwidth partner at the facet.com to learn more. |
[3277.34 --> 3280.42] We host everything we do on Linode servers. |
[3280.54 --> 3282.54] Head to lino.com slash change log. |
[3282.70 --> 3283.56] Check them out. |
[3283.66 --> 3284.46] Support the show. |
[3284.54 --> 3288.66] This show is produced by myself, Adam Stachowiak and edited by Jonathan Youngblood. |
[3288.82 --> 3293.22] And the awesome music you've been hearing is produced by the mysterious break master cylinder. |
[3293.70 --> 3296.98] We do the show live every Friday at 3 PM. |
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