it will be paradise with WASM. Thank you @scott for ending notes on WASM. 800+ podcasts I will check it out. Thank you for what you been doing!
@CodeWithAnup6 ай бұрын
Really loved this talk.
@Dmitry-Moiseenko5 ай бұрын
Great talk, thank you Scott!
@TSM_GoodBand25 күн бұрын
Scott is the best 🎉
@TheJeffHoltАй бұрын
Watching at 1.5x FTW. Very educational talk.
@mubashir36 ай бұрын
Some people prefer polished presentation with lots of pretty PowerPoint slides. I like Scott's approach that has more of a "let's learn together" feel to it. Jump between powershell to vscode and back. Also, his presentation is very laid back and tongue-in-cheek. I like it. But, I can totally understand that people who get offended by poop emoji are not going to enjoy it. In other words, you can't please everyone. And you perhaps should not try.
@Erril_Ferndal6 ай бұрын
Amazing Scott!
@andreydeev43425 ай бұрын
In Windows using explorer, you do not need to open properties using mouse and context menu. Just press Alt-Enter after you selected files (with Ctrl-A, for example), and you see this prop window opened.
@ArnonDanon6 ай бұрын
Great content 👑 Learned a lot 🙏🏼 👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽
@ChristofferLund6 ай бұрын
Scott 💪
@365nice5 ай бұрын
I liked the talk but I am confused why he didn’t cover running the straight executable in a container? He jumps to running on wasm (pretty cool) but if I don’t need Ubuntu, why do I need Wasm? The published docker hello-world example would seem to imply he could run his app with no OS at all right? Why didn’t he demo/explain that?
@365nice5 ай бұрын
To clarify - what is the minimal requirement for a modern web app - if the .net runtime provides tcp/http could you run pants.exe and connect to web services for db/logging etc.
@gerelt-od6 ай бұрын
what is dive? tools or built in
@Gin_____6 ай бұрын
Definitely a external tool
@andersondamasceno13566 ай бұрын
I do not know but it seems wasm/wasi will really change the game in the development world. What do you think folks?
@sundhaug926 ай бұрын
Checked, McCarthy is John McCarthy, who invented LISP
@ignacionr5 ай бұрын
Okay I made it almost 13 minutes into it.
@pmcgee0036 ай бұрын
Important. NUT-ella, not NU-tella. No wonder he couldn't find any. 😅
@trevorstanfield88136 ай бұрын
It's a German-Italian product name. It's pronounced NU-tella in both of those places.
@pmcgee0036 ай бұрын
@trevorstanfield8813 it started in the 1960s. It's been made in Australia, for Australia, for nearly 50 years. And it's made from hazelnuts. NUTella is the only correct English name for it. 🤨😉
@trevorstanfield88136 ай бұрын
@@pmcgee003 It was invented in Italy by an Italo-Austrian born in Austria. Please do note Austria is not the same thing as Australia.
@ignacionr5 ай бұрын
In the modern world, nobody that’s not a game uses Windows.
@dus10dnd6 ай бұрын
It's getting really tiring to continue to hear the stupid jabs from Scott. We do ACH here, as well. Come on. It is so distracting. Scott... stop apologizing for your education. WTF? We want to encourage people to learn. Stop degrading it. On one hand you praise people for coming to better themselves and tell them to be boastful to their coworkers, and on the other hand you denigrate your education. Focus on craftsmanship. It is the way. Young people need to learn that they certainly can learn these things and that they're capable people; you're simply reinforcing that it is okay to not be good. It is just so strange that you want to play the role of advocating for people... it is only like the argument about monopolies... a early entrant establishes a new market and then begins to advocate for regulation in the guise of protecting people, but it is really to keep the competition out (looking at Sam Altman and OpenAI). Do you just want to maintain your position and not have people rise to your level? It is nonsensical, so I don't think that is what you're trying to do, but.... can we just focus on the stuff? I say all of this because... I find it unfortunate... but I love your content. When you share the skills and how you've learned, it is inspiring. I learned so much watching this, like I always do when I watch your presentations. It is distracting to keep flinging feces on yourself, though. Have pride in what you've done, you've earned it... and you know that because not only have you earned it, but you continue to earn it. Telling everyone that they don't have to work hard isn't going to help them. We do have to work hard, if we want skills. It doesn't mean we have to do "hustle culture". I am a firm believer that we need to establish boundaries. But those boundaries don't mean that we don't spend our free time learning stuff. We simply get to choose when, where, why, how, and what we spend that time on. And if we love doing these things, it will be spending our free time on these things... but it is because we love them and they are a part of our being. Not only is there nothing wrong with your work being part of your identity... it is a shame when people don't feel that it is... because it means they haven't found a vocation aligned to their identity. It is like when people blast a married couple of being "co-dependent". Maybe I don't fully understand co-dependency, but why would I want to be married to a person if I didn't feel completely co-dependent with that person, or not feel it reciprocated? It would just be better to not be married. Well, same thing with my work. I absolutely want it to be part of my identity... not because of some top-down requirement to slave away for someone else, but because I have found absolute joy in what I do. Now, I do work to sustain myself, but I carve out protected time to learn and practice my priorities, first. That is what I do each day... 1-2 hours of time spent on something that I prioritize for myself. Sometimes it is something for work because that is just my personal priority. Most often it is something in tech that may be tangentially related to work, or related to future possibilities with work. However, it could be any other thing that I prioritize... like learning HVAC, solar power, battery tech, EVs, whiskey, or coffee. Which is emphasizes why at least taking seriously the acquisition of knowledge... because if people can learn how to do that, they can apply it to anything in their lives, work or pleasure.
@mubashir36 ай бұрын
A lot of what Scott says is tongue-in-cheek. You are taking it way too seriously.