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  • do you want me to do?

  • Some testing's were left.

  • All right.

  • Hey, everybody.

  • Welcome to the free code camp 2018.

  • Top contributors Party in Dublin.

  • Yeah, here we have amazing people from all around Europe and Africa.

  • Thank you, everybody for coming out.

  • It's great.

  • Uh, and we're thrilled.

  • Two welcome you all.

  • And to celebrate your many contributions to the freak Oh, camp, open source community and to your own cities, local developer communities.

  • So many of you are so critical in helping people in your communities realize that they can become developers and giving them actionable advice as to how they could do that.

  • So I just want to give a big round of applause for everybody here.

  • Yeah.

  • All right, well, we're gonna be streaming for the next three hours or so.

  • Uh, two hours and 45 minutes.

  • Wear started a little late.

  • Thanks for your face.

  • Servitia student in, um and it should be really exciting.

  • We'll talk about a lot of exciting things before we get started.

  • I have some very quick announcements, uh, things that air coming up very soon that I think everybody who's interested in free cocaine should know versatile.

  • Just like last year when freak oh camp participated in Hack Tober Fist and Octoberfest is the month of October.

  • It's a big push to get people to contribute to open source.

  • Last year, freak oh, camps guide was the number one most contributed to open source repo, uh, as part of Octoberfest.

  • Since then, the repose gotten 707,000 7000 pull requests.

  • Yeah, so I'll be completely candid.

  • It was a lot more than we were ready for.

  • And we're still closing, all right, Like we're back to like October 25th.

  • Who?

  • Even working backward.

  • But if you made poor request back in October, don't worry.

  • We're gonna get to the suit, and we are going to get that all the way down.

  • We're working very hard to do that, and we're going to make it much easier to contribute to freak.

  • Oh, Camp in October 2018 for the Octoberfest.

  • So the way we're doing that is we're taking a lot of the existing repositories.

  • We've got learned.

  • We've got curriculum.

  • We've got the freak.

  • Oh, camps last week.

  • Okay.

  • At the main repositories.

  • Ah, and then we've got the guide.

  • We're working to unify thes repose into a single repository that will make it easier for everybody to get the local freak.

  • Okay, running and to put him on the spot.

  • I'd like for Stewart to come up and say a few quick words about that.

  • Let's give it up for Stuart.

  • Stuart Taylor.

  • He's from right just ah, three hours away from here near Belfast.

  • Okay, Yes.

  • Oh, the idea that the current situation of continents freak Oh, camp is if you wanted to have the curriculum app up and running, and that's really sorry.

  • Yes.

  • So the curriculum app If you want to quickly macaroon and you want to interact with this server locally, you have to have at least two.

  • Come on, Trump's open.

  • So the idea is we're gonna have just one command that will run the curriculum app, which is learned Africa Come toe are gonna have a PR Severin as well, and you'll be ableto once again edit the curriculum.

  • I don't see the changes live in your browser.

  • Yeah, so hopefully we'll make it a lot easier for everybody to contribute to on dhe.

  • We're looking forward to pull requests.

  • Thank you.

  • So yes, it will be much easier, and our efforts will be focused on a single repositories that's active.

  • Professed the core freak.

  • Oh, camp depository, which should simplify like we'll have a single contributing dot MD file that has instructions, ideally, will have a single script the bootstraps, your local environment so that you've got your database running and you've got your MPM and soul taken care of.

  • And so you're not having Thio click back and forth and input a whole bunch of command yourself.

  • So that way it will just be much easier to do the first step to contributing to open source, which is cloning the repo on giving it running locally.

  • So we're very excited about that effort.

  • A couple other announcements since you're watching this on the YouTube channel, according to like the YouTube analytics, we looked at freak.

  • Oh, Camp is now the fastest growing programming YouTube channel.

  • Yeah, and we're getting about 50,000 new subscribers a month.

  • So if if you see like a little subscribe button and it's like red and it doesn't it's not, It should be gray, and it should say subscribed, so just click it and it should do that and you could turn on the little Bell thing, too.

  • And that will notify you in publishing videos, which is almost every day.

  • We've been publishing comprehensive in depth tutorials on Java C plus plus.

  • We recently published Common Anthology video by Briana, Who's Here, who Flew In from Berlin today.

  • And it covers basically how computers work, how networks work, how how the Internet works.

  • You covered all that in a nice 25 minute, very concise video.

  • But we also have videos that air, you know, 89 hours long that go into depth and show you how to build full projects and bootstrap developer environments for, you know, everything from C sharp to Java to know Js and ruby on rails and things like that.

  • So we're gonna continue to publish incredible, comprehensive, substantial tutorials, all of which will be completely free.

  • We're not showing any commercials.

  • If you create compelling videos about programming and you're interested, we would love to help more people see your your videos.

  • So, uh, just reach out to us and we could make that happen.

  • But for us, we wantto put as many amazing videos on YouTube as we can.

  • So we're here in Dublin were at I've got a cool sign for it.

  • The Huckle tree, which is a really cool hipster name.

  • And ah, it has a hashtag.

  • I just noticed that.

  • So this is a very cool venue.

  • Um, and they've been really cool and cooperative.

  • When you have to wire money from America and coordinate catering and all that stuff through email, it could be challenging.

  • But I just wanna do shut out the buckle tree for being very ah, helpful and, uh, having this beautiful venue that has lots of Irish t, which is, like, super caffeinated kind of English breakfast tea that I've been drinking all night, the counter of the jet lag.

  • Um, so we're gonna go in a big circle.

  • We've got a lot of people here, and everyone can take a moment to introduce themselves and where they're from and what they do for the freak.

  • Oh, camp community.

  • And the first person we're gonna hear from is team Oh, a k a systematic.

  • He has contributed so much of the free cocaine got in anyway.

  • All you introduce yourself Thank you.

  • My name is Steve.

  • Oh, I, uh, and from the Netherlands from we die and I've contributed a lot to the freak.

  • Oh, Kim Guides on the figure comparable story as well.

  • Um, I haven't been contributing that much for the past year, but hope Thio get back into it more now, why haven't you?

  • I got an internship, and then I got a job and I had to get used to it.

  • I'm Stuart, and I am a developer.

  • Full freak.

  • Oh, camp.

  • Everything I do every day is full free cocoa.

  • Good.

  • Like I'm Ben.

  • I'm from just down the road ish in Dublin.

  • I am one of the old hot You could do the freak.

  • Oh, camp.

  • I think I'm still number six in the report.

  • So I need Thio get pushed up again.

  • Yeah, again, other press You've got life in the bit in the way, but I'm hoping to get back on it this year.

  • Yeah.

  • Hi, everyone.

  • I'm some I started by writing a couple of articles and sent one to Quincy.

  • Who?

  • I was just asking for some advice.

  • He said That's brilliant, Actually stuck it on the freak o Camp Medium publication.

  • Since then, I've written more more articles and trying to give tutorials to the kind of people that want to get into writing code and possibly taken up as a career.

  • Guys, I'm Jonathan and from Belfast, Northern Ireland.

  • And, uh, haven't been too active the last year, but I am mostly try contributing to the CO Biss on some of the guide is all.

  • So yeah.

  • Hello.

  • My name is Pete.

  • I'm a data scientist based in London.

  • On I write on help at it, the media publication for free could come.

  • Hi.

  • I'm Matt Timer, software developer.

  • Also in London on I organized the London Rico Can't meet ups.

  • Hi.

  • I'm Gary Gay from Hungary, and I wrote articles to the peacoat Comedian Publications.

  • Hi, I'm David Kopel from Sugar Public.

  • I live in a part of its and I write articles to free code can publications, many about javascript.

  • And now, in about reason, ml So definitely check out within a mile.

  • Haemophilia.

  • I'm from Greece.

  • I know it's difficult name to be for enunciated and some making YouTube videos.

  • Some owners that freakin have has published some of my videos.

  • I I'm a videos from Portugal.

  • I was a civil engineering and in six months, I've rebooted my career.

  • And nowadays, Amaru remote developer working from Portugal to the Netherlands in reacting three ducks.

  • Hi, I'm Richard Sittler.

  • I'm from South Africa.

  • Johannesburg?

  • Um, I with others organized meet ups from Johannesburg on I'm a software developer.

  • And thanks to free quote Cam's curriculum, I have many needs to, you know, breaking to the industry, which I, um you know, at the beginning, I thought it was impossible to do, but yeah, I'm very grateful to Quincy and the team and meeting all of you guys.

  • It's just been fantastic.

  • I'm letting a lot and I continue to learn in my day to day job, and, um, yeah, I'm looking forward to the rest of the evening.

  • Okay.

  • Hi.

  • I'm Brianna.

  • Um, I have made some videos for a free code Cam's YouTube channel and from Kansas City originally, but now live in Berlin.

  • A cz Muchas.

  • I'm grateful to be able to contribute to free code camp.

  • I feel like a cz.

  • Many people in this room free code camp is really contributed to me into my life.

  • And I'm really grateful for that.

  • Hi, I'm Andrea.

  • I'm a student.

  • And my contributions to frequent camp were mainly writing articles on the medium publication on the flooding.

  • The guides for story off your requests.

  • Hi.

  • I'm wrong.

  • For from Portugal, I started frequent camp.

  • I changed my career and we decided with Eduardo to create a study group in Portugal to help Heather students get their way.

  • Hi.

  • Good evening.

  • I'm Johnny from Leeds.

  • I spend a lot, so I'm helping out beginners on the forum.

  • Plus, like, help with a coffee and code.

  • We regularly host Aaron leaves here in Leeds.

  • Fucking leads in England.

  • Okay.

  • Thank you.

  • Hi.

  • My name is Robert.

  • Um I'm from Norway, live in Austria.

  • Started the local Fico Can Vienna group industry out three years ago.

  • There was nothing.

  • So I was like, Okay, well started.

  • Um, people started turning up when we started.

  • Meet up groups had monthly meet ups for about three years.

  • Um, long story short.

  • I've written an article for the publication.

  • The talks are recorded since last two years, and some of the talks have made it to the YouTube channel, which is awesome.

  • Including which is the best part.

  • Um, I did a talk with my other co organizer, Donny Deutsch, who couldn't be here tonight, but he's saying hi to everyone.

  • We did a talk on going from, um, learning to code to get your first job as a self taught developer.

  • And it's also on the YouTube channel.

  • Uh, so, yeah, that's the most amazing part.

  • Like I started freak Oh, camp and studying it because I wanted to get my first developer job, and I did, which is awesome.

  • So yeah, thanks.

  • I have one.

  • I'm Richard from Oslo from Leeds.

  • Where?

  • Johnny Johnny biz ALS from the icon.

  • That is Johnny Visible.

  • Um, and I now live in Oslo, actually come from your neck of the woods.

  • So I want a local leader still in Leeds.

  • I'm gonna local leaders in.

  • Also, I also wonder free code camp instagram.

  • So if you on instagram, that's me.

  • Who's posting?

  • Ah, on wrote some articles for the medium posts and there's a YouTube video on the freak o camp YouTube of mine as well.

  • Um, and yes, about us.

  • That's a lot awesome.

  • Well, thank you, everybody, for coming out here.

  • Uh, you all have given up your time.

  • You got up your energy.

  • You know, free cocaine is a small nonprofit.

  • We don't have the resources to fly everybody out and put him off.

  • Ah, nice hotel.

  • So you all have figured out ways to come out here and stay.

  • And that means an incredible amount to me and to the rest of the free cocaine community as well.

  • So it's wonderful to be here together in Dublin and to be ableto mingle and to learn more about one another.

  • So I think at this point, what I'm gonna do is I'm gonna get some war English tea are sorry, Iris T.

  • I dodged a bullet there, Right?

  • As traditionally as it is, um, so I'm gonna get somewhere Irish Sea, and then we can sit down here on this beautiful couch overlooking this beautiful evening.

  • Um, and I'm gonna try to talk to as many of you all is possible and just interview and learn more about you.

  • So anybody who wants to be interviewed, uh, just when you see that I'm not interview is anything.

  • Come over and jump on the couch.

  • I'll talk to you.

  • V Assertive.

  • Uh, don't be shy.

  • This is This is gonna be so much fun.

  • And ah, I see tons of people in chat.

  • All of it's super supportive.

  • Thanks, everybody for tuning in and ah, yeah, we'll make a highlight video like we did with the New York City event, and then we'll share that with the community to which should be able to.

  • So all of you are able to help give people some context into what they can expect striking out on their own.

  • Ah, trying to learn software development and trying to get their first developer job.

  • And I think pretty much pretty much everybody here has their career has directly benefited from taking that jump from saying, I can learn software development.

  • I can do it.

  • I can go out and get a job.

  • Aiken, Aiken, freelance.

  • I can have a career as a software developer, and it's just that that faith in yourself and that willingness to reach out to other people in the community and ask for help and then turn around and help other people in the community to do the same.

  • And that's precisely the spirit we want to capture and convey to the rest of the free cocaine community, which at this point is millions of people around the world.

  • Um many of whom have never coded before and are eager to get started so we can provide a lot of guidance for them.

  • So I'll be right over here in just a minute.

  • I'm just gonna grab some tea.

  • I want to have a special thank you for this gentleman whom I'm gonna rotate the camera here.

  • He's, like, in shock, that I'm thinking him directly.

  • There is Look, he's got a stylish blazer.

  • Yeah, so worried that my fall over.

  • So this is Matthew Potter.

  • Come over here.

  • Stand over here with the Matthew, uh, braved the airlines in the airports coming over, and he arrived this morning with me on separate flights in Dublin.

  • And Matthew's gonna be doing R a V.

  • He is a seasoned Ah, a V guy streamer Andy streams regularly on Twitch.

  • He has a He has a Saturday morning cartoon.

  • Check it out of your wake up Super early.

  • Just Google Saturday morning cartoons which probably full of his his stream.

  • You gonna eat some breakfast cereal and watch nineties cartoons like X men and ah, gem and he man and stuff like that, Right?

  • Thundercats?

  • Yeah.

  • Thunder guys on There was a lot of stuff.

  • So, uh, thanks so much.

  • I'm gonna give you the Michael.

  • I get the tea.

  • Okay.

  • Awesome.

  • Ah, yes.

  • So essentially what I do a freak.

  • Oh, camp is, um I help out doing, uh, having a computer that's sitting in a closet that's running headless and stri drives the music channel.

  • So I can officially say I have the most content on YouTube for freak.

  • Oh, camp.

  • Even though nobody seen my face except for New York in here.

  • Damn it.

  • I'm sorry for your loss.

  • I'm also Canadian.

  • So that's why the story is there.

  • Um, but yes.

  • So we're gonna be setting up here momentarily for the interviews.

  • Ah, the camera.

  • I'm gonna cut it for a quick second.

  • I wanna make a minor modification.

  • Anybody on the stream is probably seeing a bit of a stutter.

  • I'm gonna fix that, I swear the best.

  • Um, and we're gonna make sure that Quincy's all teed up because of his flights.

  • And, um, if you knew how long it was for him to get here, you'd be like, Oh, here's more t send mt.

  • But ah, yeah, we'll be.

  • We'll be right back.

  • And, um as they did used to say on Saturday mornings after these messages will be right back.

  • Hey, I'm here with Rianna Swift.

  • Let me pop her information upon the screen for you.

  • So, Briana, welcome.

  • You flew in today from Berlin?

  • Yeah.

  • Yes, thank you.

  • Weigh only one, Mike.

  • So, Rihanna, you have been involved with freak.

  • Oh, Camp says basically the beginning.

  • Maybe you can just give us, Ah, high level over you of your involvement with freak.

  • Oh, camp and and your transition into being a developer.

  • Yeah.

  • So I found free code camp.

  • Why was an elementary school music teacher I was trying to learn how to code?

  • Um, I love kids.

  • I love teaching music.

  • But I knew it wasn't a career that I wanted to do forever.

  • So I was like, What?

  • Can I learn how to d'oh without having to quit my job and go back to school?

  • I couldn't afford to do that.

  • And I thought the people that make the Internet are probably the first ones to put all of that information for free on the Internet.

  • So I did code academy mostly javascript type stuff and found my way onto free code camp.

  • I was really involved on Twitter.

  • That was my only community.

  • So I was really have alone while I was learning and went through the free code camp challenges.

  • And as soon as I started doing that, it started to get involved in the chat room, which there was no forum at that point and started doing some pear programming and streaming that, um, so free code camp really not only taught me the fundamentals that he needed for, you know, for development and for software, but also gave me a community in a place toe, you know, misery.

  • Almost of how hard it is to learn at a go.

  • Yeah, And so you said you were a teacher.

  • Can you talk a little bit more about, like, where you were teaching what you were teaching?

  • Yeah.

  • So I taught elementary school music, which was kindergarten through fifth grade.

  • I'm still, like you think recorders, or like, xylophones, that kind of thing.

  • And it was in Central Illinois.

  • So pretty rural Illinois, um, which I love.

  • There's so many things about it I loved.

  • But the thing as I reflect back on it, teaching for my perspective in an elementary school music setting was generally gonna be the same thing with, of course, you know, some changes over the years.

  • But what really drew in a tech is that I can work from home.

  • Sometimes you can't work from home when you're teaching kindergarten, you gonna have to be in the room.

  • And, um and that is always changing.

  • You know, I always I'm going to be challenged to learn something new in a hurry.

  • And I think that's really exciting.

  • Yeah.

  • So you said early on you were communicating with other developers on Twitter and kind of working to build your own community and your support network there that you could commiserate with.

  • And how did you discover a freak?

  • Oh, camp.

  • Because I think it launched right when you found it.

  • You're one of the first few Be able to find it.

  • If I remember, right, I feel like you tweeted at me.

  • I think I was tweeting and I was like, hashtag like women who code hashtag women and tech.

  • I was just putting anything out there and I could be misremembering, but I feel like you tweeted at me like, Hey, you should try free code camp.

  • And I was like, Okay.

  • And I did.

  • And then I stuck with it.

  • I got lucky.

  • Awesome.

  • Yeah, I saw your energy, and, uh, I remember exactly the tweet I sent.

  • But, you know, at the time I was reaching out to people who I thought would be good, um, citizens within the community and who seemed really passionate and an energetic.

  • So yeah, so you joined the free Coke and community.

  • And I remember early on we were doing, like, these live coding sessions every Tuesday, and you quickly took kind of charge on those, and you would regularly stream yourself coding you share a little bit about that.

  • Yeah.

  • Yeah.

  • So I think my first time was with terror kilobyte with Nathan.

  • Shout out, Terry Kilobyte.

  • Um, and I was super intimidated at first.

  • I was like, Everybody's gonna see how dumb I am.

  • Everybody's gonna see that.

  • I don't know what I'm doing.

  • I'm gonna, you know, talk weird, which I'm sure I did.

  • But it was really addictive, not only because it was really motivating.

  • So once you're showing up in, people are watching you.

  • You have to kind of finish what you're doing.

  • Um, but also, it's so energizing to see that other people can relate.

  • Um, and I found out I tell people now, if you're ever working on something and you can't, you're stuck.

  • I think the best thing you can do is Lifestream Because and there's people here like Ben and Jonathan specifically, and Nathan Terry kilobyte, I would be streaming.

  • I don't know why people would be watching me because I was a mess.

  • I didn't know what I was doing, and they will get so frustrated watching the stream that I that I wasn't doing it right.

  • That they would be like, Just let me can I Can I call with you?

  • Like, can I help you do this?

  • And I learned so much in those times, like, the community of developers is so generous with their knowledge.

  • Everybody wants to help you.

  • So instead of feeling intimidated about streaming like, oh, they're gonna think I'm dumb.

  • Instead, it was like they want to help me learn and get better.

  • And they really did.

  • It was it was really inspiring and helpful, you know?

  • And you took a lot of this inspiration and a lot of your early insights as, ah, new developer and you were able to turn around and teach a lot of other people.

  • And the main medium we used for that was video.

  • You talk about some of your early videos that we put on freak oh camps YouTube channel?

  • Yeah, yeah.

  • So those those air fun, I think it's a really fun challenge to take something that is thought of his complex and make it sound really simple.

  • Ah, one of my favorite professors, Dr Robinson at U M K.

  • C.

  • No studying music said that you should say anything in seven words or less.

  • You can't say it in seven words or less.

  • You're not saying it well enough.

  • And I know my videos are more than 77 words.

  • But applying that concept of things like, what is the Internet, you know, like how to be had all these things work?

  • I think it's an exciting challenge for me, just intellectually, but it also makes these really important.

  • Tat comes a concept so much more approachable, and it's like, Hey, you actually can do this.

  • These aren't so complex.

  • You don't have to go take, you know, take a four year degree to understand this, it's a pro.

  • You can do this.

  • It's okay.

  • Yeah.

  • And based on your videos on YouTube and the skills that you were able to build up, just learning the code on your own and through different communities, you were able to eventually get a job.

  • Ah, can you talk a little bit about your job and how you got it?

  • Yeah.

  • Yes, I work it.

  • Get hub.

  • Which is not where I thought I would be working when I started learning to code.

  • I'm a trainer.

  • So most of the time I'm talking to developers about how to use, get and get help.

  • So regardless of what language they're programming in, regardless of what type of projects, how big their team is, everybody should probably be using version control.

  • And git is not the simplest thing to wrap your head around.

  • So it's a similar challenge to these computer science concepts.

  • Like, how can we make this simple and approachable?

  • Um, this, You know, that transition was weird because coming from elementary school music teacher to working and get hub is kind of a jump.

  • Um, but but I think working with those videos specifically and saying, How can we take these difficult concepts and make them approachable to anybody is something that really primed me for working again.

  • So I think even if somebody's going through free code camp, and if you're going through free code camp and you're like, I don't know if I necessarily see myself as a full time developer, that's okay.

  • Like there are so many places for you that are perfect free who that you might just not know exist, like I didn't know that this job existed.

  • But I love it right.

  • And as a trainer, it's a combination of doing development and also figuring out ways to teach different mechanics of get and get hub and coding best practices things like that.

  • Can you?

  • What would a typical day for you be like You could go a couple different ways?

  • Um, usually it's so we break it into one or one of two.

  • I'm on site, you know, with a customer.

  • So somebody that they're company uses get hub.

  • Their company says Our developers need to know how to use getting get hub.

  • So I show up.

  • Let's talk about getting get help for the next couple of days, and we go through some projects and get everybody as up to speed as possible.

  • But on the other days, it's resting from travel, or what I really love is working on projects of scaling that kind of knowledge.

  • So a really exciting project that we're working on now is called Get Hub Learning Lab.

  • That's it's lab dot get, have dot com and it's free tutorials on how to use Get Hub.

  • But it's a robot app.

  • So to get hub app that will walk you through the process on get hub so you don't have to go through like all the different rabbit holes, which I know I experienced when I was learning to code.

  • You go on.

  • One tutorial links you to another tutorial not linked to this other thing.

  • Before you know it, you're reading about something completely different way.

  • Try to keep it native to get help so you can see they focused on what you're actually trying to learn.

  • We're working a lot on developing new courses for that.

  • I think it's really exciting, Awesome, and one big change going from a nele, um, entry school teacher and Illinois is now you work for get hub and get up is primarily a remote focus organization.

  • Can you describe what that means?

  • Yeah.

  • Yes.

  • So most of our the majority of get hubs employees work remotely, so we don't have to show up to any specific office of the professional Service is Team that I'm on is 100% remote, actually work from Berlin now from my home, which is amazing.

  • Um, working from home is awesome, but also a challenge.

  • You have to be really organized and keep your own schedule.

  • We have to know what you want to accomplish in a given day.

  • You know, make sure that things are prioritized, but it also gives you so much freedom.

  • I can work pretty much distraction free and the hours that work for me.

  • Um, of course, I still have to work with my team.

  • It's on the only.

  • Well, there's two of us now on the training team in Europe, and the rest of them are in the United States.

  • So there's a lot of things to work around.

  • But I think free code camp in many ways prepared me for that because we were working really a synchronously.

  • We weren't in the same office.

  • I think things are moving that way in general and technology.

  • Yeah, And I'm a huge proponent of remote working and asynchronous, especially, I think, the ability to sleep in.

  • And if you if you don't feel like giving up and and then just working later or ah, you know, really drilling in and using your best judgment about when Toe To say this is a priority.

  • I need to finish this even if it means working through the weekend just having that agency and being able to make those decisions for yourself.

  • I think that's a really powerful thing for a 21st century knowledge worker, and it really empowers them to manage themselves much more than in a traditional office setting where you have a manager and they have a manager and I mean, get up his embrace managers.

  • I know initially they didn't even really have that much in the way of managers.

  • But, um, what are some things that, uh so I guess, what are some things that excite you most about?

  • Get help in the direction that the organization is going?

  • That's an exciting questions.

  • I think there's so many things that I'm excited about.

  • Um, anyone I talked to, whether they work at get hover they work with get Hub is developing something awesome.

  • There's so many amazing projects being built on Get home.

  • So many amazing minds using get have is a tool, you know, as a product, as a platform, really, about where they can share ideas and collaborate.

  • Um, I think even someone that you know works at get help.

  • What I envisioned for the tool is probably only a small percentage of what is actually capable of once it's in the hands of the brilliant developers that are gonna be using it.

  • Um, so I I don't even know if I can imagine, You know, even in my wildest dreams, I don't think I could really see what's gonna happen.

  • Things like, you know, Detroit Water Project.

  • You know, things that people are building with open source, taking it beyond our traditional understanding of open source software.

  • Open source education, open source, you know, social, you know, social growth and how can we work better as a global community?

  • It's It's so exciting, I hope I hope to see that leverage too soon.

  • What are your near term goals for?

  • Both your time and I your career get hub and, of course, just general projects that are of interest to you.

  • So Learning Lab that I mentioned earlier is a big one.

  • Um, I think there's, Ah, there's a lot of potential there to just help help people learn help People teach help.

  • People understand Samos Free code camp, right, open sourcing, education, making things more accessible.

  • Two people that I think if somebody wants to learn something that should be able to learn and it's hard, it's it's not that easy and it should be so.

  • I think whether it's get have or something greater than that, that's so that's where my goals are at.

  • Awesome.

  • Well, Briana, thank you so much for flying in from Berlin and, ah, you recently got married, so I hope your husband is thanks thanks to him for letting us borrow you for a weekend.

  • And I am excited to see what you do.

  • And and certainly we would welcome additional videos on getting get hub and other concepts as time permits for your creative, because I just sent out a video anthology of It's About 25 minutes and it's way put together, uh, I think maybe 20 different videos that you created over the past few years about how computers work, how the Internet works.

  • So everybody be sure to check that out.

  • I think that's pretty prominent on the YouTube channel.

  • Um, and be sure to follow Briana on Twitter because she she shares a lot of exciting stuff, was gonna pop up her Twitter information again real quick.

  • Just Briana Marie.

  • Ah, 132 So, thank you so much for joining us.

  • Thank you, Quincy.

  • Thanks, everybody.

  • Hi, freak.

  • Oh, camp I Awesome.

  • Thanks again.

  • Hey, come on over, man.

  • Yeah.

  • Good to meet you in person.

  • I'm gonna pull up your name and information.

  • I've got this great app that Matthew Potter put together.

  • Ah, yes.

  • I just said this girl that you're here, he's there enough, but it ordered by first name.

  • Yeah.

  • Um, So, while I'm doing this, why don't you just tell us a little bit of yourself?

  • Eat?

  • Sure.

  • Sir.

  • My name's Pete and I'm data scientist based in London on Di, uh, right for and help out at the media publication.

  • I've been doing that since October last year.

  • So almost Vienna on it's really fun is really interesting to see what articles we receive and and, you know, so curating them and helping it and, you know, high stands we we like to put up.

  • Yeah, you have written some incredibly exhaustive articles on different aspects of data science and math, and she's learning what got you into the field.

  • Ah, that's a good question.

  • So I originally started out as a zoo biologist.

  • Um, and I learned a lot statistics and all of, ah, machine learning concepts.

  • It was really interesting.

  • Thio.

  • When I begun looking into lining the program, it was really interesting to see how there's a lot of overlap between some of the skills I've learned on some skills.

  • I wanted to, you know, start start working with.

  • So, yeah, it's a field of sort of.

  • It's it's it's very fast moving it Sze always something need to learn assisting a fire it interesting.

  • I've always enjoyed statistics.

  • Yeah, So how do you keep on top of all the rapid changes in the field of machine?

  • I mean, it's probably one of the most dynamic and ah, rapid growing corpus of knowledge.

  • How do you stand on top of that?

  • Um so I think it's constant reading.

  • Really, I I I always look for new articles which come out.

  • Um, a few of my friends work in research as well, So I talked to them.

  • And here, you know, the latest light is, um but mostly it's It's about reading the documentation as well.

  • There's a balance between understand the theory of machine learning and also seeing how it works in practice.

  • And I find, for example, the psych it land documentation is really good When it tells you how to use the techniques, We also explains a background of it as well, which I find really interesting since I could learn, I believe is a python library.

  • Do you do a lot of your data science work in python Eso mostly python?

  • Yes.

  • I also use our on sequel for a database of later engineering tiled stall work s Oh, yeah.

  • I really, really like Python.

  • That's probably my favorite language.

  • I also know a little bit of JavaScript.

  • I started learning out on the freak o camp curriculum.

  • Seen decided that web development I found.

  • I found CSS to Turkey.

  • That was my problem.

  • So, yeah.

  • T specializing in data science instead.

  • Well, I would encourage youto, um, looking into data visualization.

  • I think you probably I haven't read every single one of your articles recently, but, uh, for a long time, I was the one who was actually proof reading and editing them before we published it.

  • Now we've built up this amazing editorial team, which led by Abby, and you're one of the major editors there.

  • And it's just so amazing having somebody with so much domain expertise who could really go in and take a good look at these articles and kind of fact, checked them and make sure they look good and representative of the state of the field.

  • What is your editorial work?

  • Flu like about how frequently will you check in and find articles that you're interested in editing and publishing?

  • I see.

  • So we do receive a lot of articles was always something to work on.

  • I try and check in daily, actually, take my lunch breaks at work as an opportunity to, you know, see what there is and review some of the articles.

  • And if I see one, I think I can.

  • I can help.

  • You know, Adam, get to, you know, standard we want.

  • Then I'll claim that article in the evening.

  • I'll work on it on Dhe.

  • Send it to Abby for final review in publishing.

  • Certs.

  • Yeah, it's good.

  • I think the main bulk the work is is fact checking.

  • Just being sure about what?

  • What the offer is written is 100% okay to put out on a lot of formatting as well.

  • It's one of things I learned from yourself, actually, from when I used published articles free, free when you were running the publication, the writing style keeping things really, you know, concise and easy to read.

  • A lot of our readers are internationally.

  • Don't necessary speak English as a first language.

  • So it's very important.

  • Make sure what we put out is accessible.

  • Yeah, and what are your favorite types of articles?

  • Your favorite topics.

  • Toe.

  • Add it.

  • It's a good question.

  • I really like, uh, more general articles that really sort of overviews of like, Why topics?

  • I think I think the balance Well, I mean, I really like in depth tutorial articles as well, where you can really see you know, to start what you're going to build and follow them along on DSI.

  • You know how something works in practice.

  • So, yeah, I mean, I guess it's hard to pick an exact type of art gallery like think.

  • Yeah.

  • We receive a lot of very varied and very interesting articles.

  • Aside from contributing to freak Oh, camp and, uh, editing and writing so many great in depth articles on statistics and data science machine learning.

  • What are your goals for the rest of 20?

  • 18 in 2019.

  • Um, so the company I'm working up, we're a start up, and we've recently announced on lots and really exciting products.

  • We actually teach kids how to code Onda.

  • We produce computer kits on Duh.

  • We've got some very exciting products coming out, so yeah, we're looking to start shit those.

  • And that's that's why I'm working on 2018.

  • Awesome.

  • And tell me just a little bit more about that.

  • Do you have, like, hardware products or Yeah.

  • Yeah, so we produce the hardware, so we have computer kits on dhe.

  • Ah, one kip.

  • Um, Andi also have a software ecosystem as well, so people can go in and they can learn to code.

  • It can share their creations On this online community we have on it's really interesting is a lot of synergy between you know what?

  • I work on a day job.

  • You know what free Coke is setting out to achieve as well.

  • So, yeah, I really, really enjoy spending all my time doing that.

  • Basically, also, if people were interested and I'm not sure how whether the product is totally ready for people going and buy for their schools or their kids But if they wanted to learn more about the company and you what you all are up to What's the name of the company?

  • And where can I find it?

  • Where can I, um, where can adopt me on Dhe were also in retail in the U.

  • S.

  • So Yeah, K a and O daughter Emmy.

  • Okay, great.

  • Kono dot Any Emmy?

  • Okay, you can owe me.

  • OK, great.

  • And thank you again.

  • So much for everything you've done for the community.

  • It's always a pleasure.

  • You know, you're you always take such a detailed, nuanced look at articles, and it really shows and your articles have been so in depth and I often pull them up.

  • And when people submit articles, and I'm like, Well, take a look at this.

  • This is a good example of of what works on medium and what works with the developer crowd.

  • So thank you again for kind of setting really trailblazing and setting a really good example for other technical writers and developers.

  • Thanks, Peter.

  • So I'm gonna pop Peters.

  • Ah, information back up.

  • Okay.

  • Thank you.

  • And we're joined here.

  • Richie.

  • How is your last name pronounced?

  • See?

  • Totally.

  • Totally.

  • Yeah.

  • Yeah.

  • Ritchie's it totally have a seat, Richie.

  • Yes, indeed.

  • Yeah.

  • Welcome.

  • So you're joining us from Johannes Berg?

  • Awesome.

  • Well, thank you so much for flying out, man.

  • I mean, I think you may have traveled.

  • I don't know you.

  • You may have travelled even further than I did.

  • I think.

  • All in all, it was about 14 hours with about four hours layover and, um, in Addis Ababa.

  • Um, so, yeah, but just over 10 hours, but it felt like 12 days.

  • Yeah, it's slightly exhausted with all right, but it was all good.

  • It's so far has been amazing.

  • I'm you know, I love the atmosphere.

  • I love the four seasons in one morning, which is what we experienced yesterday when I arrived.

  • Um, you're so like I landed around 6 30 in the morning and on my way here on my way to a, um uh, the guesthouse is, you know, it was nice and cloudy was little bit cloudy, was comfortable, and the clouds open up.

  • It was nice and sunny, and shortly after that, it just started raining out of nowhere out here and show lover that it was like a massive winds and stuff.

  • Yeah, so it's Yeah.

  • It seems to be like, you know, people are used to this stuff, so yeah, I'm just taking it in is a golden How was your flight?

  • It was arduous.

  • S o.

  • I woke up at 6 a.m. Friday, warning us time.

  • Then I flew to Newark, which is like New Jersey.

  • And then I waited there all day, and then I was able to fly to Rick.

  • You Vic in Iceland.

  • I hope I'm pronouncing that correctly and then flew here.

  • And I just arrived a few hours ago, so I slept on the plane.

  • I took a little power now, and it was really funny because Matthew Potter was joking.

  • I was like, I was like, Yeah, wake me up before you go on.

  • And he said, Oh, you're gonna like you up with Wake me up before I go.

  • Go?

  • You know the damn song.

  • And he has this super powered laptop.

  • I don't know what it is.

  • Incredibly loud, Some sleeping.

  • And all of a sudden I hear jitterbug Jada bug, any that's playing the song really loud.

  • And I was like, Wait, I mean, is the perfect way to wake up because I swear, like, there was, like, a party outside the room, So I Yeah, so I just took a shower and I was gonna go.

  • But now I'm thinking my Irish, uh, t.

  • And that's a tough one waking up.

  • Yeah, but yeah, man, thanks so much for flying out.

  • So tell us a little bit about what you do.

  • You do many things within the freak.

  • Oh, camp community.

  • Just give us an overview of some of the things you do.

  • Yeah, so I mean way we met a couple of years back.

  • You know, frequent cam was stole in its early days and stuff.

  • Um, so So what I do.

  • You currently is basically run meet ups.

  • I'm a core admin for free co.

  • Came Johnsburg.

  • There's a couple of other guys that some came and went and still a day.

  • But somehow domain my active wouldn't need it need be.

  • But I'm generally like organized stuff and host the mid apps themselves on it's It's quite funny and it's very interesting.

  • Like, I mean, we've got a community of about 1500 people, and we get atleast one also someone asking to join, like on a daily basis.

  • It's just insane, which is amazing.

  • So which means that, you know, the word is getting out there and people are recognizing what we're doing.

  • And they actually see the value in what we're doing, which is fantastic.

  • Yeah, so, like, I mean, the funny thing is, so you'll put up like creating events on Facebook, the Facebook group.

  • So it's free quote came through on its back on Facebook.

  • Go check it out.

  • You know, we're having our next meet up at the end of this month.

  • 29th off orders.

  • Yeah, you know it.

  • So you'll have a couple of people just like r S v p.

  • and they go get all hyped up and excited like this and then actually get a fireable eight people turn up.

  • But it's for me personally like it's it's those situations that I really appreciate and really enjoy because you sort of, like, sift through, um, you know, like the you know how to put it.

  • But it's the people that end up coming, eventually coming in, people that are truly passionate and really, really believe in.

  • You know what frequent Kim is offering is and it sort of reminds me off myself, like, pretty much like 23 years ago, when I started, I was that guy pretty much like I would rock up and I could get up me and a couple of other people.

  • But for me, it was just, you know, just getting in a lot of information, getting as much information as possible about software development.

  • And that's why I mean, you would obviously know that you know that the learning never stops, right?

  • So eso Look, I really appreciate people that that make it to the to the mid ups on DS are granted.

  • I understand some people cannot make it, you know, they will have other plans or something comes up into that sort of thing.

  • So I get all of that.

  • But, you know, I just shot out and say thank you to the people that constantly come thio to our meet ups on Buddy.

  • Enough until you just decide about that.

  • So I was We had a party at my company lost a couple of weeks ago, and I mention to one of the top guys and it said, I'm going to Dublin in a couple of weeks time.

  • Okay, Cool.

  • So, what you gonna do the And then I obviously I had to tell the

do you want me to do?

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頂級貢獻者2018年聚會在都柏林舉行freeCodeCamp.org。 (Top Contributors 2018 Party in Dublin for freeCodeCamp.org)

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    林宜悉 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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