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Developer, Advocate!

You're reading from   Developer, Advocate! Conversations on turning a passion for talking about tech into a career

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Product type Paperback
Published in Sep 2019
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781789138740
Length 782 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Concepts
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Author (1):
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Geertjan Wielenga Geertjan Wielenga
Author Profile Icon Geertjan Wielenga
Geertjan Wielenga
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Table of Contents (36) Chapters Close

1. Introduction FREE CHAPTER 2. Scott Davis 3. Ted Neward 4. Sally Eaves 5. Kirk Pepperdine 6. Rabea Gransberger 7. Laurence Moroney 8. Scott Hanselman 9. Heather VanCura 10. Matt Raible 11. Tracy Lee 12. Simon Ritter 13. Mark Heckler 14. Jennifer Reif 15. Venkat Subramaniam 16. Ivar Grimstad 17. Regine Gilbert 18. Tim Berglund 19. Ray Tsang 20. Tori Wieldt 21. Andres Almiray 22. Arun Gupta 23. Josh Long 24. Trisha Gee 25. Bilal Kathrada 26. Baruch Sadogursky 27. Mary Thengvall 28. Yakov Fain 29. Patrick McFadin 30. Reza Rahman 31. Adam Bien 32. Bruno Borges 33. Jono Bacon 34. Other Books You May Enjoy
35. Index
36. Packt

Scott's areas of interest

Scott Hanselman: TypeScript is demonstrably important and it happens to be from Microsoft. It was a risk to talk about TypeScript before it was deemed important, but, clearly, it is. The trick is to use your gut.

Another example is WebAssembly. We have a thing called Blazor that lets you compile ASP.NET pages to WebAssembly. Part of it is from Microsoft. I think it's cool and it will change things. Blazor might not become the next Ruby on Rails, but it is important.

WebAssembly is the foundation. Saying, "Here's a library and it's built on JavaScript," is different from saying, "Here's an entirely new language you've never heard of." JavaScript gets you the interview; it's your way in. Another example is getting C# to run on the Java virtual machine (JVM). You can use one thing like a bridge to the other thing.

Remember all that time that we spent trying to get virtual machines running in browsers...

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