Please login or sign up to post and edit reviews.
Polaris, Starbeam, and the Future of Ember with Godfrey Chan
Media Type |
audio
Podknife tags |
Food
Technology
Web Development
Whiskey
Categories Via RSS |
Arts
Food
Technology
Publication Date |
Jun 30, 2022
Episode Duration |
00:54:31
In 2022, the future of Ember is taking shape thanks to developers like Godfrey Chan. Alongside Yehuda Katz and other engineers, Godfrey’s working on a new edition of Polaris. The project has three main goals: to align Ember with the modern npm packaging system, continue to invest and innovate in reactivity, and encourage universal design principles.  Like many developers, Godfrey came to Ember from Rails. Months after chatting with Yehuda and Tom Dale at EmberConf, Godfrey was hired at Tilde and thrown into the Ember deep end. Today, Godfrey’s focused on big picture developments, tackling lofty goals like developing an Ember model to navigate JavaScript classes. In this episode, Godfrey talks with Chuck and Robbie about what’s to come for Polaris, solving major developer headaches, Godfrey’s philosophy on frameworks, top use cases for solutions like Starbeam, and why these innovations are necessary in 2022. Key Takeaways [00:29] - A quick intro to Godfrey.  [01:49] - A whiskey review.  [09:27] - A sneak peek at Polaris. [16:15] - Why Polaris is about easy transitions. [20:11] - How Polaris plans to evolve.  [24:54] - How Godfrey got into Ember.  [27:30] - What Starbeam is. [32:50] - Use cases for Starbeam.   [36:03] - Why Starbeam is necessary in 2022. [39:49] - A hobby and people-watching themed Whatnot. Quotes [14:54] - “Tools like TypeScript don’t automatically just understand what’s up within ember app. At least one of the things for Polaris is to figure out how we can transition to a world where we don’t have those little tiny differences anymore so that when you open a project in VS Code, TypeScript just knows what’s up.” ~ @chancancode  [37:46] - “I think conceptually, a reactivity layer that is decoupled from the framework makes a lot of sense to me because there’s just a lot of libraries and abstractions that you want to write that eventually, you want people to be able to use them in UI.” ~ @chancancode  [39:31] - “I think having something like Starbeam where you can express those reactivity concepts or those annotations without making your library only usable in React or Vue or whatever is a good thing to have in 2022.” ~ @chancancode  Links Godfrey Chan Ember Ember Core Team Rails Core Team Ruby on Rails  Tilde Lyre’s American Malt Multnomah Whiskey Library EmberConf Godfrey’s EmberConf 2022 Keynote Slides Yehuda’s EmberConf 2022 Keynote Slides Ember Octane Ember Inspector TypeScript JavaScript webpack Visual Studio Code Skypack ember-auto-import  Embroider  LinkedIn Yehuda Katz Tom Dale Starbeam React Polaris sketch JSNation Hooks Whiskey Web and Whatnot: RedwoodJS, Developer Experience, and Developing for Scale with Tom Preston-Werner GitHub  RedwoodJS Hacker News Redux Google Maps YouTube  First We Feast Hot Ones 90 Day Fiance Cities: Skyline Uncharted Twitch Discord ember-resources Connect with our hosts Robbie Wagner Chuck Carpenter Ship Shape Subscribe and stay in touch Apple Podcasts Spotify Google Podcasts Whiskey Web and Whatnot Top-Tier, Full-Stack Software Consultants This show is brought to you by Ship Shape. Ship Shape’s software consultants solve complex software and app development problems with top-tier coding expertise, superior service, and speed. In a sea of choices, our senior-level development crew rises above the rest by delivering the best solutions for fintech, cybersecurity, and other fast-growing industries. Check us out at shipshape.io.
In 2022, the future of Ember is taking shape thanks to developers like Godfrey Chan. Alongside Yehuda Katz and other engineers, Godfrey’s working on a new edition of Polaris. The project has three main goals: to align Ember with the modern npm packaging system, continue to invest and innovate in reactivity, and encourage universal design principles.  Like many developers, Godfrey came to Ember from Rails. Months after chatting with Yehuda and Tom Dale at EmberConf, Godfrey was hired at Tilde and thrown into the Ember deep end. Today, Godfrey’s focused on big picture developments, tackling lofty goals like developing an Ember model to navigate JavaScript classes. In this episode, Godfrey talks with Chuck and Robbie about what’s to come for Polaris, solving major developer headaches, Godfrey’s philosophy on frameworks, top use cases for solutions like Starbeam, and why these innovations are necessary in 2022. Key Takeaways [00:29] - A quick intro to Godfrey.  [01:49] - A whiskey review.  [09:27] - A sneak peek at Polaris. [16:15] - Why Polaris is about easy transitions. [20:11] - How Polaris plans to evolve.  [24:54] - How Godfrey got into Ember.  [27:30] - What Starbeam is. [32:50] - Use cases for Starbeam.   [36:03] - Why Starbeam is necessary in 2022. [39:49] - A hobby and people-watching themed Whatnot. Quotes [14:54] - “Tools like TypeScript don’t automatically just understand what’s up within ember app. At least one of the things for Polaris is to figure out how we can transition to a world where we don’t have those little tiny differences anymore so that when you open a project in VS Code, TypeScript just knows what’s up.” ~ @chancancode  [37:46] - “I think conceptually, a reactivity layer that is decoupled from the framework makes a lot of sense to me because there’s just a lot of libraries and abstractions that you want to write that eventually, you want people to be able to use them in UI.” ~ @chancancode  [39:31] - “I think having something like Starbeam where you can express those reactivity concepts or those annotations without making your library only usable in React or Vue or whatever is a good thing to have in 2022.” ~ @chancancode  Links Godfrey Chan Ember Ember Core Team Rails Core Team Ruby on Rails  Tilde Lyre’s American Malt Multnomah Whiskey Library EmberConf Godfrey’s EmberConf 2022 Keynote Slides Yehuda’s EmberConf 2022 Keynote Slides Ember Octane Ember Inspector TypeScript JavaScript webpack Visual Studio Code Skypack ember-auto-import  Embroider  LinkedIn Yehuda Katz Tom Dale Starbeam React Polaris sketch JSNation Hooks Whiskey Web and Whatnot: RedwoodJS, Developer Experience, and Developing for Scale with Tom Preston-Werner GitHub  RedwoodJS Hacker News Redux Google Maps YouTube  First We Feast Hot Ones 90 Day Fiance Cities: Skyline Uncharted Twitch Discord ember-resources Connect with our hosts Robbie Wagner Chuck Carpenter Ship Shape Subscribe and stay in touch Apple Podcasts Spotify Google Podcasts Whiskey Web and Whatnot Top-Tier, Full-Stack Software Consultants This show is brought to you by Ship Shape. Ship Shape’s software consultants solve complex software and app development problems with top-tier coding expertise, superior service, and speed. In a sea of choices, our senior-level development crew rises above the rest by delivering the best solutions for fintech, cybersecurity, and other fast-growing industries. Check us out at shipshape.io.

In 2022, the future of Ember is taking shape thanks to developers like Godfrey Chan. Alongside Yehuda Katz and other engineers, Godfrey’s working on a new edition of Polaris. The project has three main goals: to align Ember with the modern npm packaging system, continue to invest and innovate in reactivity, and encourage universal design principles. 

Like many developers, Godfrey came to Ember from Rails. Months after chatting with Yehuda and Tom Dale at EmberConf, Godfrey was hired at Tilde and thrown into the Ember deep end. Today, Godfrey’s focused on big picture developments, tackling lofty goals like developing an Ember model to navigate JavaScript classes.

In this episode, Godfrey talks with Chuck and Robbie about what’s to come for Polaris, solving major developer headaches, Godfrey’s philosophy on frameworks, top use cases for solutions like Starbeam, and why these innovations are necessary in 2022.

Key Takeaways

  • [00:29] - A quick intro to Godfrey. 
  • [01:49] - A whiskey review. 
  • [09:27] - A sneak peek at Polaris.
  • [16:15] - Why Polaris is about easy transitions.
  • [20:11] - How Polaris plans to evolve. 
  • [24:54] - How Godfrey got into Ember. 
  • [27:30] - What Starbeam is.
  • [32:50] - Use cases for Starbeam.  
  • [36:03] - Why Starbeam is necessary in 2022.
  • [39:49] - A hobby and people-watching themed Whatnot.

Quotes

[14:54] - “Tools like TypeScript don’t automatically just understand what’s up within ember app. At least one of the things for Polaris is to figure out how we can transition to a world where we don’t have those little tiny differences anymore so that when you open a project in VS Code, TypeScript just knows what’s up.” ~ @chancancode 

[37:46] - “I think conceptually, a reactivity layer that is decoupled from the framework makes a lot of sense to me because there’s just a lot of libraries and abstractions that you want to write that eventually, you want people to be able to use them in UI.” ~ @chancancode 

[39:31] - “I think having something like Starbeam where you can express those reactivity concepts or those annotations without making your library only usable in React or Vue or whatever is a good thing to have in 2022.” ~ @chancancode 

Links

Connect with our hosts

Subscribe and stay in touch

Top-Tier, Full-Stack Software Consultants

This show is brought to you by Ship Shape. Ship Shape’s software consultants solve complex software and app development problems with top-tier coding expertise, superior service, and speed. In a sea of choices, our senior-level development crew rises above the rest by delivering the best solutions for fintech, cybersecurity, and other fast-growing industries. Check us out at shipshape.io.

This episode currently has no reviews.

Submit Review
This episode could use a review!

This episode could use a review! Have anything to say about it? Share your thoughts using the button below.

Submit Review