Panel:

Eric Berry
Dave Kimura
Nate Hopkins
Charles Max Wood

Special Guest: Vladimir Dem

In this episode of Ruby Rogues, the panel talks with Vladimir Dem who is a Ruby developer and currently lives in Brooklyn, New York. Today, the panelists and guest talk about cables, concurrency, and Ruby. Check it out!

Show Topics:

0:00 – Advertisement: Sentry.io

1:02 – Chuck: Hello! The panel today is Eric, Dave, Nate, and myself! Our guest is Vlad!

1:30 – Guest: My name is Vladimir, but people call me Vlad. I have been writing Ruby since 2013 for about 4.5 years. Before that I was a PHP, JavaScript developer among other languages. I am mostly Erlang and Ruby now.

2:29 – Panel asks Vlad a question.

3:29 – Guest: Yeah something like that. I call it a different server b/c we still use the code base but we do not do anything related to web sockets and connections.

4:20 – Panel: If you wanted to take a normal action cables setup what steps would you have to go through to convert that over to also use the anycable server?

5:21 – Guest answers the question.

7:31 – Chuck: This sounds complicated and a bit of work. When I look at this I think: I have a tiny app is it worth it? When does it become worth it?

7:52 – Guest: Definitely not for the tiny app.

8:50 – Panel: You use it when it makes sense. Overcomplicating your infrastructure doesn’t make sense.

9:27 – Guest: That’s the idea.

10:28 – Panel.

11:05 – Guest: The question really is how many connections you have and how long-lived they are?

13:09 – Panel: If I move my project over to anycable how much new code am I going to have to write?

13:28 – Guest answers the question.

15:52 – Panel: What’s the update been like for anycable and how many users use anycable?

16:05 – Guest: I really don’t have statistics. I hear people at conferences say that they use anycable, but no real statistics right now. I would like to know these numbers, but no idea.

16:30 – Panel: ...is that the time to consider using anycable?

17:05 – Guest: That’s a good point to make.

18:44 – Panel: How is the initial handshake time with anycable? Is there any difference with anycable in that sense?

19:05 – Guest answers the question.

22:49 – Chuck: Can you define a couple of terms for me? I am hearing terms like: concurrency and real time and others?

23:00 – Guest: Good point. What is real time?

The guest continues to define these terms.

28:10 – Fresh Books!

29:10 – Chuck: Ruby 3 is supposed to solve some of these problems. Can you talk about some of those?

29:46 – Guest: Interesting question and I’ve been asked about this before.

35:14 – Panel: Did you say there was some activity around trying to reduce the memory consumption for thread?

35:25 – Guest answers the question.

36:14 – Panel: Vlad, you are spread from backend to fronted and you’ve mentioned Phoenix Live Vue. Can I pick your brain about it?

36:39 – Guest answers the question.

38:48 – Panel: It seems like one of the core tenants is empowering small teams to compete with larger teams. I have high hopes to keep small teams competitive.

39:50 – Guest: Yes, that’s the idea of Rails and Ruby itself to build something and try something and perhaps fail.

40:57 – Panelist mentions Erlang, anycable, and concurrency.

41:14 – Guest: We are working on administration functionality and we want to build something fast.

44:40 – Panel: That’s the interesting thing about turbo links cause I think it was a marketing fail. You have to invest time to learn how to use it and how to use it properly.

45:44 – Guest: I don’t have a good guide for turbo links.

46:00 – Chuck: Anything else we want to talk about?

46:10 – Guest: Two more things I want to mention.

54:02 – Advertisement: Get A Coder Job!

54:35 – Picks!

End – Cache Fly!

Links:

Get a Coder Job Course
The DevRev Podcast Show
Angular
DevChat TV
Ruby
Elixir
Ruby on Rails
Angular
Cypress
Vue
React
Faye-Websocket-Ruby
Anycable
EMx 020 Episode
Entreprogrammers: Episode 248
Socketry
The Rails Doctrine
Walmart: Invisible Glass
Bose Wireless Headphones
Netflix: Newsies / Broadway musical
KanbanFlow
Advent of Code
Heroku Deployment
Guest’s Twitter
Guest’s Dev.to
Guest’s GitHub

Sponsors:

Sentry
CacheFly
Fresh Books

Picks:

Dave

Invisible Glass

Eric

Bose Quiet Comfort Headphones
 

Nate

The Rails Doctrine
Newsies

Charles

Kanban Flow
EntreProgrammers
The pomodoro technique
masterhunt.com/devchat

Vlad

Advent of Code
Any Cable

Special Guest: Vladimir Dementyev.

Panel:

Eric Berry
Dave Kimura
Nate Hopkins
Charles Max Wood

Special Guest: Vladimir Dem

In this episode of Ruby Rogues, the panel talks with Vladimir Dem who is a Ruby developer and currently lives in Brooklyn, New York. Today, the panelists and guest talk about cables, concurrency, and Ruby. Check it out!

Show Topics:

0:00 – Advertisement: Sentry.io

1:02 – Chuck: Hello! The panel today is Eric, Dave, Nate, and myself! Our guest is Vlad!

1:30 – Guest: My name is Vladimir, but people call me Vlad. I have been writing Ruby since 2013 for about 4.5 years. Before that I was a PHP, JavaScript developer among other languages. I am mostly Erlang and Ruby now.

2:29 – Panel asks Vlad a question.

3:29 – Guest: Yeah something like that. I call it a different server b/c we still use the code base but we do not do anything related to web sockets and connections.

4:20 – Panel: If you wanted to take a normal action cables setup what steps would you have to go through to convert that over to also use the anycable server?

5:21 – Guest answers the question.

7:31 – Chuck: This sounds complicated and a bit of work. When I look at this I think: I have a tiny app is it worth it? When does it become worth it?

7:52 – Guest: Definitely not for the tiny app.

8:50 – Panel: You use it when it makes sense. Overcomplicating your infrastructure doesn’t make sense.

9:27 – Guest: That’s the idea.

10:28 – Panel.

11:05 – Guest: The question really is how many connections you have and how long-lived they are?

13:09 – Panel: If I move my project over to anycable how much new code am I going to have to write?

13:28 – Guest answers the question.

15:52 – Panel: What’s the update been like for anycable and how many users use anycable?

16:05 – Guest: I really don’t have statistics. I hear people at conferences say that they use anycable, but no real statistics right now. I would like to know these numbers, but no idea.

16:30 – Panel: ...is that the time to consider using anycable?

17:05 – Guest: That’s a good point to make.

18:44 – Panel: How is the initial handshake time with anycable? Is there any difference with anycable in that sense?

19:05 – Guest answers the question.

22:49 – Chuck: Can you define a couple of terms for me? I am hearing terms like: concurrency and real time and others?

23:00 – Guest: Good point. What is real time?

The guest continues to define these terms.

28:10 – Fresh Books!

29:10 – Chuck: Ruby 3 is supposed to solve some of these problems. Can you talk about some of those?

29:46 – Guest: Interesting question and I’ve been asked about this before.

35:14 – Panel: Did you say there was some activity around trying to reduce the memory consumption for thread?

35:25 – Guest answers the question.

36:14 – Panel: Vlad, you are spread from backend to fronted and you’ve mentioned Phoenix Live Vue. Can I pick your brain about it?

36:39 – Guest answers the question.

38:48 – Panel: It seems like one of the core tenants is empowering small teams to compete with larger teams. I have high hopes to keep small teams competitive.

39:50 – Guest: Yes, that’s the idea of Rails and Ruby itself to build something and try something and perhaps fail.

40:57 – Panelist mentions Erlang, anycable, and concurrency.

41:14 – Guest: We are working on administration functionality and we want to build something fast.

44:40 – Panel: That’s the interesting thing about turbo links cause I think it was a marketing fail. You have to invest time to learn how to use it and how to use it properly.

45:44 – Guest: I don’t have a good guide for turbo links.

46:00 – Chuck: Anything else we want to talk about?

46:10 – Guest: Two more things I want to mention.

54:02 – Advertisement: Get A Coder Job!

54:35 – Picks!

End – Cache Fly!

Links:

Get a Coder Job Course
The DevRev Podcast Show
Angular
DevChat TV
Ruby
Elixir
Ruby on Rails
Angular
Cypress
Vue
React
Faye-Websocket-Ruby
Anycable
EMx 020 Episode
Entreprogrammers: Episode 248
Socketry
The Rails Doctrine
Walmart: Invisible Glass
Bose Wireless Headphones
Netflix: Newsies / Broadway musical
KanbanFlow
Advent of Code
Heroku Deployment
Guest’s Twitter
Guest’s Dev.to
Guest’s GitHub

Sponsors:

Sentry
CacheFly
Fresh Books

Picks:

Dave

Invisible Glass

Eric

Bose Quiet Comfort Headphones
 

Nate

The Rails Doctrine
Newsies

Charles

Kanban Flow
EntreProgrammers
The pomodoro technique
masterhunt.com/devchat

Vlad

Advent of Code
Any Cable

Special Guest: Vladimir Dementyev.

Twitter Mentions