![The Scrimba Podcast artwork](https://is1-ssl.mzstatic.com/image/thumb/Podcasts124/v4/26/71/7b/26717b3e-f146-3f2c-3ff1-24da5b4f757b/mza_7940940973295293791.jpg/100x100bb.jpg)
Career Advice From a Vue Core Team Member
The Scrimba Podcast
English - February 15, 2022 22:47 - 34 minutes - 47.4 MB - β β β β β - 1 ratingTechnology Business Careers junior developers software development programming Homepage Download Apple Podcasts Google Podcasts Overcast Castro Pocket Casts RSS feed
π About the episode
Meet Ben Hong πΊπΈ! Ben is a Senior Staff Developer Experience Engineer at Netlify, Vue Core Team member, Google Developer Expert, and teacher. After studying psychology at school, Ben picked up programming in his own time, making him one of the most successful self-taught programmers on the podcast to date! He joins us to share his best advice about learning to code and the many career benefits of getting involved with open source.
π Connect with Ben
π¨π»βπΌ LinkedInπ Websiteπ©βπ GitHubπ¦ Twitterβ° Timestamps
Introduction (0:00)Benβs transition from psychology to programming (01:06)Developer experience and why it matters more than you think (04:26)Developer experience as a profession (05:25)Ben is part of the Vue core team (07:08)How Ben got involved in one of the biggest JavaScript open source projects in the world (07:53)How to start with open source yourself (10:38)Why Ben works so hard (16:21)Passion vs. discipline as a profesional (18:36)How Vue compares to React and other front-end tech (20:56)Should you abandon React to learn Vue?? (23:27)Benβs best advice for anyone learning to code (25:27)Quick-fire questions (29:36)π§° Resources mentioned
Vue MasteryComputed properties in VueWatch Ben code on TwitchLearn to take notes in Obsidian with BenβοΈ Leave a Review
If you enjoy this episode please leave a 5 star review here and let us know who you want to see on the next podcast.
You can also Tweet Alex from Scrimba at @bookercodes and tell them what lessons you learned from the episode so they can thank you personally for tuning in π