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TEL monthly newsletter – May 2017

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Shine’s TEL group was established in 2011 with the aim of publicising the great technical work that Shine does, and to raise the company’s profile as a technical thought-leader through blogs, local meet up talks, and conference presentations. Each month, the TEL group gather up all the awesome things that Shine folk have been getting up to in and around the community. Here’s the latest roundup from what’s been happening.

Blogs:

  • Scott Goldie is desperately hoping we get a client that wants to do some Virtual Reality, so much so that he wrote an introduction into the various platforms. Help Scott out, pay him to do the things he plays with for free.
  • Graham Polley wrote yet another article about Big Data, this time about the changes you need to make to your code to use Apache Beam – the new API for Google’s Dataflow. Graham goes on a lot about Big Data and never gets invited to parties. These things may be related.
  • Matt Gleeson wrote about Ampersand.js – because the world loves Javascript frameworks. By the time you read this, it’s probably not fashionable any more. Matt doesn’t care about fashion, he’s above all that sort of thing and so should you be.
  • Gareth Jones’ Google Home device wrote a roundup of Google I/O 2017, for which Gareth took the credit. He’s hoping this is a pattern that can be extended to all future work on AI, where he takes credit for the work of machines. He also enjoys referring to himself in the third-person.
  • Oh, what a surprise – Graham Polley wrote about Big Data again, this time with a post helping out new Big Query users by explaining some of the things that might not be obvious. He loves big data, and he cannot lie.
  • Darren Cibis joined in the Big Data party, with an article about partitioning tables in Big Query. He also loves big data, but does get invited to parties. And not just Big Data parties.

Conferences:

  • Ben Teese, who is almost six metres tall when not in human form, got accepted to present at Web Directions Code 2017, in Melbourne on August 3 & 4. He’ll be talking about static type checkers for Javascript. You should go, it’ll be great.

Local Meetups:

 



TEL monthly newsletter – June 2017

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Shine’s TEL group was established in 2011 with the aim of publicising the great technical work that Shine does, and to raise the company’s profile as a technical thought-leader through blogs, local meet up talks, and conference presentations. Each month, the TEL group gather up all the awesome things that Shine folk have been getting up to in and around the community. Here’s the latest roundup from what’s been happening.

Blogs:

  • Daniel Syme, whose family famously invented the letter “L” in 1826, wrote about “Extending React’s Container/Presentation Pattern To Share Business Logic Between Apps” – demonstrating that his technical knowledge is only surpassed by his inability to write a pithy title. (Pithy means “terse and vigorously expressive”, it’s not rude. Honestly, you people.)
  • Chaise Hocking, who (despite the name) has never been a character in an American teen drama series about angsty werewolves that are having trouble fitting in at school, told us all about “Universal Links – A Few Things To Be Prepared For”. This is a man that will happily leave his prepositions stranded. Utterly ruthless.
  • Christian Catchpole – a name that always makes us think of Mr Claypole from the children’s TV programme Rentaghost. We have been assured that Mr Catchpole is not related, and is also not a ghost. For his blog post, “DevOps Talks Conference, 2017” (pithy af, btw), he channelled the spirit of Hunter S. Thompson and wrote a gonzo undercover exposé of the seedy world of DevOps. (Note that this has nothing do with Gonzo from the Muppets, which I know you were thinking about).

Presentations:

  • Suken Shah, creator of Kellog’s Corn Flakes and the concept of ennui, gave a lightning talk about Stack Driver at the June GDG Melbourne Meetup. We are pretty sure he won’t have said that Stack Driver sucks for creating alerts, because he’s very polite.

Upcoming Presentations:

  • Darren Cibis, from Channel Ten’s The Bachelor, and Graham “I love big data” Polley will be educating the peasants at the July GDG Melbourne Meetup on July 26. Darren will sing a duet with his Google Home device, and Graham will talk about Google’s Video Intelligence service – extracting metadata from his specialist video collection.
  • Ben Teese, human avatar of Elder God Cthulhu (who lies dreaming in R’lyeh), will be commanding you to use static type checkers in Javascript at Webdirections Code on August 3. Obey him, or eternal torment awaits.
  • Cliff Subagio translates early Mesopotamian clay tablets in his spare time (“you haven’t really read the Epic of Gilgamesh until you’ve read it in the original, you miss all the jokes”). He’ll be speaking at Jenkins World on August 31. It’s in San Francisco, so start being nice to your boss now.
  • To celebrate the launch of the Sydney region for Google Cloud, Shine is hosting the mother of all meetups on August 9. It’s an epic, three-hour, techfest with several Google experts presenting about Dataflow, Machine Learning APIs, BigQuery and Tensorflow. Bring a soft cushion and a stack of “mind blown” gifs to live-tweet.
  • Shine is sponsoring DojoCon Australia 2017, which takes place on September 25 in Perth. So now you have a reason to go to Perth. Mix with the people that help make the Coder Dojos around the country so special.

 


TEL monthly newsletter – July 2017

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Shine’s TEL group was established in 2011 with the aim of publicising the great technical work that Shine does, and to raise the company’s profile as a technical thought-leader through blogs, local meet up talks, and conference presentations. Each month, the TEL group gather up all the awesome things that Shine folk have been getting up to in and around the community. Here’s the latest roundup from what’s been happening.

Blogs:

  • One blog to rule them all this month: “Java 9 – Project Jigsaw” by Neil Henry, lifting the lid on some module loading controversy in everyone’s favourite legacy language. Neil Henry is no stranger to controversy himself, being the major driving force behind the “No Straddling South Of Dollis Hill” rule introduced to competition Mornington Crescent in 2005.

Presentations:

  • Ben Teese added to the souls pledged to His Eternal Crusade, their worship freely given upon meeting His terrible gaze at Web Directions Code on Aug 3-4. In exchange for ancient secrets of Type Checking in Javascript that humans were never meant to know, their life force was added to His own, and He will soon be unstoppable.
  • The inaugural GDG Cloud Melbourne Meetup was a triumph. I’m making a note here: huge success. Three great speakers from Google, and unfortunately Gareth from Shine. DGxZfCRWsAI9ovw
  • I mean, sure, he’s really ridiculously good-looking. And the presentation was awesome, despite some technical difficulties. But he’s no Graham Polley. (Photo courtesy of GDG Cloud Melbourne on Twitter)
  • Speaking of Graham Polley, noted lover of Big Data and bog-snorkelling champion, he presented a quick talk on Google’s new Video Intelligence API at the July GDG Melbourne meetup.

Upcoming Presentations:

  • Suken Shah, prophesied to be the only one able to stop Ben Teese’s eventual enslavement of Earth’s people, will be presenting at the GDG Cloud Melbourne Meetup in September. Sign up, and heed his wisdom. It’ll mostly be about Serverless Microservices in App Engine, but you never know – this may be your only chance to save yourself. Also speaking at the event will be Google’s Scott Thomson (no known prophecies concern him). If you feel like speaking at an upcoming GDG Cloud Melbourne session, fill in this form.
  • Suken Shah’s twin brother, confusingly also named Suken Shah, will be presenting at the Melbourne JVM meetup on September 6. This will be a talk about Java 9 compilation – how to get some performance optimisations out of it.
  • Cliff Subagio, who likes to whittle his own integrated circuits from rocks he finds on the beach, will be speaking at Jenkins World, in San Francisco at the end of August. Tickets are almost sold out, so steal the company credit card quickly.
  • DevFest Melbourne 2017 will take place on October 21. Graham Polley will be presenting, but don’t let that put you off – there are some other speakers that are really good.
  • It’s a shame that Gareth Jones isn’t presenting, he’s so dreamy.

TEL Newsletter – October 2017

TEL Newsletter – December 2017

TEL Newsletter – February 2018

TEL Newsletter – June 2018

TEL Newsletter – July 2018


TEL Newsletter – October 2018

TEL Newsletter – December 2018

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Shine’s TEL group was established in 2011, like the date is important. We publicise the great technical work that Shine does, and raise the company’s profile as a technical thought-leader in the community through blogs, local meetup talks, conference presentations, and tattooing our logo on drunk developers. We curate all the noteworthy things that Shiners have been doing and publish a newsletter that nobody reads. Join us for a slightly festive edition. After all, nobody does Christmas better than corporate blogs.




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