List of videos

Chengxi Li: Bootstrapping A Live Streaming React Web App - JSConf.Asia 2016
Nowadays, live streaming is an essential feature of an internet product. There are tons of examples that show when live streaming can enrich a product: Super-stars connecting with fans, professors broadcasting vivid live courses and live video shopping experiences. In this talk, I‘m going to use React, a component based framework which makes it easy to build and maintain the bricks and blocks for a live streaming web-app. He'll dive into performance optimizations and how you can migrate your product to offer similar functionality and keep up with this trend. Lee is part of the AlloyTeam at Tencent, China. He is working on bootstrapping a live video web-app with React and HLS in order to win over market-share for their product in China. JSConf.Asia - Capitol Theatre, Singapore - 25+26 November 2016 Source: https://2016.jsconf.asia/ License: For reuse of this video under a more permissive license please get in touch with us. The speakers retain the copyright for their performances.
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Vito Chin: Automate Your Electronic Life With The JS Ecosystem - JSConf.Asia 2016
Bots and machine learning are all the rave these days. But does it feel like we’re being force-fed pre-packaged AI that we do not have much autonomy over? The greatest potential in leveraging computer-based automation for the individual should be one that we can teach to serve the need of its personal owner. Sometimes, we may need robots that drives for us less than an automated process that helps us with the increasing chores that we do online, repetitively and sometimes seemingly futile. For example, how many times had you wondered if the computer can just download the CSV of your bank statement for you (in the absence of proper APIs), process it and augment it to your ledger automatically? Or the times where you wish there could be an easier way to tell the computer to do something on bash than to issue a command with 5 parameters? Javascript has all the answer for you, with tools such as Nightmare.JS to automate browser-based activities, CLI frameworks such as Vorpal and of course the biggest collection of packages in the world that is npm. The trick to continuous harmony is to find something that can gel all of these cool Javascript tech together and run itself as a continuous concern, essentially becoming a simpler computer-based version of yourself, augmented. In this quick talk, I will share my little adventure and experiment trying to automate the boring bits of my electronic life with such a JavaScript tool called Jodot. Vito had been looking for that special something that can maximise his code and family time for quite some number of years. Recently, he believe he might just had found it within the asynchronous nature of JavaScript and npm. That aside, he’s into cloud and software development stuffs. He co-authored PHP Development in the Cloud and maintains Gmagick (pecl.php.net/gmagick) JSConf.Asia - Capitol Theatre, Singapore - 25+26 November 2016. Source: https://2016.jsconf.asia/ Slides: https://speakerdeck.com/vitoc/automate-your-electronic-life-with-the-js-ecosystem# License: For reuse of this video under a more permissive license please get in touch with us. The speakers retain the copyright for their performances.
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Alex Gouaillard & Daniel Burnett: Evolution Of The Web - JSConf.Asia 2016
The web has disrupted the way developer approach software development. It is Fast, almost FTL. It’s not rare to hear people saying they want their own project to scale like the web, and to evolve as fast as the web. But how does it evolves so fast without being (too) chaotic? The W3C, short for world wide web consortium, is the body in charge of defining the web, the JavaScript APIs that all applications (wether browser or framework rendering web pages) should support to be web-compliant. That process is not well know to web developers which is a pity as their feedback is THE MOST important thing in the evolution of the web. Two W3C Invited Experts will provide insights into the W3C. What is the process through which the web evolve? What are the advantages you, as web developers, could have by following the process, or even becoming an active member? How to make a difference? What is the difference in terms of evolution between the web and the internet? Both will provide feedback from their respective point of view, and will answer questions from the audience. As a member of the W3C, IETF and IMTC, Dr Alex is an active participant in the WebRTC community. Among other projects he co-led the WebRTC-in-Webkit project and maintains his "WebRTC by Dr Alex" blog with the goal to reduce the barrier of entry into the field for students and individual developers. He holds a Ph.D. in signal, image and video processing at the French INSA and in his free-time helps his previous students from Harvard Medical and Pasteur as a Scientific Advisor to develop in-silico modeling solutions to complement trials of cancer drugs. Dan Burnett is a web veteran who has been participating in the evolution of the web since its early days and has been charing severe of W3C’s working groups. He is the writer of the reference book on WebRTC. JSConf.Asia - Capitol Theatre, Singapore - 25+26 November 2016. Source: https://2016.jsconf.asia/ License: For reuse of this video under a more permissive license please get in touch with us. The speakers retain the copyright for their performances.
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Marco Cecconi: High Performance Architecture Of Stack Overflow - JSConf.Asia 2016
Stack Overflow is a website that helps millions of developers every day. On the other hand, not many developers realize that this site serves them with incredible efficiency. For example, a question and answer page is typically served in 10ms. How do you serve so many requests in so little time while running on 9 web servers? In this new talk, I will explain how this is planned, implemented and measured. Marco is a developer in the core Q&A team of Stack Overflow since 2013. While not creating bugs and fixing them in a hurry, he enjoys blogging on sklivvz.com, covering computers topics from transistors to tech leadership.He frequently speaks on architecture, engineering and Stack Overflow. JSConf.Asia - Capitol Theatre, Singapore - 25+26 November 2016. Source: https://2016.jsconf.asia/ Slides: http://slides.com/sklivvz/high-perf-architecture-10/?token=W4iDQ79L#/ License: For reuse of this video under a more permissive license please get in touch with us. The speakers retain the copyright for their performances.
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JSConf.Asia 2016 - A look back
Want to join us in January? Get your tickets for JSConf.Asia 2018 at https://events.pouchnation.com/event/jsconfasia2018 This video is look back at Southeast Asia's largest web developer conferences at the Capitol Theatre in Singapore. A big thank you goes out to everybody involved in making this video! It's been such fun :) You can find out more about the next JSConf.Asia at https://2018.jsconf.asia Here is the full playlist of all talks from JSConf.Asia 2016 to keep watching: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL37ZVnwpeshFn7VjMHjenn8niUTYNe8O7 Music credit: Rebuild by Matt McKegg (Destroy with Science) https://soundcloud.com/destroy-with-science/rebuild (And, yes, he uses JavaScript and http://loopjs.com to compose his music in the browser! So epic! Here's how he does it https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NL0nb8A8FDM)
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Jennifer De Walt: How I learned to Code by Making 180 websites in 180 days | JSConf.ar 2014
Jennifer De Walt interview during JSConf.ar, 29th November 2014. https://jsconfar.com
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Alex Sexton: Your Very Own Component Library | JSConf.ar 2014
Alex Sexton interview during JSConf.ar, 29th November 2014. https://jsconfar.com
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Brendan Eich: The future of Javascript | JSConf.ar 2014
Brendan Eich interview during JSConf.ar, 29th November 2014. https://jsconfar.com
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Tomasz Janczuk: Sandboxing Node js with CoreOS and Docker | JSConf.ar 2014
Tomasz Janczuk interview during JSConf.ar, 29th November 2014. https://jsconfar.com
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