Supper Club
Local First and TypeScript’s Missing Library with Johannes Schickling
Johannes Schickling discusses Overtone, a local first music app built on Spotify/Apple Music, and Effect, a library for more structured and reusable TypeScript code.
Supper Club
Johannes Schickling discusses Overtone, a local first music app built on Spotify/Apple Music, and Effect, a library for more structured and reusable TypeScript code.
Supper Club
Emma Stapa, creator of Biome, discusses background, goals, and roadmap of this new CLI tool aiming to replace ESLint and Prettier with better performance and simpler configuration.
Supper Club
Ben Vinegar discusses Cloudflare Analytics Engine, building Counter Scale, managing the Syntax podcast under Sentry, and more.
Supper Club
Corey Laviska, creator of Shoelace, and Connor Rogers, Shoelace contributor, discuss reinventing Shoelace as Web Awesome under the Font Awesome umbrella. They talk about the Font Awesome Kickstarter success, wanting to avoid framework churn, and building Web Awesome as an open source UI library focused on web components.
Supper Club
Discussion with Google Chrome extensions engineer about changes in Manifest V3, effects on ad blockers, bringing more APIs to service workers, and building extensions.
Supper Club
In this episode Scott and Wes Bos interview Corbin Crutchley, author of the Framework Field Guide, about his experiences with and comparisons of React, Vue and Angular.
Supper Club
Anne and Trudy discuss their backgrounds working with Shopify and building their app Design Packs which adds sections and templates to Shopify themes.
Supper Club
David Flanagan explains Kubernetes, containers, WebAssembly, and self-hosted infrastructure to Wes and Scott. He provides tips for managing your own servers and recommendations for learning more.
Supper Club
Cameron McAfee has a diverse background spanning design, development and products. Known for creating memorable brands and experiences, he aims to build tools that solve problems for creators.
Supper Club
Wes, the developer of the Transformers.js library from Hugging Face, discusses running hundreds of AI models locally using JavaScript and WebAssembly, with applications in vision, audio, text and more.