The atmosphere at #RailsWorld has been absolutely electric. I thought it would be hard to top Amsterdam, but Toronto has. So many passionate Ruby on Rails developers, so many selfies, so many handshakes. Incredible vibe, venue, and weather here! 🤘
Special #RailsWorld announcement: @yukihiro_matz and @dhh will share the stage for the very first time for a fireside chat about #Ruby, #Rails and all things #opensource. This special conversation will be moderated and hosted by @Shopify founder and early Rails Core member @tobi. We are beyond excited that Matz has found time in his epic conference schedule to join us for this chat. This is a session that you don’t want to miss! https://t.co/5bq4gOEqLY
@igor_alexandrov I was just looking for this! I knew they recently added a way to do it but couldn’t place the “normalizes” term 🤦 thanks for sharing 🙌
Ian is a solid culture add. I've learned so much from him over the last several years. His passion for observability, learning from incidents, and incremental delivery has really made a difference in how I work every day.
I'm looking for my next position! If you're in need of an experienced, product-minded, collaborative software engineering leader who knows how to lead, motivate, and coach engineers with a strong strategic vision tied to business outcomes, let's talk. https://t.co/eYPKSOLk6T
Super excited we get to sponsor the t-shirts at @railscamp_USA this year.
It's an awesome community of kind people. Usually we hangout in the woods. This year, it's the beach!
@bobbilee always finds amazing locations, and if you haven't checked it out, you absolutely should.
Did to know that you can give praise during code reviews?
It will change the whole atmosphere of your code review and show how much the team appreciates the effort of each other.
Recently, an acquaintance in tech asked me what, in my experience as a public librarian, makes websites and apps unusable to people with limited technology access, and after a few days thinking about it, I’m gotta put one of the biggest ones as two-factor authentication.
You can use Git’s `-m` option multiple times. The first is the subject line, and every subsequent one is a paragraph:
$ git commit -m "Subject" -m "First paragraph" -m "Second paragraph"