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B
D
A
B
D
A
A
A
A
No,
no
I
think
his
name
was
Zach.
He
wasn't.
He
owned
the
other
nuclear
power
plant
that
Homer
went
to
work
at
and
it
turned
out.
He
was
an
evil
genius
trying
to
take
over
the
world
and
at
the
end
of
the
episode
he
ran
around
with
a
flamethrower
on
his
back
and
like
torched
the
power
plant,
and
you
don't
remember
that
episode.
Second
I'll
watch
The
Simpsons,
oh.
A
A
B
A
B
C
A
C
A
A
A
A
Welcome
to
the
community
stand
up
everybody.
It
is
their
original
trio
of
hosts.
Today
we
are,
some
people
may
have
noticed.
We've
had
some
guests
recently.
I
am
unable
to
make
the
10
o'clock
Pacific
time
Tuesday
slot
these
days,
because
I
have
a
very
important
meeting
to
go
to,
and
so
we've
been
using
that
to
bring
in
a
guest.
So
we
had
what
we
had
Ryan
and
we
had
Steve.
Then
we
had
Ryan
I,
think
mm-hmm
people
loved
him
very
much.
A
With
the
two
one
release
announcement
details
imminent,
we
will
we
plant
have
a
lot
more
guests
in
that
slot
over
the
coming
a
couple
of
months,
in
fact,
there's
a
schedule
floating
around
internally,
which
I'm
gonna
work
on
publicizing
on
the
website
soon.
Hopefully
so
people
of
various
devs
can
come
in
and
showcase
the
features
they've
been
working
on
as
part
of
the
2
1
release,
so
that'll
be
good
every
other
week.
You'll
still
have
me
in
here
doing
the
usual
rubbish,
but
every
other
week.
A
That's
not
that
week
will
tell
me
a
little
more
focus
where
we
can
show
off
or
to
one
feature
so
yeah.
Hopefully,
people
enjoy
that,
so
it
seems
like
we've,
had
some
good
feedback
on
the
last
couple
of
ones.
So,
oh
so
Jeff
is
saying
the
flamethrower
thing
is
a
riff
off
the
merchandising
bit
from
Spaceballs
there.
You
go
I
like
to
think
it's
a
combination
of
both
those
things
who
knows
but
no
I'm
not
buying
a
flamethrower
Scott.
You
don't
have
to
worry
well.
C
A
C
A
B
Ok,
first,
so
you
see
I
have
my
open,
fast
t-shirt,
open,
fast,
calm,
ok,
the
open
functions
as
a
service.
It's
like
you,
know,
kinda
like
as
your
functions
or
lambda,
but
it's
open,
which
is
cool
and
then
I've
got
my
finally
got
I've
got
the
Raspberry
Pi
cluster
running
yes
with
a
blinking
blinking,
blinking
lights,
very.
A
B
B
Made
this
cool,
raspberry,
pi
car
now
I
saw
that
lip
I
said:
yeah,
it's
cool
and
it
runs
on.
It
runs
on
a
Raspberry.
Pi
has
a
camera
that
you
can
like
up-down
left-right
and
look
around
and
stuff.
It's
got
really
proper.
Like
so
many
of
these.
You
see
these
wheels
all
the
time
these
robot
wheels
and
then
you
end
up
building
a
robot.
You
buy
it
from
some
cheap
company
and
they
end
up
realizing.
It
doesn't
turn
yeah.
This
actually
has
proper.
Oh.
B
B
B
B
A
B
B
A
A
C
C
A
A
B
B
C
B
C
B
A
A
D
A
D
B
B
A
C
B
Doctor
for
Windows
the
edge
version,
the
canopy
windows,
insider
super
beta,
alpha
version
of
work
or
Windows
added
a
new
feature
that
says
kubernetes
support.
Literally
you
just
check
a
box
now
and
you
can
turn
on
readies,
which
is
ever
so
shiny
because
it
allows
you
to
do
all
kinds
of
stuff
that
you
ordinarily
couldn't
do
like.
We
run
kubernetes
easily
on
Windows.
It's
almost
like
mini
cube
but
easier.
So
I
wanted
to
see
how
easy
it
would
be
to
get
asp.net
running.
B
B
A
C
Honestly,
the
next
one
was
one
that
you
sent
me
as
well.
This
was
so
the
key
thing
here:
we've
talked
about,
there's
a
asp
net,
there's
two
boiler
plates
and
the
this
there's
I
think
asp
net
and
UC
boilerplate,
and
this
one's
asp
net
boilerplate-
and
this
was
somebody
you
talk
to
you
at
NDC,
london,
and
we
mentioned
we
called
them
out
like
two
years
ago.
I
think
we
featured,
but
it's
a
it's
pretty
framework,
and
yes,
that.
B
B
That
you
said
that
Damian
it's
it's-
it's
did
spend
some
time
here
right.
So
if
you
go
and
check
out
their
templates,
this
is
pretty
amazing.
So
it's
nice
because
it
works
on
both
asp.net
MVC
and
it
works
in
asp.net
core.
You
can
go
and
pick
whether
or
not
you're
going
to
target
full
framework
or
core,
whether
you're
going
to
be
multi
page
with
jQuery
or
single
pages
angular,
and
then
it
will
generate
this
template
now.
A
B
Got
and
what's
cool
about
it
is
that
it's
not
just
one
kind
of
application.
They
build
other
apps
on
top
of
it.
So
like
they've
got
a
Stack
Overflow,
clone
and
they've
got
a
line
of
business.
Clone
and
they've
got
a
yeah,
see
here's
their
Stack
Overflow
clone,
that
is
all
written
in
there
and
their
framework,
and
it
takes
care
of
all
the
animations
and
all
the
use
of
of
how
the
spa
works.
All
these
things
are
live
and
on
on
lines
you
can
check
them
out
at
asp.net,
boilerplate,
there's
their
simple
tasks.
B
One
this
one
here
is
like
a
full
event:
creation
and
registration
application,
the
stuff
that
they
include
in
their
documentation
is
really
amazing,
and
it
also
has
been
translated
into
lots
of
different
languages.
Particularly
the
thing
I
was
impressed
with
was
their
use
of
multi-tenancy
and
their
smartness
around
multi-tenancy,
which
is
really
nice
for
for
software
as
a
service,
so
asp.net
boilerplate.
It
is
not
something
that
you
can
look
at
in
ten
minutes.
You
need
to
spend
a
day
with
it.
It's
pretty
slick.
C
B
B
C
A
Hang
on
hang
on
hang
on.
I
need
to
clarify
that
statement
a
little
bit.
It's
how
you
get
it
at
a
should
be
context
when
you
are
a
service
being
activated
by
the
DI
container,
typically
in
most
places,
you'll
get
to
h-2b
context,
because
it's
past
you
or
it's
on
one
of
your
base
classes
right
if
you're
a
controller,
it's
already
day,
it's
already
on
there
from
your
page
or
in
a
view
or
if
you're
in
Middle,
where
it's
passed
into
you.
A
B
A
Of
my
that
it
is,
it
is
a
transit
that
was
already
added.
It
was
magic
ace
we
conduct
our
current
was
a
magic
thing
that
system
web
tried
to
make
work
by
way
of
all
these
background,
mechanics
right,
but
we
don't
have
statics
in
core,
and
so,
if
you
do
need
to
go
to
get
to
the
context-
and
you
are
not
on
you-
don't
get
given
a
type
that
has
it
had
any
off
it
already
like
pull
it
out
of
the
ether
and
that's
what
this
thing
is.
A
You
can
get
out
of
the
ether
assuming
you're
activated
from
DI,
but
there
are
caveats.
Nothing
in
the
framework
uses
this
by
default.
So
you
have
to
add
this,
which
is
what
this
is
probably
talking
about,
but
you
don't
need
to
think
very
carefully
about
whether
you
want
to
use
eyes
to
be
context
access.
It
is
the
lesser
of
the
two
patterns
for
getting
at
it.
Okay,
as
overhead
cool
yeah.
Anyway,
sorry.
C
B
C
B
C
C
Don't
we
well
I
can
just
go
through
them
with
you.
Well,
if
I
can't
talk,
I'd
rather
give
them
like
I
spent
a
lot
of
time
reading
through
them
all
I.
If
you
can't
hear
me
that
doesn't
make
sense,
try.
A
C
C
No
worries,
but
we
get
so
I.
You
can't
hear
me,
then,
let's
just
push
them
to
next
week.
I,
don't
mind
heaven
more
next
week.
So
this
is
a
nice
just
quick
tip
from
Andrew
Luck.
Here
he
found
when
he
was
trying
to
include
files
external
to
his
asp
net
core
application
that
if
you
scroll
down
a
bit
to
the
first
thing,
if
you
say,
add
existing
item,
what
it's
going
to
do
is
actually
copy
it
into
your
project.
Mm-Hm.
D
C
B
C
A
B
Also
fair,
to
point
out
that
this
chevron
here
is
something
that
is
not
super
intuitive
to
a
lot
of
people,
and
if
you
go
file
open,
you
can
actually
click
on
the
Chevron
say
open
as
and
open,
like
you
know,
a
gif
as
a
binary
file
and
get
a
hex
editor.
A
lot
of
people
just
ignore
that
Chevron.
So
that's
a
good
reminder
that
that
Chevron
exists
period
also.
A
Warning
that,
if
you
add
files
as
a
link,
anything
that's
attempting
to
enumerate
files
or
find
them
without
going
through
msbuild
won't
find
it.
So
then
you
have
to
be
aware
of
when
you
use
this
particular
tip
is
that
this
registers
the
file
with
the
CS
prodding.
That
says,
please
find
me
all
the
files
in
this
project
by
asking
em
is
build
for
that
information.
A
It
will
give
you
that
in
the
list,
but
if
you
have
resolved
the
path,
the
root
path
of
the
directory,
using
like
one
of
the
runtime
primitives
like
the
eye
content
root
stuff
or
like
the
content
root
provider.
That's
that's
given
to
you
on
the
eye
hosting
environment.
It
doesn't
know
that
you've
had
to
stuff
as
a
link
right.
It
doesn't
go
virus
build.
It
just
looks
at
the
folder
and
just
a
numerator
using
the
file
system.
C
This
one's
cool,
so
basically
what
what
history
was
saying
is
that
there
is
not
a
convention
for
role
based
authentication
for
razor
pages.
Yet
that
he's
that
he's
aware
of
so
he
went
and
wrote
one
up.
So
this
is
a
convention
when
you
register
out,
you
can
include
so
that's
it's
just
one
one
or
two
page
downs
here
you
can
include
a
role,
rule-based
registration
in
it.
Yeah.
A
A
What
he's
simply
doing
is
it
says
I'm,
creating
a
policy
called
the
require
administrator
role
and
then
that
policy
is
made
up
of
a
series
of
rules
right
and
the
one
rule
that
he's
habit
here
is
that
oh,
this
policy
requires
that
you're
in
the
role
called
administrator,
so,
like
he's
basically
creating
role
based
like
before
we
had
yeah,
which
is
fine,
and
that
that's
perfectly
reasonable.
But
there
are,
there
is
a
there.
A
Is
a
group
of
customers
and
people
who
have
come
from
the
existing
sort
of
role
based
way
of
doing
authorization
and
if
I
where's
my
roles
now
I
want
to
do
roles
and
like
well,
it's
all
policies.
Now
you
can
recreate
roles,
you
can
do
whatever
you
like.
You
can
have
a
policy,
that's
based
on
anything
like
literally
anything.
But
if
you
want
to
do
the
you
know
the
quote-unquote
simplest
thing,
then
you
can
do
something
like
this
and
there's.
There
are
little
places
now,
where
there's
just
a
built-in
first
class
concept
of
a
role.
C
B
An
extension
method,
yep
cool.
C
That's
it:
okay,
all
right!
We
we
haven't
had
there's
a
few
weeks
to
catch
up
on
here.
This
is
so
Philip
has
updated,
is
typed
routing
for
asp
net
core
with
MVC
2
or
asp
net
core
MVC
I!
Guess
you
if
you
wrote
there,
so
this
is
strongly
typed
routing,
so
you
can
you
can
write
route
directly
to
you
know
home
controller.
In
this
case.
That's
it!
It's
nice
to
see
he's
been
working
on
this
I
believe
since
2014.
D
C
B
A
C
A
trade-off
exactly
in
per
versus
and
he
talks
some
about
this
in
here-
there's
also
there's
a
discussion
on
Twitter
where
people
have
talked
about
brute,
forcing
using
GPUs
using
cloud
GPUs
like
you
know,
and
so,
if,
if
you
have
maybe
a
smaller
user
base
and
you're
concealed
lean
more
towards
really,
you
know
you
prefer
to
turn
the
dial
more
towards
security
and
and
are
not
concerned
about
so.
But
he
does
talk
in
here
about
you
know
perfect
test.
It
make
sure
it
works.
B
D
B
C
So
we
had
Ryan
come
on
and
talk
about
HTTP
client
factory
last
week
and
so
Steve
said:
hey
I've
been
sitting
on
a
post
series
since
October.
If
it's
locked
down
enough
I'd
love
to
publish
this,
so
he
walks
through
a
two-part
series
here.
So
the
first
one
is,
you
know
what
is
it
how
you'd
use
it?
You
know
kind
of
basic
overview
stuff.
C
C
C
A
Stuff,
a
lot
of
people
looking
forward
to
this,
we
got
it's
amazing
how
strong
the
reaction
we
had
to
demoing
this
in
talking
about
it
in
London
versus
all
the
other
stuff
coming
into
on.
That's
actually
quite
a
lot
of
stuff.
This
was
the
one
that,
for
whatever
reason,
got
a
lot
more
people
sort
of
reacting
to
it.
So
you.
C
Know
it's
Java
or
what?
But
every
time
I
hear
Factory
in
the
context
of
software,
I
start
to
nod
off
and
so
I
told
Ryan
it
was
pretty.
I
was
impressed
with
his
presentation
and
with
how
cool
the
feature
is
that
I
was
still.
You
know
on
the
edge
of
my
seat
and
asking
questions
about
a
factory.
You
know
45
minutes
into
his
demos,
mm-hmm.
C
This
is
just
a
quick
asp
net
core
gotcha
steve
and
probably
some
other
people
watching
have
updated
projects
from
asp
net
core
one
to
two
and
along
the
way
his
migration
stopped
working,
and
he
wasn't
sure
why,
when
he
scrolled-
and
it
looked
like
from
the
the
error
message
that
he
just
had
screwed
up
his
connection
string,
what
you'll
see
when
you
scroll
down
is
that
the
project
file
includes
a
reference
to
the
CLI
tools
and
CLI
tool.
Was
one
dot,
o--
and
needed
to
be
met?
He
needed
to
update
that
to
two
dot
o.
C
C
A
Nothing
will
upgrade
that
this
is
one
of
the
gaps
in
the
experience.
Right
now
is
that
project
tools,
as
we've
talked
about
a
few
times,
there
is
literally
no
tooling
experience,
I
wanna
Klee.
There
is
no
tools,
experience
for
tools,
so
there's
no
command-line
experience
to
add
at
all.
There's
no
command-line
experience
to
update
at
all,
there's
no
vs
experience
to
add
or
update
at
all,
it's
all
manual
and
in
two
one
we're
adding
global
tools,
and
we
will
be
shipping.
C
C
A
Complicated
like
they,
they
load
your
application.
When
you
invoke
them
and
then
they
reach
inside
your
app
and
call
what
they
call
the
inside
man
or
the
inside
thing,
which
is
like
there's
a
piece
of
VM
that
runs
in
your
app
and
a
piece
that
runs
in
the
tool
and
if
they're
not
the
same
version,
and
they
don't
work.
And
then
you
know
certain
ways
we
can
detect.
That
and
the
other,
which
is
like
Ford's
compatible,
can
be
hard
to
detect.
A
And
so
all
we've
made
allowances
overtime
to
try
and
make
it
fail
better
right
but
yeah.
If
you're
trying
to
invoke
if
you're,
using
the
one
over
in
the
tool
and
you
reach
into
an
app
that
is
oh,
like
we
would
have
made
changes
that
the
one
Oh
tools
would
never
have
predicted.
Obviously
like
force
compatibility
is
hard,
if
not
impossible,
and
so
it
doesn't
know
how
to
file
a
car
fail
in
last
way,
unless
you
designed
for
it
from
the
very
beginning
so
right.
C
D
C
A
C
B
C
I
think
that's
that's
a
for
further
study.
Okay.
We
actually
have
another
link
on
that
in
a
second,
so
the
next
one
here
this
is
from
Nate
bar
Betty.
You
may
remember
him:
he
did
the
little
asp.net
book.
It
was
a
hundred
page
ebook
that
we
featured
back
in
November
timeframe,
so
he
made
his
writing.
Quality
is
always
great.
This
one
isn't
it's
about
it's
using
multi-tenant
with
a
Postgres
back
end
and
the
Postgres
back
end
in
this
case
is
hosted
by
siteÃs,
which
is
a
SAS
Postgres
provider.
C
So
so
the
things
that
you
know
this
is
a
in-depth
walk-through.
You'll
see
some
things.
You
know
I,
dug
down
into
the
end
and
he's
using
SAS
kit
is
the
kind
of
agency
middleware
thing
that
he's
using,
but
this
is
this
is
kind
of
a
you
know,
step-by-step,
create
your
database.
It's
all
there
kind
of
thing
so
and
he's
building
out
a
stack,
overflow
style
site
and
then
doing
a
multi-tenant.
A
C
C
A
A
C
B
C
C
C
Yeah
so
another
from
mate.
This
is
an
OID
C
debugger,
so
he
he
actually
I,
don't
know
Damian.
You
might
learn
more
about
that
in
here
here.
He
talks
about
a
debugger
that
he
built
where
you
can
go
through
and
it'll
help.
You
construct
your
query
and
then
you
can.
Actually.
You
know
like
interactively
debug
and
test
it.
So.
A
C
C
So
this
is
kind
of
a
you
know
what
a
lot
in
a
lot
of
cases
as
Rick
talked
about
in
his
talk,
you
may
want
to
run
on
a
database
because
you're
doing
changing
things
on
the
fly
whatever
it
is.
You
know.
So
this
is
a
really
in-depth.
You
know
kind
of
system
he's
built
out
and
he's
built
it
to
work
pretty
cleanly
with
already
and.
B
C
A
To
him
yeah
one
of
the
things
we've
seen
people
who
have
tried
backing
their
localized
like
their
strings
with
a
database.
One
of
the
things
to
look
out
for
is
when
you
get
to
a
large
number
of
strings
and
or
a
large
number
of
locales
that
you're
translating
into
you,
have
to
be
very
cognizant
of
the
memory
use
because
the
if
you
do
a
night
well,
you
know
someone
may
even
implement
of
the
string.
A
Localizer
Factory,
you
just
got
a
load
everything
out
of
the
database
and
because
they're
all
strings,
that's
a
lot
of
memory
that
just
gets
loaded
up,
but
which
is
fine.
But
then,
if
you
want
to
be
able
to
support,
like
the
other
thing
you
just
said,
John,
which
is
like
oh
they're,
live
updates.
It
was
like
well,
okay,
when
do
you
know
to
go
back
and
check
to
reload
them,
and
how
do
you
get
rid
of
the
fact
that
you
have
strings
that
you
don't
want
to
use
anymore
and
how'd?
A
You
manage
the
memory
around
that,
but
if
you
want
to
do
something
a
little
more
efficient
such
that
you
load
strings
as
they're
demanded,
for
example,
how
do
you
do
that
efficiently?
It
can
be
quite
challenging
as
no
matter
what
you're
backing
it
with
whether
it's
a
day.
Also,
the
interface
is
not
async,
and
so
you
can't
load
strings
on
demand
from
a
through
the
I
string,
localizer
interface
in
like
in
line
with
a
request
in
a
blocking
fashion.
A
That's
a
better
nanny
pattern,
and
so
you'd
want
to
ensure
that
you're
doing
an
initial
upload,
while
the
application
is
still
booting
before
the
surface
starts.
Accepting
requests
to
get
you
to
the
point
where
you
can
serve
the
first
request
and
then
have
some
way
of
loading
either
you
load
everything
you
deal
with
the
memory
use
or
you
have
a
way
of
doing
background
loads
on
demand.
When
people
you
know
ask
for
strings
that
you
want
that.
You
haven't
loaded,
yet
it
can
get
quite
complicated
very
quickly
as
the
number
of
strings
grows.
A
C
C
C
C
C
Next
one
is
a
bit
of
a
hack,
but
I
thought
it
was
interesting.
This
is
from
Fanny
Reinders.
He
talked
if
he
wanted
to
integrate
with
whatsapp.
They
don't
have
a
nice
clean,
API
or
any
API,
so
you
can
actually
use
selenium
Chrome
driver
and
integrated
with
whatsapp
web.
So
this
is
just
interesting
to
see
what
he
did,
how
he
hooked
it
in
here
so
and
of
course,
source
code
is
available
in
his
repo.
That's
about
it
hang.
B
B
B
C
B
B
A
A
C
C
C
D
A
C
A
C
B
D
B
C
B
B
A
B
B
C
A
Alright,
so
these
are
two
one.
So
the
context
of
these
is
with
the
upcoming
2.1
release,
all
right,
so
people
are
away.
So
if
people
think
back
to
when
we
released.
Oh,
we
introduced
a
new
meta
package.
Remember
a
meta
package
is
just
a
package
of
packages
back
in
the
default
experience
you
do
file
new,
a
sneer
core
on.
A
Oh,
when
you're
running
on
the
core.
You
will
use
Microsoft
that
HP
net
cord
dot
all
will
be
your
package
reference,
so
that
brings
in
the
world
right
brings
in
everything
that
we
build
anything
that
we
integrate
with
ID
everything
and
then,
when
you
cuz,
because
all
right
exactly
including
some
Azure
stuff
like
it,
actually
starts
spreading
out
pretty
quickly,
it
brings
in
Redis.
A
It
brings
in
all
types
of
stuff,
because
we
have
some
things
that
integrate
with
their
party
things
right
and
then,
when
you
publish
we,
you
don't
take
those
with
you
by
default,
because
we
had
the
runtime
store
and
we
delivered
all
the
runtime
assets
for
this
package
as
part
of
the
installation
with
the
runtime
story.
Few,
if
people
remember
now
they're
this
change
that
we're
making
into
one
a
spinet
corner
all
will
still
be
available.
A
We
will
continue
to
produce
that
all
for
the
life
of
the
two
decks
product,
but
we
are
changing
the
default
for
new
projects
into
one
we're
going
to
change
to
this
other
meta
package
called
Microsoft,
a
snake
or
app
and
first
sounds
familiar.
It's
because
we
have
Microsoft
net
cord
app,
which
is
the
name
of
the
shared
framework
that
dotnet
core
runs
on
right.
A
So
if
you
ever
look
behind
the
guts
of
things
and
I'm
sure
you
know
Scott
you've,
given
these
talks
I've,
given
these
talks-
and
we
show
like
what
the
app
sits
on
top
of
there's,
this
folder
called
microsoft.net
core
app.
There
is
a
package
that
the
members
represents,
that
that
is
kind
of
implicit
that
you
don't
see,
but
it's
behind
the
scenes.
A
It
was
implicit
in
1.0,
but
now
it's
not
so
this
is
kind
of
the
equivalent
for
asp
net
core
and
the
difference
between
all
an
app
is
effectively
what
it
says
there
in
the
next
paragraph,
which
is,
we
have
simply
removed
references
to
things
that
our
team
doesn't
own
or
can't
support
as
part
of
making
the
core
experience
work,
and
so
it's
less
dependencies.
It's
not
a
lot
like
if
you
scroll
down
and
to
that
list.
A
If
whoever's
in
control
the
screen
I,
don't
know
whose
screenings
that
you
Scott
there's
less
here
yeah,
so
it's
that
list,
plus
anything
they
depend
on.
So,
for
example,
you
can
see
they're.
The
sixth
item
is
Microsoft.
Sorry,
though
this
is
the
fifth
the
fifth
item,
because
Microsoft
that
extension
is
like
caching
got
Redis
that
depends
on
Stack
Exchange
dot,
Redis,
which
we
don't
own.
So
we
can't
support
that.
Okay,
if
there
was,
if
there's
something
happened,
and
we
had
to
issue
a
security
fix
for
that.
A
Obviously
we
would
work
very
closely
with
the
Stack
Exchange
of
registering
to
make
that
happen,
but
we
can't
force
them
to
do
anything.
Okay,
we
just
asked
very
nicely,
and
so
we
have
removed
things
of
that
type
from
the
default
experience,
so
that
there
is
a
cleaner
understanding
of
wha
well
dot.
App
is
the
stuff
that
Microsoft
sort
of
owns
or
has
enough
influence
on
to
be
able
to
support,
and
then
everything
else.
A
A
Obviously
we
work
closely
with
them,
but
those
things
are
also
controlled
by
a
different
life
cycle
and
that's
a
different
support
policy
like
Asia
libraries
are
tied
to
as
your
services
and
as
your
services
have
a
different
support,
lifecycle
to
things
like
the
dotnet
framework
or
don't
make
or
a
spinette
core,
so
tying
them
all
up
in
one
package,
which
we
try
and
draw
a
circle
around
to
say
this
is
supported,
is
is
a
little
confusing,
and
so
we've
tried
to
clean
that
up
a
little
bit
with
this
dot.
App
change.
A
That's
all
it
is
so
when
you
move,
when
you
create
a
new
to
one
app
it'll
be
Microsoft
Faceman,
it
called
our
app
and
you
won't
have
these
dependencies.
So
if
you
want
them,
you'll
need
to
add
them
manually
and
if
you're
moving
from
202
to
1,
we
would
recommend
that
you
change
your
dot
all
reference
to
app,
and
then
you
add
back
any
of
these.
A
A
We
come
up
with
with
ridiculous
code
names
for
things
so
cake
kodkod.
It
has
okay,
remember
the
whole
thing
started
as
project
K,
so
we
still
come
up
with
your
cholesterol.
They
went
so
Cod
was
it
was.
Is
the
project
codename
we
used
to
describe
all
the
features
that
we
want
to
do
to
improve
authoring
web
api's?
Please
don't
move
those
around
I
just
want
to
see
if
I
could
I
will
go
and
remove
your
access
to
all
of
our
repo.
A
A
A
Ok,
so
there's
stuff
here
that
we're
thinking
beyond
2.1
there's
things
that
we
want
to
continue
to
do
to
improve
the
experience
of
building
and
consuming
web
api
is
built
with
a
spirit
core,
and
so
we've
made
some
improvements
in
2.1,
and
then
we
will
build
on
top
of
those
improvements
in
further
releases,
which
is
what
the
work
in
the
first
two
columns
is
representing.
You'll
learn
more
about
these
over
the
coming
weeks,
as
we
start
talking
more
about
them
and
logging
about
them
and
you'll
be
able
to
pick
up
bits.
A
Obviously,
when
we
release
a
preview,
you
can
try
and
pick
up
bits
now,
but
I
wouldn't
encourage
it.
It's
incredibly
difficult,
so
yeah.
So,
if
you're
interested
in
like
web
api
stuff-
and
you
want
to
go,
do
some
low-level
trolling
through
the
issues
and
the
code
that
changed
yeah,
don't
do
so
there's
some
interesting
stuff
in
here.
That's
going
to
make
things
somewhat
easier.
A
A
Yes?
Well,
the
list
is
those
things,
those
other
things
yeah
so
like
if
you
just
well
it
so
the
thing
that
makes
it
difficult
is
that
there
are
transitive
dependency
still.
So
there
is
what
dot
app
depends
on
it's
like
its
first
level
dependencies
and
then
it's
there's
what
that
depends
on
right
and
so
to
get
a
full
flat
list
is
kind
of
a
little
like
is
the
depth
file.
You
have
to
build
something
with
it.
Look
at
the
depth
file
and
you'll
see
everything
in
there.
We
don't.
A
We
haven't
actually
just
built
a
flat
list,
but
if
you
go
and
look
at
them,
I
get
feeds
like
the
standard.
Dev
might
get
feeds
that
we
have
that
anyone
can
look
at.
You
can
look
at
the
dot
app
package
in
there
and
you
can
just
open
it
and
look
at
what
it
depends
on
and
then
you
can
get
an
idea,
but
again
to
your
point.
A
A
I
think
it's
bad
now,
along
and
it'll
be
available
on
channel
9
around
the
same
time
that
the
blog
post
goes
live
later
this
week,
so
yeah,
that's
all
coming,
it's
all
goodness,
and
then
at
some
point
we'll
be
able
to
tell
you
when
the
first
preview
will
be
available.
It's
not
today,
it
won't
be
by
the
end
of
this
week,
we're
still
working
through
figuring
out
when
that
will
be,
but
I
hope
it's
soon.
Oh
I.
B
Just
remembered
something
totally
unrelated
to
this
entire
show
that
I
want
to
share
as
we
go
for
the
door
of
people
who
are
stuck
there.
Yes,.
A
B
B
B
A
B
D
B
B
B
So
anyway,
I
went
over
there
and
I
end
up
writing
a
blog
post
here
at
the
imagine
cup
blog
and
did
a
whole
video.
So
they
did
a
solution
for
diabetics
and
specifically
type
one
diabetic,
kids.
It's
like
this
really
cool
NFC
and
Bluetooth
Low
Energy
system.
They
designed
this
whole
thing,
so
I
went
to
hang
out
with
them
and
they
showed
me
their
system.
It
is
pretty
darn
amazing.
It's
got
a
whole
cloud-based
front-end
Koch's,
cloud-based
back-end
rather,
and
they
explained
it
to
me
and
I
got
to
demo.
B
B
D
B
B
B
B
A
A
Channel
we've
literally
halved
our
viewership
alright.
So
what
we
know
is
that
Scott
is
famous.
We
all
knew
that,
but
the
the
the
fact
that
we're
now
driving
this
through
a
different
identity
has
actually
had
a
huge
impact
on
our
viewership.
So
we're
going
to
try
and
fix
that
I
like
Scott
you're
gonna,
put
us
a
short
video
on
your
channel,
which.
C
A
Ask
too
I'm
going
to
ask
you
all
the
hundred
and
seventeen
people
watching
now
live
and
the
two
thousand
that
were
watching
the
next
week
instead
of
the
five
thousand
that
you
still
watching
a
week.
Please
ensure
that
when
you
you
tell
other
people,
don't
assume
that
other
people
you
know
know
about
the
show
and
if
you
find
any
value
of
the
show,
please
share
it
with
other
people.
I
had
people
come
up
at
the
end
of
the
workshop.
Every
time
I
teach
it
saying
I'm
so
glad
you
do
the
show.
A
So
in
a
group
of
thirty
there's,
always
a
random
like
two
or
three
who
I've
watched
the
show
and
I.
Don't
know
whether
that
means
that
they're
more
likely
to
buy
the
workshop,
because
they've
seen
the
show
or
whether
it's
a
representative
representing
of
ten
percent
of
all
the
people
watch
the
show,
which
means
we
only
have
fish,
which
would
be
a
problem
so
I.
Please
try
and
serve.
B
B
A
That's
a
very
good
question:
that's
a
very
good,
so
that
would
move
the
needle
more
than
me
making
a
video,
very
good
suggestion.
We
should
do
that
and
we're
also
going
to
try
and
do
some
more
cross
promotion
of
the
show
on
Facebook
and
the
HP
net
website
and
Twitter
and
those
type
of
things
as
well
to
try
and
get
our
viewership
up.
We
hope
the
new
guest
stuff
that
we're
gonna
do
is
going
to
be
good
for
people
and
give
you
a
bit
more,
very
content
which
is
which
I
hope
people
like
as
well.