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A
A
A
A
Hello,
hello,
y'all,
welcome
to
open
source
Friday
open
source.
Friday
is
essentially
a
show
that
I
run
every
Friday
on
Twitch
and
now
YouTube
and
Linkedin,
where
I
chat
with
open
source
maintainers
about
their
projects.
A
It's
helpful
for
me
because
now
I
get
to
learn
about
new
projects
and
learn
about
new
technologies
and
then
also,
hopefully,
the
audience
can
as
well
and
then
I
hope
that
it
will
also
be
helpful
for
the
maintainers
themselves,
so
they
can
get
some
more
exposure,
okay,
so
I.
This
is
part
two
of
the
stream
to
this
today,
in
particular,
I
did
like
a
two-part
stream
where
I
had
one
person
on,
and
now
we
have
a
second
person
on
named
Donald
I
want
to
give
a
quick
disclaimer
for
the
last
stream.
A
A
lot
of
people
asked
like.
Why
is
it
called
awesome,
black
maintainers?
What
happened
to
the
white
maintainers
well
I,
bring
on
a
lot
of
of
white
maintainers
y'all
like
I.
Do
not
neglect
them.
They're,
like
the
majority
of
Open
Source,
so
each
Friday
I
have
brought
on
maintainers
and
they
just
so
happen
to
be
white,
but
because
we're
in
America
and
right
now,
it's
Black
History
Month
I
thought.
A
Why
not
like
highlight
some
black
maintainers
like
let's
see
what
they're
doing
right
like
I,
wanted
to
just
be
able
to
especially
dedicate
this
time
to
them
so
without
further
Ado.
Instead
of
me
talking
so
much,
but
I
want
to
go
ahead
and
introduce
Donald
or
have
Donald
introduce
himself
hi.
B
Everyone,
my
name,
is
Donald
I'm,
a
self-sword
software
developer,
I'm,
currently
working
on
a
project
called
formidable
JS
as
well
as
lunaql
yeah
I
work
for
a
company
called
realm.
Digital
I.
Basically
do
r
d
work
yeah,
that's
that's!
That's
pretty
much.
It.
A
Awesome,
thank
you
and
I'll,
say
hi
to
some
people
and
chat.
Jose
said
hello,
there's
just
a
whole
bunch
of
highs,
hey
C
bid,
2
thanks
for
joining
on
both
of
them,
and
someone
asked
what's
the
name
of
the
music
playing
when
streaming
was
it
called
waiting?
I
have
no
clue,
I'll
be
honest
with
y'all
I
took
that
that
music
and
the
slide
from
canva
so
I
don't
know.
But
if
you
know
it,
that's
cool
all
right
so
tell
us.
You
said
you
maintained
formidable
JS.
What
is
that.
B
Yeah,
so
formidable
JS
is
a
I
call
it
the
one
person
framework.
It's
a
full
stack
framework
that
allows
you
to
build
applications,
so
you
can
build
Frontier
and
stuff.
You
can
build
back
end
and
you
can
do
all
of
that
by
yourself.
So
yeah,
that's!
Basically
it
yeah.
A
B
Yeah
so
I
call
it
the
one
person
framework,
because
it
allows
you
to
do
everything
by
yourself,
or
at
least
it
tries.
So
if
you
are
building
an
app
you
can
build,
you
can
build
a
backend
by
yourself.
You
can
build
the
front
Chain
by
yourself
and
you
don't
have
to
worry
about.
How
do
you
get
started
with
building
the
front
end?
How
do
you
start
sort
of
holding
the
back
end?
You
do
everything
in
one
code
base.
So
that's
why
it's
called
the
one
person
framework.
A
That
makes
sense
all
right
and
then
also
on
your
you
have
a
Twitter
account
for
formidable
JS,
and
then
you
described
it
as
like.
I,
don't
even
know
if
I'm
saying
this
word
right,
imba
I'll
type
it
out
for
people
what
what
does
that
even
mean
all.
B
Right
so
Ember
is
a
full
stack
programming
language
that
was
created
by
the
folks
at
scrimba,
so
yeah.
So
that's
where
the
name
comes
from,
so
they
basically
use
it
to
build
scrimba,
and
that's
that's
basically
how
the
project
came
about.
A
All
right
and
scramble
is
that
tool
that
people
use
am
I
Am
I
Wrong
is
that
the
tool
that
people
use
to
do
like
coding,
tutorials
or
is
that
a
different
tool.
A
The
same
tool,
oh,
that's
cool!
That's
really
cool!
Thank
you.
Thank
you.
Yeah
somebody,
somebody
just
said
scrimba
is
awesome.
I
think
it's
so
cool
that,
like
they've
combined
doing
a
tutorial
like
watching
a
tutorial
video,
but
then
you
can
also
like
edit
the
the
visual
editor
that
they're
showing.
B
A
B
I
kind
of
been
following
the
project
for
like
two
years
now:
okay
I
actually
discovered
Ember,
because
I
wanted
to
build
a
game.
Engine
and
I
was
like.
Let
me
find
a
language
that
doesn't
have
a
game
engine
and
then
I
found
Ember
and
then
I
started
doing
some
research
on
it
and
I
found
out
that
it
was
created
by
the
same
guys
who
created
scrimmer.
So
that's
how
I
kind
of
found
on
them
out.
A
B
A
Them
so
great,
okay
cool.
So
what
inspired
you
to
create
formidable
Js.
B
Yeah
I
think
so
after
finding
Timber
I
decided
that
I
wanted
to
learn
the
language,
but
one
of
the
bad
things
that
I
usually
do
when
I
find
a
new
tool.
I
try
and
create
a
different
tool
using
that
specific
tool.
So
I
was
like.
Let
me
create
a
framework
and
I
basically
builts
for
Middle
chairs
and
that's
how
I
learned
Ember
and
that's
that's
why
I
created
for
medical
Jets
just
to
learn
Timber
and
then
over
the
years,
I
decided
to
start
using
formidable
JS
for
other
personal
projects.
B
A
A
B
For
sure,
let
me
just
open
this
cool,
so
I've
got
my
code.
Editor
I've,
set
up
a
example
project
just
to
get
started
so
basically,
I'll
just
show
you
the
file
structure.
So
those
who
are
coming
from
a
larval
background
they'll
see
this
it's
very
similar
to
larval.
So
you
have
the
app
folder,
which
is
where
your
main
code
sits.
I
have
bootstrap,
which
is
basically
the
bootstrapping
of
the
application.
You
have
the
config,
so
here
you
can
configure
your
application.
Whether
you
want
to
do
course.
B
You
want
to
do
database,
so
here
you'll
see,
there's
a
bunch
of
connections,
equal
light,
massive
or
postgres
and
Ms
SQL.
How
do
you
want
to
handle
hashing?
Do
you
want
to
use
Big,
B
Crypt
or
what's
the
other
option,
I've
gone
to
there's
also
login?
How
do
you
analog
whatever
so?
Let's
say:
you're
testing,
you
know,
I
see
the
data
you
want
to
log
it
to
slack
Discord
or
in
in
a
file
and
there's
also
yeah,
there's
also
the
mailing
stuff.
B
So
you
can
you
know
we
currently
have
two
mailers
smt
and
same
mail
and
then
there's
sessions.
So
here
you
can
also
configure
your
sessions,
so
all
of
this
comes
pre-configured
for
you,
which
is
really
great
in
the
in
in
the
public.
You
can
host
your
files
just
test
your
files
resources.
This
would
be
where
your
front
end
sits
routes.
This
is
where
you
can
Define
rods,
with
a
API
routes
or
web
routes
and
then
storage.
You
can
store
files
here
as
well
test.
B
You
can
write
some
tests
and
then
yeah-
that's
that's
that's
pretty
much
it.
So,
let's
start
the
application.
Okay
cool,
just
the
node
Crossman.
B
Thing
called
Craftsman:
it's
basically
the
CLI
tool
for
the
framework.
It
allows
you
to
basically
scaffold
a
bunch
of
things.
Yeah,
let's
check
it
out,
so
I
have
so
run
the
application
development
board.
A
B
See
that
yeah
cool
so
now
that
we've
started
the
the
application
you'll
see
here,
it
says
successfully
generated
types,
so
how's
that,
what's
that
so
in
in
the
framework
you
can
create
requests
and
in
the
request
you
can
specify
the
rules.
So
let's
say
you
have
a
post
request
and
you,
the
post
request,
is
basically
storing
a
user.
Maybe
you
want
to
have
a
username
or
an
email
address
and
you
want
to
specify
the
actual
rules.
So
you
can
say
the.
B
Must
be
unique
and
you
can
say
the
email
address
must
be
an
actual
email
address
and
then
you
can
have
another
field
called
password,
and
you
say
the
minimum
characters
of
The
password
should
be
eight.
You
know.
So
what
that
will
do
is
what
the
successfully
generated
types
it'll
actually
generate
a
type
for
that
request,
so
we
can
actually
check
it
out.
So
here
we
go
so
this
type
here,
it's
coming
from
a
request
called
store
user
request
and
it
has
a
name
and
an
email.
B
So
you
can
check
that
out,
store
user
request,
and
this
is
the
request.
So
here
you'll
see
the
rules,
and
this
is
basically
taking
all
of
this
and
it's
putting
it
to
the
side.
So
this
will
allow
you
to
sort
of
have
type
check
in
within
your
code,
which
is
really
great
cool.
So
let's
go
to
the
application
that
got
started
in
this
tab
here.
B
So
this
is
an
example
project
that
I
built
it's
basically
a
basic
form,
so
you
can
create
a
new
user.
So
let's
create
a
new
user
Donald.
B
Oh
and
then
click
add
it
adds
the
user.
So
let's
look
at
the
code.
So
if
we
go
to
I
think
it's
users
index,
oh,
so
now,
if
we
look
at
the
code,
let's
actually
look
at
the
piece
of
code
that
actually
added
the
user
yeah.
This
is
it
so
this
is
in
the
this
is
in
the
so
here
we're
basically
saying
user
dot
on
on,
and
then
we
pass
in
the
name
of
the
Rat.
So
this
is
the
name
of
the
rods
and
then
we
we're
like
cool.
B
So
when
this
runs
it'll
actually
add
the
user
it'll
send
request
to
the
back
end.
Let
me
open
up
the
API
routes,
just
check
what
that
is.
So
this
is
the
route
that
gets
called
okay.
A
B
Notice
we
are
calling-
or
we
are
using
the
name
so
here
user.on
and
the
idea
behind
that
is,
if
you
at
any
point,
you
decide
to
change
the
name
or
you
change
the
URLs.
You
don't
have
to
worry
about
now.
You
have
to
go
back
to
your
Frontier
and
then,
like
figure
out
like
change
the
other
day
as
well.
You
can
just
use
the
the
name
of
the
Rat
which
is
efficient.
Oh.
A
B
For
these
specific,
so
for
this
specific
demo,
I
used
SQL,
Lite,
okay,
because
I
don't
want
to
set
up
my
SQL.
B
Then
we
can
actually
go
and
look
at
the
code.
The
function
that
gets
executed
is
this
one
yeah.
So
we
have
some
dependency
injection
the
store
user
request.
So
basically,
what
that
means
is
when
this
create
function
hits
the
back
end.
B
The
backend
will
execute
this
and
then
it'll
it'll
inject
this
request
to
the
function
and
then
because
it's
injecting
the
request
of
the
function,
we
now
have
access
to
methods
and
properties
that
are
inside
that
request,
so
which
is
great,
and
then
it
just
calls
this
persist
function
and
you
can
check
it
out
and
basically
here
what
we're
doing
is
we're
just
checking
if
a
user
with
the
same
email
address
exists.
If
that
user
exists,
then
we
just
throw
an
error.
A
validation,
error
email
is
already
taken.
B
If
the
user
doesn't
exist,
we
create
the
user
and
then
we
return
it
to
the
front
end
and
that's
pretty
much
it.
So,
let's
actually
try
and
add
a
user
with
the
same
email
address
yeah.
So
why
not
I
don't
know
it's
a
gmail.com
boom
email
address
is
already
taken,
so
it's
gonna
re-render
the
errors
for
you,
and
so
let's
check
that
out.
B
So
this
is
yeah.
This
is
the
this
is
the
part
where
it
ranges
the
errors,
so
we're
like
who,
if
there's
an
error,
if
there's
an
email,
error,
I
run
through
all
the
errors
and
then
print
them
out
in
the
front
end,
and
that's
basically
it
okay.
A
B
So
the
other
cool
thing
is
because
this
is
a
full
stack
application.
It
means
it's
API
ready
so
because
I
have
routes
in
my
API
in
my
API
file,
I
can
actually
call
them.
Let's
say
you
know
we
had
a
different
client
and
they
were
trying
to
integrate
with
the
platform.
We
could
give
them
the
endpoints
and
they
could
actually
integrate
with
the
platform.
So
I
mean
let's
try
to
access
some
of
these
routes
onto
API
users,
one.
So
this
Returns,
the
first
user
we
can
do
I
mean
there's
a
new
user.
B
We
added
a
new
user,
it
was
user
four.
This
is
the
user
that
we
just
added.
And
then,
if
we
had
a
user
that
doesn't
exist,
five,
it
will
throw
a
404
error.
So
it's
API
ready
as
well,
which
is
really
great
and
and
that's
pretty
much
pretty
much
it
there's
a
ton
of
things
you
can
do
as
well.
So
we
can
take
a
look
at
the
CLI
tool,
so
node
crosswind,
so
here
just
running
through
some
of
the
commands.
B
So
we
have
the
a
bunch
of
these
make
commands
which
basically
allow
you
to
so
you
can
make
a
command.
You
can
make
a
config
controller
prod
exception,
middleware
mail,
migration,
repository
request,
a
whole
bunch
of
things
you
can
do.
You
can
run
migrations.
B
You
can
check
out
your
art
list,
so
that's
my
favorite,
actually
so
new
node
CrossFit
routes
list
and
it's
basically
going
to
print
all
the
rods
that
are
registered
yeah,
which
is
pretty
cool
and
because
it's
authentic,
it's
it's
odd,
ready
you.
Basically
it
comes
with
these
rods,
which
you
can
use
to
set
up
authentication,
which
is
great,
so
you
don't
have
to
write
both
from
scratch
as
well.
B
A
B
Also
part
of
the
part
of
the
framework
there's
actually
a
repository
on
the
formidable
chess
org
on
GitHub,
so
yeah
you
can
check
check
all
of
that
out.
If
anyone
is
interested
yeah,
you
can
I
think
you
can
also
put
application
in
maintenance
mode.
B
So
if
you
don't
want
people
to,
let's
say
you're
doing
deployments
and
you
want
people
to
access
your
application
and
put
it
in
maintenance
mode
if
you
are,
but
if
you
want
to
be
able
to
access
the
application
again
so
have
it
so
that
it's
accessible
to
your
machine
only
yeah,
you
can
do
a
whole
whole
lot
of
things.
A
Wow
you
really.
This
project
needs
more
attention.
You
put
a
lot
into
this
like
I,
think
I'm,
yeah
I'm,
just
like
I,
don't
even
know
which
part
I'm
impressed
at
like
you
built
a
whole
framework
and
then
it
comes
with
CLI
commands.
It
comes
with
I
think
you
said,
authentication
built-in,
which
is
always
a
pain
in
the
butt
for
people,
and
then
you
can
put
it
into
maintainer
mode.
You
can
use
it
for
migrations.
This
is
cool
people.
A
B
Want
it
yeah,
yeah
yeah,
there
is
something
else
called
let's,
so
we
also
have
a
scheduler.
So
let's
say
you
want
to
run
basically,
like
a
crown,
you
know
on
certain
tasks.
At
specific
times
you
can
set
up
your
scheduler
here,
so
you
can
basically
do
schedule
call
function
in
there.
You
can
increase
your
own
bunch
of
code
and
we
can
specify
how
often
it
should
run.
So
we
can
do
every
three
dot
days,
so
it
run
every
three
days.
B
We
can
do
every
three
hours,
for
example,
or
every
three
minutes,
or
we
will
just
do
every
minute
and
it'll
run
every
minute
and
then
there's
also
a
new
feature
that
I
recently
worked
on.
So
we
had
a
had
a
new
user
that
wanted
to
use
formidable
chess
for
this
project
called
praza
and
they
wanted
to
be
able
to
queue
their
processes.
So
we
added
a
q
worker
that
you
can
now
check
out.
You
know
formidable
here.
B
A
B
A
This
is
great,
I
love,
it
y'all
start
start
this
project.
So
why
did
why
have
I
heard
of
this
before,
like
you
put
so
much
effort
into
it
and
I,
also
like
even
even
like
the
small
stuff,
with
the
scheduler
right,
I
expected
you
to
like
for
the
scheduler
right
in,
like
you
know
the
Cron
job
stuff,
where
it's
like
zero
zero
space
star,
but
no
yeah.
B
Yeah
yeah
the
whole.
The
whole
point
of
the
framework
is
to
make
it
easy
for
people
to
for
people
to
build
full
stack
applications.
You
shouldn't
have
to
worry
about
like
things
like
crime,
you
know
you
should
just
be
able
to
write
code
and
everything
just
worked
so
yeah.
It's
it's
pretty
beefed
up.
There's
a
lot
of
things
you
can
do.
I
can
set
up
your
own
commands,
so
you
can
actually
add
on
to
your
Craftsman.
So
you
can.
B
So
yeah
there's
a
lot
of
things
you
can
do
and
yeah
it's
not
hard
at
all
to
get
started.
You
can
use
imba
on
the
back
end
as
well.
So
I
showed
you
emba
for
the
front
end,
but
you
also
you
can
also
use
it
on
the
back
end.
In
fact,
we
use
our
views.
Our
views
are
actually
in
Ember.
So
if
I
go
to
resources
and
I
open
up
views,
so
this
is
a
Ember
View
and
it's
actually
in
imber
right.
So
this
is
what
we
use
for
for
rendering
views.
A
B
Then
we
also
use
Ember
for
our
emails.
So
oh
I,
don't
have
emails,
don't
know
anything
else.
Okay,
I,
don't
have
notes
yeah.
You
can
also
use
it.
You
can
I
mean
let's
actually
create
an
email.
B
Make
mail
alerts
user,
for
example,
and
this
will
create
a
new
email,
I'm
gonna
open
it
so
that
we
can
start
styling.
A
B
Can
add
some
3G
red?
This
is
red,
so
like
this,
this
would
be
the
template
that
gets
sent
to
the
user
of
our
email,
yeah
yeah.
So
there's
a
lot
of
things
you
can
do.
Yeah
yeah.
A
A
This
project
is
dope,
people
are
starring,
it
which
is
great,
and
then
somebody
said
they
never
heard
of
imba
I
think
you
might
have
come
in
late,
but
I
learned
that
it's
the
language
in
which
scrimba
well
Donald
taught
me
this
in
which
scrimba
is
built
on
and
if
you
you're
not
familiar
with
scrimba,
it's
like
it's
like
a
place
for
people
to
learn
how
to
code,
so
they
have
like
coding
tutorials
like
video
tutorials,
but
you
can
also
like
pause
the
video
and
like
edit,
the
the
editor
that
they
show
you
within
the
video
so
yeah.
B
Yeah
so
yeah
I
mean
if
anyone
wants
to
get
get
involved.
The
source
code
is
on
GitHub.
You
can
start
playing
around
with
it.
Yeah.
A
B
Yeah
go
ahead,
so
there's
a
bunch
of
repos
here
and
they
all
sort
of
connected.
B
So
let's
see
this
is
the
the
typescript
Depot
is
the
Ember
repo.
So
maybe,
let's
check
out
I
mean
we
can
check
out
the
console.
B
So
here
we
have
a
bunch
of
so
this
is
the
console
repo.
This
is
what
Crosman
is
built
on
top
of,
so
you
can.
Actually,
if
you
wanted
to
build
something
similar
to
Craftsman,
you
can
build
it
on
top
of
console,
which
would
then
make
it
easy
for
you
to
build
something
similar
to
Craftsman,
and
this
is
written
in
Ember.
Yes,
it's
written
in
imber.
Let's
see
what
can
I
show?
Okay.
A
B
Well,
let's
actually
look
at
cues,
because
that's
the
most
recent
one
come
on
so
I
mean
accuse.
This
is
the
recent
recent
feature
that
I
added
still
needs
to
be
documented,
but
it's
basically
a
q
worker,
yeah
I,
don't
know
if
you
have
any
specific
questions,
I'm
trying
to
see
what
I
can
actually
show
you
chewable.
A
B
Can
run
it
after
like
10
minutes
or
an
hour
yeah,
and
this
is
written
in
typescript.
Yes,
it's
written
in
typescript,
we
have
a
bunch
of
commands
yeah,
we
have
the
work
command
which,
which
is
basically
what
gets
the
cues
to
start
running.
A
Okay,
I
think
this
looks
great.
So
if
people
wanted
to
or
what
would
be
most
valuable
to
you
for
people
contributing,
is
it
people
using
the
project?
Is
it
people
opening
issues?
Is
it
people
saying
picking
up
issues
like
what
would
be
are?
Is
there
any
need
for
for
your
project
right
now
for
contributors.
B
Yeah
there
is,
but
I'd
say
the
best
way
to
like
get
involved.
Is
you
actually
use
the
the
framework
yeah
she's
the
framework?
If
I?
If
you
find
issues,
you
can
obviously
open
the
the
issue
and
yeah
I
think
just
use
the
project.
B
Have
talks
as
well
good
bucks,
so
if
I
open
up
so
this
is
like
a
whole
getting
started.
B
You
can
use
vue.js.
If
you
don't
want
to
use
Ember,
you
can
use
BJs.
If
you
don't
want
to
use
view
chess,
you
can
use
react
so
really
yeah.
A
B
Literally,
when
you
start
your
application,
so
you
can
specify
that
you
want
to
use.
So
this
is
just
run
this
command
and
your
application
will
will
be
scaffolded
with
react
or
UHS.
So
this
is
a
pretty
pretty
awesome.
I
think
yeah.
A
B
All
right,
if.
A
Folks
in
the
audience
have
questions
please
feel
free
to
to
put
them
in,
but
I'm
going
to
move
into.
Some
is:
are
you
done
with
your
demo
cool.
A
Is
this
is
awesome
like
I
didn't
want
to
limit
you
because
there's
so
many
cool
things
you
built
in,
but
I
have
a
couple
other
questions
for
you
that
are
maybe
less
on
the
technical
side,
but
more
on,
like
being
an
open
source.
Maintainer
I'm,
just
curious
I
always
like
to
ask
people
like
what
are
the
challenges
of
being
a
maintainer
and
I
asked
this
because
I
think
sometimes
we
look
at
different,
like
people
doing
things
like:
oh
you're,
a
developer,
Advocate
you're,
a
maintainer
you're,
a
software
engineer
and
we're
like.
A
Oh,
this
is
so
awesome,
but
like
we
never
really
talk
about
like
what
challenges
you
might
be
saying
to
to
be
able
to
do
those
roles
so
yeah.
What
are
your
thoughts
on
that.
B
Yeah
I
think
it
it's
it's
our
Aunt
finances.
It's.
B
To
work
on
something
for
free
when
you
have
like
a
lot
of
stuff
to
do
on
like
personal
stuff,
so.
B
B
A
Gonna,
do
it
soon
and
you
would
think
like
I
have
a
job
where
I
could
dedicate
time
to
it,
but
I
still
have
other
things
to
do.
That
makes
me
wonder:
do
you
have
a
GitHub
sponsors
page.
A
It
up,
if
you
don't
know
how
I
have
a
blog
post
on
like
what
things
to
include
in
there
to
really
help
I'll,
send
it
to
you
and
maybe
I
should
show
it
to
other
people
too.
Do
you
mind
me
sharing
my
screen
really
quickly?
Yeah,
let
me
I
hope.
I
don't
share
too
much
on
here,
because
sometimes
when
I
press
share,
oh
my
computer
froze.
A
Okay,
let's
see
okay
yeah
so
somewhere
here,
I
have
a
how
to
like
create
a
sponsors
page
because
I
want
you
to
get
paid
and
I
know
it's
not
like
the
the
ultimate
answer.
It's
still
like
a
like
sponsors
is
still
a
thing.
A
That's
a
work
in
progress
because,
yes,
it
exists,
but
how
do
we
get
people
to
to
pay
you,
but,
like
one
thing,
I
found
that
has
been
useful
to
people
is
like
actually
putting
like
actually
putting
effort
into
your
sponsor's
page
so
like
making
sure
like
you
kind
of
like,
have
an
intro
of
telling
who
you
are
and
what
you
do
to
help
people
get
invested.
With
You
featuring
like
repos
of
your
work.
A
If
you
have
a
team
and
then
making
sure
you
like
set
up
the
tears
in
which
people
should
pay
you
so
like
do
you
want?
Are
you
preferring
for
people
to
like
get
give
you
five
dollars
a
month
and,
if
so
like?
What
can
they
get
from
that
like?
Well,
you
prioritize
their
issues
and
stuff
like
that.
So,
just
just
something
to
think
about
that'll
like
help
people
feel
more
more
encouraged
or
motivated
to
to
sponsor
you.
A
B
Check
it
out,
do
you
share
the
link
I'll
check
it
out
awesome.
A
B
I
think
people
coming
up
to
me
and
saying
hey.
We
are
trying
to
build
something
like
this.
Can
you
help
us?
Can
you
show
us
how
we
can
get
started?
I
think
that's
been
like
the
most
rewarding
Parts
about
all
of
this
I
had
one
guy
from
Germany
restart
reached
out
to
me.
It
was
like
building
this
forgot.
What
app
he
was
building
but
like
we
had
I
think
we
had
like
sessions
every
Saturday.
We
basically
I
showed
him.
Oh,
you
can
fix
this
using
this
method.
B
You
know
and
then
I
had
this
recently
I
had
this
guy
reach
out
to
me
who
was
building
Plaza
I'm
like.
B
When
you
know
we
added
cues,
so
I
think
all
of
that
it's
sort
of
like
collaborating
with
them
in
a
way
which
is
great,
so
yeah
I
think
that's
been
the
most
rewarding
part.
A
Yes,
okay,
all
right!
So
now.
This
question
is
a
little
bit
of
a
more
heavy
question,
but
because
I
named
this
awesome,
black
maintainers
and
because
of
what
I
explained
earlier
I'm
like
I
I
run.
This
show
every
Friday
I
struggle
to
find
maintainers
from
different
backgrounds
like
I'm,
mostly
fine
by
men,
and
that's
like
fine
right
like
but
I'm
like
why.
A
Where's,
the
diversity
in
open
source
I
have
an
idea
of
of
where
they
are
and
what
why
it's
not
as
successful.
But
from
your
perspective,
like
what
are
your
thoughts
on
how
we
can
improve
diversity
in
open
source.
B
I,
actually,
don't
have
an
answer
for
that
I
I,
actually,
I
honestly,
don't
know
I
think
maybe
it
has
to
do
with
like
the
grass
street
level
of
tech
in
general,
not
a
lot
of
us
people
of
color
are
exposed
to
Tech,
you
know
yeah,
and
it
goes
back
to
maybe
studying
in
like
school.
You
know
get
get
kids
involved
as
early
as
possible.
B
A
A
I
agree
with
you:
it's
like
a
domino
effect
of
like
people,
don't
know
about
open
source
because
they
don't
they
weren't
exposed
to
Tech
the
the
guest.
Before
you
actually
said
the
same
thing,
it's
like.
We
need
to
start
introducing
it
at
the
high
school
level,
because
I
agree
right,
like
even
when
I
was
in
high
school,
I
didn't
even
know
what
coding
really
was
so
I
was
like
I
think
it's
like
they're
trying
than
something
I
don't
know,
but
I
do
agree
with
that.
A
We
need
to
expose
more
Folks
at
a
lower
level,
about
technology
and
about
open
source
and
that'll
help
get
more
of
them
in
there.
So
we
talked
about
how
people
can
contribute
to
your
project.
B
Not
at
the
moment,
I
think
I'm
still
trying
to
find
my
feet
as
well
yeah.
So
it's
like
I,
actually
I,
don't
have
the
answer
as
well.
So.
A
Yeah,
that's
fair
and
I.
Think
I.
Think
for
me,
even
though
I
like
just
started
being
a
maintainer
I've
like
in
my
job,
I
get
the
opportunity
to
what's
the
word,
observe
other
maintainers
or
learn
from
them,
and
what
I've
seen
is
like
the
way
that
they're
getting
more
contributors
and
stuff
like
that
is
from
projects
like
this
from
from
doing
a
twitch
stream
from
like
going
to
a
Meetup
or
a
talk.
A
So
just
if
anyone
is
listening
here
and
they
want
to
get,
they
have
an
open
source
project,
but
they're
like
dang
nobody's
contributing
my
camera
keeps
dying,
I'm,
sorry,
y'all!
It's
been
on
for
like
a
couple
hours.
That's.
Why
give
me
a
second
for
it
to
pop
back
up.
A
Of
course,
okay,
we
are
okay,
cool
yeah,
sorry
about
that,
but
basically
some
of
it
might
feel
cringe
to
like
be
promoting.
It
feels
like
self-promotion.
You
know
what
I
mean,
but
it's
valuable
it's
important,
because
nobody,
you
build
something
so
amazing
and
like
I,
didn't
know
how
amazing
it
was
until
you
came
on
this
screen.
So
things
like
this
are
helpful
in
gaining
more
contributors
and
gaining
more
sponsors
and
gaining
more
users,
because
now
some
people
watch
the
stream
and
maybe
they'll
tweet
about
it.
A
They'll,
try
it
out
whatever
and
yeah
good
good
first
step.
Thank
you
for
saying
yes
to
my
DM,
obviously
a
short
short
notice.
Yeah
people
said
fire
to
formidable
or
they
give
a
fire
Emoji.
Somebody
said
wow
I,
think
when
you
were
presenting
so
like
people
are
really
really
impressed
by
this
I'll
transition
into
some
of
the
non-technical
questions.
A
If
nobody
in
the
audience,
oh
actually
one
person
did
someone
said
this
Frameworks
Works
in
a
use
case
for
creating
an
API
that
can
maintain
scalability
and
be
simple
to
add
features
and
solve
bugs
like
going
from
100
users
to
I,
mean
I.
Guess
that's
a
thousand
and
then
or
ten
thousand
in
little
time
without
breaking
the
app
I.
Think
they're
asking
is
this
framework
scalable.
B
Been
battle
tested
to
the
fullest
yeah,
the
half
you
guys
using
it
and
I
mean
we're
just
checking
off.
If
it
works
is
expected,
is
it
breaking
you
know?
Are
they
are
the
issues
and
whatnot?
So
at
the
moment
you
know
it's
still
it
beta.
So
don't
expect
it
to
work
100,
so
yeah
I'm
installing
issues
and
still
fixing
a
couple
of
bugs
so
yeah.
It's
still
still
yet
to
see.
Yeah.
A
A
Open
the
issue,
if
it
works,
if
it
does
or
if
it
doesn't
someone
said,
go
router
with
flutter
uses
that
similar
name
model
that
you
showed
us
earlier
and
then
someone
mentioned
that
they
have
a
node.js
framework
called
Athena
or
Athena,
which
is
based
in
lateral,
too
I'd
love
to
Victor
reach
out
to
me,
I'd
love
to
to
highlight
your
project.
A
B
Selfie
selfie
Poland
dolphy
yeah,
yeah
yeah.
This.
A
A
B
It's
it
was
created
by
the
same
guy
who
created
c-sharp
I.
Think
I
could
be
wrong.
A
No
I
love
to
hear
new
new
languages
on
here,
because
a
lot
of
times
people
say
like
Q
basic
or
some
like
you
know
some
other
language
that
starts
basic
and
my
mine
was
sequel
for
some
random
reason.
I
think
I
was
like
trying
to
learn
to
code
and
then
I'll
sequel,
popped
up
and
I
was
like.
Okay,
I'll
learn
that,
but.
B
A
B
That's
a
very
odd
first
language
to
try
out
yeah.
A
B
A
Like
I
think
you
know,
we
live
in
a
capitalist
world
where
it's
like.
Oh
we
gotta
work
and
stuff
like
that,
and
we
forget
about
that.
I
want
to
highlight
this
comment
from
Deshawn.
That
said,
awesome
DeSean
was
the
the
last
guest
right
before
you
so
happy
that
he
got
to
come
through
and
check
this
out.
Another
question
for
you
maybe
formidable
JS
is
the
answer
to
this,
but
I
don't
know
what
it's
a
dream:
open
source
project
that
you
would
like
to
create
one
day.
B
I
think
I've
created
it
already.
I
mean
it's
not
open
source
yet
but
I
think
if
I
change
my
mind
in
the
future,
it
would
be
the
dream
project-
yeah,
probably
Luna,
ql
yeah
can't.
A
B
Hey
it's
a
it's,
a
no
SQL
database
that
lives
on
the
edge.
Okay,
yeah!
That's
that's!
Basically,
it's.
A
B
Driven
nosql
database
that
lives
on
the
edge.
A
Sounds
exciting,
I
love
that
okay
last
two
questions,
the
word
gif,
do
you
say
I,
don't
want
to
say
how
I
say
it?
Do
you
use
a
heart
attack.
B
B
I,
don't
have
a
favorite,
but
the
recent
I
think
the
reason
that
I
listened
to
was
friends
where
she's
got
Jay-Z
on
it.
Yeah.
A
B
A
Soon,
as
he
said,
it,
I
was
like
oh
yeah,
yeah,
that
someone
said
that's
a
banger
yup
and
then
someone
talked
about
your
lunar
ql.
They
said
awesome.
Database
project
would
love
to
get
more
info.
Maybe
when
maybe,
if
he
open
sources
it,
we
can
have
him
back
on
yeah
awesome
awesome.
Are
there
any
I
didn't
ask
to
Sean
this,
but
he
ended
up
I,
guess
saying
it:
are
there
any
things
you
want
to
promote
or
or
tell
people
to
check
out
or
follow
you
on
or
anything.
B
Just
follow
me
on
Twitter,
it's
Donald
pahis
and
you
can
follow
me
on
GitHub
results.
Donald
P,
yeah,
that's
that's!
That's
it!
Let.
A
A
My
computer
doesn't
like
that.
I've
been
streaming
this
song,
but
y'all
follow
him
on
Twitter
I
already
showed
you,
the
the
GitHub
link
as
well,
which
is
github.com
formidablejs,
definitely
give
it
a
star.
Definitely
try
it
out
yeah,
it
sounds
it's
like
a
really
beefed
out.
Project
I
was
expecting
like
because
I
hadn't
heard
of
it
before
I
was
like
it's
probably
super
early
stage.
That's
okay
like
let's
see
what
what
like
he's
starting
to
build
out
and
what
he's
planning,
but
no
you
have
it
like
full.
B
Week,
yeah
there's
a
lot
of
things
you
can
do
with
it.
Yeah,
it's
just
just
a
lot.
You
know
people
just
need
to
try
it
out
how.
A
A
Yeah
appreciate
it
so
much
all
right,
y'all,
thank
you
for
to
the
audience
for
for
stopping
by
and
watching,
especially
for
watching
both
parts
of
the
the
chat
I
had
a
part,
one
in
part.
Two
so
I
think
appreciate
those
who
maybe
either
just
stopped
in
or
have
been
watching
the
whole
time.
I'll
see
y'all
next
Friday
and
bye
foreign.