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A
Hello,
everyone
and
welcome
to
the
conference-
oh
my
goodness,
I'm,
so
glad
that
we
were
able
to
do
this
even
with
the
whole
pandemic
thing
happening
here.
I
I
know
that
this
is
not
the
ideal
conditions
for
some
kind
of
technical
event,
but
I'm
still
glad
that
we're
able
to
have
it
together.
That
being
said,
I
wanted
to
talk
a
little
bit
more
about
technical
communities
today,
because
this
is
something
that
I
often
don't
normally
talk
about.
A
I,
don't
normally
give
very
technical
talks,
but
I
think
this
is
something
that's
really
important
for
developers
and
non
developers
to
know
about
talk
about
and
just
understand
and
really
realize
the
value
of
what
a
community
can
bring.
So
that
being
said,
a
little
introduction
I'm
going
to
get
my
computer
set
up
here.
My
name
is
Cassidy
Williams.
You
can
find
me
at
casa.
Do
for
most
platforms,
not
Instagram,
because
sadly
a
teenager
took
that
from
me,
but
you'll
you'll
find
me.
Casa
do
feel
free
to
reach
out
anytime
and
I
am
a
principal
developer.
A
Experience
engineer
at
nullify
and
my
job
is
so
fun.
I
haven't
been
there
very
long,
but
I
really
love
just
being
able
to
interact
with
developers.
A
lot
speak
at
events
like
this
one
write,
blog
posts
and
demos
and
stuff
for
people
to
build
with
and,
of
course,
just
work
on
that
will
file
together.
It's
a
really
great
team
to
be
a
part
of
that
being
said,
I
haven't
actually
been
at
notify
for
very
long.
A
This
is
something
that's
that's
a
relatively
new
role
at
the
time
I've
recorded
this
I
think
I
just
hit
my
two-month
mark.
That
being
said,
I've
been
around
a
few
different
companies,
as
you
can
see
her
on
the
slide
there.
There
are
quite
a
few
companies
that
have
hopped
around
to
I.
First
started
it
out
of
college
at
venmo
and
went
from
venmo
over
to
clarify,
went
from
clarify
Dell
for
digital,
then
to
Amazon
that
Ducote
pendin
to
react,
training
and
to
nullify,
and
all
of
these
places
were
awesome.
A
I
ended
up
switching
over
to
clarify
and
I
clarify
I
was
doing
developer.
Relations
was
loving.
It
was
working
on
the
website
of
things
and
had
just
an
awesome
time.
Working
on
that
team
and
then
kind
of
to
my
surprise,
I
was
really
tired
of
living
in
New,
York
City,
and
it
was
a
great
place
to
be
in,
but
I
was
ready
to
try
something
new
and
so
I
ended
up
packing.
A
My
bags
and
left
clarify
to
go
off
to
Seattle
and
work
at
a
company
called
L
for
digital
l,
for
digital
was
a
creative
agency
that
was
so
fun
to
work.
For
we
had
a
laser
cutter
in
the
office
and
and
got
to
play
around
with
3d
printers
and
also
just
work
with
some
really
interesting
clients
and
I
loved
kind
of
doing
that
creative
side
of
coding
and
I
was
doing
some
engineering
management
work
as
well
and
as
much
as
I
loved
that
they
were
bought.
A
I
was
part
of
another
acquisition
and,
unfortunately,
with
the
company
that
bought
it,
l4
is
no
more.
It
was
absorbed
into
this
big
company
and
and
I
decided.
You
know
with
all
the
changes
that
they're
making
I
guess
it's
time
for
me
to
move
on
to
another
role,
then
I
went
on
to
Amazon
and
with
Amazon
I
worked
on
Alexa
I.
Don't
want
my
device
to
wake
up
in
here
and
as
as
fun
as
it
was
to
work
on
that
team.
A
You
know
she
woke
up
anyway
as
fun
as
it
was
to
work
on
that
team
and
I
got
to
work
with
my
sister
as
well,
which
was
always
great
to
be
able
to
do.
It
didn't
really
fit
well
with
me.
I
realized
that
I
didn't
like
big
companies
and
with
some
culture
shifts
and
in
the
company
I
just
decided
that
Amazon
wasn't
for
me
and
so
I
switched
over
to
code
pen.
The
code
pen
team
is
awesome.
It's
pretty
much
the
exact
opposite
of
Amazon
size-wise.
A
It
was
only
eight
people
and
I
loved
just
doing
straight
engineering
work,
building
some
awesome
tools
at
code,
pen
and
and
loved
it,
and
then
with
that
I
was
realizing.
Okay
as
much
as
I
love,
coding,
I,
kind
of
love,
speaking
to
I,
love
being
with
developers
and
interacting
with
them
more
and
as
much
as
I
loved
code
pen.
This
was
something
that
I
really
wanted
to
be
a
part
of,
and
so
I
ended
up.
A
Switching
over
to
react,
training
react,
training,
awesome,
company,
I
was
going
to
speak
at
conferences
and
give
workshops
and
go
to
events.
Pretty
constantly
I
was
traveling
all
the
time.
I
traveled
more
than
three
times
a
month,
often
and
don't
get
me
wrong,
I
loved
it,
but
it
was.
It
was
a
lot
of
traveling
and
a
lot
of
teaching
and
I
really
loved,
being
able
to
interact
with
developers
and
then
coronavirus
hit
and
unfortunately
react
training.
A
They
had
to
lay
off
all
staff
and
it's
something
that
we
didn't
expect,
but
it's
something
that
had
to
be
done
and
after
doing
some
rapid
interviewing
and
reaching
out
to
the
network.
That's
how
I
ended
up
at
natla,
Phi
and
I'm
doing
again
developer
experience
engineering
here,
which
is
part
of
the
dev
rel
umbrella,
with
a
little
more
coding
here
and
there
and
and
I
absolutely
love
it.
All.
A
Switching
companies
I've
never
planned
on
going
into
a
company,
saying
okay
I'm
going
to
be
here
for
a
year
and
then
I'll
switch
I've
never
wanted
to
leave
a
place,
and-
and
this
is
something
that
just
happens-
factors
outside
of
your
control
can
suddenly
topple
your
career
plans
at
a
moment's
notice,
and
this
is
especially
true
for
everyone
now,
because
of
that
pandemic.
This
is
this
is
something
that
really
a
lot
of
people
right
now
are
realizing,
because
you
don't
know
if
your
job
will
be
at
risk.
A
A
Think
that
this
quote
is
very,
very
powerful
because
it
really
emphasizes
the
importance
of
people
oftentimes
when
we
are
working
on
such
technical
projects
and
coding
day
in
and
day
out,
it's
sometimes
easy
to
forget
the
human
side
of
things,
and
it's
it's
sometimes
easy
to
forget
the
communication
that
you
have
to
have
those
people,
the
the
relationships
that
you
have
to
build.
Those
people-
and
this
is
this-
is
really
the
core
of
what
I
want
to
talk
about
today
is
being
a
part
of
your
community.
A
You
should
really
embrace
your
community
throughout
my
career
of
highs
and
lows.
Wanting
to
learn
and
grow.
I've
really
learned
that
a
community
is
the
thing
that
will
keep
me
around
in
the
industry
as
a
whole,
whether
whether
you
are
in
tech
or
in
some
other
industry
this.
This
could
really
apply
to
all
sorts
of
things.
If
you
have
a
community
that
is
around
you
that
will
stick
around
and
a
community
that
supports
you,
you
are
more
likely
to
stay
in
that
industry
and
threw
him
out
throughout
my
career.
A
Just
in
this
past
this
past
season
of
the
pandemic,
one
react.
Training
fell
through.
My
network
is
what
helps
me
get
interviews
when
I
was
moving
from
New
York
to
Seattle.
I
was
nervous
because
I
didn't
know
anybody
in
Seattle,
but
I
knew
people
who
knew
people
in
Seattle.
It's
it's
something
that
people
don't
often
consider
when
they're
trying
to
move
up
the
career
ladder
and
trying
to
be
the
best
technical
person
that
they
can
be.
We
kind
of
just
focus
on
the
code.
A
We
try
to
just
learn
as
much
as
we
can
and
and
build
as
much
as
we
can,
and
that
being
said,
the
best
way
to
learn-
and
my
humble
opinion
is
to
teach
your
community-
it's
not
just
about
being
a
part
of
a
community
and
shouting
around
and
saying
oh
I'm.
Here
it's
about
teaching
and
giving
back
to.
They
do
say
that
the
best
way
to
learn
is
to
teach,
and
a
few
years
ago,
personally,
I
decided
to
make
my
first
online
class
for
beginner
web
dev.
A
Why
I
used
it
before
just
by
making
this
course
for
other
people,
and
it
really
kind
of
opened
my
eyes
to
how
much
you
can
learn
by
teaching
and
since
then
I've
taught
a
few
other
online
courses
and,
of
course,
I
worked
at
react.
Training
I
was
teaching
courses
in
person
and
online
and
when
you
teach
when
you
show
people
how
to
do
something,
you
understand
a
topic
that
much
deeper.
So,
yes,
you
can
say:
oh
I
have
no
time
for
people.
I
have
no
time
for
building
friendships
in
the
office.
A
I
have
no
time
for
building
out
a
network.
I
want
to
build
my
apps,
but
really
when
you
teach
your
community
when
you
work
on
things
that
can
be
shared
with
others.
This
is
something
that
can
teach
you
deeper
than
you
could
ever
imagine.
The
whole
concept
of
learning
in
public
is
really
really
important.
A
Another
thing
that
I
started
doing
was
I
started
a
technical
newsletter
that
I've
been
sending
it's
hard
to
believe
almost
three
years
now,
where
I've
just
been
sending
technical
interview
questions
every
single
week,
where
others
can
practice
interview,
questions
and
I
can
practice
them
too,
and
we
can
learn
from
each
other
to
see
how
people
solve
different
things,
and
it
has
different
web
dev
articles
and
stuff
I
promise.
This
isn't
meant
to
be
a
shameless
plug.
This
is
just
something
that
I've
done
where
it
started
as
a
thing
where
I
was
like.
A
That
kind
of
forces
me
to
read
those
articles
and
to
understand
the
content
of
those
articles
and
learn
the
contents
much
much
better.
They.
There
are
so
many
different
things
that
you
can
do
to
kind
of
pay
it
forward
into
your
community.
That
will
teach
you
so
much
better
and
it's
all
about
kind
of
giving
and
taking
there's
this
great
quote
by
Erin
Newkirk
she's,
the
CMO
over
at
local
crate.
A
I,
don't
know
if
any
of
you
have
seen
Parks
and
Rec
that
it's
such
a
funny
show,
but
there's
there's
a
scene
with
Leslie
Knope,
where
she
is
trying
to
plan
for
a
festival
and
they
need
they
need
the
police
department
to
be
able
to
provide
security
at
this
festival
and
they
keep
almost
asking
favors
and
they
keep
kind
of
holding
back
and
and
never
actually
asking
a
favor
and
then
eventually
another
character.
Ben
goes
and
asks
the
favor
for
her
and
says:
hey.
A
Would
you
be
able
to
do
this
and
the
police
chief
said
you
know
for
Leslie
Knope?
Yes,
she
gets
whatever
favors
she
wants
and
when
Ben
asks
why
he
says,
because
for
Leslie
Knope
she's
doing
these
she's
asking
these
favors
for
other
people,
she's
asking
not
from
a
selfish
perspective
but
to
to
help
things,
and
that's
not
to
say
that
you
should
never
be
selfish,
of
course,
but
to
have
that
sort
of
attitude
to
be
a
giver
first
and
not
a
taker.
A
First
is
really
really
key,
often
when
people
network
with
others,
whether
you're
at
an
event
online
or
offline
or
you're,
even
emailing
or
interacting
with
Twitter.
They
immediately
think
how
can
I
get
the
most
out
of
this
relationship
and
you
can
kind
of
tell
that
right
away
this.
This
kind
of
this
kind
of
attitude
leads
to
really
awkward
mentorship
proposals.
Side.
A
Don't
do
that,
don't
just
go
up
to
a
person
and
say:
will
you
be
my
mentor
as
I'm
sure
that
that
has
worked
for
some
people,
but
it
doesn't
really
foster
a
relationship.
It's
just
saying:
hey.
Will
you
be
my
mentor?
Here's
a
series
of
questions
you
can
its
robotic.
You
can
gauge
my
progress
over
time.
I!
Hope
you
get
something
out
of
this
like
I.
A
Will
it's
that's
something
that
you
don't
want
to
do
it
being
someone
who
is
a
taker
first,
it
leads
to
unrealistic
asks
and
honestly,
eventually,
people
start
kind
of
screamin
your
emails
and
calls
because
they
know
that
you're,
the
kind
of
person
who
will
always
ask
things
and
never
give
back.
You
don't
want
people
to
even
have
the
slightest
bit
of
dread
when
they
see
a
message
from
you.
This
also
goes
out
to
you.
Managers
out
there.
You
don't
want
to
be
that
person
that
says:
hey.
A
Can
you
talk
and
then
gives
no
context
for
the
meeting
and
give
someone
stress
for
the
rest
of
the
day.
You
always
want
to
be
the
person
where,
when
people
see
a
message
from
you,
they're
enthusiastic
about
what
you
might
be
asking,
whether
it's
a
give
or
a
take,
you
want
to
be.
The
person
that
passes
along
job
leads
shares.
Information
connects
with
others,
connects
others
together
and
helps
people
grow.
A
You
want
to
be
the
person
where,
when
people
hear
from
you
they're
delighted
to
hear
from
you,
because
it
has
something
to
do
with
the
community
and
if
you
are
doing
and
ask
where
it
might
be,
for
your
personal
self
they're
happy
to
ask
to
give
to
that,
ask
because
you're,
the
one
who
has
given
first
and
I
don't
want
people
to
step
all
over
you.
This
isn't
the
kind
of
thing
where
you
should
say.
A
Yes
to
absolutely
everything
and
just
kind
of
let
people
ask
you
for
unrealistic
things,
be
discerning
and
be
rational
about
what
you
accept,
but
be
as
much
of
a
giver
as
you
can,
because
that
is
what
a
community
is
about.
A
community
is
a
give
and
take,
and
if
you
only
take
that's,
not
community
building,
that's
just
building
yourself
for
what?
If
again,
when
plans
aren't
real
and
you're
kind
of
only
taking
things
for
yourself
if
your
job
falls
through,
if
a
pandemic
happens,
if
the
unthinkable
happens,
you
want
people
to
be
there.
A
Who
can
be
your
support
and
you
get
that
support
because
you
support
the
community
first.
So
all
this
being
said
be
the
community
member
you
want
to
see
in
the
world
as
cheesy
as
the
quote
sounds
being
able
to
teach
others
to
give
technically.
So
that
way,
you
can
learn
technically
to
be
the
person
that
fosters
a
community
where
people
want
to
say.
Oh
I
bet
that
they'd
be
interested
in
this
technical
project
or
oh
I,
bet
that
they
would
enjoy
this
and
being
the
person
that
people.
A
Think
of
because
you
have
already
thought
of
them-
is
such
a
rewarding
thing
and
it's
something
that
fosters
a
wonderful
community
that
people
want
to
be
a
part
of
and
that
people
grow.
You
want
to
be
able
to
lift
as
you
climb,
where,
as
you
move
up
in
your
career
ladder
and
and
in
a
given
community,
you
want
to
help
people
grow
along
with
you.
So
that
way,
there's
always
room
for
more
and
people
are
always
paying
it
forward.
A
So
that
being
said,
I
want
to
thank
you
so
much
for
coming
today
for
having
me
this
is.
This
is
one
of
those
events
that
I'm
so
proud
to
be
a
part
of
and
I'm
so
glad
that
I
was
able
to
share
this
time
with
you
and
be
amongst
so
many
other
amazing
speakers
and
thank
you
so
much
I
hope
to
see
you
on
the
Internet.