►
From YouTube: YUI In the Wild #3 Jon Tsai and Talentral
Description
Our weekly YUI Open Roundtable, featuring news and interviews from the YUI Community.
A
A
Team
and
jonathan
scythe
from
teletron
I
want
to
thank
you
very
much
for
taking
some
time
out
to
come
chat
with
us,
and
we
have
you
on
screen
as
well.
You'll
be
able
to
share
your
screen
any
time
to
talk
about
stuff
that
you
came
to
chat
with
us
about
before
we
do.
That,
though,
do
we
have
any
sort
of
pressing
news
or
anything
we
want
to
bring
up
first
or
shall
we
cover
that
later,
because
really,
the.
C
Sure
off
at
the
end,
not
much
just
welcome
back
and
hope
everyone
had
like
a
great
new
year
yeah.
I
encourage.
A
You
guys
we're
sorry
for
the
delay
for
the
the
yy
comp
videos
they're
all
ready
to
go.
They're
queued
up.
We've
got
the
first
one
at
yesterday.
Yours
will
be
there
at
some
point
in
time,
I'm
basically
broadcasting
them
in
the
order
that
they
went
through
the
conference.
So
you
get
sort
of
a
sense
of
the
the
flow
and
we
also
have
a
transcriber
who
will
go
and
add
transcription
scripts
to
each
of
those.
So
if
you
have
any
accessibility
issues,
you
would
still
be
able
to
see
them.
A
So,
oh
nice,
so
outside
of
that,
I
don't
have
anything
new,
except
everyone
will
be
back
pretty
much
next
week,
like
we
store
sort
of
at
half
staff
right
now
and
then
we'll.
There
was
a
comment
on
the
everything
else
discussion
group
about
the
future
yui,
and
I
just
wanted
to
mention
that
once
everyone
comes
back
and
we
talk
about
goals
and
stuff,
we'll
be
able
to
come
up
with
a
blog
post
that
will
sort
of
feature
the
things
that
we.
C
B
Yeah
so
my
name
is
jonathan,
and
currently
I'm
the
co-founder
and
cto
of
a
startup
called
talent,
troll
and
we're
our
first
product
was
a
career
management
platform
kind
of
like
an
online
portfolio
management
tool.
B
So
I'm
currently
showing
my
screen
talent,
troll.
It's
a
portmanteau
of
talent,
central,
so
our
first
product
is
a
portfolio
management
platform.
So
we
recently
did
our.
B
So
it's
think
of
it
like
a
resume
where
you
can
have
expandable
and
collapsible
elements
and
like
a
lot
of
drill
down.
So
as
I
mentioned,
I
guess
this
is
a
way
to
kind
of
go.
Through
my
background,
I
used
to
be
a
back
end,
engineer
and
local
paranoid
for
yahoo
fantasy
sports.
B
So
I
guess
I
consider
myself
a
generalist
or
more
of
a
back-end
engineer,
but
it's
interesting
that
I'm
here
talking
about
yui
and
it
really
is
a
testament
to
how
good
of
a
tool
that
the
y
I
team
has
put
together,
and
I
I
use
yui
not
because
I'm
I'm
a
former
yahoo,
but
when
I
did
an
evaluation
of
just
the
front-end
libraries
available
out
there.
I
deliberately
found
that
you
know
yui
is
the
best
for
my
needs
and
the
way
that
I
think
the
way
that
I
like
to
approach.
B
Things
is
from
just
a
very
engineering-centric
approach.
In
terms
of
things.
I
value
are
rapid
development
time,
scalability
robustness,
at
least
in
my
in
in
most
of
my
development
experience.
B
The
bottleneck
is,
I
guess,
like
humans
and
finding
people
scaling
up
your
team
and
finding
a
platform.
A
front-end
framework
that
people
can
wrap
quickly,
learn
and
do
things
with,
and
you
can
structure
your
code
with.
Yes,.
C
Cool,
so
can
you
walk
us
through,
like
a
demo
of
talent
role
like
can
you
show,
I
see
it
looks
like
you
have
a
lot
of
like
interactivity
going
on
right
now
on
your
site.
So
can
you
show
us
like
how
some
of
the
features
there.
B
Right,
so
this
is
the
profile
and
I'll
just
call
out.
I
guess
the
the
so
here
you
see
in
in
my
expertise
and
accomplishment
sections
you
can
drill
down
and
and
attach
images
and
whatnot,
and
this
is
using
the
yui
panel
every
event
I'm
I'm
doing
here
is
using
the
yui
event
library
using
delegate.
I
made
everything:
listen
for
the
top
event,
which
I
learned
at
the
yui
conf.
B
Instead
of
the
click
event,
so
our
our
website
isn't
responsive
yet
we're
in
the
process
of
making
our
website
entire
website
mobile,
responsive,
but
using
the
listening
for
the
top
event
makes
it
work
pretty
well
for
mobile
devices
as
well.
So
this
is
kind
of
like
the
profile
view
page.
We
also
have
a
profile
manage
page
where
you
can
edit
your
profile
and
it's
kind
of
like
a
inline
editor.
A
B
Here
we're
doing,
we
have
templates,
we,
we
have
javascript
templates
that
are
in
text,
slash
x,
template
types
in
script,
tags
that
we
convert
html
to
a
form
and
back
and
then
we're
doing.
B
Yeah:
okay,
because
we
we
still
have
we,
we
have
a
good
amount
of
users
who
aren't
on
html5
or,
like
the
latest
browsers,
so
we've
yeah
that
was
kind
of
like
a
design
decision.
Do
you
have.
A
B
Yeah
so
kind
of
a
pain,
but
again
that's
why
yui
is
the
tool
of
choice,
because
I
have
to
I
just
for
most
of
the
things.
I
just
write
my
code
once
and
let
you
I
take
care
of
the
rest.
C
So
you're
using
you're
uploading
like
a
lot
of
different
like
media
and
content
over
to
your
site.
So
are
you
using
any
features
in
your
way
to
help
you
do
that?
But
how
are
you
like
handling
like
uploading,
like
different
images
or
different
content?
How
are
you
taking
doing
that.
B
Guys
using
on
the
back
end,
oh
so
our
back
end
is
django
and
we
pretty
much
have
web
services
like
api
endpoints
that
you
can
call
sort
of
restful
more
or
less.
B
Yeah,
let
me
think
about
that
for
a
second
in
terms
of
deploy,
I
know
we're
using
jenkins.
I
wrote
a
jenkins
script
and
we're
using
fabric
fabric
is,
is
a
python
tool
kind
of
like
chef,
but
a
lot
more
lightweight,
so
we
have
a
bunch
of
fabric
tasks.
B
This
is
fabric
that
will,
let's
see,
we
click
a
button
in
jenkins
that
calls
the
fabric
test
to
do
the
actual
deploy
at
this
point
we're
basically
doing
a
github
update
into
a
deploy
user
on
the
on
the
production
machines
and
then
just
restarting
the
web
server.
C
See
so
do
you
do
anything
like
unique
with
yui?
In
that
case,
I
know
if
django
like
there's
like
a
way
that
I
can
collect
all
of
your
like
static
files
and
then
deploy
them
like
immediately
onto
like
a
cn
or
something
like
that.
Currently.
B
Yeah,
I
think
that
what
you're
talking
about
is
the
collect
static
for,
like
you
can
break
your
django
has
like
different
apps
and
you
can
have
collect
all
of
that
into
yeah
until
you
have
a
single
yeah.
B
Right
now
we're
just
serving
all
of
our
static
content
from
the
same
web:
server,
cool
yeah.
Are
you
using
like
amazon
web
services
or
like
what
are
you
using
for
the
hosting
yeah
we're
we're
using
for
we're
using
amazon
web
services?
So
we
probably
have
around
10
10-ish
ec2
instances
and
some
are
general
web
purposed
as
general
web
services
web
servers.
Some
are
redis
cache
instances.
Some
are
mysql
databases
and
those
are
pretty
much.
The
three
main
flavors
for
our
production
web
stack.
B
We
haven't
really
looked
into
the
app
framework
we
we've
built
several
modules
on
top
of.
Let
me
see
if
I
can.
We
built
several
modules
on
top
of
yui.
B
Our
team
is
two
people,
so
me
and
myself,
myself
and
another
engineer
wasn't
able
to
make
it
today
named
william.
B
So,
in
terms
of
like
code
structure
like
what
I
like
to
do
is
what
we
do
is
we
keep
a
file
in
our
directory
called
skeleton.js
that
essentially
up
at
the
top?
I
don't
know
if
this
is
we
do
you
know
import
your
basic
node
and
event.
B
I
think
you
pretty
much
get
those
for
free.
I
don't
know
you
have
to
bring
them
in.
You
have
to
bring
it
yeah
anyway,
and
and
basically
we
basically
use
this
as
a
as
a
template
for
all
of
our
javascripts,
and
then
I
guess
I
don't
need
to
necessarily
go
into
explaining
that
structure.
C
A
B
I
mean
we
we've
written
a
couple
of
of
custom
utils
that
I
think
the
bar
we
we've
been
wanting
to
basically
contribute
this
back
to
the
yui
library
or
gallery,
but
I
think
the
bot,
the
bar
for
like
open
source's
code,
is
like
pretty
high
and
so
yeah.
It's
pretty
specific
to
your
products
right
now,
right
yeah,
and
so
I
mean
what.
A
B
Well,
our
code
needs
to.
We
have
a
couple
places
where
we
want
to
decouple
like
talent,
specific
stuff
within
our
code,
so
that
I
don't
know
if
this
is
a
good
example,
but.
B
But
yeah
I
mean
it's:
it's
almost
there
like
we're,
we're
doing
the
yui
dot
ad
to
create
our
own
module
up
here,
and
I
think
we
just
need
to
clean
up
a
couple
things.
Do
you
have
your
your
source
out
there
like
on
github
or
something
now
or
is
it
closed
source
right
now?
It's
closed
source
where
we
want
to
make
it
open
source
as
soon
as
possible,
realizing
the
kind
of
the
delay
and
kind
of
like
repackaging.
B
I
I
actually
use
like
the
same
formula
for
a
bunch
of
my
projects,
django
for
the
back
end
and
amazon
web
services,
so
I
actually
started
kind
of
like
an
independent,
open
source
project
called
hack
toolkit
that
you
can
follow
at
packtoolkit.com
and
I'm
putting
together
a
django
example
that,
like
a
like
a
skeletango
skeleton
right
now,.
B
A
B
And
yeah,
if
you,
I
guess,
if
you
look
at
the
hack
tool
kit,
there's
a
bunch
of
hack
tool
gets
them.
I
mean
it's
kind
of
like
a
main,
the
main
project
that
has
a
lot
of
what
are
they
called
kind
of
like
remote
references
to
oh,
like
get
some
models,
yeah
sub
mod?
Yes,
that's
right,
yeah,
sub
modules
for
web
apps,
so
I've
kind
of
like
built
a
bunch
of
like
these,
like
hack
tool
kits
or
like
skeletons
like
using
jekyll
and
like
these
kind
of
like.
A
You
could
throw
this
into
yeoman
or
something
and
you'd
be
able
to
build,
like
potentially
none
of
that,
but
something
like
that,
where
you
could
just
drop
these
in
and
start
yeah
cool
so
is,
is
how
what
kind
of
overlap
is
there
between
the
hack
toolkit
and
the
source
code
of
the
lunchroom?
Are
you
like
moving
things
into
hack
toolkit?
Are
they
just
sort
of
separate
entities.
B
There's
there's
kind
of
some
overlap
and
some
separate
things.
There's
a
I
mean,
there's
a
lot
of
like
common
stuff
for
like
django
stuff,
like
user
accounts
and
authentication,
because
django
comes
with.
For
example,
django
comes
with
like
a
username
as
a
primary
key
and
then
a
lot
of
my
projects.
I
like
to
allow
users
to
associate
emails
as
kind
of
like
the
email,
because
people
don't
forget
their
emails
and
and
allow
you
to
associate
multiple
emails,
so
I've
and
a
bunch
of
middleware.
B
It's
like
they're
kind
of
like
request,
free
processors
that
I've
written-
and
these
are
all
part
of
hack
toolkit.
B
Or
there's
there's
a
little
bit
of
both
one
of
the
things
I
wrote.
Let's
see
where
the
middleware
is
well,
at
least
it's
it's
currently
intellectual,
but.
B
B
B
If
the
browser
is
internet
explorer
because
we
do
a
lot
of
on
our
site,
we
do
a
lot
of
the
kind
of
ajax
ajaxi
interaction
right.
A
B
C
B
That's
definitely
within
the
possibility,
but
not
currently
on
our
roadmap,
uh-huh
yeah.
One
thing
I
could
see.
A
Using
this
I
mean,
since
it's
there
is
coming
up
with
a
mobile
version
of
the
site
that
may
be
more
mobile-centric
like
maybe
even
like
a
mobile
web
app
yeah.
We
could
use
the
same
api
so
that
you
could
keep
the
whole
the
main
website.
You
know
you
said
it's
still
not
responsive
yet,
but
maybe
you
can
sort
of
like,
instead
of
like
trying
to
migrate
it
like
just
start
fresh
from
like
a
mobile
side.
Maybe.
B
B
You
guys
are
probably
familiar
with
discuss
like
the
online
forums
or
comment
software,
and
so
we
kind
of
want
to
do
the
same
thing
like
kind
of
like
an
embeddable
javascript
widget,
allow
you
that
would
allow
you
to
kind
of
like
copy
and
paste
some
code
and
be
able
to
view
your
talent
profile
or
portions
of
it
anywhere
yeah.
It's
like
an.
B
C
B
Yeah,
I
don't
know
if
we
pretty
much
have
we're
old
school
and
we
just
use
a
makefile
and
we
have
a
make
target
to
compile
which
actually
compiles
our
css.
Nothing
else
really
needs
to
be
compiled.
But
if
you
look.
B
It's
pretty
much
just
looking
through.
You
know,
a
shell
script
that
looks
through
my
less
files
and
then
compiles
them
into
css
files.
C
Cool
yeah,
I
mean
what
about
like
any
other
libraries
like.
Do
you
guys?
Are
you
guys
using
any
other
libraries
with
yui
and,
like
you
know,
jquery
or
something
like
that
or.
B
No
currently
we're
not
and
yeah
we're
not.
You
know:
css
like
css
we're
using
pure,
oh
cool.
C
B
Now,
I
think
about
it,
I'm
not
sure
if
we're
using
a
lot
of
pure
right
now
we're
still
on
fonts
grids
for
the
majority
of
tantral.
I
think
for
some
of
our
internal
admin
tools
we've
moved
to
pure,
because
we
pretty
much.
A
B
We
try
to
keep
up
to
date
on
the
newest
versions,
as
you
guys,
we
follow
the
blog.
So
whenever
a
new
version
of
yui
and
girl
come
out,
we
try
to
get
on
it.
I
think
we've,
I
don't
think
we've
we
might
have
had
one
backward
compatibility
issue,
one
time
but
yeah
generally,
we
have
this
really
cool
tool
that
use
it's
real
time:
error,
tracking
roll
bar
that
it's
it's
a
it's
a
piece
of
javascript
that
you
can
stick
in
on
on
your
javascript
and
also
on
your
back
end.
B
B
But
oh,
this
is
actually
a
problem.
We
get
a
lot.
I
don't
know
what
the
deal
with
this
is
actually,
but
we
have,
you
know,
allows
us
to
see
how
many
occurrences
we
get
and
usually
what
we
do
is
just
throw
up.
You
know
release
the
new
yui
under
production.
If
we
get
errors
like
a
lot
of
errors,
then
we
figure
that
okay
there's
something
broken
in
our
code,
but
other
times
we
get
funny
errors
like
this,
where
it'll
say
yui
is
not
defined,
and
actually
it's
it's
been.
A
A
B
No,
I'm
not
sure,
because
sometimes
why,
like
we're
using
y
ui
from
the
cdn
and
and
just
occasionally
we're
seeing
those.
B
B
B
C
B
A
B
B
We
do
we
do
we
do
stage
before,
but
only
we're
hitting
it
because
yeah
these
errors
aren't
like,
because
they're
I
only
look
into
the
errors
that
are
happening
consistently
and
I've.
Historically,
I've
just
dismissed,
like
the
one-off
errors,.
C
C
Accessing
the
site
and
their
browsers
are
set
to
a
different
language.
So
that's.
C
Errors
might
be
in
like
one
language
or
another,
it
sounds
like
default.
Language
is
french
and
I
think
the
javascript
there
is
no
gel
right,
so
they
might
actually
be
the
same
error
just
like,
because
I
guess
like
the
service,
I
read
right
because
the
because
the
roll
bar
is
just
throwing
it
right
back
up
the
server
right.
It's
just
capturing
whatever.
A
B
B
C
Users
from
china
actually
like
this
is
a
side
note
but
like
some
chinese
browsers
are
really
interesting.
They'll
show
like
ie
user
agents
and
they
have,
but
they
contain
like
two
like
javascript
engines
right
right,
they'll
have
like
the
gecko
engine
plus
trident
yeah,
exactly
so
that
they
can
view
like
the
ie
sites
and
and
like
regular
sites
as
well.
B
A
So
yeah,
so
what's
your
process
for
like
so
you
say,
you've
got
a
new
new
feature
that
you
want
to
add.
What
do
you
sort
of
go
through
when
you
are
adding
that
to
this
site?
Do
you
have
like
sprints
or
do
you
deal
with
like,
for
instance,
like
say
that
there's
a
new
feature,
like
you
know,
we're
working
on
promises
and
why?
Why
do
you
you
know
investigate
those
things
and
potentially
add
them,
or
do
you
look
at
more
like
on
the
user
interface
side?
First,
like.
B
We
do
a
little
bit
of
everything
like
we're,
a
two-man
engineering
team,
so
we
we
try
to
do
sprints
one
week
sprints,
but
I
mean
our
priorities:
kind
of
change
like
day
to
day
at
times
since
we're
a
startup.
A
C
B
C
B
At
this
time
we
are
not
instrumented
for
a
b
testing.
Okay,
unfortunately,
do
you
do
any
ci
stuff,
like
continuous
integration,
we
have
a
suite
of
for
back
end
yeah.
We
have
unit
test
run
in
python
and
for
our
django,
but
we
don't
do
any
front
end
testing,
probably.
C
A
That
we'll
definitely
look
into
so
I
had
one
one
one
question
I
was
sort
of
at
the
very
beginning
like:
why
would
you
decide
to
choose
why?
Why?
Because
I
hear
a
lot
of
people
who
you
know,
there's
a
there's.
This
idea
that
people
who
know
about
yui
continue
to
use
yui
and
they're
kind
of
like
advocates
and
there's
like
this
core
of
people
right
and
then
there's
the
trick
is
to
like
get
get
that
you
know
expanding.
A
B
I
can't
say
that
I've
done
an
exhaustive,
you
know
search
or
comparison,
but
I
liked
how
yui
is
like
it's
a
one-stop
shop
for
the
most
part
like
when
I
wanted
to
do
like
xyz
or
an
animation
for
the
jquery.
It
kind
of
it's
kind
of
like
the
wild
west.
A
B
Not
it's
not
very
well
standardized
and
for
me,
I
feel
like
engineering
having
like
a
tightly
controlled
engineering
environment
is
important
for
me,
and
so
that's
why
I
choose
that's
one
of
the
reasons
why
I
chose
yui.
A
B
Thing
seamlessly,
and
also
just
the
way
that
the
way
that
things
are
expressed
consistently
there's
just
no
like
gotchas.
It's
like
a
very
consistent
syntax,
there's
no
right
when
you
come
across
some
new
feature.
It
works
kind
of
like
the
old
features
right,
yeah.
C
A
B
Yeah
not
sure
per
se,
because
I
remember
there
was
some
mention
at
the
yui
conf
that
you
guys
would
be
doing
something
different
with
the
gallery.
A
B
Right
now
I
find
it's
kind
of
like
the
case
with
a
lot
of
like
open
source
projects,
but
like
the
person
who
originated
the
module,
he's
the
only
one
who's
able
to
main
maintain
that
module
going
forward.
So
that's
kind
of
like
I
don't
know.
I
don't
know
of
a
way
to
an
efficient
way
to
to
work
around
that,
but
it'd
be
nice.
If
there
was
a
where
you
don't
have
one
gatekeeper
for
that
module.
So
one
thing
about
like
gallery.
A
Is
the
idea
that,
once
you
can
just
point
to
any
generic
github
repo
that
you
could
have
multiple
authors
for
that?
You
know
repo
and
that's
one
way
around
that
kind
of
like
single
person
owns
it.
So
I
mean
one
one
strategy:
now
some
people
do
is
they'll
they'll
fork
their
if
it's
in
a
github
them
and
have
their
you
know
they
sort
of
carry
it
forward
from
there.
If
it's
it's
gone,
stale
right
and
then
yeah,
but
now
they
own
it
and
that's
not
what
they
wanted
to
do
right.
C
A
C
Yeah
just
communicate
with
others
on
like
the
yui
support
forum,
especially
on
like
the
galley
forums
and
like
I
think
you
can
definitely
see
if
people
want
to
keep
like
contributing
to
like
the
one
that
you
want
to
fork.
A
Yeah
and
it
sounds
like
it
ties
into
the
other
site
you're
working
with
that
was
the
hack
stuff
toolkit
yeah
yeah,
like
it's
almost
as
if,
if
you
made
those
like
either
yy
components
or
something,
then
you
would
get
the
best
of
both
worlds.
You
might
get
people
who
are
also
working
yui
interested
in
your
stuff
as
well.
A
B
Top
secret
right
now,
but
it's
gonna,
be
mobile,
so
we're
actually
looking
into
since
we're
a
team
of
two.
We
don't
have
a
wealth
of
resources
where
the
next
app
we're
looking
to
build
is
is
mobile,
but
it's
gonna
be.
My
inspiration
is
actually
the
nest
controller
app.
It's
the
thermostat
for
your
home
and.
A
B
Was
kind
of
like
researching
this
for
a
little
bit
and
this
this
is
a
thing
that
behaves
amazingly
consistent
across
all
devices
like
the
I
don't
know,
if
you
guys
have
nests
for
your
home,
but
if
you're
on
android
or
iphone
or
your
desktop,
it's
amazingly
consistent,
and
so,
as
an
engineer
I
like
to
when
I
look
at
something
I
like
to
figure
out
how
it
was
built-
and
I
think,
based
on
like
what,
based
on
the
interaction
like
like
if
I
scale
this
page
down,
it's
responsive,
very
nice
and
they
got
these
panels
that
when
it's
a
certain
see
when
it's
fully
full,
it's
yeah,
it's
this
panel,
that's
scaling
and
it's
really
slick
and
smooth,
and
so
we're.
B
Then
the
app
we're
building
is
is
kind
of
like
along
this.
Along
the
same
thing,
a
theme
of
our
company
careers,
a
mobile
app,
and
we
want
what
we're
going
for
here
is
right
ones,
run
everywhere,
and
so.
B
C
So
yeah,
I
think
a
bunch
of
people
have
done
research
with
like
why
why
I'm
filming
app
before
and
for
doing
that,
it's
basically
you
need
to
basically
bundle
up
your
components
when
you
send
it
out
with
your
native
application.
So
you
just
like
you
can
use
like
the
yui
configurator
on
the
website.
Just
make
sure
you
grab
all
the
modules
that
you
want,
and
then
you
put
those
into
your
like
your
source
folder
when
you're
creating
right.
B
A
C
And
if
you
have
like
offline
data,
because
if
people
want
to
still
access
their
data,
even
if
they're
not
connected
to
like
a
data
network
or
wi-fi
or
something
like
that,
that's
something
that
you
can
use
like.
Some
people
have
been
using
local
storage
or
app
cache
or
those
like
sort
of
like
offline
storage
mechanisms
in
their
browser.
So.
C
C
A
C
See
yeah,
especially
on
mobile.
You
want
to
like
limit
the
number
of
like
connections
you
make
because
mobile
it's
sometimes
people
have
like
a
lot
of
like
bad
connections.
Data
is
especially
like
bad
for
us,
because
a
lot
of
like
the
connections
you
have
might
just
like
break
or
stuff
like
that.
I
mean.
A
So
that's
why
you
want
you
know
you
can
pre-load
all
the
stuff.
It
doesn't
mean
that
that
stuff
doesn't
ever
get
updated.
You
can
actually
build
in
like
something
where
you
know
when
you,
you
know
like
say,
there's
idle
time
or
something
you
could
go
and
check
to
see
if
the
scripts
are
refreshed.
You
know.
C
Yeah
and
on
the
way
you
saw
eye
side
of
hints
like
teals,
working
on
like
seven,
you
work
on
the
gesture
side
of
things,
so
that's
something
that
hopefully
will
be
coming
out
soon.
So
you
can
take
a
look
at
that
like
whenever
that,
once
that's
ready.
A
Cool-
and
you
mentioned
you
know,
having
take
advantage
of
pure,
you
might
look
at
you
know
you
talk
about
the
nest
stuff,
you
could
probably
start
with
pure
as
that
sort
of
basis
and
build
up.
You
know
the
library
yeah.
A
Yeah,
I
mean
that's
one
thing
I
wish
that
pure
had
is
actual
app
templates,
as
well
as
just
website
templates.
That
would
get.
I
think,
a
lot
of
people
interested
in
you
know
because
you
could
go
just
like
you
have
a
template
for
django
and
stuff,
like
that.
You
have
a
template
for
a
mobile
web
app.
B
C
So
I
think
jeff
has
just
actually
been
doing
something
with
like
responsive
typography,
and
so
basically,
like
he's
made
this
prototype,
where,
depending
on
how
you
like
size
up
your
div
and
your
screen,
size
it'll
adjust
the
type
to
like
a
certain
to
the
correct,
like
font
size.
That
would
be
like
the
easiest
person
like
say
you
want.
You
always
wanted
this
text
to
be
the
width
of
the.
A
Of
the
screen,
it'll
it'll
like
say
it's,
some
word
like
you
know,
supercalifragilistic
or
something
it'll
always
determine
what
is
the
maximum
font
size
to
get
that
width
without
so
it
doesn't
like
scale
it.
It
actually
changes
the
font
size,
but
you're,
probably
talking
about
like
different
resources
like
you
want
different
font
resources.
B
No,
I
yeah
the
scaling
font
size
like
if
you're
reading,
for
example,
if
you're
building
an
e-reader
app
like
you
want
the
yeah,
you
want
to
be
able
to
make
it
larger
or
smaller.
A
B
I
guess
so
you
can.
My
web
personal
website
is
johns.
High.Com
j-o-n-t-s-a-I
and
my
email
address
is
hello
at
johns
high.com.
So
yeah,
that's
how
you
can
find
me.
Have
you
ever
I'm
pretty
much
john
cy
everywhere
on
the
web
yeah.
Have
you
considered
using
your
own
telentral
to
find.
B
We're
not
quite
there
yet
we're
we're
yeah
we've.
B
We're
we're
working
on
more
funding
right
now
and
and
building
this
new
product,
this
new
mobile
product
that
will
improve
our
traction
so.
C
Awesome
so
yeah
check
out
tolentral
and
yeah
thanks
for
talking
to
us
about
like
why
and
all
that
yeah
yeah.
A
Eventually
become
and
again,
if
you,
the
two
things
I
really
want
to
convey
to,
you
is
that
if
you
do
have
something,
that's
like
you
know,
blocking
you
like
say:
there's
a
new
release
going
on
the
irc
channel
is
really
a
fast
way
to
get
people
to
respond
because
people
are
there
all
the
time
and
the
other
thing
was
there's
things
you
want
to
contribute
back,
I
mean
the
gallery
is
a
great
way
to
start,
but
if
you
have
something
that
you
feel
like
is
core
or
even
like
code
fixes
feel
free
to
follow,
just
full
requests
and
we'll
get
those
going
as
well.
A
A
We
had
a
few
people
who
wanted
to
join
the
hangout
but
did
not
show
up
ezekiel.
A
Well,
if
not,
then
thanks
again
for
coming
and
we'll
keep
checking
out
your
site
and
see
what
this
super
secret
thing
is,
give
like
a
beta
list
or
something
yeah.
C
A
Yeah
cool
well
yeah,
thanks
again,
thank
you
yeah
thank
you.
Did
you
have
anything
else
for
this
this
week?
No,
do
we
have
a
clue
about
next
week,
people
lined
up.
C
You
said
you
had
someone
oh
yeah,
so
next
week
we
have
marco
astrich
from
it's
asprick
and
he'll,
be
talking
about
some
of
the
new
like
gallery.
Models
that
he's
been
building
so
keep
an
eye
out
for
that
awesome.
Stay
tuned
thanks.
Everybody.