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Dan Carlin

Dan Carlin is an American political commentator and podcaster. Once a professional radio host, Carlin eventually took his show to the Internet, and he now hosts two popular independent podcasts: Common Sense and Hardcore History.
Carlin obtained a B.A. in History from the University of Colorado Boulder. He broke into the television news business in Los Angeles in the late 1980s. He has worked as a television news reporter, an author, a columnist, and a radio talk show host. No longer broadcasting on terrestrial radio, Carlin has achieved recognition in internet radio, podcasting, and the blogosphere. Currently, he hosts two popular podcasts.

Yehuda Katz

Yehuda Katz is passionate about all things Open Source.

He is one of the creators of Ember.js, a member of the Rust Core Team, and a retired member of the Ruby on Rails and jQuery Core Teams. He is a member of ECMAScript’s TC39 standards committee, and a former member of the W3C’s TAG (Technical Architecture Group).

His 9-to-5 home is at the startup he founded, Tilde Inc.. There he works on Skylight, the smart profiler for Rails, and does Ember.js consulting.

He’s best known for his open source work, which also includes having created projects like Thor, Handlebars, Bundler and Cargo.

He travels the world doing open source evangelism and web standards work and can be found on Twitter as @wycats.

Mario Klingemann

Mario Klingemann, alias Quasimondo, is what you get when you cross the analytic mind of a coder with the creative fervor of an artist and add a little bit of mad scientist mentality to the mix.

In his aim to surprise himself and his audience he constantly tries to explore uncharted territories in order to discover unseen beauty and unthought ideas.

A key factor in his work is the drive to overcome limitations by creatively repurposing and recombining objects and systems to reveal their hidden qualities.

His creations have been exhibited in international art shows and won acclaim among critics as exemplary pieces of net art. Pieces like Mona Tweeta, ScribblerToo, Flickeur, Dada Visualization, Like This or his Pie Packing series have made their way into uncounted best-of lists and got featured in

He enjoys sharing his explorations and discoveries on design and technology conferences worldwide, has co-founded the Munich FabLab and is working as a freelance code artist building creative tools, mobile apps and media installations.

Joshua Davis

Joshua Davis is an American designer, technologist, author and artist in new media.

He is best known as the creator of praystation.com, winner of the Prix Ars Electronica 2001 Golden Nica for “Net Vision / Net Excellence”.[1] An early adopter of open-source, offering the source code of the praystation.com composition and animation developments to the public.

Dan Abramov

On this weeks episode we are lucky to be joined by Dan Abramov, creator of Redux and React Hot Loader (React Transform). We start off the show with his upcoming move to work at Facebook in London, and touch upon how he became interested in programming from a young-age. Following this we discuss his transition from VBA, to C# and then JavaScript - by-way of CoffeeScript and a BackboneJS application he was working on. Issues with the complexity of asynchronous logic and hard-to-reproduce bugs lead him to invest time in exploring React. We then talk about the problem React solves and how its’ pragmatic approach (including escape-hatches) can easily propagate up your code-tree. Successful use of React was followed by exploring Flux and we highlight how it forces data-mutations to follow a strict-cycle. We discuss the history of different Flux implementations and how he went about eventually making his own (Redux) for a recent talk he gave. Finally, we wrap up the show highlighting his work with React Hot Loader and its successor React Transform, along with recommended resources for beginners looking to explore these subjects in more detail.

Sebastian McKenzie

Australian. I write JavaScript compilers @Facebook. Creator of @babeljs, @lernajs. Got called shady by @samccone's mum..