The Bike Shed
Episodes
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358: Class Methods
October 18th, 2022 | 40 mins 40 secs
Inspired by a Slack thread, Joël invites fellow thoughtbotter Aji Slater on the show to talk about when you should use class methods and when you should avoid them. Are there particular anti-patterns to look out for? How does this fit in with good object-oriented programming? What about Rails? What is an "alternate constructor"? What about service objects? So many questions, and friends: Aji and Joël deliver answers!
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357: Notetaking For Developers
October 11th, 2022 | 30 mins 55 secs
Joël is joined by Amanda Beiner, a Senior Software Engineer at GitHub, who is known for her legendary well-organized notes. They talk about various types of notes: debugging, todos, mental stack, Zetelkasten/evergreen notes, notetaking apps and systems, and visual note-taking and diagramming too!
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356: The Value of Specialized Vocabulary
September 27th, 2022 | 39 mins 20 secs
Guest and fellow thoughtbotter Stephanie Minn and Joël chat about how the idea of specialized vocabulary came up during a discussion of the Ruby Science book. We have all these names for code smells and refactors. Before knowing these names, we often have a vague sense of the ideas but having a name makes them more real. They also give us ways to talk precisely about what we mean. However, there is a downside since not everyone is familiar with the jargon.
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355: Test Performance
September 20th, 2022 | 42 mins 44 secs
Guest Geoff Harcourt, CTO of CommonLit, joins Joël to talk about a thing that comes up with a lot with clients: the performance of their test suite. It's often a concern because with test suites, until it becomes a problem, people tend to not treat it very well, and people ask for help on making their test suites faster. Geoff shares how he handles a scenario like this at CommonLit.
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354: The History of Computing
September 13th, 2022 | 31 mins 16 secs
Why does the history of computing matter? Joël and Developer at thoughtbot Sara Jackson, ponder this and share some cool stories (and trivia!!) behind the tools we use in the industry.
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353: Mental Models
September 6th, 2022 | 38 mins 22 secs
Mental models are metaphors that help us understand complex problems we work on. They can be a simplified roadmap over an infinite area of complexity.
How does one come up with mental models? How are they useful? Are they primarily a solo thing, or can they be used to communicate with the team? What happens when your model is inaccurate? Today, Joël is joined by Eebs Kobeissi, a Developer and Dev Manager at You Need a Budget, to discuss.
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352: Case Expressions
August 30th, 2022 | 32 mins 23 secs
As developers, we care a lot about code quality. How do we know how good is good enough? When do we stop improving code? Alternatively, when working on code that's really bad, how much do you improve it before calling it a day? thoughtbot's Stephanie Minn joins Joël to chat about this and case expressions: We recently discussed these as part of thoughtbot's RubyScience reading group. Are case expressions bad? Are they equivalent to multi-way conditionals? When do you use polymorphism?
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351: Learning in Public
August 23rd, 2022 | 37 mins 7 secs
It's Joël's first episode as host of The Bike Shed! 👋
Joël has fellow thoughtbotter Steve Polito join him to talk about the benefits and drawbacks of "learning in public" and how there are many, many different ways to do it.
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350: 21 Bell Salute
August 16th, 2022 | 52 mins 9 secs
It's Steph and Chris' last show. Steph found a game, and if you've been following the journey, all of the Test::Unit test files are now live in RSpec. JWTs really grind Chris' gears.
They wrap up with things they've learned, takeaways they've had, and their proudest podcasting moments. They also thank all the folks who've helped make The Bike Shed happen.
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349: Unpopular Opinions
August 9th, 2022 | 40 mins 16 secs
Steph and Chris announce Joël Quenneville as the new host of the show! 🎉 Joël talks about his grand plans for where The Bike Shed is going to go from here. (Okay, maybe not grand plans...!)
Together, the group chats about unpopular opinions and hot programming takes.
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348: Breaking News
August 2nd, 2022 | 32 mins 13 secs
Steph and Chris share some big news about the future of The Bike Shed.
Steph shares an update about integrating with Knapsack Pro. Chris is excited for larger projects that will begin in the next few weeks. They answer a listener's question on keeping backlogs connected to the product vision.
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347: Tracking Velocity
July 26th, 2022 | 38 mins 50 secs
Chris talks about a small toy app he maintains on the side and working with a project called capybara_table. Steph is getting ready for maternity leave and wonders how you track velocity and know if you're working quickly enough?
They answer a listener's question about where to get started testing a legacy app.
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346: Occasional Biscuits
July 19th, 2022 | 37 mins 13 secs
Natural disaster movies, anyone? It's what Steph's been into, and Chris has THOUGHTS on the drilling in Armageddon.
Additionally, a chat around RuboCop RSpec rules happens, and they answer a listener's question, "how do you get acquainted with a new code base?"
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345: Fire Drill
July 12th, 2022 | 49 mins 22 secs
Chris is getting ready to travel, and of course, Sagewell started the day with an incident, a situation, if you will...
Steph talks books perfect for vacations and feels sufficiently scarred regarding still working with moving fixtures over to FactoryBot.
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344: Spinner Armageddon
June 28th, 2022 | 38 mins 50 secs
Steph has an update and a question wrapped into one about the work that is being done to migrate the Test::Unit test over to RSpec.
Chris got to do something exciting this week using dry-monads. Success or failure?
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343: Opt-In To Oversharing
June 21st, 2022 | 30 mins 31 secs
Chris is weathering through a slight lull, a holding period, where his team waits for new features to become available with some of the platforms they integrate with, and as they think out new facets of the platform they're building.
Steph has been thinking recently about working in isolation. It's a topic that Joël Quenneville pointed out to her and mentioned. Can engineers work in isolation and be successful?