[based on a true story]
So. Your friend's about to teach you how to make a website. Great!
You make a file, and you save it as 'index.html'. Why it's called 'index' isn't really explained to you, but whatever.
You type the following.
hello world
function netstat( cb ) { | |
const spawn = require( 'child_process' ).spawn; | |
const netstat = spawn( 'netstat', [ '-e' ] ); | |
var resp = ''; | |
netstat.stdout.on( 'data', ( data ) => { | |
resp += data.toString(); | |
} ); | |
netstat.stdout.on( 'end', ( data ) => { |
[based on a true story]
So. Your friend's about to teach you how to make a website. Great!
You make a file, and you save it as 'index.html'. Why it's called 'index' isn't really explained to you, but whatever.
You type the following.
hello world
Cheng Lou, a former member of the React team, gave an incredible talk at React Europe 2016 entitled "On the Spectrum of Abstraction". That talk is available for viewing here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mVVNJKv9esE
It's only a half-hour, but it is mind-blowing. It's worth re-watching two or three times, to let the ideas sink in.
I just rewatched the talk for some research, and wrote down a summary that's semi-transcript-ish. I didn't see any other transcripts for this talk, other than the auto-generated closed captions, so I wanted to share for reference.