Ember has gone a bit under the radar with the emergence of React and Vue but they pioneered most of SPA concepts we are seeing today and really hit a sweet spot.
It's amazing how you guys make good documentaries about something that's nerdy and boring. Good focus on community, because that's how Ember seems to me from the outside (using it quite rarely) - it's the community. One that created framework :).
yes, congrats to the team. I watched Vue, GraphQL and now this one - I am completely emotionally detached from any programming language and yet I teared up on all 3 videos 😂
That's the thing: it's not boring at all. It's nerdy and exciting. Developers have this power to shape the world's digital infrastructure.
5 ปีที่แล้ว +17
Was switching job myself ~5 months ago. The amount of React positions out there is astonishing. Took me a while to get a company with Ember in their stack. But now I really can't be happier. Getting basic understanding of the codebase took me just couple of days. The opinionated approach of EmberJS really helps to prevent bike shedding.
What you like about of ember ? To prefer it instead of react ?
4 ปีที่แล้ว +5
@@javierfuentesmora1814 Pretty much as my comment states: Lower amount of bike-shedding / batteries-included approach. I don't have to make decisions if I follow community standards and EmberJS is great by providing the tools to make sure you follow them (ember-cli for example). This is simplification, but with Ember: I don't have to think how to structure my component folders, I don't have to think how to fetch / persist data, I don't have to worry about the build system, I don't have to re-invent the auth layer, I don't have to care about state, etc... If I want to play with technologies for the sake of playing with technologies, fair enough I guess there is plenty of ways to do that. But if I want to create _big_ app that can be maintained by dozens of people without the need to rewrite it completely every year, then I'd 100% chose Ember.
@ That is truly the problem with React, it's an incredible view layer but it has lacked a framework for a very long time. Nextjs comes close to being that framework but it's still not as opinionated and straight forward as for example Angular and Ember. Almost every React project I join is full of spaghetti components and 10 different ways to solve data fetching and stores that has grown out of various needs.
Simply amazing. After nearly 10 years of HTML, CSS, WordPress, & Genesis Framework I was bored out of my mind. I needed to grow. I needed a challenge. I needed Ember. It took a full year, but I finally "cloned" Schlumberger's oilfield glossary into an Ember application. They wanted nothing to do with the app, but that year of learning opened the door to Python. I'm nearly ready for a beta release of the text summarization app of my dreams, which harnesses AI, ML, and NLP. Ember is the lens through which I view all other languages and frameworks. Without Ember, I'm just another WordPress developer. With Ember, I can conquer the world. Can't thank Yehuda Katz, Tom Dale, Sam Selikoff, Jen Weber, Balint Erdi, and so many others enough. They have patiently guided me along this path directly or indirectly. The community behind Ember.js is unlike any other I've encountered. It's ensured my lifetime loyalty to the framework and vision. Other frameworks might dominate the download charts, but no matter what there is nothing like the Ember.js community. I LOVE YOU ALL!
Man, I so miss working in Ember. Here in Bangalore I haven't got a company who was working in Ember, so I can join. So sadly I had to move to other frameworks. But I still use for my personal projects. Thank you so much Ember, you have made me into a programmer who can code with confidence and not afraid of learning anything that is new. Because in Ember it's always a learning everyday and being challenged either writing a addon or adding a pipeline to Broccoli build system. Was challenging, god I miss those days, when I used to do crazzy things like these.
I'm still baffled how complex frontend has become, you need babel, webpack, npm or yarn and node , and some configs to get something like hello world to work on a framework (except for vue, which works in browser directly)... I'm mostly a php dev, i always thought that backend is supposed to be more complicated, given that it sits in a server, talks to other servers etc., but to get php to work, all you need is composer, and php runtime... And you don't have to compile it, most backend web frameworks don't need compiling including dot net core...
This documentary is soo good it melted my heart,,, why you guys stopped making more of them..?? We wanna see svelte, dart, elm, rust, etc? Even popular things like duckDuckGo, Angular, React, Flutter, would be nice Even things which aren't popular anymore we want to see them like AngularDart, Just keep making more of these.
Love you ember.. Thank you so much for this amazingly beautiful well documented masterpiece.. The quality of this documentary is just 24 carat gold. I just had no other options other than subscribing
This story is so awe inspiring. You guys have been so brave. I wish I had a mentor like you! Tom Dale is a boss! I haven't had the chance to work on ember a lot at work but it looks lit!
Wow!... What a gorgeous film... Well done. I'm happy RealToughCandy tech channel recommended it. We took a look at Ember when we studied MVC Frameworks during one of the mentorship study groups. Other TH-camrs I respect like Erik Hanchett also has said nice things about Ember and its community. I remember being surprised by how large, and enterprise-worthy it felt like an Angular or Java app, but not... I really enjoyed this. This documentary was a great idea.
These videos are great! Really well filmed and edited. I started by watching the Vue video first and then coming to this one. I've known about Ember for awhile but never tried it. But now after watching this documentary I'm going to give it a look. This maybe the start of me becoming an Ember developer 🙂
You guys at Honeypot work so hard to make the Best Tech Documentaries ever. Everytime I see your documentaries, I tear up a bit. Keep up the good work. AND, when is the React Documentary coming up?
Hey guys, keep up the nice work with Ember, Im using it here in Brazil for lots of projects; super fast developing curves.. love it. Big Thanks from the Amazon Rain Forest
please make more of like these videos, I'd love to pay content like this. you're awesome. A documentary of stackoverflow with an interview with people like John Skeet would be awesome!
@@Honeypotio Kakfa, database systems, any startups that had to scale (netflix, uber etc..), rust as a language, services like heroku that help businesses scale. Not picky though, I'm not really into front end tech but the way you present your information is incredibly captivating I'll watch whatever :)
These are great ideas for documentaries. We have some really cool projects in the pipeline that will keep us busy for the rest of 2020. I think rust would make a great documentary, also Laravel. Thanks for the encouragement 🙏
Yeah, he dresses over the top. Everyone around him dressed in tees and jeans... it’s like he watched suits and said he wanted to be Harvey for Halloween and then never stopped dressing like that.
Cool doco enjoyed it, good work with Ember.js.. Love the idea... I'm sorry but compared to other JS frameworks Ember is dead... Try finding an ember job in Australia...
Thank you thank you thank you. This guy has brains. The rest is just brainwashed zombies following shiny things. I second that. You ruined the web and then react ruined it more
Ember has gone a bit under the radar with the emergence of React and Vue but they pioneered most of SPA concepts we are seeing today and really hit a sweet spot.
a lot not a bit
It's amazing how you guys make good documentaries about something that's nerdy and boring. Good focus on community, because that's how Ember seems to me from the outside (using it quite rarely) - it's the community. One that created framework :).
Thanks, Mario! Glad you liked it :)
Boring? Pardon
yes, congrats to the team. I watched Vue, GraphQL and now this one - I am completely emotionally detached from any programming language and yet I teared up on all 3 videos 😂
That's the thing: it's not boring at all. It's nerdy and exciting. Developers have this power to shape the world's digital infrastructure.
Was switching job myself ~5 months ago. The amount of React positions out there is astonishing. Took me a while to get a company with Ember in their stack. But now I really can't be happier. Getting basic understanding of the codebase took me just couple of days. The opinionated approach of EmberJS really helps to prevent bike shedding.
What you like about of ember ? To prefer it instead of react ?
@@javierfuentesmora1814 Pretty much as my comment states: Lower amount of bike-shedding / batteries-included approach. I don't have to make decisions if I follow community standards and EmberJS is great by providing the tools to make sure you follow them (ember-cli for example). This is simplification, but with Ember: I don't have to think how to structure my component folders, I don't have to think how to fetch / persist data, I don't have to worry about the build system, I don't have to re-invent the auth layer, I don't have to care about state, etc...
If I want to play with technologies for the sake of playing with technologies, fair enough I guess there is plenty of ways to do that. But if I want to create _big_ app that can be maintained by dozens of people without the need to rewrite it completely every year, then I'd 100% chose Ember.
@ That is truly the problem with React, it's an incredible view layer but it has lacked a framework for a very long time. Nextjs comes close to being that framework but it's still not as opinionated and straight forward as for example Angular and Ember. Almost every React project I join is full of spaghetti components and 10 different ways to solve data fetching and stores that has grown out of various needs.
Simply amazing. After nearly 10 years of HTML, CSS, WordPress, & Genesis Framework I was bored out of my mind. I needed to grow. I needed a challenge. I needed Ember. It took a full year, but I finally "cloned" Schlumberger's oilfield glossary into an Ember application. They wanted nothing to do with the app, but that year of learning opened the door to Python. I'm nearly ready for a beta release of the text summarization app of my dreams, which harnesses AI, ML, and NLP. Ember is the lens through which I view all other languages and frameworks. Without Ember, I'm just another WordPress developer. With Ember, I can conquer the world. Can't thank Yehuda Katz, Tom Dale, Sam Selikoff, Jen Weber, Balint Erdi, and so many others enough. They have patiently guided me along this path directly or indirectly. The community behind Ember.js is unlike any other I've encountered. It's ensured my lifetime loyalty to the framework and vision. Other frameworks might dominate the download charts, but no matter what there is nothing like the Ember.js community. I LOVE YOU ALL!
Happy Ember dev for five years now.
Man, I so miss working in Ember. Here in Bangalore I haven't got a company who was working in Ember, so I can join. So sadly I had to move to other frameworks. But I still use for my personal projects.
Thank you so much Ember, you have made me into a programmer who can code with confidence and not afraid of learning anything that is new. Because in Ember it's always a learning everyday and being challenged either writing a addon or adding a pipeline to Broccoli build system. Was challenging, god I miss those days, when I used to do crazzy things like these.
In globallogic have vacancy bro in Noida branch if you have 5+ experience
Apply for linkedin
I'm still baffled how complex frontend has become, you need babel, webpack, npm or yarn and node , and some configs to get something like hello world to work on a framework (except for vue, which works in browser directly)... I'm mostly a php dev, i always thought that backend is supposed to be more complicated, given that it sits in a server, talks to other servers etc., but to get php to work, all you need is composer, and php runtime... And you don't have to compile it, most backend web frameworks don't need compiling including dot net core...
Yes, we have yet a lot to simplify.
This documentary is soo good it melted my heart,,, why you guys stopped making more of them..??
We wanna see svelte, dart, elm, rust, etc?
Even popular things like duckDuckGo, Angular, React, Flutter, would be nice
Even things which aren't popular anymore we want to see them like AngularDart,
Just keep making more of these.
Ember is the best framework. Thank you guys!
Love you ember.. Thank you so much for this amazingly beautiful well documented masterpiece.. The quality of this documentary is just 24 carat gold. I just had no other options other than subscribing
The quality of these documentaries is insane !
This documentary has very good quality. Thank you for this!
Check out the home for untold developer stories around open source, careers and all the other cool stuff developers are doing at bit.ly/3iVysIZ
This story is so awe inspiring. You guys have been so brave. I wish I had a mentor like you! Tom Dale is a boss! I haven't had the chance to work on ember a lot at work but it looks lit!
I've just done the Vietnamese subtitles. Please approve it.
thank u so much
That was awesome and really well done! Very much enjoyed it! Thank you for making this! So inspiring!
Wow!... What a gorgeous film... Well done. I'm happy RealToughCandy tech channel recommended it. We took a look at Ember when we studied MVC Frameworks during one of the mentorship study groups. Other TH-camrs I respect like Erik Hanchett also has said nice things about Ember and its community. I remember being surprised by how large, and enterprise-worthy it felt like an Angular or Java app, but not... I really enjoyed this. This documentary was a great idea.
Thanks! So glad you enjoyed it!
Having the young Sean Connery as a spokesman is a clear advantage over Angular freaks
These videos are great! Really well filmed and edited. I started by watching the Vue video first and then coming to this one. I've known about Ember for awhile but never tried it. But now after watching this documentary I'm going to give it a look. This maybe the start of me becoming an Ember developer 🙂
You guys at Honeypot work so hard to make the Best Tech Documentaries ever. Everytime I see your documentaries, I tear up a bit.
Keep up the good work. AND, when is the React Documentary coming up?
Hey guys, keep up the nice work with Ember, Im using it here in Brazil for lots of projects; super fast developing curves.. love it. Big Thanks from the Amazon Rain Forest
Imagine Java: The Documentary one day. Would love it
make Ember.js great again
please make more of like these videos, I'd love to pay content like this. you're awesome. A documentary of stackoverflow with an interview with people like John Skeet would be awesome!
Связка топовая. Спасибо, бро!!!
what about a docu now on how it disappeared? what happened? why did and still do React, Vue and Angular take the lead?
Amazing! Heart warming
This is so motivational!
I love it. No other words
How does the emberjs company actually makes money? what is their business plan? Would have been an interesting point in the doc, and now im curious
These documentaries are awesome!
18:07 sure you're gonna survive, ember.js
We totally need a together framework
Hey, I am just curios that, is there any plans to create Angular Documentary too ?) If not, I definitely encourage you doing it)
18:31 I was sure he was gonna say, "take that angular"
I'm subscribing because I want to see more of these documentaries!!
Hi, these documentaries are amazing. Do you have any plans to do something like this for backend technologies as well?
Thanks! yes, we have a few ideas that we are considering for backend technologies. Do you have any favs you'd like to see a documentary about?
@@Honeypotio Kakfa, database systems, any startups that had to scale (netflix, uber etc..), rust as a language, services like heroku that help businesses scale. Not picky though, I'm not really into front end tech but the way you present your information is incredibly captivating I'll watch whatever :)
These are great ideas for documentaries. We have some really cool projects in the pipeline that will keep us busy for the rest of 2020. I think rust would make a great documentary, also Laravel. Thanks for the encouragement 🙏
I really love the documentaries you do.
Intern: Wears former office attire
Programmer: You don't have to wear like To_ Dales *chuckles*
Worked with Ember at my first gig, but definitely prefer React these days. Great documentary!
14:05 Leah looks exactly like the Ember.js Mascot!
Wow! kudos for the concept. I wonder if there are more of such documentaries! Any recommendations?
Thanks! We also made an Elixir documentary, you might like that too :) th-cam.com/video/lxYFOM3UJzo/w-d-xo.html
From the looks of it, seems like Ember is better than Angular, React, or Vue. Am I wrong?
Very very nice docu 👌
Amazing documentary!
great!!! thanks for your documentaries. Perhaps the next could be nodejs o mozilla?
Who else liked the entry of linkedin..!
That was my fav part!
what an inspiring story
Hi, what a great documentary! What's the music from 1:18? Thanks!
Tom Dale looks like someone that works at a bank. It doesnt look like a dev ;oD
Awesome!
Is ember.js has new version to compete with React.js?
This is really cool.. ..
tom wearin suit, look like management consultant ready for next 10 hardcore meeting
Funny thing is Javascript apps are still broken. Nothing has changed since 2011.
So cool
Good job!
sthap, plz sthap! now I want to write stuff in ember..
Thanks sir
Great #yashrajsolutions
🤘🤘🤘
This guy is wearing a freaking rolex...
Yeah, he dresses over the top. Everyone around him dressed in tees and jeans... it’s like he watched suits and said he wanted to be Harvey for Halloween and then never stopped dressing like that.
Cool
Cool doco enjoyed it, good work with Ember.js.. Love the idea...
I'm sorry but compared to other JS frameworks Ember is dead... Try finding an ember job in Australia...
yep, it's Angular/React/Vue now. In the future, it will probably be React/Vue.
Django documentry
John 1:10
Good job bro, JESUS IS COMING BACK VERY SOON; WATCH AND PREPARE
Haha they really thinking they a competitor :D
boomer stack
who still uses this? :P
Is it just me or does the linkedin office looks like a basement with alot of locked in asians in it?
React is better :v bais
And the *Ember* died. *R.I.P*
Yes. Ember is dead
You ruined web development.
how so
thank u, next
@@TomDale github.com/stimulusjs/stimulus is enough for 80% of Web applications. You kicked off a complexity vortex that swallows productivity.
@@sphexishhuman6882 twitter.com/dril/status/922321981
Thank you thank you thank you. This guy has brains. The rest is just brainwashed zombies following shiny things. I second that. You ruined the web and then react ruined it more
how bout you guys?