It's a middle-man role: "Developer Advocates' advocate for their platforms by helping end developers use their products, and they still do. So the true meaning of a Developer Advocate is someone whose job is to help developers be successful with a platform or a technology." Essentially they're teachers for developers with a direct line of communication to the engineering team and help influence the directions for the product roadmap.
There are a few ways to describe it: they’re professional conference presenters, engineering influencers, community managers, liaisons for developer consumers, tech demonstrators, etc. In short, they try to get developers excited to use their tech.
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Useful stuff, didn't know most of these before
Great video Sam! I always record tutorials and use Chrome URLs but never explain them. It is good to have a clear overview of them.
WOW, I have some nice takeaways from this video. Thank you!
But why does the add/edit shortcut dialog consider chrome: urls invalid?
Very useful
Good video
NOTE: Remove from the video the beeping sound in the background
At what time?
What exactly is a developer advocate?
It's a middle-man role: "Developer Advocates' advocate for their platforms by helping end developers use their products, and they still do. So the true meaning of a Developer Advocate is someone whose job is to help developers be successful with a platform or a technology."
Essentially they're teachers for developers with a direct line of communication to the engineering team and help influence the directions for the product roadmap.
There are a few ways to describe it: they’re professional conference presenters, engineering influencers, community managers, liaisons for developer consumers, tech demonstrators, etc.
In short, they try to get developers excited to use their tech.
@@GLENC0C0 Oh I see thank you
👏👏👏
Oh thank goodness for a second thought google was gonna try and push their own URL protocol