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Most people are scared to present at a conference, or a meetup, or at a company meeting. Public speaking is a common fear, and many find themselves at night waking up from nightmares involving a disastrous speech. All too often, people think public speaking is something to be afraid of. THEY"RE TOTALLY RIGHT OH MY GOD PUBLIC SPEAKING IS ONE OF THE MOST STRESSFUL THINGS YOURE EVER GOING TO DO PLEAS
A lot of my talks like How GitHub Uses GitHub to Build GitHub and posts like How GitHub Works are great, but they represent a snapshot of the company when we were 30-75 employees. We're 217 today, and things inevitably changed to grow the company to that scale. This talk is retrospective: it takes a closer look at specific things that I've said over the last two years, and then details the adjustm
This talk covers both Git and GitHub: different tricks I've picked up after three years at GitHub, helpful advice on common gripes I've seen in support tickets and tweets, and just general nifty things that make you a faster, more capable technologist.
Tech companies do a generally poor job at keeping employees from leaving. There are plenty of reasons for this: competing offers, unhappiness, and just generally itchy feet. Because of this, sometimes it's difficult to focus on building a strong culture of company solidarity, particularly when you're trying to juggle the hundreds of other needs of a growing business. This is a talk about keeping p
This is the updated version of my "How GitHub Works" talk. Read more: http://zachholman.com/posts/how-github-works/
Success can bring many glamorous changes to your company: hiring more employees, getting free coffee, and giving everyone a private jet filled with cash and endangered African predatory cats. Success can lead to less-glamorous problems, though. As you grow, your team's development environment becomes really important. How long does it take to clone, set up, and boot your apps? Can your employees s
Learn about the growth patterns and the architecture behind github.com.
This talk covers both Git and GitHub: different tricks I've picked up after two years at GitHub, helpful advice on common gripes I've seen in support tickets and tweets, and just general nifty things that make you a faster, more capable technologist. http://zachholman.com/talk/git-github-secrets
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How GitHub Works. Hint: it's pretty cool.
We've had some pretty terrible ideas at GitHub. But they're not all bad, honest! Let's talk about some of the good Ruby-themed patterns we use.
A month after launching, GitHub hosted one thousand repositories. Three years later, we host over three million. In the same time we've gone from one thousand users to over a million. This type of scaling presents some interesting technical challenges. I'll dig into our development workflow and how we address concepts like scaling, deployment, code review, and testing. It also presents some intere
Build features fast. Ship them. That's what we try to do at GitHub. Our process is the anti-process: what's the minimum overhead we can put up with to keep our code quality high, all while building features *as quickly as possible*? It's not just features, either: faster development means happier developers.
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