Nickolas Means likes to tell stories. His conference talks [1] often center around a curious anecdote, but he deftly weaves both technical and organizational relevancy into them. Nickolas talks about how he builds a talk from conception to execution and goes over some fundamentals of good presentation slides. The goal is to provide a narrative without overwhelming the user with too much textual content.
He continues with advice for novices and experts alike, including how to craft a CFP that will increase the likelihood of your talk being accepted. He suggests that new speakers choose a larger conference to speak at, rather than a smaller one, as they have more capacity to provide mentoring. Even if you're not a Ruby or Rails developer, their conferences tend to be very welcoming, and he suggests taking a look at rubyconferences.com to find one that fits.
Links from this episode51. Best Practices in Error Handling
50. High Energy, Low Power: A Bluetooth Christmas Story
49. Building Effective Distributed Teams
48. From NodeConf EU 2019
47. Working with an Event-Driven Architecture
46. Go at Heroku
45. Illuminating Poetry with Technology
44. GraphQL's Benefits and Costs
43. The GitHub Student Developer Pack
42. How to Prepare for Coding Interviews
41. Architecting Multi-Tenancy
40. Operating Open Collective
39. Evolving Alongside your Tech Stack
38. Building with Web Components
37. Bonus: Organizing a Memorable Tech Conference
36. Supporting Open Source through Open Collective
35. Bringing Open Source to Work
34. An Introduction to Rust
33. GopherCon 2019 Spotlight, Part 2
32. GopherCon 2019 Spotlight, Part 1
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
Insight Story: Tech Trends Unpacked
Zero-Shot
Fast Forward by Tomorrow Unlocked: Tech past, tech future
The Unbelivable Truth - Series 1 - 26 including specials and pilot
Lex Fridman Podcast