MAS 106: Tracy Lee - podcast episode cover

MAS 106: Tracy Lee

Jan 14, 202032 min
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Episode description

Tracy Lee is a Google Developer Expert, and Co-Founder of This Dot Labs and This Dot Media joins Aaron on this week's My Angular Story to share her coding journey. Tracy majored in marketing and was interested in coding because her boyfriend was a developer. She also loves building communities and has helped build 12 companies in the past 14 years. Her main interests are coding in Angular, React, Ember, Artificial Intelligence, Augmented Reality and Machine Learning. In her free time, she runs Venture Hacked with the mission to help create relationships between startups and investors as well as give talks at conferences on her coding adventures and enjoys pairing with friends. Host: Aaron Frost Joined By Special Guest: Tracy Lee My Angular Story is produced by DevChat.TV in partnership with Hero Devs. Sponsors ____________________________________________________________ "The MaxCoders Guide to Finding Your Dream Developer Job" by Charles Max Wood is now available on Amazon. Get Your Copy Today! ____________________________________________________________ Links Picks Aaron Frost: Tracy Lee:
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Transcript

Hey everybody, thanks for coming to another episode of My Angular Story. I'm your host Aarren Frost, and today we're extremely lucky to have Tracy. We do one of the biggest names in our community come and be on the podcast. So, Tracy, this is all about you, but give go ahead and do a short intro of you know who you are. Hi, my name is Tracy. You can follow me on Twitter at lady Leep. I'm the CEO of a company called this dot Labs. We spend a lot of

time helping large scale enterprises build really cool applications. More more recently, we've been helping companies with their AI and VR related you know, initiatives, which has been really, really, really fun for us. We've been focusing obviously a lot on Angler. A lot of our team is Angular developers, and we love graph ql, but we also equally love reacting you at the same time, so it's a fun adventure, you know. Yeah. Yeah.

This episode is sponsored by Century dot Io. Recently, I came across a great tool for tracking and monitoring problems in my apps. Then I asked them if they wanted to sponsor the show and allow me to share my experience with you. Century provides a terrific interface for keeping track of what's going on with my app. It also tracks releases, so I can tell if what I

deployed makes things better or worse. They give full stack traces and as much information as possible about the situation when the error occurred to help you track down the errors. Plus one thing I love you can customize the context provided by Century, so if you're looking for specific information about the request, you can provide it. It automatically scrubs passwords and secure information, and you can customize the scrubbing as well. Finally, it has a user feedback system built in

that you can use to get information from your users. Oh and I also love that they support open source to the point where they actually open source Centry. If you want to self host it, use the code dev chat at centriy dot io to get two months free on Century small plan. That's code dev chat at Century dot io. And you guys have been this dot labs has been around for how long I think two years now or so? Cool? Yeah? Cool? And you also have some other this dot company too

as well, Like yet, isn't this dop media a thing too? Yes? So this dop Media. We kind of split the company into two pieces because one of the main reasons we started the logs portion was because we get so excited about bringing the JavaScript community together. So we have the Stop Media where we do tons of events. So every month you can find Angular meetup dot com. It's a global Angular meetup. It's the first Thursday of every

month. Uh. And then we have you know, react jsmeetup dot com, which is the second Thursday, and then view meetup dot com which is the third Thursday. So but heb ourselves pretty busy. I mean, we're really focused on helping try to change the ratio and tech as well. So we do a lot of work trying to help women in tech. Next year we're actually going to start some public mentoring programs to try to help women attech. You know, we just really believe in just trying to create a more

inclusive, you know, community for us for ourselves. Cool. And that's that's this dot media that does that. Yes, it's not media, this dot dot ceo. Yeah, terrible way to spell it. Yeah, that's awesome. So how did you How did you start in the text? How did I start in the text? Yeah? I started off because my boyfriend at the time was a developer, and I remember the first time he he

was like, oh I'm a developer. I'm like, okay, whatever, you know, who cares, right, I dated Weirdly enough, every single guy I've dated has been a developer, except for one sales guy. Two sales guys. Yeah, exactly. It's funny because they're so different. Sales guys and developers are so different. It's very true. So I grew up in the Bay Area Sulicon Valley, so I guess everyone's a developer there anyways, So maybe that's why. But yeah, so I remember he said,

oh, I do JavaScript. I was like, oh, Java, you know classic? Right? Yeah? But you know he you know what, what developer doesn't want to teach their significant other hawd to code? Right? So guess who learned how to code? Cool? You guys started like just coding as like date date night. You'd sit down and do some code. Yeah, like call it healthy or unhealthy, But that relationship was basically I mean I took a boot camp, right, I took a two or three

week boot camp to learn the basics. But you know, we basically spend our entire lives like hacking. Actually, you know it's funny. I used to go on dates and I used to be like, you know, okay, we can get through the days we like each other, but how effective can we be sitting in a room quiet on our laptops together. And that was like my idea of like, okay, we can we can actually start dating now. You know, I'm sure all developers can relate, right like

you don't want that significantly that. It was just like, not shut up. I need to focus. I need to focus exactly. Yeah, like sometimes, I mean even yesterday I yelled at my husband. I was like, dude, I have headphones in. Don't talk to me. Can't you see my headphones are on? Do you not know? What? Is he a developer? He's a developer. Yeah, and he was coding as well, but I think he was like doing some random stuff. I was like,

I'm done talking. I that's just funny developer relationships. That should be an entire podcast developer. Well, Devrell, that'd be funny. I guess you could take that two ways. DevRel personal. I'm hearing new podcast coming, I see happening. That's funny. So this this person you're dating, is like, oh, get into this and you're like all right, and then so okay, so let me tell you. Let me tell you from my point of view. Okay, I've never heard the name Tracy Lee.

And then like it felt like overnight, that's all. I just heard your name. Like, oh, Tracy, Tracy, Tracy, Tracy, you just showed up everywhere all of a sudden. That's that was my experience. I was like. And then after hearing about you for a while, I met you one time in San Francisco, so yeah, that was kind of my you. You came up quick in the community, like really really fast.

Yeah. Yeah, I don't know. I don't know what happened there, but I mean I do love the developer community, and it's kind of hard to get away from it. I think, like as you you know, like I just, you know, honestly, I just started developing because I wanted to play. I mean, it was fun for me. I fell in love with it. It was hard. You know, I have

a marketing background. Marketing is not hard, but like development is hard, you know, So you know, I I and you know, I was surrounded by friends who just coded, so you know, me and Ben Lush and Jay Phelps, Like what would we do when we were hanging out, like we would just you know, I mean, me and Jay would. I remember this one Thanksgiving, I woke up forgetting how I could actually get into my bed, but me and Jay had actually built a really awesome add

on you. Yeah, we basically spent like three drink like three bottles of wine and like coated, so you know whatever. And you know Ben is the same way, right, Like we used to just sit around and and like do that type of stuff. And you know, that's how I started got involved in the rsg's quarantine. I mean, I think they needed some help from a community perspective to like just figure you know, figure things out from like a non tech perspective. So I kind of started helping with that.

And I'm so proud of how the our XDS core team has grown. Now. I mean, you through our extress lives, so you've seen like going from you know, Ben and OJ and uh David right and and Paul and Matt, but like, you know, a very small subset of people to all of a sudden having like you know, Yon Nicholas super involved, Nicholas Jamison involved, and that's that's just been really cool to see it really cool to be a part of. I really like that. So how did

you meet it? Seems like Jay and Ben are kind of your besties. Yeah, how did you meet those two? I'm pretty sure I met them both on Twitter, which is why I love Twitter so much. So if you're not on Twitter, highly recommend uh. But we they you know, they both actually I met I met Ben when he was working at Netflix and I actually ran I run modern Web, so we actually do this every other

month in the Bay Area. We run modern Web Bay Area, so you can go to meetup dot com slash modern Web and we actually co host it almost every single time now with the Angular Mountain View meetup. So it's really nice to partner with Stephen Fluin on that type of stuff. And you know, like, actually it was my boyfriend was like, oh Ben Lush or ex jus. I was like, is that important? All right? Fine? And then you know, and then I invited Ben to can speak,

and then you know, we became friends. And then Jay at the time was working in LA and then you know we uh, you know, then Jay moved to Netflix, and then you know, me and Jay became really good friends. And I feel like Jay was always like my stand in date. You know, it's like Jay's never doing anything that exciting. Sorry, Jay, I love you. So like Jay's always available to do anything, which is great because then he's just always hanging out right, So are we

wait lots of time together? I like j Jay's dude. Yeah, smart, really sad, super smart. Yeah. Hey, folks, this is Charles Maxwood and I just launched my book, The Maxicoder's Guide Defining Your Dream Developer Job. It's up on Amazon. We self published it. I would love your support. If you want to go check it out. You can find it there, The Maxicoterer's Guide Defining Your Dream Developer Job. Have a good one, max out. So okay, so you said you said you

were in marketing before you became a programmer. Again you got into it. Yeah, so talk to us about pre programming Tracy. Pre programming, Tracy, I was all about building communities. And it's kind of weird because my life even back then, you were still a community builder even Yeah, I

think you know when did I start? I think I discovered Twitter somewhere around two thousand and eight or so, and you know, that was like kind of around the time where I started my first startup, well, like my first tech startup, right, it was like the time when APIs were you know, I was at an API conference, like look at these things, They're cool. Yeah, exactly, And I was like learning what an API was. And I remember, you know, like I was always interested in

like just bringing people together. So that's always been my thing, Like if I see a bunch of people, how do I bring them together? How do I help the community? Right? Like I really love helping people. So my last company, dish Crawl, we were in two hundred and fifty different cities. We had over two hundred and fifty women across it was like ninety nine point five percent or something crazy like that woman and we helped them dishral it's called Dishcrawl, Yeah. And what we did is we took people

on food adventures like pub crawls, but with food. And so we taught them, you know, in a five week period, how to do marketing, how to do social media, how to do PR, how to do restaurants sales, and how to actually host an event. Right, Like it's

a pretty intense program. Yeah, but when I really loved about it, I mean, you know, obviously we were a startup so we made a lot of mistakes, like imagine a bunch of twenty year olds, like trying to run a business with two hundred Like we grew to one hundred and twenty five people in less than three months, and so like you have these like twenty something your old girls going like, oh crap, what do we do

now? You know, but like the you know, our our intent was that, you know, let's try to help get you know, actually I don't know what the intent was, but what ended up happening was we were able to help a lot of women get jobs and like find their passion. So a lot of women love food, right, so they're always interested in

getting involved in the food industry. So we helped enable that and create these like little entrepreneurs in all these different little cities, which is really cool and it's kind of funny because you know, now with this thought, I feel like, you know, I'm really focused on trying to help women at tech again or like women in general again. And also you know, we've been doing this apprentice program this year, which is trying to help get women their

first job. So you know, like I think themes in your life, right, like whatever type of human you are like if you kind of look back on your life, you'll start finding these sort of patterns emerge, and mine is basically community and helping women apparently. Yeah, well that's good. That's good. You have a lot of passion for it's you're inspirational for a lot of us that watch you and see what you're doing. It's it's good. You're a good example for the community. So I'm glad you. Thanks

and you have fun doing it, you can tell. Yeah, I mean I get excited about it, But I mean I think it's actually been kind of interesting for me to go through. So I've been going through this for a year now. I've been bored, can you believe it? Super busy. So I don't know how you're bored. Well, like internally I sort of have this like unrest, like what's the next thing? What are we

going to do next? You know? Like lately I've been really focused on you know again, like AI, machine learning, AR stuff, VR stuff, like just thinking about like I think angler is super interesting. I think like graph QL for example, is super interesting, react view, et cetera, et cetera. But like thinking about like what technology enables, you know, like what's the bigger picture, Like we're all doing stuff, we're all

developers, we're all building stuff, we're all hacking on things. But like, what's the greater picture, Like what's the what's the like, what's the big thing? And I don't know what the answer to that, but hopefully i'll have the answer in a few months, yeah, or an idea. Anyways, what do you think? What do I think about? What about

you? Do you think? What do you think is like the bigger thing, like the big you know, with the whole Like three or four months ago, you remember when the react community kind of caught on fire, Tatiana Mac asked people to read some books. Well, she suggested some books,

and I read a couple of them, and they were really powerful. I'd only ever been like impacted that much by books a couple of times in life, and so I don't know, I'm still I'm still chewing on those to figure out what I could do, because you know, sometimes you do have a bigger reach and you do have a bigger opportunity to help people, and it seems like you should use that to help. Yeah, I think I'm kind of like you, maybe still figuring out what that means. I'm not

sure yet. Yeah, I think I think it's difficult because like, as you become a leader within the community, like whether you like it or not.

And I think with the whole React thing, part of it was because I feel like, you know, not good or bad, right, but just the way it is, Like I think the React community leaders are just like, yeah, you know, we're building stuff for Facebook and like there's this React community and you know whatever, like you know, like they feel responsibility, but they're not like we need to mold the community, whereas the Angular community is very intentional about how they want to mold the community, code

of conduct, being inclusive, et cetera, et cetera. So like, you know, I look at some of the opportunities I have, for example, and you know, positions I get put in, and you know, if I don't do anything right, like what what am I doing? I'm setting an example? By not setting an example. Yeah, by not doing anything, you're setting the example of what to do, which would be nothing. So you have to do something right. And I think that's really difficult

because it it's like I think this is also the burden, right. This is also why the React leaders are kind of like like you guys deal with it because it's it's so much emotional energy, Like people can't account for the amount of time and energy spent on just like thinking about it, dealing with it, whatever, which is probably one of the most difficult things that leaders

typically have to do. Right, Like the Angular team spends a lot of time making sure that the community is right, and that takes a toll on things that also takes away from development time, et cetera, et cetera. But you know, yeah, whatever, that's just the way it is. Yeah, it is. And yeah, I'm trying to figure out my place though, because yeah, as a white dude, sometimes I want to talk in the conversations, but I don't feel I don't feel unwelcome, but I

don't explicitly feel welcome. Yeah, and so it's like, you know, a lot of it. So I'm kind of in this put me in the game coach, like I'm watching, I'm ready, I don't know where I fit. I'm kind of it's kind of like there's a bunch of people playing jump rope and I'm like waiting to jump in, trying to see you, Hey, can I jump in yet? Can I? And so I'm kind of I don't know. I'm on the I'm ready though, and I've made

a couple of attempts. But well, I think like things like m G. KOMF and you know, doing the diversity scholarship for example, like that that's a great example of I think being a leader where you can my fit one of my one of my really good friends, you know, whenever we're in a group and when there's a bunch of women like he is, he wants to open his mouth, and I'm like, dude, stop, just don't open your mouth because I think, you know, regardless of the intent

of you know, men or white men or whatever it is, trying to help in that situation, Like it's it's like you never know how somebody's gonna take it rong or right. You will literally never know, and so it's

scary. It's it's like you can mean good and it could come out bad, Like you just don't know, yeah for sure, So you have to be careful right to your point, right, So I think, like, I don't know, I mean, I think a lot of people have different opinions about this, but like I think that sometimes when put in those situations like just don't get involved in the conversation, how are what you want to? But like help in other ways, right, like the diversity scholarship.

You know, I think William Apple, you guys do a lot, spend a lot of time and energy like trying to get woman up on stage and stuff like that, which I think is important. So you know, there's tons of different ways people can help. Yeah, there's hero Devs has been fun. We we have a lot of Central and South American employees and so that that for me, has been a lot of fun since I was a

teenager. When I was a teenager, I went and lived in Mexico for two years and just kind of fell in love with fell in love with this this culture I'd never known, but I just you know, it became a part of me. And so hero Does has been fun the last year two to get more opportunity to to mingle with and just work. Oh man, that's the funnest this practice because now I emerging, I'm learning Argentine Spanish. Yeah, and it's so different, like all the swear words don't they're not

the same, like all the like even food is called everything. So it's it's it's fun to learn another another version of Spanish. So yeah, all the tacos, but I mean, are to you're not eating tacos. I guess you're eating in Argentina. But you were just there for the tacos erin Come on, yeah, exactly, I was. I was there for the Tacostish Adventures in Angular is a dev chat dot tv production made in partnership with hero Devs. Hero Devs is a group of Angular experts who can help your

team code like true developer heroes. If your team needs an Angular expert, reach out to Aaron at hero dot dev today. So what's next? Your your focused? So right now? Okay, so you're balancing. You got a lot of balls in there. You've got our ex ys core team. Yeah, you've got this dot, both of this dots, right, You've got a bunch of community stuff you're doing around the Sorry you've said the name like three times before we're talking. It's like an escalation bracket. What's that

escalation? What else would be going on? I mean, I think, like I'm not that involved in the rxgs core team right now, Like I'm more involved. I feel like sometimes if there's a fire and I need to calm it down. That's why I'll get involved, but I'm not as deeply involved just because I've been traveling for the past few months. So November December I'll probably pick back up again and see see how it can be of use. This year, I spend a lot of time keynoting conferences on diverse student

inclusion. Also this thing we call this the pan stacks. Yeah, and it's all about like process, abstractions and mentorship and this new way of thinking about building development teams. And I get really excited about that because I think like building inclusive development teams with just you know a lot of common sense things ideas is really impactful and can help you know, a lot of these larger organizations succeed. But you know, I really want to play around with Verro

like I think. You know, it was interesting because when I first started development, I literally was just like, all right, I'm excited about this thing. I'm going to do this thing. I'm going to write about it, I'm going to talk about it. That's what I'm going to do.

Right. So initially, when I started, you know, speaking, I just spoke about angular and burun react and view, and you know, was really excited about angular material, you know, so spend a lot of time talking about Angular material, and I think one of the struggles I've been having, which is funny because everybody has the struggle, right, it's this idea of like what do I do next? Like what are people going to care

about? You know? Is that interesting enough? Whenever? And I realized just recently that like I've been spending way too much time thinking about the cool thing versus like forgetting about why I started development in the first place, which was just to like do something and get excited about it. So Vero, which is this really cool framework for AR. It's like, so to use eron, oh my god, you would be like, it's just crazy.

It's just zero v v I R. Oh yeah it is. It's like as easy as using Angular material for AR though, yeah, but for AR. Yeah. So that's what I'm super excited about. If I can get my life back. Is it web based or is it like what what what's Vero focused on? Is it more like native Android iOS or what is it? So the demo I saw you can actually use React native and Viero. Cool, and that is all I know. Yeah, that's awesome. I was planning on spinning it up with React NATA, I need to get more

involved in that stuff. Did you say you guys are doing AI as well? Oh yeah, yeah, we've been doing like you know, everybody's all about using machine learning and AI to kind of optimize business processes. I feel like, especially in supply chain, right, Like, there's just so many

cool things out there. I think if you look at sort of more old school organizations, what you'll find is still a lot of processes that are very hands on, like kind of like you know, call centers, right, But you know, we've been thinking a lot and helping some of our clients with things like how do you optimize call centers or you know, call scripts right based on building a model to learn what the best thing to say is next, or doing things like you know, like VR wise like if I

guess, I guess mainly and shipping you kind of see this stuff. But you know, like there's so many different applications out there right now where you can literally just hold up your phone and you know, using using AR, I always say vr AR, but using AR it can actually tell you like what's wrong with your truck and then ship you apart immediately, right, Like, So there's so many amazing cool ways you can kind of like use these

new technologies, which is something I get really excited about because I really get excited about like helping enable enable businesses. That awesome. Yeah, obviously everybody's also just migrations. I mean, so I have one last question to ask. I just I just kind of learned this about you when you were when you were stuck in Taiwan, you said you're from Taiwan. I didn't know that. Oh yeah, I'm Taiwanese. Okay, So how long did you

live in Taiwan? How many times did you go how often you go back talking about your Taiwan I'm Taiwanese, but I'm American born, so I was actually born in the Bay Area. Taiwan was actually my first language, and then Mandarin was my second, and then English. But really mm hmm. But I mean, you know, when you're young whatever, like, you can learn languages so easily. Yeah. So, I mean I speak it, I speak, I can understand Taiwanese, and I can speak Mandarin,

but I can't speak business man like. That's very different. I mean I'm sure you know, does does like does your mom and dad both speak Taiwanese and Mandan? Yeah, I mean people who speak Taiwanese like they speak Taiwanese and Mandarin at the same time. Okay, Okay, I didn't know that. Okay, So a similar ishue or are they not very similar? Mmm?

Sometimes it's similar and sometimes it's not. Like you know how, I'm sure in your family you speak like Spanish English, right, so it's kind of the same thing, except it's Taiwanese Mandarin, Taiwanese and Mandarin at the same time. Yeah, yeah, I understand. Okay. Well's cool. So, Tracy, if anyone wants to get a hold of you, talk to you, need some help with something. What's the best way for the

community to get a hold of you. They can always email me, I mean, you can always email me Tracy at this dot ceo, or you can always find me on Twitter at lady Leit DM is open, dms are open. Yeah cool? All right, so lady at Lady lead or Tracy at this dot Tracy t r A c y Yes at this dot co. Yeah, okay, this dot dot co. Sorry, this dot dot com. Cool. Well, let's let's move on to picks real quick. In case you haven't listened before, everyone, we've kind of picked something and share

something that we like with the community. So I'm gonna pick, and it can be anything. So I'm picking CBS Survivor, the game show on TV, Survivor. I've watched it for years. I'm going to be on it

one day. But this season has been the last three episodes have been really interesting because they go really they've never done this before, not even one time, and now it's three episodes in a row where they go deep into social issues, like, uh, three episodes ago, these two buddies, they're like buddy buddy buddies, and one of the guys called the other guy's bandana

do rag and the dude who got his pandemic called the dog. He felt like it was kind of racist, and so there was like this breakdown where they there was a teaching moment and it got real between these two friends. I was like, that's awesome and I got the chills and I was like, man, that was a really good episode. And then the last two episodes have been really powerful as well. So I'm gonna pick. If you haven't watched Vive recently, I'm picking. I'm picking Survivors, So go check

it out. It's got some good social messages this season. So, Tracey, do you have any picks? Yes? So I recently was in Sweden and I went to this place called scanned Witch like sandwich but Scandinavian scanich. Yeah, and it was so delicious. So I've been stalking their Google reviews and basically researching how I'm going to make all the different styles of these scanwitches.

So Scandinavian sandwich is basically an open face sandwich. Okay, so it's just a piece of bread that's really good and like nicely grilled in butter. And then this one they had pork belly on top, and then they had like an Asian sesame oil slow, like a Carra pinnegri slaw. But yeah, I really yeah scan Witches, and they're only in Europe. Well, I mean Scandinavian sandwiches, I guess. So you have to go to Scandinavia to eat these open face sandwiches. But this one particular was really good.

Oh I also learned something new. So did you know that Scandinavia is like Scandinavian area is like the biggest consumer of eating candy? No, yeah, because more than America. Yes, because apparently there's this thing in Sweden, where I don't remember what it's called, but it's basically called like sweet Saturday,

where every Saturday, kids can go to the store. And I'm probably getting this wrong, but sweets can go to the kids can go to the store and they have those bulk candies and they can just pick out candies and like that's their Saturday, every Saturday. How cool is that? That's as a kid, that would be awesome. Yeah, good for your health. Not as a parent you'd be like I'm going to hit my kids in the head when they come home. But yeah, yes, exactly. As a

kid, that'd be awesome. All right, that's cool. Well, Tracy, you've been an awesome guest. Thanks for all that you do in the community and for all the good examples you are showing the rest of us. Yeah, thanks for having me. Yeah, and to the listeners, I will say thank you and we'll see you next time. Bendwidth for this segment is provided by cash Flow, the world's fastest c d N. Deliver your content fast with cash Fly. Visit c A c H E f l Y dot com to learn more.

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