tag:engineers.sg,2005:/episodes?page=154Engineers.SG2024-03-19T09:47:18Ztag:engineers.sg,2005:Episode/12172016-10-23T03:32:56Z2024-01-08T04:01:45ZBuild Features, Not Apps - iOS Conf SG 2016<iframe width="560" height="315" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/lJlyR8chDwo" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe><p>Speaker: Natasha Murashev - @NatashaTheRobot</p>
<p>Most iPhone users don’t bother installing any apps per months. And worse, ~80% never use an app they’ve installed again. The future of mobile is clearly not app, but features. Features that make the iPhone ecosystem still a native experience, but as open and flexible as the web. Learn how you could prepare for that future.</p>
<p>About the speaker</p>
<p>Natasha is an iOS developer by day and a robot by night. She blogs about Swift, watchOS, and iOS development on her blog, natashatherobot.com, curates a fast-growing weekly Swift newsletter, This Week in Swift, and organizes the try! Swift Conference around the world. She's currently living the digital nomad life as her alter identity: @NatashaTheNomad</p>
<p>Event URL: <a href="http://iosconf.sg/">http://iosconf.sg/</a></p>
<p>Produced by Engineers.SG</p>Natasha Murashevtag:engineers.sg,2005:Episode/12162016-10-23T03:32:51Z2024-03-16T05:00:45ZVisualizing Graphs in Swift - iOS Conf SG 2016<iframe width="560" height="315" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/hUkfpjZsT3g" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe><p>Speaker: Conrad Kramer (@conradev), Workflow</p>
<p>In this talk I will walk through building an interactive graph visualization that doubles as a physics simulation, and I’ll be building it from scratch. I will be writing a version of this demo <a href="https://bl.ocks.org/mbostock/4062045">https://bl.ocks.org/mbostock/4062045</a> in Swift 3. </p>
<p>Building the force directed graph layout will involve building a quad tree (yay recursive enums) to efficiently simulate Coulomb’s Law and a custom animator to coordinate the simulation. Finally I will also walk through how this can be embedded in a playground with explanatory markdown to teach the same principles.</p>
<p>About the speaker</p>
<p>Conrad Kramer is one of the iOS developers behind the automation app WorkFlow that won WWDC design award in 2015. He got his start 6 years ago by making software for jailbroken iOS devices and has since used that experience to build apps for the App Store. He has contributed to a few open source projects including ComponentKit and Mantle, and has released a few of his own. He enjoys cycling, electronic music, introspection and occasionally, sleeping.</p>
<p>Event URL: <a href="http://iosconf.sg/">http://iosconf.sg/</a></p>
<p>Produced by Engineers.SG</p>Conrad Kramertag:engineers.sg,2005:Episode/12152016-10-23T03:32:46Z2024-03-17T22:00:46ZA Protocol for Composition - iOS Conf SG 2016<iframe width="560" height="315" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/X_aDFEl8Qko" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe><p>Speaker: Keith Smiley (@smileykeith) Lyft</p>
<p>One of the hardest parts about using UIKit effectively is keeping view controllers small and maintainable. At Lyft we use protocol extensions in Swift to fend off the massive view controller problem in order to write stateless, reusable code. </p>
<p>During the talk we'll do a deep dive into one of Lyft's most complex view controllers in order to see how the protocol extensions fit together to keep the view controller small.</p>
<p>About the speaker</p>
<p>Keith works on Lyft's 100% Swift app. In his free time he likes to work on vim plugins, and command line tools to make iOS development outside of Xcode more bearable.</p>
<p>Event URL: <a href="http://iosconf.sg/">http://iosconf.sg/</a></p>
<p>Produced by Engineers.SG</p>Keith Smileytag:engineers.sg,2005:Episode/12142016-10-23T03:32:41Z2024-02-28T07:00:50ZNotify Me, Notify You. Aha! - iOS Conf SG 2016<iframe width="560" height="315" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/j5ocpZckY0E" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe><p>Speaker: Sam Davies (@iwantmyrealname), RayWenderlich.com</p>
<p>User notifications are incredibly important part of iOS apps - allowing you to get your user to interact with your app when *you* want. They enrich the user experience, and provide real value to your users. So why are they such a pain to work with? Apple has finally heard your cries of despair, and in iOS 10 introduces the new UserNotifications framework. This acts as a central place to handle all user notifications, whether they be local or push notifications. </p>
<p>In this talk we'll take a quick jaunt through the new framework, covering what you need to do to transition existing behaviour, in addition to looking at some of the new functionality. Learn how to create custom, interactive notifications, as well as building an extension to intercept and manipulate your push notifications. There may well be additional ABBA puns, but given the quality of the first one, it's looking unlikely.</p>
<p>About the speaker</p>
<p>Sam is a developer, an author and a trainer, working for Razeware, the company behind the curtain at raywenderlich.com. Despite starting out in academia working on computer vision problems, he's spent the last 5 years working in the mobile world, primarily focused on making delightful things in iOS. Whilst he's probably wrangling with some kind of code, recording videos or presenting talks during the day time, you'll often find him out entertaining the masses by night, armed with his trombone and killer dance moves. You should say hi to him. He's nice. Honest.</p>
<p>Event URL: <a href="http://iosconf.sg/">http://iosconf.sg/</a></p>
<p>Produced by Engineers.SG</p>Sam Daviestag:engineers.sg,2005:Episode/12132016-10-23T03:32:37Z2024-03-15T23:00:31ZMemory Graph Debugger - iOS Conf SG 2016<iframe width="560" height="315" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/znjoIDAu-h8" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe><p>Speaker: Mugunth Kumar (@MugunthKumar)</p>
<p>Mugunth is a co-author of popular iOS programming book iOS Programming Pushing the Limits. </p>
<p>He wrote MKStoreKit, MKNetworkKit and many other open-source iOS libraries. Some of his work include developing iOS apps for startups like Found, Squiryl, RedMart etc.</p>
<p>Event URL: <a href="http://iosconf.sg/">http://iosconf.sg/</a></p>
<p>Produced by Engineers.SG</p>Mugunth Kumartag:engineers.sg,2005:Episode/12112016-10-23T03:32:29Z2023-10-29T12:01:26ZEnter the Dragon: Taming LLVM - iOS Conf SG 2016<iframe width="560" height="315" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/rwBBdlois2g" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe><p>Speaker: Omer Iqbal (@olenhad), Garena</p>
<p>LLVM is a compiler infrastructure project, designed as a set of reusable libraries. From humble beginnings as his holiness Chris Lattner's research project, it has recently gained much traction, with compilers for Swift, C, C++, Objective C, Rust, Haskell, etc, using it under the hood. </p>
<p>At it’s core, LLVM features an architecture independent, type safe, instruction set called “LLVM IR”, which LLVM compiles to several instruction sets including x86/x86-64, ARM, Power PC etc. So in essence, if you’re lazy and want to implement a multi platform programming language that runs “natively”, LLVM saves you tons of time and effort. </p>
<p>This talk will go through implementing a very simple compiler (in Swift!) for a very simple, toy programming language, using LLVM.</p>
<p>About the speaker</p>
<p>Omer is an iOS Dev at Garena, although he is often found serenading to functional programming. He loves wasting time on developing toy compilers. There are rumors thar he prays to a bust of Chris Lattner, though these are unconfirmed. </p>
<p>Event URL: <a href="http://iosconf.sg/">http://iosconf.sg/</a></p>
<p>Produced by Engineers.SG</p>Omer Iqbaltag:engineers.sg,2005:Episode/12102016-10-23T03:32:23Z2024-01-08T02:01:14ZReactive State Machine - iOS Conf SG 2016<iframe width="560" height="315" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/Oau4JjJP3nA" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe><p>Speaker: Yasuhiro Inami (@inamiy), Line Corp</p>
<p>Since Swift has emerged in 2014 and the idea of Functional Reactive Programming (FRP) has become widespread, iOS development practices are now in a great paradigm shift. </p>
<p>However, we still have difficulties in managing states and side-effects to interact with our world. In this presentation, we will look through the basics of Automata Theory (State Machine), ideas from JavaScript’s React.js and Redux, and how to unite them with FRP.</p>
<p>About the speaker</p>
<p>Yasuhiro is an iOS developer at LINE Corporation. While creating iPhone apps such as messenger, camera, news app in his work, he also dedicates his time to functional (reactive) programming and open source projects, e.g. TryParsec. </p>
<p>He is a huge fan of Swift and Haskell, and he is a try! Swift 2016 Tokyo speaker.</p>
<p>Event URL: <a href="http://iosconf.sg/">http://iosconf.sg/</a></p>
<p>Produced by Engineers.SG</p>Yasuhiro Inamitag:engineers.sg,2005:Episode/12092016-10-23T03:32:19Z2024-01-08T04:01:45ZThinking of your tests as a software product - iOS Conf SG 2016<iframe width="560" height="315" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/BbPPnxhcdHo" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe><p>Speaker: Michael Petrov (@mpetrov), Dropbox</p>
<p>Having a test suite can double your development speed, but your app likely doesn’t have one. In this talk you’ll learn how to build a test suite that is minimal and delivers high signal. You will also learn how just a few simple design choices will keep your tests useful, flexible, and low maintenance as your project evolves. This talk is based on many hard lessons from both startups and larger companies and will focus on practical advice for any app size.</p>
<p>About the speaker</p>
<p>Michael is an iOS engineer, founder, and author. Currently, Michael is working for Dropbox where he’s building a testing platform to allow the Dropbox app to ship every two weeks.</p>
<p>Despite starting his career in PHP and even writing a book on it (calling this period his darker days), Michael switched to iOS eight years ago. He began his iOS journey by building one of the first iOS database applications, FMTouch. In 2012, Michael co-founded a Y-Combinator backed startup that released Couple, a messaging app for couples. The Couple app has millions of downloads and thousands of five star reviews. After a 2015 acquisition by Dropbox, Michael joined its iOS team. At Dropbox, Michael has worked on the core app and most recently became a founding member of the Mobile Platform team.</p>
<p>Michael lives in San Francisco with his wife and three robots. In his free time, he spends his time prototyping with VR, TensorFlow, Intel Edison, and Amazon Echo.</p>
<p>Event URL: <a href="http://iosconf.sg/">http://iosconf.sg/</a></p>
<p>Produced by Engineers.SG</p>Michael Petrovtag:engineers.sg,2005:Episode/12082016-10-23T03:32:14Z2024-01-08T02:01:14ZProgramming without recompiling - iOS Conf SG 2016<iframe width="560" height="315" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/t8ifiNXPWW0" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe><p>Speaker: Krzysztof Zabłocki (@merowing_), The New York Times</p>
<p>Stop recompiling. A dramatic boost to your iOS programming productivity. Are you writing in Swift, seeing long compile times? Would you rather spend your time implementing features than watching Xcode build spinner? </p>
<p>What if you could implement production code, without having to recompile your code, and what if it was even faster than Apple Playground? </p>
<p>It’s possible and it can make programming much more efficient and more fun in the process.</p>
<p>About the speaker</p>
<p>Krzysztof is an iOS developer, known for creating Objective-C Playgrounds, Apple’s Essential Apps like Foldify and 3D Game Engines. </p>
<p>Passionate about writing quality code and helping other do the same. He blogs on <a href="http://merowing.info">http://merowing.info</a> and open sources tools/libraries on <a href="https://github.com/krzysztofzablocki">https://github.com/krzysztofzablocki</a>, making it into top 50 most starred Cocoa accounts worldwide. </p>
<p>Senior iOS Developer at The New York Times</p>
<p>Event URL: <a href="http://iosconf.sg/">http://iosconf.sg/</a></p>
<p>Produced by Engineers.SG</p>Krzysztof Zabłockitag:engineers.sg,2005:Episode/12072016-10-23T03:32:10Z2024-03-06T14:00:42ZWriting Swift, while living on Objective-C - iOS Conf SG 2016<iframe width="560" height="315" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/EHWRisQ9IB8" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe><p>Speaker: Ben Asher (@benasher44), Yelp</p>
<p>Even if you're only writing Swift code these days, you likely work with time-tested Objective-C libraries or even just your app's old Objective-C code. As a Swift engineer, it's important to understand how the two languages work together. Because the Yelp app shipped with the App Store back in 2008, we've been quite busy marrying our new Swift and legacy Objective-C code. </p>
<p>I'm going to talk about the basics of Swift and Objective-C interoperability, how to minimally prepare your Objective-C for your Swift, and most importantly, the finer points of nullability.</p>
<p>About the speaker</p>
<p>Ben is an iOS engineer at Yelp working to help engineers feel confident pushing code for an app that shipped with the App Store. He also enjoys contributing to open source projects such as CocoaPods. In his free time, he likes flying planes and baking bread.</p>
<p>Event URL: <a href="http://iosconf.sg/">http://iosconf.sg/</a></p>
<p>Produced by Engineers.SG</p>Ben Ashertag:engineers.sg,2005:Episode/12052016-10-19T01:54:40Z2024-03-05T15:00:29ZData.gov.sg - PyData Singapore<iframe width="560" height="315" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/nVqhhxXJB6I" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe><p>Speaker: Loh Li Wei</p>
<p>Synopsis: Data.gov.sg was launched in 2011 as the Singapore government's one-stop portal to its open data. The new data.gov.sg, now in public beta, goes beyond being a data repository. It aims to make government data relevant and understandable to the public, through the active use of charts and articles. We will discuss the key features on the new data.gov.sg, such as real-time APIs, dashboards, data blog and the recently released developers portal. We will also share on our data quality guide, which will assist government agencies in converting their data from human-readable report formats into reusable, machine-readable formats.</p>
<p>Speaker: Loh Li Wei is an associate consultant in IDA's Data Science Division, focusing on data-driven narratives and open data standards. He is part of a five-member team currently working on the new data.gov.sg portal. </p>
<p>Event Page: <a href="http://www.meetup.com/PyData-SG/events/229711618/">http://www.meetup.com/PyData-SG/events/229711618/</a></p>
<p>Produced by Engineers.SG</p>
<p>Help us caption & translate this video!</p>
<p><a href="http://amara.org/v/YEAX/">http://amara.org/v/YEAX/</a></p>Loh Li Weitag:engineers.sg,2005:Episode/12062016-10-19T01:54:21Z2024-03-04T07:00:34ZCausal Analytics - PyData Singapore<iframe width="560" height="315" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/OcNdSFLZ9fU" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe><p>Speaker: Dr. Tuan Q. Phan</p>
<p>Synopsis: "Dangers of big data", using the spurious correlation examples, and how we can do better causal analytics.</p>
<p>Speaker: Dr. Phan is currently an Assistant Professor at NUS in the Department of Information System. His research brings together social sciences, computer science, and statistics to investigate social networks, social media, Big Data, product diffusion, word-of-mouth, and web and mobile commerce. He has looked at a number of topics related to online and offline social networks such as the effects of natural disasters on human social networks, how individuals react to privacy changes, how some individuals become influential, and how firms can leverage social media.</p>
<p>Event Page: <a href="http://www.meetup.com/PyData-SG/events/229711618/">http://www.meetup.com/PyData-SG/events/229711618/</a></p>
<p>Produced by Engineers.SG</p>
<p>Help us caption & translate this video!</p>
<p><a href="http://amara.org/v/YERQ/">http://amara.org/v/YERQ/</a></p>Tuan Q. Phantag:engineers.sg,2005:Episode/12032016-10-18T15:54:58Z2024-03-18T15:00:55ZUsing Docker Machine with a remote host - Docker Singapore<iframe width="560" height="315" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/oGAUA06dRio" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe><p>Speaker: Sergey Shishkin (@sshishkin)</p>
<p>Event Page: <a href="https://www.meetup.com/Docker-Singapore/events/234059828/">https://www.meetup.com/Docker-Singapore/events/234059828/</a></p>
<p>Produced by Engineers.SG</p>
<p>Help us caption & translate this video!</p>
<p><a href="http://amara.org/v/YAuA/">http://amara.org/v/YAuA/</a></p>Sergey Shishkintag:engineers.sg,2005:Episode/12042016-10-18T15:54:56Z2022-12-03T11:00:42ZDocker for AWS - Docker Singapore<iframe width="560" height="315" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/ypYnSnOPkJo" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe><p>Speaker: Vincent de Smet</p>
<p>Event Page: <a href="https://www.meetup.com/Docker-Singapore/events/234059828/">https://www.meetup.com/Docker-Singapore/events/234059828/</a></p>
<p>Produced by Engineers.SG</p>
<p>Help us caption & translate this video!</p>
<p><a href="http://amara.org/v/YAty/">http://amara.org/v/YAty/</a></p>Vincent De Smettag:engineers.sg,2005:Episode/12022016-10-17T18:15:00Z2023-06-15T23:00:44ZHow to Stop Hating your Tests - Agile Singapore Conference 2016<iframe width="560" height="315" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/lmSae3kuBuU" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe><p>Speaker: Justin Searls (@searls), Co-founder @ Test Double</p>
<p>Your app is a unique snowflake. Your tests are too… but they shouldn't be!</p>
<p>You know the person on every project team who cares just a little bit more about testing than everyone else? This talk is a distillation of the lessons learned I've learned from being that guy on dozens of projects.</p>
<p>This is a rapid-fire session that covers 15 systemic problems that plague most teams' test suites, presented form an angle you probably haven't considered before. Best of all, it'll equip you with preventative measures to avoid or mitigate each of them.</p>
<p>About the speaker</p>
<p>Justin has a superpower: when he uses software, it stops working. With this power came the responsibility to show others what makes the world's software ugly, confusing, and broken. He co-founded Test Double, a software agency dedicated to making software that's better for businesses to manage, developers to work with, and customers to use.</p>
<p>Slides: <a href="http://blog.testdouble.com/posts/2015-11-16-how-to-stop-hating-your-tests.html">http://blog.testdouble.com/posts/2015-11-16-how-to-stop-hating-your-tests.html</a></p>
<p>Event Page: <a href="http://2016.agilesingapore.org">http://2016.agilesingapore.org</a></p>
<p>Produced by Engineers.SG</p>
<p>Help us caption & translate this video!</p>
<p><a href="http://amara.org/v/XvSp/">http://amara.org/v/XvSp/</a></p>Justin Searlstag:engineers.sg,2005:Episode/12012016-10-17T18:14:54Z2023-09-03T07:01:42ZBuilding A Remote Engineering Culture - Agile Singapore Conference 2016<iframe width="560" height="315" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/cOOdqVKmdN0" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe><p>Speaker: Jon Chan (jonhmchan), Lead, Marketing Engineering @ Stack Overflow</p>
<p>At Stack Overflow, we are a remote-first company. That means no matter where you are in the world, if you are a great developer, we want to make sure you’re treated just like you’re in our headquarters in New York. How do you build agile teams when most people are remote? We take this to an extreme: get my first-hand account of what it’s like to work full-time as an engineer at Stack Overflow traveling to 22 cities in 7 countries in three months. You’ll learn what it means to build a truly remote culture, what tools we use to make it possible, and how we do standups, iteration, and communication in a truly international engineering team.</p>
<p>About the speaker</p>
<p>Jon is a developer at Stack Overflow since 2013 and heads up Marketing Engineering and Developer Evangelism there. He is also the founder of Bento, a site that helps hundreds of thousands of self-taught developers around the world learn to code from the best resources. Jon speaks frequently on tech education, diversity, and how to build engineering focused startups. Before Stack Overflow and Bento, Jon was a technology consultant at Deloitte and graduated from New York University.</p>
<p>Slides: <a href="https://speakerdeck.com/player/eb613ccc851a4706a17bdf284b5c03c5?feature=oembed">https://speakerdeck.com/player/eb613ccc851a4706a17bdf284b5c03c5?feature=oembed</a></p>
<p>Event Page: <a href="http://2016.agilesingapore.org">http://2016.agilesingapore.org</a></p>
<p>Produced by Engineers.SG</p>
<p>Help us caption & translate this video!</p>
<p><a href="http://amara.org/v/XvSs/">http://amara.org/v/XvSs/</a></p>Jon Chantag:engineers.sg,2005:Episode/12002016-10-17T18:14:49Z2023-04-24T07:03:24ZFriction - Agile Singapore Conference 2016<iframe width="560" height="315" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/k4FCkArbPrc" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe><p>Speaker: Mary Poppendieck (@mpoppendieck), Owner @ Poppendieck.LLC</p>
<p>You have great software engineers. They work on autonomous product teams that deliver frequently. The products are doing well. But -- there is always a But. Things could be better. Something is frustrating team members or disappointing customers or slowing things down. What is it?</p>
<p>Friction. No matter how well things are going, there will always be friction. Consumers experience friction when using your product. Friction delays a team's response to a product request. Friction makes the code difficult to change. Differing expectations create friction among team members. Competing goals create friction between teams.</p>
<p>This talk looks at the most common sources of friction in software systems, and present patterns for reducing friction that can be used again -- and again -- to identify and address points of friction on an on-going basis.</p>
<p>About the speaker</p>
<p>Mary Poppendieck started her career as a process control programmer, moved on to manage the IT department of a manufacturing plant, and then ended up in product development, where she was both a product champion and department manager.</p>
<p>Mary considered retirement 1998, but instead found herself managing a government software project where she first encountered the word "waterfall." When Mary compared her experience in successful software and product development to the prevailing opinions about how to manage software projects, she decided the time had come for a new paradigm. She wrote the award-winning book Lean Software Development: An Agile Toolkit in 2003 to explain how the lean principles from manufacturing offer a better approach to software development.</p>
<p>Over the past several years, Mary has found retirement elusive as she lectures and teaches classes with her husband Tom. Based on their on-going learning, they wrote a second book,Implementing Lean Software Development: From Concept to Cash in 2006, a third, Leading Lean Software Development: Results are Not the Point in 2009, and a fourth book, The Lean Mindset: Ask the Right Questions in 2013. A popular writer and speaker, Mary continues to bring fresh perspectives to the world of software development.</p>
<p>Slides: <a href="https://speakerdeck.com/agilesingapore/friction-mary-poppendieck-agile-sg-2016">https://speakerdeck.com/agilesingapore/friction-mary-poppendieck-agile-sg-2016</a></p>
<p>Event Page: <a href="http://2016.agilesingapore.org">http://2016.agilesingapore.org</a></p>
<p>Produced by Engineers.SG</p>
<p>Help us caption & translate this video!</p>
<p><a href="http://amara.org/v/XvSt/">http://amara.org/v/XvSt/</a></p>Mary Poppendiecktag:engineers.sg,2005:Episode/11992016-10-17T18:14:45Z2023-12-21T11:01:33ZBuild a better, faster product with Game Thinking - Agile Singapore Conference 2016<iframe width="560" height="315" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/Du_FZ2yl2r8" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe><p>Speaker: Amy Jo Kim (@amyjokim), Game Designer, Entrepreneur, Startup Coach @ ShuffleBrain</p>
<p>Do you want to harness the deeper power of games – the power to drive long-term engagement? Are you ready to look beyond the silver bullets & Skinner boxes – and learn to think like a game designer? In this talk, you’ll learn the foundations of Game Thinking - brought to life with front-line stories from eBay, Ultima Online, The Sims, Rock Band, Covet Fashion, Happify, Lumosity and Slack. You’ll come away with a smarter approach to innovative product design - and practical, actionable design tips you can use right away to turbo-charge your path towards product/market fit.</p>
<p>About the speaker</p>
<p>Amy Jo Kim, Ph.D. is a world-renowned social game designer, community architect and startup coach with deep experience in early-stage innovation and collaborative design. Her design credits include Rock Band, The Sims, eBay, Netflix, Cover Fashion, indiegogo, nytimes.com, Ultima Online, Happify, Pley and numerous startups. She holds a B.A. in Experimental Psychology, and a Ph.D in Behavioral Neuroscience. She’s an adjunct professor of Game Design at the USC School of Cinematic Arts, where she co-developed the multi-player game design curriculum. Her current focus and passion is Getting to Alpha - an online coaching program and design toolkit for innovative teams who want to accelerate early product design.</p>
<p>Slides: <a href="https://www.slideshare.net/secret/1YHYqs5CCB8VkW">https://www.slideshare.net/secret/1YHYqs5CCB8VkW</a></p>
<p>Event Page: <a href="http://2016.agilesingapore.org">http://2016.agilesingapore.org</a></p>
<p>Produced by Engineers.SG</p>
<p>Help us caption & translate this video!</p>
<p><a href="http://amara.org/v/XvSu/">http://amara.org/v/XvSu/</a></p>Amy Jo Kim