Thứ Ba, 28 tháng 8, 2018

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Imagine for a moment there's a quaint little Build a Bear in a remote idyllic village.

Imagine that just one of their employees hid cameras in teddy bears sold by the store and

filmed small children with it.

Imagine the mass-outrage that would follow.

Now imagine if thousands of employees were doing it, and the company covered it up.

They would be sued and bankrupt in a fortnight.

But imagine if instead of just filming small children, they were beating, molesting, and

even raping them.

Imagine if the company called the victims liars and threatened them if they told anyone…

and in the cases that were reported, the cops and judges sided with the abusers.

As the scandal grew, imagine that Build a Bear paid billions of dollars in settlements

to silence the victims from speaking out, and to avoid scandal, while keeping the offending

employees on the books – shuffling them from store to store, and sometimes if the

offenses became too public, moved them to foreign countries, placing them in positions

of authority over powerless communities.

Imagine they were put in charge of orphanages where they continued to rape and abuse the

most vulnerable of our children with impunity.

And imagine this going on for decade after decade after decade.

All over the globe

Imagine corrupt company officials feigning regret and remorse, promising swift action

and reform while hiding the names of abusers and protecting the rapists.

Refusing to release documents, and lobbying to protect their own.

Allowing it to happen again and again and again.

Now as this nightmare intensifies, imagine that you're a customer.

Would you continue to give them your money?

Would you continue to recommend this megalithic monster bringing family and friends into their store.

Would you continue to let their employees near your precious children?

Lastly, imagine that the company officials had the bold-faced gall to claim status as

mankind's sole moral authority - to be the voice of god on earth.

The audacity!

What if I told you the worst part of this hell-on-earth scenario is that you don't

have to imagine it.

Because outside your mental theater this hush-job of perpetual savagery

has become an ecclesiastical pandemic

turning the Catholic Church into a pedophile's paradise.

Enough is enough.

For more infomation >> Take the Build-a-Bear Double Standard Test - Duration: 4:39.

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How To Build a Dream Marketing Team (From Scratch) - Duration: 5:46.

For more infomation >> How To Build a Dream Marketing Team (From Scratch) - Duration: 5:46.

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The exact steps you need to take to build a quick and easy consulting website - Duration: 4:44.

- Hey, Paul Klein again.

How you doin'?

Another quick business tip for ya today.

Today I wanna talk about the exact steps

you need to take to build a quick and easy

consulting website.

Everybody thinks that it's super hard,

you gotta spend all this money and everything,

and it's really not that difficult.

To get started when you're first

just starting something on the side

of you're trying something new and you don't wanna

spend a lot of money, don't go spend a ton of money

on a big giant web developer and invest all kinds of money.

You can make a great site with a lot of the free tools

and you don't need to be a programmer

or ya know, a rocket scientist to do it.

My site is done on Weebly.

I found Weebly to be super easy,

but the first thing you need to do is go get

your domain name, as I talked about in

why it's so important to be your personal brand

and get your domain name under your name.

Ya know, go get that registration.

You can register it at Weebly,

on my webpage under tools in my box,

I mean my toolbox,

or tools in my trade.

I can't remember what it's called.

Anyway, I have a lot of different tools,

different digital tools that I use there

and you're welcome to click on the links and use those.

Some of those are an affiliate link for me.

So I get a small, tiny, tiny commission on it.

I haven't even got one yet.

So hopefully, someday, I'll get one.

But at any rate, check it out.

You can check out Weebly.

Super easy to use, set up.

You only need two or three pages.

It's real easy to use and there's no coding

or anything like that.

I've tried WordPress, JoomLa, a lot of different

products out there like that.

They're all good and I'm sure there's certainly

a place and a time when that would be needed.

But I've found that just a basic Weebly site

and even I'm sure Squarespace and Wix

and oh, I don't know, there's other ones too

that are similar to Weebly, but are just as good.

But man, just get one of those and start it.

Put up a page with your picture on it,

your services, a phone number.

Even if you don't have a whole bunch of pages.

You don't need to have a Mercedes, ya know,

when the Corolla will get there, get ya there.

Just to get ya some traction.

In today's digital world as you know,

our resume or the way people do business,

the Yellow Pages are gone, all that stuff.

It's all about on the web, being able to find you

when they Google search ya and so forth

or they Google search a term in your industry.

Having that webpage is so crucial for that.

Just get a Wix site or a Weebly site.

Get it up and running.

Have a home page or a splash page.

Super easy to do.

The other thing I have on my page

that's under my tools is a web based logo creator.

So you can get on there right now

if you just wanna try an idea.

One of the things I found that really helped me

is if you use Logojoy just to create a logo

for an idea you have, even if you're not going anywhere,

I love to do that.

It's free, you can create a logo,

and kinda visualize what you're,

you have in mind for a product or service

or something like that and then you can put it on

as your screensaver or put it on your phone background

and you know, it kinda helps you visualize

where you're going with your product or service.

So, Logojoy's a great nother one.

There's also like Fiverr and 99designs.

What's the other one?

Yeah, Fiverr, 99designs, Upwork,

those are all good too.

They encompass multiple designers and people

all around the whole world to do design work,

but Logojoy is simple.

It's web based, bam.

Put your name and your business in there

and it'll come up with 10 different logos

and you can pick one.

If you wanna buy it, you can.

You don't have to.

So it's a great tool out there.

So go out there, get your webpage, get your domain first.

GoDaddy or Weebly is one of the domain registrations.

Get just a basic Weebly site.

Just set it up, just get in there and dig on it.

It's not that hard to do and use Logojoy

or one of those types of places

and create you a logo and man, you're up and running

and going and get in the game and get in the business.

So it's a good thing.

I'd love to connect with you at PaulKlein.net

where I have my one-page consulting agreement

that you can get.

It's a template that I've used for all my consulting

with working with Target and Cracker Barrel

and Taco Bell and so forth.

I've used that same template for those contracts.

You can certainly use it, plagiarize it,

copy it and adapt it to your situation.

So, would love to connect with you.

Again, that's at PaulKlein.net.

Check that out and get in the game and keep it going.

Until next time, we will have another business tip for ya

and hope to hear from you soon.

Talk to you later, bye bye.

For more infomation >> The exact steps you need to take to build a quick and easy consulting website - Duration: 4:44.

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How To Build A Cottage with 3 Bedrooms For A Single Family | Lovely Tiny House - Duration: 6:48.

For more infomation >> How To Build A Cottage with 3 Bedrooms For A Single Family | Lovely Tiny House - Duration: 6:48.

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Go on Azure, Part 7—Build a Go app with Buffalo and deploy to Azure | Azure Friday - Duration: 9:13.

>> Buffalo is one of the most popular frameworks

to build web apps with Go.

But did you know there's a plug in to

deploy to Azure easily,

and even generate code that will

integrate well with Azure services?

Well, Martin Strobel is going to show us how to build

a Go application with Buffalo and

deploy it to Azure App Service,

today, on Azure Friday.

Welcome to Azure Friday.

I'm Erik St Martin and with me today

is Martin Strobel to talk about Go Buffalo,

and how we can deploy it straight to Azure.

>> Hi, yeah, that's right.

Yeah. As you were saying, that

the Buffalo framework is one of

the most popular ways of getting

a web app started and going quickly in Go.

So, I've been using it for a little while,

making sure that all

of my services can get off the ground,

I can deliver them as quickly as I can.

But, well, it was really easy to get a container,

using a Buffalo app, because it gives

you a Dockerfile or that kind of thing.

I noticed that there were still all of

this work that I had to go to do to

configure the infrastructure in Azure,

to make it so that I could

run that containerized application well.

That just seemed wrong to me.

I felt like this is all boilerplate stuff,

there really out of your way, to just go,

do it, get it done, fast,

try to get as few commands between

somebody and their application running in the cloud.

So, we gave it a shot.

So, if anybody's used Buffalo before,

they might be familiar with this default application.

I can run it here on my local machine.

It's just starts up a background task.

I can come over to a browser, pop it open.

Look, here we go.

Basic Buffalo application.

I've already set up my databases,

so that there's an instance running

on PostgreSQL here on my local machine in Docker.

>> Okay.

>> But, now, I need

to get it into

a position where I can run it in the cloud.

>> We've got to do it live.

>> We've got to do it live, that's right.

I want to have it in the cloud.

My mom keeps telling me that things

are in the cloud, I want to get it out there.

So, there's this handy-dandy plugin

that's available to you now,

under the Buffalo Azure subcommands, called Provision.

If we give it the dash x flag,

it doesn't actually do the point yet.

It just goes and modifies our project,

so that it has the portion

needed so that my plugin

knows how to do the deployment later.

I'll get it. We give it a name.

>> This is similar to like in it

or something I can muster commands.

>> Yeah. That's right. So, instead of doing a Buffalo

in it or a DEP in it or something like that.

This one is specifically.

I intend on putting

this particular application into Azure,

Go initialise that. We give it a name.

So, in this case,

we call it Azure Friday one.

We're off to the races. It did that pretty quick.

All it did was go and hit the wire

to pull down an arm template so that it

knows what infrastructure to go actually deploy in Azure,

and then added the parameters that I had provided here,

and the ones that either detected by going and looking

at the Buffalo project into a file.

So, if we pop open as we

deployed our parameters to our JSON. Take a look.

You can start seeing some of

the particular details that we plugged in

about our project, Azure Friday one.

>> So, it recognize that now we're

using PostgreSQL as the database,

and database name got pulled out. Things like that.

>> That's right. It was, as you were saying,

it's just going and reading the

database,.yml file that was

already part of our Buffalo project.

I did have to go make one tweak to it and replace

the default to context that

Buffalo shoved in there with something that said,

go look for my particular environment variable,

that's where I'm going to want it.

From there, I guess,

it's a good point to say.

Well, what if we wanted to inject

some cloud services that we wanted to use?

So, in addition to just deploying to Azure,

we can actually take this plug in and extend it out,

so that we can take advantage of Event Grid.

A Event Grid is a messaging solution,

that's each to be based inside of Azure,

so that you can get

PUB/SUB mini text between your services.

So, if you do a Buffalo generate.

>> So, in this case, what you wanted

to do is provision this in

addition to the things that it can auto detect.

>> That's right. So, you

would probably want to add into your Arm Template,

it then Grid the topic.

But there's also some code that you want to inject into

your application to actually handle

the events when Event Grid calls you,

because we're going to be adding

a subscriber portion into our Buffalo application.

So, if we say buffalo generate eventgrid,

we're going to call it Ingress,

because that's what we're going to be

being made aware of.

Microsoft.Storage.BlobCreated events by Event Grid.

So, with this one commands,

Buffalo goes and modifies our application to

have added a new path inside of the application,

so that we have a new endpoint expose

that will be able to be called

by Event Grid and handle events that are passed to it.

We also have a file called ingress.go generated for us.

That will go actually,

let the application know that,

when it sees a Microsoft.Storage.BlobCreated event,

it should go and it should use

the statically typed call to serialize that for you.

So, really if you just.

>> Now, this was generated by the plugin itself.

>> Yeah. That's right. So, with one commands,

all of a sudden you've got

stubs that you can go and implement.

Let's say, "Hey, want a new blob

that's created in Azure?Let me know about it."

Then go call this method.

It does all the routing for you.

Just makes everything work.

>> That's awesome.

>> Yeah. Let's see.

So, we were looking at generating that,

and if we want to see it running locally,

we can do another Buffalo Dev.

See those endpoints added into our application.

Just lit up. Now, it is time to get into the cloud.

So, if we take that Buffalo Azure Provision command

from early on before where we give it a dash x

to say don't actually go do it yet.

Now, we're going to really do it.

But we don't need to give

it a name or anything because it cached those parameters,

we'll use all of the same settings that we used before,

so that we have a deploying model

that's configurable and reproducible.

All the good quality stuff that you want to service.

So, this will take off.

It's going to go, make a new Arm Template in Azure.

This takes a few minutes. We don't want to wait for that.

>> We're in a hurry.

>> That's right. So, I have

the same application over here called Azure Friday 2.

It's very similar.

It didn't have the Event Grid stuff added into it.

But other than that, if we take a look,

it has all of the same stuff

we added in azuredeployedljson,

and a new database configuration.

Here we ran that Buffalo Azure Provision

and we waited for it to finish.

If we come over to a browser,

where I already have it typed in,

and we do a refresh.

You'll see we have a Website called Azure Friday 2,

running our containerised version,

running in the Cloud,

connect talking to our PostgreSQL database.

>> All of this, you were able to do straight from

the Buffalo command line without actually having to

go into that easy SLI

or into the portal or anything like that?

>> That's right. Didn't have to touch it.

>> Now, that's a spam.

>> Yeah. I'm really excited about.

I know it's made it so that when I time myself,

I can get a website without a database,

from no new directory,

to running in the cloud in about four minutes.

So, it really, I mean, it's I could do split.

>> Three would be better.

>> Three would be better. I'll work on it.

Bring me back next year, Illl have an update.

>> Well, thanks so much for coming on.

>> Yeah. Thank you. Today we were learning all about

the Azure plugin for Go Buffalo here on Azure Friday.

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