WiFi: Kyruus HQ Guest / Ju$t_Vi$it
Boston Node #13
Brian Sodano
@codemouse
Sam Oliver
@hammmy_sammmy
Code of Conduct for Boston Node Events
Boston Node is a not-for-profit professional networking group dedicated to providing an inclusive community for discussing, learning about, and working with JavaScript, the Node.JS runtime, and related technologies. We are committed to providing a harassment-free experience for everyone regardless of gender, gender identity and expression, sexual orientation, ability, physical appearance, body size, race, ethnicity, age, religion, socio-economic status, caste, creed, or preferred programming language. We do not tolerate harassment of event participants in any form. Event participants violating these rules may be sanctioned or expelled permanently, at the discretion of the event organizers.
Forms of harassment include sexual language and imagery, sexist, racist, and exclusionary jokes, and acts that insult or belittle other event attendees in any way. These are unacceptable at all Boston Node events. Other forms of harassment and discriminatory behavior include, but are not limited to: offensive verbal comments related to gender, gender identity and expression, sexual orientation, ability, physical appearance, body size, race, ethnicity, religion, socio-economic status, caste or creed; sexual images in public spaces; deliberate intimidation; stalking; following; unwarranted photography or recording; sustained disruption of event programming; inappropriate physical contact; and unwelcome sexual attention.
Participants asked to stop any harassing behavior must comply with the Boston Node Code of Conduct immediately. Any participant that does not comply with the Boston Node Code of Conduct may be removed from the event without warning by any Boston Node event organizer or host. Participants are expected to comply with the Boston Node Code of Conduct at all event venues. The Boston Node Code of Conduct does not supersede any venue or host-specific Codes of Conduct.
How to report harassment & discrimination
To report an incident, you may contact any of the Boston Node organizers directly via email or message them via meetup.com. An anonymous incident report form is forthcoming.
Periodic Review
Organizers review the Code of Conduct annually and welcome constructive feedback from the community.
Acknowledgments
Adapted from the following sources:
JSConf Code of Conduct: https://jsconf.com/codeofconduct.htmlBoston
Women Who Code Code of Conduct: https://www.womenwhocode.com/codeofconduct
Intro
**CDK & TypeScript for easy, scalable Node.JS Serverless Applications**, with Katey Watson [@CategoricallyKT](https://twitter.com/CategoricallyKT)
**AI via Microsoft Cognitive Services**, with Veronika Kolesnikova [@breakpointv16](https://twitter.com/breakpointv16)
Break
**Security Story Time - what you can learn from npm security incidents to protect your own projects**, with Jen Weber [@jwwweber](https://twitter.com/jwwweber)
Group Q&A
Who invented Node.JS and in what year did they give their first talk about it?
Ryan Dahl
2009
As of 1/1/20, what is the most depended upon npm package?
lodash
In Sep 14, 2015, Node.js and io.js merged into a single code base known as Node.js version what?
4.0
What year did yarn debut?
2016
BostonNode13
By Brian Sodano
BostonNode13
- 219