Why Some Developers Are Live-Streaming Their Coding Sessions
itwbennett writes Adam Wulf recently spent two weeks live-streaming himself writing every line of code for a new mobile app. He originally started to live-stream as 'a fun way to introduce the code to the community.' But he quickly learned that it helps him to think differently than when he was coding without the camera on. "Usually when I work, so much of my thought process is internal monologue," he said, "but with live streaming I try to narrate my thought process out loud. This has forced me to think through problems a little differently than I otherwise would, which has been really beneficial for me."
nobody cares about what one guy does.
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Basically, the lasts generations feel like they are special and everyone should be watching them do eveything. Isn't that what social networks do?, Turn everybody into a narcissistic prick?
If you grew up in an age of ubiquitous connectivity, infinite bandwidth, a webcam, and the belief that everyone was special, you'd stream your own sessions too.
You learn a LOT by teaching and that is what he is doing.
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