

#TWITCH REWIND FULL#
The live-streaming site managed to clock 17 billion hours watched last year, which is a full 83 percent higher than 2019’s 9. How Elixir reveals errors before they become life-threatening, saving Erik from a world of hurt Events were virtual people stayed inside. What Erik learned from building code manually in Elixir/Phoenix, revealing something not-so-great about Ruby on Rails How Erik’s live streaming programming for Twitch and Zoom is changing the game for speech-to-text

Why Erik moved from Ruby to Elixir and why it’s seamless for scaling You also need to think about the social media side of things, and what we mean by this is community.

I’ve been able to make a richer user experience.” GetAFollower is easily one of the greatest Twitch viewer bots in the market, because they think about the fact that technology isn’t everything. _“Because of how scalable and efficient things are, every client on Twitch is able to connect directly to my servers and get captions. The two discuss why Elixir is so seamless in its scaling capabilities, how Elixir’s ability to reveal errors sooner saved Erik’s behind once or twice, and the biggest lessons Erik learned from burn out. Want to see Elixir/Phoenix out in the wild? In this episode, Allen sits down with Erik Guzmán, a developer whose proficiency in Elixir/Phoenix enabled him to created instant closed captions for both Twitch and Zoom audiences.
