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The Five-Minute Geek Show

The Five-Minute Geek Show

Matt Stauffer

Matt Stauffer, unabashedly geeky, 5 minutes, twice a week. Frontend dev, backend dev, audio, design, podcasts--all fair game.
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Top 10 The Five-Minute Geek Show Episodes

Goodpods has curated a list of the 10 best The Five-Minute Geek Show episodes, ranked by the number of listens and likes each episode have garnered from our listeners. If you are listening to The Five-Minute Geek Show for the first time, there's no better place to start than with one of these standout episodes. If you are a fan of the show, vote for your favorite The Five-Minute Geek Show episode by adding your comments to the episode page.

Figure out the values, then make the choice according to your values

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The Five-Minute Geek Show - 98 | Take care of yourself

98 | Take care of yourself

The Five-Minute Geek Show

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03/02/17 • 7 min

Take care of yourself

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The Five-Minute Geek Show - 30 | Why I Don't Work From Home

30 | Why I Don't Work From Home

The Five-Minute Geek Show

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03/31/15 • 7 min

Why I work from a remote office instead of from home

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The Five-Minute Geek Show - 26 | It's all about that schema

26 | It's all about that schema

The Five-Minute Geek Show

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03/13/15 • 7 min

Talking about the MEAN stack and why Mongo & NoSQL make you work too hard

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The Five-Minute Geek Show - 84 | I don't think you have $10,000 to waste on that AWS token
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06/15/16 • 5 min

I don't think you have $10,000 to waste on that AWS token -- don't commit your credentials to GitHub!

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The Five-Minute Geek Show - 82 | How Are You Getting Paid For Your Free Work?
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06/01/16 • 8 min

In what ways, other than money, are we paid for our free (open source, teaching, etc.) work?

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The Five-Minute Geek Show - 73 | Introducing Briefs.fm and the Three-Minute Geek Show
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02/03/16 • 7 min

Talking about the new service, briefs.fm, and my new diary/micropodcast, the Three-Minute Geekshow

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The Five-Minute Geek Show - 68 | Programming on Twitch

68 | Programming on Twitch

The Five-Minute Geek Show

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12/22/15 • 9 min

A live-streamed episode about live-streaming. How meta.

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The Five-Minute Geek Show - 101 | Your Top Idea, and Letting It Fester
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07/07/17 • 9 min

What's at the top of your brain? And what's the benefit you get from having to wait on something, letting you brain roll over it?

Transcript:

Hi, I'm your host Matt Stauffer, and this episode 101 of The Five Minute Geek Show, a weekly show about development and everything around it. It's one topic per episode about front-end, back-end, mobile, project management, design, entrepreneurship, whatever. If it's geeky, it fits.

Today, we're going to be talking about your top idea. I've talked about it a little bit in the past, but essentially, at any given moment, there's usually one primary thing that your brain returns to you when it gives a moment to rest. I often have about seven of these, which drives my wife nuts. We've talked often about the fact that I need to have less commitments. Not just because I need to be spending less time doing things, but because I need spaces for my brain to not only rest and have moments where I think about things family life related, not just all these kind of entrepreneurial and work ideas that I'm doing.

So, essentially, when you have nothing else to do. When you're stuck in traffic, or when you are using the restroom, or showering, or taking a walk or something like that, your brain kind of rolls on to things. The things that your brain roll onto, often those are kind of like ... People frequently know this, are the things that ... We get some really great thinking done then, right? You've got stuck on something at work, and you go home and you sleep on it, and you come back and you have an answer. Or you go, you take a 15 minute walk.

Sometimes you take a 15 minute walk, your brain just needs to re-orient itself. But sometimes ... For example, I'll often have an idea for an application or for a software of service, or for a project or a book or a blog post or a video. I'll have the idea long before I create the thing. I had an idea for a new product ... Not a product but that open-source thing that I want to do, like 11 months ago or something. Every once a while, it pops into my brain. It hasn't been the top of my mind, but it pops into my brain for a little bit. I think about it, and I think about one aspect of it, one nuance. Well, how would I get these people to carry the content here? Or, what would motivate somebody to want to carry the content here versus somewhere else? Or, how would I handle the fact that there's this type of data coming in there, but that type of data coming in there?

So, it pops up every once in a while, and I kind of think about it for a little bit, and the thinking that I do there kind of moves into the storehouse of answers that I've come up with for those things. So, every single time I've ever created something of significance size, there's been years or at least many months of thinking about the thing prior to the point where I actually get started.

So this thing, I bought a domain name for it three weeks ago, and I told everybody at Titan about it three weeks ago, but I've been thinking about the thing for months. I've been thinking about it even more frequently since then. It's nearly at the top idea of my mind kind of thing where most of my free time, I think, "Well, okay, here's another thing I need to think about it." Then I think through it for a while, while I'm putting my daughter to sleep, or something like that.

So it's interesting that there's not just this idea of the top idea in your mind. I've talked often with people about this top idea in your mind thing, Paul Graham's somebody who wrote something about it recently. It's not just the fact that you have one, which of course is an important conversation, because if you've never thought through these things, some of these important things about that are ... Like, if you're trying to split your job responsibility between multiple roles, there may be certain roles that never get to be the top idea in your brain, which means they never get that kind of free time thinking or that free moment thinking or that extra brain power that allows you to power through some things that might not happen during your normal, actual application of the job.

Often I've told people who've wanted to do three things, I'm like, none of those three things are going to be done ... Or at least probably two of those three things are actually going to be done to a one-third attention level, because two of them are not going to be the forefront idea. So it's not even the time to spend on the thing, it's the time to spend thinking on the thing. So there's definitely things worth thinking about, just with regard to what is at the forefront of your mind.

But what I want to talk about is giving space for yourself to process through the thing over time. It's almost as if ... So, okay, we did a developer battle. I think I'm goin...

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FAQ

How many episodes does The Five-Minute Geek Show have?

The Five-Minute Geek Show currently has 115 episodes available.

What topics does The Five-Minute Geek Show cover?

The podcast is about Geek, Design, Php, Development, Css, Podcasts, Technology and Programming.

What is the most popular episode on The Five-Minute Geek Show?

The episode title '114 | Catching Up On Where I've Been' is the most popular.

What is the average episode length on The Five-Minute Geek Show?

The average episode length on The Five-Minute Geek Show is 8 minutes.

How often are episodes of The Five-Minute Geek Show released?

Episodes of The Five-Minute Geek Show are typically released every 6 days, 23 hours.

When was the first episode of The Five-Minute Geek Show?

The first episode of The Five-Minute Geek Show was released on Dec 4, 2014.

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