DejaVue – Details, episodes & analysis

Podcast details

Technical and general information from the podcast's RSS feed.

DejaVue

DejaVue

Alexander Lichter & Michael Thiessen

Technology
Education

Frequency: 1 episode/8d. Total Eps: 62

Transistor
Welcome to DejaVue, the Vue podcast you didn't know you needed until now! Join Michael Thiessen and Alexander Lichter on a thrilling journey through the world of Vue and Nuxt. Get ready for weekly episodes packed with insights, updates, and deep dives into everything Vue-related. From component libraries to best practices, and beyond, they've got you covered.
Site
RSS
Apple

Recent rankings

Latest chart positions across Apple Podcasts and Spotify rankings.

Apple Podcasts

  • 🇫🇷 France - technology

    13/07/2025
    #87
  • 🇫🇷 France - technology

    28/06/2025
    #69
  • 🇩🇪 Germany - technology

    10/10/2024
    #65
  • 🇨🇦 Canada - technology

    08/10/2024
    #91

Spotify

    No recent rankings available



RSS feed quality and score

Technical evaluation of the podcast's RSS feed quality and structure.

See all
RSS feed quality
Good

Score global : 79%


Publication history

Monthly episode publishing history over the past years.

Episodes published by month in

Latest published episodes

Recent episodes with titles, durations, and descriptions.

See all

Vue Performance Tips

Episode 28

jeudi 3 octobre 2024Duration 40:44

Vue is fast (actually the fastest SSR framework)! But sometimes apps might a bit more fine-tuning. And by sometimes, we mean rarely.

Still, it can happen - so join Alex and Michael in this DejaVue episode to dive into what tools Vue gives us to improve the frameworks' performance. 

Further, they dive into the recent SSR benchmark and what it means for you as a developer, as well as striving topics like perceived performance. 

Enjoy the episode! 

Chapters

  • (00:00) - Intro
  • (01:14) - The topic of this episode - Performance
  • (02:05) - Optimizing for performance from the beginning?
  • (04:03) - Prop stability
  • (08:18) - v-once
  • (10:45) - v-memo
  • (12:57) - Does v-pre fit into the mix?
  • (14:28) - Recalculation of computed's
  • (20:47) - Virtualization
  • (24:05) - shallowRef
  • (27:25) - Vapor Mode in the future
  • (28:44) - Server Side Rendering
  • (29:14) - The recent SSR benchmark
  • (31:35) - Results of the benchmark
  • (32:00) - What does this mean for you?
  • (35:19) - Perceived performance
  • (37:33) - Improving SSR performance
  • (39:12) - VueConf Toronto
  • (40:20) - Wrapping up


Links and Resources



Links marked with * are affiliate links. We get a small commission when you register for the service through our link. This helps us to keep the podcast running. We only include affiliate links for services mentioned in the episode or that we use ourselves.

Working at AWS (with Erik Hanchett)

Episode 27

jeudi 26 septembre 2024Duration 54:26

While Alex is at PragVue, Michael is joined by Developer Advocate Erik Hanchett who works at no other company than AWS. In this DejaVue episode, they discuss the different duties of a Developer Advocate and skills one need to become one, as well as everything around content creation and conferences.
In addition, Erik shares how it is to write Vue code as a Software Engineer at AWS, which he did for multiple years.

Enjoy the episode!

Our Guest

Erik Hanchett


Chapters

  • (00:00) - Welcome to DejaVue
  • (00:35) - How would you describe your job?
  • (03:20) - Do you miss the deep technical problems?
  • (09:41) - Duties when speaking at a conference
  • (12:50) - What is Developer Advocacy?
  • (23:30) - Which skills do you need to be a Developer Advocate?
  • (26:40) - Your first content pieces doesn't have to be perfect
  • (28:16) - First Five unreleased DejaVue episodes
  • (29:44) - Putting yourself out there
  • (32:09) - Erik's first podcast guest appearance ever
  • (37:10) - Using Vue.js at Amazon Web Services
  • (41:29) - How did you get into Vue?
  • (43:16) - Working on AWS Open Source projects
  • (45:06) - Migrating a library from Vue 2 to Vue 3
  • (49:48) - Nested Slot Bonanza
  • (51:34) - Angular, React and Vue devs in the same project
  • (52:15) - Wrapping up


Links and Resources




Your Host


Michael Thiessen


---

Links marked with * are affiliate links. We get a small commission when you register for the service through our link. This helps us to keep the podcast running. We only include affiliate links for services mentioned in the episode or that we use ourselves.

Insights from the Nuxt Team Retreat

Episode 18

jeudi 25 juillet 2024Duration 20:20

In this episode of DejaVue, Alex and Michael talk about the previous "IRL Nuxt event", which was a team meeting where most Nuxt Core Team members met in France.

Together, they discuss why they met, what happened, why there was a delicious cake and further insights from the retreat, like more breaking changes to Nitro and Nuxt, codemods and other topics.

Enjoy the episode! 

Chapters

  • (00:00) - Welcome to DejaVue
  • (01:04) - A real life Nuxt team meeting?
  • (02:44) - Who was at the meeting?
  • (04:11) - A cake?
  • (05:54) - Activities
  • (09:37) - How DejaVue came to life
  • (10:37) - Previous Vue Podcasts
  • (11:57) - Vue.js Australia?
  • (12:20) - Meetups
  • (13:23) - Further activities
  • (14:46) - Nitro breaking changes
  • (16:06) - Nuxt breaking changes
  • (18:36) - Meeting IRL more often?
  • (19:44) - Wrapping up


Links and Resources



Links marked with * are affiliate links. We get a small commission when you register for the service through our link. This helps us to keep the podcast running. We only include affiliate links for services mentioned in the episode or that we use ourselves.

Tiptap and Vue.js (with Vanessa Otto)

Episode 17

jeudi 18 juillet 2024Duration 54:01

In this episode of DejaVue, Alex and Michael are joined by Vanessa Otto, a Senior Engineer at GitLab and previously being the head of Frontend at Zavvy.

After discussing Vanessa's co-host role in the German Working Draft podcast, it all revolves around the headless editor "Tiptap" in the episode. From hearing why Vanessa chose it instead of other editors and her research around editors, Tiptaps integration with Vue and what the "headless" part of the editor adds to it, over to which use cases are ideal for Tiptap. 

And yes, an example repository is included so you can convince yourself of the easiness! Enjoy the episode! 

Chapters

  • (00:00) - Welcome to DejaVue
  • (00:55) - Guest Introduction
  • (04:00) - About the "Working Draft" podcast
  • (09:54) - What is Tiptap?
  • (12:30) - Is Tiptap framework agnostic?
  • (15:38) - The headless part of Tiptap
  • (18:38) - Customization as the biggest benefit?
  • (23:26) - How Tiptap content is serialized and saved
  • (25:25) - Maturity of Tiptap
  • (28:03) - Adding own blocks to Tiptap
  • (32:01) - Tiptap and Vue principles
  • (34:42) - Did the community around Tiptap grew?
  • (36:22) - ProseMirror as the base for Tiptap
  • (38:50) - Tiptap Extensions - Seamless with Vue?
  • (42:48) - Calling Tiptap extensions
  • (46:55) - Call to Action: A fun idea for a Tiptap Project?
  • (47:09) - Meet Vanessa and Alex in Germany this Autumn!
  • (48:22) - Why Vanessa chose Tiptap
  • (51:32) - Wrapping Up!


Links and Resources



Links marked with * are affiliate links. We get a small commission when you register for the service through our link. This helps us to keep the podcast running. We only include affiliate links for services mentioned in the episode or that we use ourselves.

The Future of Vue.js (with Evan You)

Episode 16

jeudi 11 juillet 2024Duration 51:53

After the first part, Michael and Alex continue their conversation with the one and only Evan You, covering the future of the modern JavaScript Framework.

Starting straight with possible plans for Vue 4 to address common pain points and no ETA for the next major, exciting improvements like native CSS Scoping or removing the need for declaring props are discussed (though nothing is set on stone)!


Next, Vue 3.5 and it's current alpha version are on the list. We all look forward to the amazing features in the next minor version, including Lazy Hydration, perf improvements, easier types and also new composables like useTemplateRef.


Eventually, the State of Suspense, Vapor Mode, Volar, and Mobile App Development with Vue are addressed as well.


Enjoy the episode!

Chapters

  • (00:00) - Welcome to DejaVue!
  • (01:06) - Do you have any plans for Vue 4?
  • (02:47) - Ref Unwrapping in objects
  • (05:22) - Native CSS Scoping, Signals and Browser range
  • (07:12) - Defaulting to script setup and TypeScript
  • (11:12) - No prop declaring necessary anymore
  • (13:43) - Nothing set in stone for Vue 4
  • (14:50) - Vue 3.5 improvements
  • (15:50) - Internal type improvements
  • (16:33) - Reactive Props Destructure RFC
  • (19:31) - useId and useTemplateRef
  • (21:00) - Do we still need custom directives?
  • (22:06) - Lazy Hydration
  • (22:57) - Allowing Hydration mismatches on purpose
  • (25:10) - Custom Lazy Hydration Triggers
  • (26:18) - Vue 3.5 Alpha
  • (26:56) - State of Suspense
  • (30:17) - Vapor Mode
  • (33:44) - Performance of Vapor
  • (35:31) - Volar and the Vue VS Code Extension
  • (39:09) - Negativity towards Volar
  • (40:18) - Mobile App Development with Vue
  • (42:51) - What content would help the Vue community?
  • (51:07) - Wrapping up!


Links and Resources



Links marked with * are affiliate links. We get a small commission when you register for the service through our link. This helps us to keep the podcast running. We only include affiliate links for services mentioned in the episode or that we use ourselves.

Ten Years of Vue (with Evan You)

Episode 15

jeudi 4 juillet 2024Duration 01:00:12

This DejaVue episode is special - Alex and Michael meet up with the creator of Vue, Vite and Rolldown, Evan You himself and talk about the last ten years of Vue!

Starting with how Vue.js started as a side project while Evan still worked at Google, Evan shares the story of how Vue.js came to be and how it evolved over the years. Interesting insights, such as why the Composition API was created and which initial problems should be solved with it, are shared in this episode. And to all that, questions from the Q&A were answered as well, touching topics like petite-vue, if and how the Options API will persist and how opinionated Vue.js is.

After an hour of content and insights, the episode ends with a tiny cliffhanger, as Part Two of the conversation covering the future of Vue, possible Vue 4 features, Vapor mode, Vue 3.5 and more, will be released next week!

Enjoy the episode!

Chapters

  • (00:00) - Welcome to DejaVue!
  • (01:09) - How did Vue.js start out?
  • (04:48) - The Initial Version of Vue.js
  • (13:42) - Do new Vue users start without a build step?
  • (15:02) - Vue's expansion to different use cases
  • (18:14) - Is Petite Vue dead?
  • (21:03) - Why Vue 2?
  • (29:58) - How opinionated is Vue?
  • (35:15) - The Transition from Vue 2 to Vue 3
  • (36:32) - How did the idea for the Composition API came up?
  • (38:24) - Options API vs Composition API
  • (44:54) - Will the Options API stick around?
  • (46:10) - Overhead of keeping APIs around
  • (51:13) - Considering to disable Options API via a flag?
  • (53:05) - The former class-based API proposal
  • (58:03) - Classes with Vue's reactivity concept
  • (59:38) - Whaat, there is a Part 2?


Links and Resources


VueUse and Our Favorite Composables

Episode 14

mercredi 26 juin 2024Duration 36:45

VueUse might be a library known to many Vue and Nuxt developers - and if not, it should be quickly! With over 200 functions, composables and utilities, it provides a "standard composable kit" which Alex and Michael take a look at in this DejaVue episode. And more than that, they also share their favorite composables that they use or learnt a lot from. Definitely do not miss that out and stay for the spoilers at the end.

Enjoy the episode!

Chapters

  • (00:00) - Welcome to DejaVue
  • (00:45) - An Introduction to VueUse
  • (01:59) - How often do you use VueUse?
  • (03:50) - Using a library or better to DIY?
  • (05:38) - The Reactivity Layer
  • (06:43) - Docs, Demos and Source Code
  • (09:52) - Composable 1 - useEventListener
  • (13:10) - Composable 2 and 3 - useDebounceFn & useThrottleFn
  • (17:46) - Composable 4 - useLocalStorage
  • (24:00) - Composable 5 - useMagicKeys
  • (29:04) - Util 6 - makeDestructurable
  • (33:18) - Wrapping up around VueUse
  • (34:43) - Nuxt Tips Collection
  • (35:33) - SPOILER!!!


Links and Resources


Links marked with * are affiliate links. We get a small commission when you register for the service through our link. This helps us to keep the podcast running. We only include affiliate links for services mentioned in the episode or that we use ourselves.

The Road to Nuxt 4 (with Daniel Roe)

Episode 13

jeudi 20 juin 2024Duration 01:18:43

Nuxt 4 is cooking for a while and is close to being released soon. An ideal time for a DejaVue episode where Michael and Alex we explore the upcoming major version of the metaframework with the lead of the Nuxt team, Daniel Roe.

After introducing Daniel, we jump into the power of small changes and how Daniel explains his day job to people. We then dive into why Nuxt 4 is being necessary "now", its top priorities, and how to ease any fears about upgrading (don't worry folks!). Eventually, new Nuxt 4 changes and even features, like the improved folder structure will be discussed. As a bonus, Daniel reveals how he got into programming and that we was a real hacker-man early on.

And of course, Daniel reveals when Nuxt 4 will be released in the final minutes, as well as his upcoming Nuxt for React Devs course.

Enjoy the episode! 

Chapters

  • (00:00) - Getting Started and Guest Introduction
  • (02:43) - How do you Describe your Day Job?
  • (04:33) - The Power of Small Changes
  • (11:50) - April Fools Joke
  • (13:02) - Why Nuxt 4 Now?
  • (19:00) - The Top Priority for Nuxt 4
  • (20:54) - How to reduce the Fear of Nuxt 4?
  • (27:48) - Codemods for Nuxt 4
  • (29:41) - Experiencing Nuxt 4 Migrations
  • (32:02) - New Folder Structure
  • (34:06) - Exciting New Nuxt 4 Features
  • (36:46) - Compatibility Date
  • (44:26) - How did you get into Programming?
  • (48:44) - Daniel's Contact with the Vue World
  • (52:38) - University Degrees
  • (59:42) - Joining the Core Team
  • (01:04:28) - How Daniel is Funding
  • (01:08:56) - The Freedom of Doing the Things You Enjoy
  • (01:12:45) - When will Nuxt 4 be released?
  • (01:15:20) - Interesting Projects and Courses of Daniel
  • (01:17:25) - Wrapping Up


Links and Resources


Geotastic, a Vue-based Browser Game (with Creator Eduard But)

Episode 12

jeudi 13 juin 2024Duration 01:02:18

Today on DejaVue, Alex and Michael are joined by Game and Web Developer Eduard But, who created Geotastic - a Vue-based browser game revolving around geographical knowledge and uses Googles Maps and Streetview API! Starting with Edu's background in programming and web development and initial experiences with Vue.js, we dive deep into how it happened he got into Game Development, which multiplayer game he built first and *why* and eventually talk about Geotastic
With more than 1.5 Million registered users, Edu reveals details about the financial model, how he keeps things up and running, challenges while maintaining and which new game mode will come to Geotastic soon! 
Tune in to hear all of the above and more.

Enjoy the episode! 

Chapters

  • (00:00) - Intro and Guest Introduction
  • (01:31) - How did you got into Programming and Web Development?
  • (03:55) - Did you like being responsible for the "Full Stack"?
  • (05:46) - After working at a Media Agency
  • (07:55) - First Experience with Vue.js
  • (11:55) - Creating the first browser-based Game
  • (16:54) - Learnings from building a Multiplayer Game
  • (19:20) - Starting Geotastic
  • (21:20) - What type of Game is Geotastic?
  • (24:22) - Deciding against a Subscription Model
  • (28:03) - Differences between Geotastic and GeoGuessr
  • (30:53) - Embracing the Community
  • (32:49) - How did you use Vue.js to build the Game?
  • (35:45) - Technical Challenges while maintaining Geotastic
  • (41:36) - Taking a look at the back-end
  • (43:38) - Daily Players and Expenses
  • (48:36) - "Just do it" mentality
  • (51:27) - People asked for Ads 😲
  • (53:39) - When will Geotastic Ranked come?
  • (57:21) - *SPOILER* - A new game mode
  • (59:28) - Wrapping up


Links and Resources

Learning new Vue Features and Concepts (with LearnVue aka. Matt Maribojoc)

Episode 11

jeudi 6 juin 2024Duration 43:53

In this episode of DejaVue, Michael is joined by Matt Maribojoc, better known as LearnVue on YouTube.

While Alex is being absent at VueConf US, Matt and Michael discuss topics around learning and understanding new programming features - from figuring out what the latest features are over to how to properly learn them and eventually teach them to their audience.
Tune into the episode to figure out all of the above, in addition to what level of understanding is "necessary" to teach a certain concepts and why content creation is important for libraries, frameworks and open source in general.

Enjoy the episode!

Chapters

  • (00:00) - Guest Introduction - Matt Maribojoc
  • (02:41) - Where and How to Learn New Concepts or Features?
  • (08:50) - How to Explore a New Feature?
  • (19:42) - The Level of Understanding for Teaching
  • (25:38) - Importance of Content for Frameworks and Open Source
  • (31:57) - The Platform Question: YouTube Videos vs. Blog Posts
  • (36:57) - Sharing and Spreading Knowledge of Others
  • (43:27) - Wrapping up


Links and Resources


Related Shows Based on Content Similarities

Discover shows related to DejaVue, based on actual content similarities. Explore podcasts with similar topics, themes, and formats, backed by real data.
EntreArchitect Podcast with Mark R. LePage
UI Breakfast: UI/UX Design and Product Strategy
Everyone Hates Marketers | No-BS Marketing & Brand Strategy Podcast
The Build Show Podcast
Side Hustle Pro
The Brian Buffini Show
The BetterLife Podcast
Retirement Answer Man
Advisor Marketing Made Simple
The Wealth Without Wall Street Podcast
© My Podcast Data