![]() I gave it a go myself a week or so later, after setting up my Twitch channel and bumbling my way through using OBS. You can even see this comment I left under his video: His open source life is very different to mine. I found it fascinating, as Nolan maintains open source libraries that get a lot of use and activity. Replying to issues on GitHub, triaging bugs, debugging code in branches, you name it. He explained everything he was doing along the way. I watched him streaming his open source work one weekend, and it was awesome. What tipped me over the edge of wishing I could do it to actually doing it is credited to Nolan Lawson, a friend of mine. Handmade Hero was one of the first programmers I watched code online, quickly followed by the developers at Vlambeer who developed Nuclear Throne live on Twitch. Given that I was already in a niche on Twitch, why not be in an even smaller niche, like JavaScript powered hardware ) I signed up for my own channel, and have been streaming regularly since. I work on NodeJS hardware libraries a fair bit (most of them my own). Instead of gaming, which the majority of streamers on Twitch do, I wanted to stream the open source work I do in my personal time. ![]() I gave streaming a go for the first time last July. By Suz Hinton Lessons from my first year of live coding on Twitch
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