All of a sudden, the next few weeks will be busy ones for me. I’ll post details soon, but if you read one of my posts from the past week, you just might be able to guess what I’ll be up to.
Hello, Tampa Bay techies, entrepreneurs, and nerds! Welcome to the weekly list of online-only events for techies, entrepreneurs, and nerds based in an around the Tampa Bay area.
Keep an eye on this post; I update it when I hear about new events, it’s always changing. Stay safe, stay connected, and #MakeItTampaBay!
Monday, July 20
- Tampa Bay Agile — FREE WEBINAR: The Agile 12 Step Program – Free Counseling (V. Lee Henson) @ 12:00 PM to 1:00 PM
- Tampa Bay DevOps Meetup — Best Practices In Implementing Container Image Promotion Pipelines @ 6:30 PM to 8:30 PM
- North Port Toastmasters Meets Online!! @ 6:30 PM to 8:00 PM
- Tampa Bay Thinkers — What Can Be Done About Racism in the U.S.? @ 7:00 PM to 9:00 PM
- South Tampa Toastmasters — Kick Start Your Week Every Monday night Zooming with People Who Inspire! @ 7:00 PM to 8:15 PM
- Thinkful Webinar | Intro to JavaScript: Build a Virtual Pet @ 8:00 PM to 10:00 PM
Tuesday, July 21
- Tampa Bay Agile — v-Lean Coffee @ 7:30 AM to 8:30 AM
- Venice Area Toastmasters Club #5486 @ 7:30 AM to 9:00 AM
- Clearwater Renaissance Speakers Toastmasters @ 12:00 PM to 1:00 PM
- Tampa Bay Tech Career Advice Forum — How to Define Your Professional Brand @ 3:00 PM to 4:30 PM
- Tampa Hackerspace — Online Weekly Open Make Night @ 6:00 PM to 10:00 PM
- Hack The Box Meetup: Tampa (Remote) @ 6:00 PM to 9:00 PM
- WordPress St. Pete @ 6:30 PM to 8:30 PM
- Thinkful Webinar | Intro to Data Science: Predictive Modeling @ 9:00 PM to 11:00 PM
Wednesday, July 22
- Tampa NoSQL — Getting Started with Couchbase by Building a User Profile Store @ 12:00 PM to 1:00 PM
- Digital Video Editing Class (ONLINE CLASS) -FREE for Hillsborough residents only @ 1:00 PM to 3:00 PM
- ACES: Architects, Contractors, Engineers, & Site Developers — State of the Market @ 4:00 PM to 5:00 PM
- Tampa Bay Tech Career Advice Forum — Get a Career in Tech @ 6:00 PM to 7:30 PM
- Suncoast Developers Guild — Whiteboard Challenges @ 6:30 PM to 8:30 PM
- Tampa Writers Alliance — Critique Group @ 6:30 PM to 8:30 PM
- Analytics – St Pete & Tampa — More on the Elastic Stack – TBD @ 7:00 PM to 8:00 PM
- Carrollwood Toastmasters Meetings now conducted Online using Zoom @ 7:00 PM to 8:30 PM
Thursday, July 23
- Carrollwood Business Connection — Let’s get together for some great networking! @ 7:30 AM to 9:00 AM
- Tampa Bay WaVE — Listening Between the Lines [Wave Webinar] @ 10:00 AM to 11:00 AM
- Wesley Chapel Young Entrepreneurs Meetup (40 and Under) — Business Networking Lunch Every Thursday Virtually @ 11:30 AM to 1:00 PM
- Sarasota Speakers Exchange Toastmasters @ 12:00 PM to 1:00 PM
- Tampa Tech and Beer — Community Connect Episode #8 The Future of Healthcare Technology @ 5:00 PM to 6:00 PM
- Agile Social — Personal Agility Exploratory Session @ 6:00 PM to 7:00 PM
- Clearwater Community Toastmasters @ 6:00 PM to 7:00 PM
- Thinkful Webinar | Learn Product Management With Thinkful @ 8:00 PM to 10:00 PM
Friday, July 24
Saturday, July 25
Sunday, July 26
There aren’t any online tech, entrepreneur, or nerd events in the Tampa Bay area scheduled…yet!
Do you have an upcoming event that you’d like to see on this list?
If you know of an upcoming event that you think should appear on this list, please let me know!
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The Undercroft, Tampa Bay’s cybersecurity guild/collaboration space, is offering scholarships to members and non-members for the July 20th cohort of their UC Baseline cybersecurity skills program. Simply put, it’s a chance to learn essential cybersecurity skills from the area’s experts for free!
The UC Baseline program comprises the following courses:
- Hardware 101: Gain a thorough understanding about the devices on which all our software runs and through which all our information flows.
- Networking 101: Learn how our systems are connected and the ways in which they communicate through these connections.
- Linux 101: Covers the foundations of security in Linux environments, the OS on which the internet runs.
- Windows 101: Here’s a big challenge — learn the foundations of security for Windows environments.
- Information Security 101: Covers everything from core IT concepts, to cybersecurity principles, methods, and practices.
- Python 101: If you’re doing security, you should have some coding skills to automate your work and build tooling, and Python’s an excellent language for that task.
Here’s The Undercroft’s offer:
Are you looking to take control of your personal privacy and security? Are you frustrated by disappearing jobs and want to make an impact in the cybersecurity industry? Do you have what it takes to ensure your economic future and that of others?
The Undercroft’s Baseline program was built for those with the fortitude to fight against daily attacks that threaten our way of life.
In response to the global pandemic and increasing uncertainty in our economy, we are offering a select number of scholarships to guild and non-guild members for our July 20th, 2020 cohort.
Interested? Sign up on their scholarship page. You’ve got only until sometime on Friday, July 17th to apply!
(I’ll admit it: Although I’m not likely to qualify, I applied.)
From 6:30 to 8:30 tonight, join the folks from Suncoast Developers Guild for an online hangout where everyone will share their tips and tricks for making the most out of their tech tools!
If you’re in tech and in the Tampa Bay area, you’ll want to keep an eye on what Suncoast Developers Guild are up to. They’re more than just a coding school — they hold and host regular community events, they sponsor all kinds of goings-on, they maintain a public Slack for local techies (suncoast.io), and they’re part of what makes the Tampa Bay tech scene what it is!
My other computer stand

I don’t just use books as monitor stands for my Linux setup, but for my macOS setup as well — and it’s an equally geeky set of books!

Here’s that previous article about my Linux monitor stand setup:
Yesterday, I posted an article positing that WeWork’s CEO might just be indirectly and accidentally responsible for drastically changing the processor industry:
What if WeWork’s jamoke CEO accidentally changed the processor industry?
The article got a record number of pageviews, and I got a number of emails and direct messages asking all sorts of questions about Arm chips, from “What makes Arm processors so different?” to “Has anyone seen an Arm-based Mac in action yet?”
Here are some videos that should provide lots of background material to better help you understand Arm chips and Apple’s move to their own custom silicon.
Let’s start with this CNET supercut of the parts of the WWDC keynote where Tim Cook and company talk about Apple’s transition from Intel chips to their own Arm-based ones:
This is Max Tech’s best guess as to what the Arm-based Mac release timeline will look like:
Many people have a take on what Apple’s move to Arm means. Here are CNET’s top 5 guesses:
Here’s a video from a year ago that asks “Is Intel in trouble? Is ARM the future?”. It’s worth watching for its history lesson about Arm:
Here’s a really quick (under 6 minutes) look at Arm CPUs:
Here’s a more hardcore explanation of how CPUs (in general) work:
CPUs used to be stand-alone things, but we’ve been migrating to SOCs (systems on a chip) for some time. Here’s an explainer:
This Gary Explains video explains the differences between Arm’s and Intel’s architectures:
Here’s a reminder from Computerphile that Arm design chips — they don’t make them. There’s a difference:
Here’s a treat: an unboxing of Apple’s “developer transition kit”, which registered Apple developers can apply to try out to test their apps on Apple silicon. It’s a Mac Mini powered by an Apple A12z chip, which is the same processor that drives the iPad Pro.