![]() They don't recognize it as such, but it is. These are the engineers I need to connect them with, or maybe just the support, or in some cases, it's the sales team. Or, more importantly, I can tell, okay, this is the group that they need to go to, to actually get a solution. But it helps to have that technical background to know, alright, these are the things that these are the issues, for example, that a client might have, maybe it's something I can guide them on myself. And so when they hired me on my role, really focused more on developer experience, Developer Relations, the technical side of things alongside of course support, because that gets rolled into it as well. And I did want to, I did want to kind of clarify that in previous iterations of evangelists that Adobe has had a technical evangelist is a little bit different than the role, for example, that Alicia Devorah, who was the previous ColdFusion evangelist, her role really was more centered on the support and sales side of things versus the technical side, which comes from her background, she was in sales, she was in marketing, she was in support, I come from a technical background, I was deaf, I'm in the trenches with all of you. ![]() And it's maybe not an easy question to answer. So I guess the first thing maybe some people are wondering is what the heck is an Adobe, Adobe ColdFusion technical evangelist? And he also lives in California, does lots of outdoor stuff, and even plays wacky computer games. So he comes with an interesting perspective on, you know, arguments about the role of cold fusion and how wonderful it is. He's been doing it a long time in cold fusion, but he's also done a bunch of other languages. Thank you for having me.Īnd for those of you who don't know him, he's been doing full-stack application development for more than 20 years. But you know, he's the very open and transparent guy. So I've been asking questions from listeners, got a lot of tough questions, he's agreed to take them. And we're going to do an Ask Me Anything episode. In his limited spare time, Mark enjoys mountain biking, overlanding in his Jeep, and playing Destiny 2 (horribly). He is currently the Technical Evangelist for ColdFusion at Adobe and has served in that role for the past 9 months. He has extensive professional experience in ColdFusion, C#, JavaScript, VB.net, SQL and several other languages. Mark Takata has been a full-stack application developer, graphic artist, UI/UX expert & technical writer for more than 20 years. Podcast: Play in new window | Download | Embed
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