![]() Like you don't want to have a backend between the marketing team and the developers and the designers. So, this is kind of promising another way of working here, right? ![]() And if you have to rewrite the whole home page every time you have those changes, that's no good at all. And those sorts of needs are gonna come up all the time. You have to switch from a carousel for like client photos to a video that's an explainer. A live event that needs updates all the time. When we start talking about the modern marketing website, you can't just say, this is what the marketing page looks like. You are in the section and you are going to ship it to Prismic and Prismic will give a UI editor to work in it. So, instead of a whole page, I get to, like, design as a developer this is what - you mentioned hero. But what we're specifically looking at today is Slice Machine. So, I dropped the Prismic link there if you want to go check that out. Oh, I see that you're now a subscriber, Jembrerly, I'm looking forward to getting Spammed with your boops. Also, make sure you go and follow Lucie on Twitter to get the latest on Prismic, on Slice Machine and on the other cool things that Lucie is working on. I appreciate that because there's no way I could do that on my own without some help. They make this show more accessible to more people. The live captions are made possible through our sponsors, Netlify, Fauna, Auth0, Hasura. ![]() And if you want to follow along with those - those live captions, you can see them on the home page of v. We've got Amanda with us today helping us out. We have live captioning, as always, made possible by White Coat Captioning. And while we're looking at this, let's take a quick second to shoutout the sponsors. I'm going to switch us over into pair programming view here. I also saw that Bobby Tables subscribed earlier. And Prismic takes care of having the UI editors to input content inside of it. So, you are building those with Slice Machine and give them to Prismic. Might have a subscription section, an article section. With Slice Machine, you create components which are website sections. And then I can reuse that component in whatever order to build different types of pages out of components. Jason: Instead of thinking about your headless CMS as being a I open a page and edit a page, when you think about Slice Machine, we're saying, like, I'm opening a component of the page to edit. An average component being ready for the CMS to be detected by the editor and the marker inside of it. It's the new way we like people to build websites with Prismic as the service and with the brand new workflows that allows you to build your component. Lucie: So, Slice Machine, as we like to call it, is the cannery version of Prismic. Jason: And Slice Machine, then, is - is a thing built by Prismic. And it gives developers a lot of ability to use the technology that you are using. That's quite the modern way of manipulating content on a website or other kind of website. But you don't have like any frontend like with WordPress or other technologies. So, it's a CMS that gives you like a dashboard for editors and an API for developers that you can create content from it. Maybe the first thing that we should do is differentiate between the two. But so, I want to talk a little bit about Prismic and Slice Machine. I definitely only retained 10% of it, though. I have had experts on here to teach me Vue. I have a little bit of - I have been taught. Not a lot, but it's going to be all right. And so, next is something is we're going to use a little bit of NUXT today. And, yeah, I guess a huge J S and Next.js. So, I'm working on stuff on GitHub, the platform for projects. And I am in the NUXT community and with everything. I am also creating content on my side, blogging about JS and the serverless. And I have been working at Prismic for 9 months now and I'm writing my master's degree at college. For those of us not familiar with you or your work, do you want give us a background? ![]() But before we talk about that, I want to hear about you. Lucie, thank you so much for joinings us.Įxcited today, we're going to be doing something we haven't done in a while, working with headless CMSs, and with Prismic Slice Machine, which is an interesting spin on how CMS management works. Jason: Hello, everyone, and welcome to another episode of Learn with Jason. Communication Access Realtime Translation (CART) is provided in order to facilitate communication accessibility and may not be a totally verbatim record of the proceedings. Captions provided by White Coat Captioning ().
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