And that is possible thanks to Netlify, Fauna, Hasura and Auth0, making this accessible to more people, which means a lot to me. It's available on the home page, if you want to read along as you go. We've got White Coat Captioning here, today, and that is always very welcome. We're going to start by talking to the captions. Let's head over to the home page, here, and let's do a quick shoutout to the sponsors. #TWITCH SUBSCRIPTIONS HOW TO#In a feature stream, I will figure out how to make it possible for that dashboard to make calls to the Learn With Jason stream. So, I don't think we'll get anything where, like, subs, today, will actually be able to do something from this dashboard. I don't think I have the necessarily infrastructure to allow calls to be made to the stream. Now, what I don't think I'll be able to today. Then, based on that, we'll be able to put in some logic and show some capabilities. Then, based on that� you know, all this is assuming that we get as far as I want to get. It'll show, you are logged in or you're not subscribed or not subscribed to my Twitch channel. Once we get that, we'll be able to show that. We'll start with OAuth so people can log into v. #TWITCH SUBSCRIPTIONS MOD#Maybe we can put the mod queue right into the dashboard. So, if you are a subscriber, or Learn With Jason on Twitch, maybe we can show things no matter what, if you're a Twitch user and show things additionally if you're a Twitch subscriber. You're going to get an access token that we can then use to make a request for your subscription status on v. Twitch as OAuth so you'll be able to log into v. We might have to call inaudible as we go. That API is steadily improving and it's been pretty wonderful, right? So, my goal, today is to take advantage of� well, here's my tentative plan. #TWITCH SUBSCRIPTIONS UPDATE#Help.īut, you know, around some of the other features, around being able to access the API, get information about your stream, update things like that. I've been happy with the Twitch dev team, they seem to be paying attention and listening when people are asking for things so, you know� it sounds like we do them to� hopefully make some improvements on the moderation and the protections for� for, you know, the underrepresented folks who are streaming, it seems like we got a lot of problems with harassment and bot rates and hate rates. Yeah, so the "how" of how I want to do this is Twitch has an API and the Twitch API is good, getting better. If somebody wants to pay $5 to troll, they will. For now, at least, letting the sub being the filter. Kind of doing a little bit of stuff that I think is little bit more fun, but less safe and for now, at least, we'll see how well this scales. There's always the risk of somebody� somebody anonymously abusing a feature when it's open. Like, interact with something with texts input versus just being able to emote. Like, being able to post a question or being able to� to� I don't know. Maybe there will be new things that we build and the idea is that we can make this into kind of a fun� like, a fun way to� to interact with the stream, if you're a sub.Īnd, give us some� some abilities to, like, play a little bit more and basically give� give people a little more access by being subs, that is maybe a little too noisy or a little too dangerous otherwise. I would love for there to be a way to open up the dashboard to the side and you would have access to maybe a soundboard or maybe I do polls or maybe you could, like� maybe we'll limit the submarine controls to just the subscribers. Here's what I want to do, let's talk about the outcome and then we'll step back to the "how." What I want there to be true is I would like there to be a dashboard that is somebody could open if the stream is line if you're a sub. So, okay, let me� let me maybe contextualize this a little bit. I thought today would be a fun day to plan with an idea that I've had for a long time, which is to try and use Jamstack Off. I promise we're going to have a lot of fun today. Today, on the show, we're going solo, again, we've had a couple scheduling hiccups this week. 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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