Transcript
00:00:00And if I want a portfolio, for example, maybe not really important to say using this, but
00:00:13yeah, you have directly what you want and then you can edit quickly your project.
00:00:29So yeah, that's it, I think for the agents right now, I don't know if we have more idea.
00:00:38You can mention the blog posts where we have everything in detail to explain how it was
00:00:45implemented as well as the source code is open source.
00:00:49If you want to deep dive into how we created the next agent on the website, what components
00:00:55we use in order for being on the side to show the thinking, everything under the hood and
00:01:02if you want to contribute to add a more feature to it, this is I think where you can start
00:01:08learning from it.
00:01:11And this isn't the only thing either, right?
00:01:13Because Hugo built the MCP toolkit, which enables any Nuxt website to also be a Nuxt, to be an
00:01:22MCP server and be integrated into any AI that supports it.
00:01:30And Nuxt.com has really become like the focus for a lot of things.
00:01:35You would never believe that it has this API.
00:01:39So it's our modules API that powers the Nuxt dev tools.
00:01:42It has MCP servers, like a lot of them, which you can connect to from your Nuxt app, from
00:01:48your, your AI agent, and now it has been built with chat.
00:01:53I mean, someone needs to stop Hugo.
00:01:55He is, he is just too good.
00:01:59Thank you.
00:02:03Something that he did, um, I'll try to share my, my whole screen, um, that I find quite
00:02:10impressive.
00:02:11I don't know if you, if you're now seeing my screen.
00:02:15Yeah.
00:02:16Um, it's this admin, so I'm sorry you guys won't be able to connect to this admin, but
00:02:22we do have this widget on the website when you can, uh, give your feedback.
00:02:27And that's actually quite useful in order for us to be, to know what are the pages to focus
00:02:32on over time, uh, is it improving?
00:02:37And he recently pushed the MCP admin where, uh, we plugged into our conversation and not
00:02:47mistaken here.
00:02:50I could ask, um, go on the Nuxt admin MCP and tell me the, uh, forward page and more feedback
00:03:04or to improve it.
00:03:09And this way we'll normally, if I configure it properly, it should call, but that's the
00:03:16admin, uh, yeah.
00:03:23That's what I guessed.
00:03:24I think I need to use the agent called the Nuxt admin MCP and tell me about the poorest
00:03:35page feedback and how to improve it.
00:03:42Maybe across this one is the good one should be, yeah.
00:03:56Then it's telling us that this page has, uh, average score.
00:04:00We only had three feedback, but this way we're able to understand, uh, some, uh, leads how
00:04:07to improve this page.
00:04:09It's probably because it's only a week of feedback.
00:04:12We can ask for more.
00:04:14Yeah, exactly.
00:04:17And something else we've been working on, uh, you mentioned Nuxt contents and Nuxt contents
00:04:21is our base CMS where we, uh, have all of our documentation in DOM and we're able to use
00:04:29a component within Markdown.
00:04:32In the past months, we've been working on a project named Comark.
00:04:36So we extracted the core of the contents in order to be able to use, uh, to open it and
00:04:44collaborate with the Zvetki team as well as the Nuxt team for having this Markdown with
00:04:50components as run time.
00:04:53And while we're talking about AI, um, this project also supports streaming and auto closing.
00:05:00So we have, uh, ongoing feature, uh, happening here, uh, this made, this is the worst, uh,
00:05:10being able to say, generate me on the page about, uh, let's say basketball shoes.
00:05:20And we can, uh, right now the AI is basically streaming pure Markdown, but by leveraging
00:05:26and teaching the AI to use this syntax, it can start generating, uh, landing pages, uh,
00:05:33using these, uh, components under the hood.
00:05:37So this is very early, uh, stage progress, but this is, uh, quite promising and we want
00:05:44to, uh, we're working to open it to everyone in the V1 in the next weeks.
00:05:51And that's on the, uh, the current progress of Markdown.
00:05:56And yeah, I think that's maybe, uh, Daniel may have some progress he wants to share.
00:06:01Or I just see that he left.
00:06:03Oh, he's back.
00:06:04Right on time.
00:06:05He's back.
00:06:06Hello.
00:06:07Welcome.
00:06:08You know, I just like to keep you on your toes.
00:06:17Uh, yeah, I was talking about comark and next content, uh, I mean, next content before, and
00:06:28then I was like, Daniel may have something to mention.
00:06:30And then, uh, I figured out what you were after the call.
00:06:35Well, um, yeah.
00:06:37Um, so I think, uh, one of the very interesting, I don't know if it's, is it, how many people
00:06:44are listening to this?
00:06:45How do you spell some secrets about things that we're thinking of working on?
00:06:52Give the people what they want, don't tell, don't tell anyone, right?
00:06:57It's just between us and the very close friends who are listening right now, um, we're talking
00:07:12about how to improve our knocks.
00:07:14So not for a very long time has been this, uh, and by this overlaps a little bit with
00:07:19that special side, but like next to the, a very long, long time has been, um, a solution
00:07:25for SEO.
00:07:26So people have, uh, been to, to use next and get great search engine results just out of
00:07:33the box.
00:07:34In fact, I think for quite some time, next was top of the search results for next JS,
00:07:42but that is right, uh, Sebastian, you remember that as well, right?
00:07:46People would search for, for next and next would be top of the list and it's no longer
00:07:50true.
00:07:51We absolutely do not rank the next anymore.
00:07:53Um, but we're thinking about what we can do with stuff like next content to mean that next
00:07:59is the best, uh, is, is a phenomenal platform for onset engine optimization.
00:08:05So what you do when people are actually searching for information about your product or whatever,
00:08:10that they might be using, um, uh, some other, other things like an agent, or maybe they're
00:08:16using a smart speaker or something like that.
00:08:19Um, how do they get information about your, your site?
00:08:22And there's a lot of things we have planned on that.
00:08:24I'm not driving that project just to be clear, but within the team we are, and I don't want
00:08:28to spell too many secrets, but that is something that's worth mentioning maybe, um, when it
00:08:33comes to thinking about some cool new stuff that, that might be happening on the next content
00:08:37end of things.
00:08:38Yeah.
00:08:39Thank you.
00:08:40If you, uh, if you look on the recent Peru quest on a Nuxt.com, uh, repo or the, uh, Nuxt
00:08:47UI documentation, Benjamin and Hugo has been pushing more, uh, uh, AEO, uh, optimizations.
00:08:53So basically if an agent is trying to, uh, crawl the Nuxt documentation, if we detect
00:09:00it with the accept header, except waiting for text modern, then we are serving the modern
00:09:06pages directly, same if we detect the user agent, we also, uh, doing it for all the pages,
00:09:13we're trying to add the JSON-LD, so more content for agents to, uh, to understand, uh, what
00:09:19they are crawling, to give them, to reduce the context window also, like in giving them
00:09:24the content directly.
00:09:26And so far we are experimenting and we are thinking of what features could be part of
00:09:31the core or either our core module, uh, but for these, before refactoring and trying to
00:09:36think of something agnostic, we need to first, uh, experiment it ourself, um, and yeah, and
00:09:42see how the community, uh, adopted and if it actually makes sense because we are, it's evolving
00:09:48so fast.
00:09:49We've been talking about LLMs.txt, MCP, now it's about accepting a markdown as a header.
00:09:56How is it going to be in, uh, in two weeks?
00:09:58Um, so we don't want to push feature directly in the core if we need to deprecate them, uh,
00:10:06once later.
00:10:07So we're going step by step on this, but experimenting every time we can.
00:10:16I think one of the things I love about Nuxt, and I mean, we talked about the modules ecosystem
00:10:21and the fact that, uh, it is possible to extend it.
00:10:24It means it's possible to build things like this that don't make it into the core and they
00:10:28don't need to make, like they can be an experiment.
00:10:31They can be something that people use in production, they use on their websites and we can really
00:10:35get feedback, um, not just conceptual feedback or feedback on an RFC, but actually practical
00:10:42feedback on, uh, real world projects or real world use cases.
00:10:46Um, before we need to, you know, um, make, make the decision about whether something becomes
00:10:53a core module or not.
00:10:56I don't see if there is any question in the chat, um, on live chat, the rest of we, we
00:11:07could answer or.
00:11:08Um, I, I have a question and that I know you've already shared kind of what, um, the secrets
00:11:15of what you're working on, but is there anything, um, upcoming that you're particularly excited
00:11:20about next that you hand share?
00:11:32There are a lot of things that I'm excited about, but, um, I don't want to, uh, uh, what,
00:11:40so one of the things is that we're working on getting everything ready for the next version
00:11:44five.
00:11:45This is something we've been talking about for a while.
00:11:47Um, nitro version three, um, was, is the main feature that, that this brings, um, and getting
00:11:55the ecosystem ready for this move is a big piece of work, but it's something that's really
00:12:01the right direction.
00:12:02So nitro moves us towards web standards.
00:12:05So really, really minimal, um, server, uh, rapper that as much as possible to first native,
00:12:12um, wherever that, that is, whether that's bond, Dino node or, or whatever.
00:12:18Um, and the, I think the, the move is going to be something that people immediately feel
00:12:24very happy about, uh, version five nightly, um, locally.
00:12:31And it is a real joy to use already, even though it's, it's, it's not, not, not out there in
00:12:36a, in a beta or alpha even.
00:12:38Nice.
00:12:39I know we've had a community comment, uh, someone said they're very excited for V5.
00:12:45Um, and another question as well, uh, what are your top recommendations slash tips on
00:12:50optimizing Nuxt workloads on Versailles?
00:12:53Hugo do you want to go first, like optimizing Nuxt on Versailles, uh, because it's like,
00:13:07it depends on which way, like, what do you mean about like, like optimization, like optimization,
00:13:14like, is it like for speed, for build, for running?
00:13:19Yeah, I think there are many ways, but, uh, yeah, I will, I will go at least for the runtime
00:13:28part.
00:13:29Um, and I think that's something we're still trying to figure out is how in Nuxt we can
00:13:36suggest the user that this page could be cached or either rendered, um, it's always tricky
00:13:44as we can have, uh, components, uh, doing data fetching that you can use in pages.
00:13:49You can have, uh, authentication directly in your old application.
00:13:53So in that way, you, you don't want to cache, or if you start caching pages, uh, with the
00:13:58authentication, let's say you have a header and then you display the authenticated user.
00:14:03Then you want to make sure that you are, uh, you're pre-rendering a placeholder, making
00:14:09sure that you don't have this hydration error because you figured out on the client side
00:14:13that you authenticated.
00:14:14So, um, I would say that in Nuxt, we do have this very powerful feature that is also coming
00:14:21from Nitro.
00:14:22It's called the route rules.
00:14:24So with these route rules, you'll be able to mention part of, uh, routes using patterns.
00:14:29So you can say this group, like let's say I have an admin, embedded admin, slash admin,
00:14:35uh, disable the SSR.
00:14:37I don't need it for this part, uh, the slash blog, a star star, uh, then you, uh, you put
00:14:45them as ISR, uh, because we don't use blog posts every, uh, seconds.
00:14:50So you can leverage the incremental static, uh, generation in version.
00:14:55With these, uh, route rules, you'd be able to optimize part of your apps with just the
00:15:01lines of config.
00:15:03And this, this would be my biggest recommendation of, uh, before pushing onto production.
00:15:10Check your route rules.
00:15:12Awesome.
00:15:13Thanks.
00:15:14One thing that, uh, go ahead.
00:15:18Oh, sorry.
00:15:20One thing that might be worth checking out is NPMX.
00:15:23So NPMX, if you haven't come across, it is a, uh, it's a replacement for npmjs.com.
00:15:30So it's a browser for NPM, the registry, um, and it's, uh, it's built in Nuxt and it's hosted
00:15:36on Vercel and we've really highly optimized it for performance.
00:15:42So if you're looking for how to optimize something for performance on Vercel, and you want to
00:15:45look at what some of these things look like in a real world app that we've designed to
00:15:49scale to a lot of page views, there are so many people use it, um, then check it out.
00:15:58So you'll see the route rules, um, in action, you'll see caching.
00:16:01So we use, uh, we cache, uh, um, with incremental, um, static generation.
00:16:09So effectively building, um, and caching payloads, uh, when required we use, uh, the new feature
00:16:17in Nuxt 4.4, which is a payload cache, even for non pre-rendered pages, which is, um, to
00:16:27me, it's very cool.
00:16:28Um, it means you get the benefits of, uh, fetching data before you even move to a page.
00:16:34So the data that will be required by that page is already fetched by the framework in advance.
00:16:39Um, and that means makes for a really, really fast, um, experience.
00:16:45And there are lots more things, um, that you might be able to spot and maybe try out on
00:16:52your website.
00:16:53Amazing.
00:16:54Thank you.
00:16:55Um, and we've also had a comment, um, someone said, never tried Nuxt before, might be worth
00:17:03the try now.
00:17:04Um, so we've got some, um, Nuxt curious folks in the audience, um, for those people, what
00:17:09is the best way for them to get started with the Nuxt?
00:17:12I know we've already mentioned some AI tooling as well, um, but yeah, any recommendations
00:17:16there?
00:17:17Um, I think this one, uh, right now, now we have the Nuxt agents, so it can give you like
00:17:24really nice hints about, uh, where to start if you want to use a template or stuff from
00:17:29scratch using the documentation.
00:17:31Um, so we have like a lot of template on, um, Nuxt.com, but also on Nuxt UI, uh, and also
00:17:39we have Nuxt.new, uh, which also some other templates, um, but yeah, might ask directly,
00:17:48um, to the, to the agent now.
00:17:51Um, also on the Nuxt UI documentation, you can already open in v0 also, if you want to
00:17:57just chat, uh, with the project before like taking it to an ID and just start really coding.
00:18:08I do think often when getting started, um, I mean, I haven't had any problems getting
00:18:12started from, from zero, but I like to have at least a minimal project cloned, uh, personally.
00:18:17Um, so I have my own template, uh, just on GitHub, Daniel Rose slash Nuxt dash site dash
00:18:23template.
00:18:24Um, and you can clone that.
00:18:25It's very minimal, but it has things like, uh, tests and tests, unit tests, um, and things
00:18:31like that, that are, that are hints to, um, LLMs that I want to continue building the project
00:18:37in this way.
00:18:38Um, and I find things like that minimal templates are a little bit like seed crystals, uh, for
00:18:44LLMs.
00:18:45They, they point it in the right direction and give the necessary, um, direction for it
00:18:50to grow in the way that you probably want.
00:18:52Um, and really you don't need anything special on top of that.
00:18:56Um, although you can add in stuff, but you don't need anything special.
00:19:01Um, you can just get started with, with a template or a basic Nuxt, um, new project and just say,
00:19:09this is what I want to build.
00:19:10And I found LLMs are phenomenal with it.
00:19:12They don't have any issues.
00:19:14Um, so the main thing I think is, um, with any new thing that you're trying, build an
00:19:19opportunities to learn and not just have the results, right?
00:19:24Like, okay, it looks great, but how do you at that point feel you've tried, tried something
00:19:29you've not really tried Nuxt, like something has been created for you.
00:19:33Um, so if you can build in opportunities to maybe, uh, ask the LLM, give me a tour, um,
00:19:40teach me, um, the features of Nuxt using what you've built.
00:19:45Um, stuff like that is really useful because it connects the dots at one it's helpful for
00:19:49you as you review the code that's been created.
00:19:51And two, you learn like you gain new skills and experience with something.
00:19:56Um, uh, Cat Hick, Dr. Cat Hicks, um, do look her up on GitHub.
00:20:02She's produced some Claude skills for building and creating learning opportunities with anything
00:20:07that you're doing little 10 minute exercises in the middle of coding challenges that let
00:20:12you try and internalize some of the stuff that maybe your agent is working with.
00:20:17We have unprecedented access to knowledge that we don't have right to being able to do things
00:20:22that we might not have known how to do six months ago that the key thing is how do we
00:20:29keep ourselves continuing to grow and develop as people and building in some of these, um,
00:20:35these habits and skills and learning breaks is I think a really, really important thing
00:20:41if we want to see, you know, our, our brains continued to, you know, develop
00:20:46That's such a good point. Um, as, uh, as a fresh Nuxt, uh, user as well. Um, and I'm mainly
00:20:56from a Svelte background. Um, but I also had my agent kind of map the, the concepts from,
00:21:02from Svelte to Nuxt. Um, so yeah, definitely a plus one on using our agents to help us learn.
00:21:08Does someone want to add to that? Sorry. That is great. And I think that's, uh, I'm sharing
00:21:17my screen again. Um, Nuxt is truly a progressive, uh, framework. So we, we made sure that you
00:21:26can start the minimal project. You can get started with these, with one app.vue file.
00:21:32That is your, your main shell. And then you can progressively add routing, data fetching.
00:21:40We do have this feature, uh, of auto importing, which was one of the best, uh, improvement
00:21:45in terms of developer experience. And now with the rise of AI, um, we are, we are thinking
00:21:51of having a, you, you can anyway disable it if you prefer to, to have imports directly
00:21:56in your code. Uh, but this is, uh, truly the, for me, the best way to, to start with. Um,
00:22:03we also have EVALS. So we're running EVALS on Nuxt on different models, similar to how
00:22:11the Nuxt is doing. And so far, without even, uh, tricking the agent with a .m skill or agent.md,
00:22:21they are quite good at most of the Nuxt knowledge so far. On top of this, if you, um, are into
00:22:28MCP, I need to double check where we have, uh, these, but I think, yeah, we do have this,
00:22:35uh, MCP server that you can add directly into your JPG code. So yeah. Yeah. So that's, uh,
00:22:49we are AI powered, but so far, uh, even without adding the MCP server, um, agents are quite
00:22:57good so far. And what I like to recommend is try with a minimal setup and start adding feature
00:23:03step-by-step. And if you use AI for doing it, uh, ask it to, uh, to explain why. And,
00:23:10uh, yeah, like Daniel said, uh, at this key to make sure that you, you keep your brain
00:23:16active as much as possible. Here, here. Um, so we've got a few more questions
00:23:25to finish up this section. Um, one from the chat. So I'm seeing Nuxt being used a lot in
00:23:30the German e-commerce community. Do you think in general Nuxt is more popular in Europe than
00:23:36in the US or is it kind of balanced slash the other way round?
00:23:42Well, I mean, I'm based in Edinburgh, uh, Sebastian, Hugo is in London. Uh, Maya you're, you're
00:23:51based in Europe as well. Like I feel I might be the wrong person to ask about whether, uh,
00:23:57how popular Nuxt is in the U S but my, my feeling is it is more popular in Europe. Sometimes
00:24:02that seems to be how it works. React tends to be more popular in North America. View was
00:24:09much more popular elsewhere in the world. Um, and that seems to be true with Nuxt as well,
00:24:15but we need to change that. We need more people to use Nuxt in, in, in the U S we need, we
00:24:19need a core team member from the U S something like that. I don't know.
00:24:25Nuxt all over the world. Yes. So next question, um, from X with Nuxt evolving fast from three
00:24:35to four to five, what's the best strategy for teams to handle production migration safely,
00:24:41especially with SSR and nitro changes.
00:24:50I don't want to, so far we, yeah, we don't know. Uh, I start, um, between Nuxt 4 and Nuxt
00:24:583 and Nuxt 4, uh, like I believe there were almost no breaking changes or they were very
00:25:03well documented. So you can just repeat the page to your AI and help, uh, and ask it to,
00:25:11to help you on this. And even if you don't use AI, it was quite easy to, to migrate. Um,
00:25:17and it was only if you were using specific features, uh, quite advanced that you could
00:25:21have a breaking change. So Tanya made sure that the upgrade was very smooth. It was harder
00:25:27from two to three, uh, because we, uh, we had also this upgrade from Vue 2 to Vue 3 that
00:25:33was a, um, a different framework and a different approach I'm using, whether it's the composable
00:25:40era. Uh, and we took the approach to also, uh, rewrite the whole server engine. So you
00:25:46could work, uh, serverless environment with performance. So these two big rewrites we plan
00:25:53to rewrite next. So the next major or going to be, uh, approachable and there is this,
00:26:01uh, port compatibility that we all have built, which means that you can start, um, uh, aging
00:26:08to V5 or to the new feature coming or the breaking change that is happening in V5 ahead of time.
00:26:15So you can get prepared and let Daniela continue on this.
00:26:22I think that's the key. That's one of the key things I would say is we want to be forwards
00:26:26and backwards compatible. And, uh, and I think the upgrade version four was three to four.
00:26:34We very deliberately wanted to make that proof that you don't need to be afraid of breaking
00:26:39changes and next, and you don't need to be afraid of majors. Um, like sometimes it feels
00:26:45like you get stuck on, on something like, Oh, we can't, we can't release a major. And so
00:26:50our plan is to release a new one every year, uh, at least. Um, and that interestingly seems
00:26:57to be matched with a lot of other projects. So if you look at node, for example, their
00:27:01new, um, release schedule of, uh, making sure that there are majors every year, um, matches
00:27:09pretty well with us. And I think in general, the, the pattern is, um, when you use next,
00:27:15you're using it, uh, to build a project like a house. Um, so your, your project is, uh,
00:27:21it's alive. It, it, it like a house, it needs, um, new paint, it needs touching up. Um, you
00:27:28always want your website to be adopting the best practices of today, not just the best
00:27:33practices when you wrote it, um, which is why Knox needs to continue to evolve and make sure
00:27:38that it is, it does have, um, what you need to build a great website. Um, and I think probably
00:27:46in the last, uh, last few months, um, we've seen some supply chain attacks on NPM. It just
00:27:52reinforces the need to make sure that with all of your dependencies, you stay up to date,
00:27:57um, and you stay tracking, uh, the latest, um, that, that you can, uh, and the responsibility
00:28:03for us as package creators and maintainers is to make sure that that upgrade, those upgrade
00:28:08steps are as painless as possible. Um, so if you are finding that you are upgrading
00:28:14next and it is painful, that is my, that's a problem. Tell me, complain to me please,
00:28:21because we don't want that to be the case. We don't want people to be saying, Oh, how
00:28:25do I upgrade? We want people to be saying, Oh, it's a joy. You know, it took me half a
00:28:29day to do this major upgrade, um, not two months. Um, so we really want to optimize for that
00:28:36for lots of reasons, not just because it's what websites need, but it's because the ecosystem
00:28:42needs. Um, and yeah, we want people not to be afraid of those upgrades.
00:28:47And if you want to ping Daniel, it's on blue sky and row.deb.
00:28:54You can find me almost everywhere. Amazing. Wonderfully said, thank you. And I want to
00:29:01finish off our questions, uh, about community. So, uh, not long ago I saw a photo. I think
00:29:07I can't remember what conference it was, but I remember, uh, it was one of you speaking
00:29:11and there was an image of a community and, and it says something like a nexus about the
00:29:16people. Um, so it seems you have an amazing community. Uh, tell us about them, uh, where
00:29:20can we get involved, um, contribute, et cetera. Tell us more.
00:29:30I think Daniel is frozen. Yeah. It was Daniel Turk at Vue.js, Amsterdam, uh, I think. Um,
00:29:40and yeah, I don't, I would say that if you want to join us, we have the discord server
00:29:47who is very active. And we, uh, we share many, many news on this. We have the, uh, GitHub
00:29:54anyway, the, the issues on GitHub, the pull request is where also the code is being written.
00:30:00This is where IDs are implemented, uh, shared. Um, if you want to help us, there are many
00:30:07things where you can, uh, either help on the issues, give ideas, um, uh, share your experience,
00:30:15share your demos. We also have the Twitter accounts next to us on GS. We have a blue
00:30:20sky account. We're using the next.com. Uh, I think we have a Mastodon account, LinkedIn
00:30:26showcase page. If you're into LinkedIn, uh, we don't have an Instagram page, uh, neither
00:30:31SoundCloud, but, uh, you can, the, the discovery is also a nice place to hang out. If you want
00:30:39to have a question, just chat with us. We are, we're there also. And, uh, yeah, that's, uh,
00:30:46I think, uh, the whole people we share with also all the modules create, or you're like,
00:30:51you don't need to contribute directly to the core. And I think that's one of the beauty
00:30:54of NERSC is you can start with a template that you want to share it, and you can start with
00:31:00a module because you, you built a feature, uh, by creating a module and you can share
00:31:05with the whole community. I think we have more than 300 maintain module for the current version
00:31:10of NERSC. So with more than 1000 contributors. So please, uh, please come and hang out with
00:31:17us. You're going to enjoy it. Yeah. Let's go. Amazing. I think Daniel, you can't hear you.
00:31:27Yeah. But he said we have a SoundCloud, I think. I think he'd have a, something to add on the
00:31:51community side. Yeah. Maybe he's cooking up the first track
00:31:55for the SoundCloud. So I just want to say that community, and I'm glad you brought it up.
00:32:05I think community is the best, best bit, um, about Nuxt even. Um, and I think the, I mean,
00:32:13I think the community is where open source is all about because community is like open
00:32:17source is me taking something or not me, but any one of us taking something and saying to
00:32:21someone else, Hey, what do you think about this? Do you like it? Do you want to get, do
00:32:26you, do you want to help make it better? And so, and that community is, is, is what makes
00:32:32open source worthwhile. It's why we do it. It's what is the whole point. I very strongly
00:32:38believe that contributing.md is more important than the agents.md. I would rather have zero
00:32:44agents and lots of people than the other way around. Like the thing that makes it worthwhile
00:32:50is the fact that there are people that I care about who are part of a project. Um, and honestly,
00:32:56that's been true. I think of not just Nuxt, but the Vue community, for example, has been
00:33:00very much like that. Um, but yes, it's all about the community and, um, it is always wonderful
00:33:06to see new people join and start to contribute, to become part of it. Um, and that includes
00:33:12just coming and asking for help as well. I should say that's how I got involved, um, coming
00:33:18in and pestering people in Discord to find the answers to my questions.
00:33:23Love it so much. But yay for humans, yay for community. Um, yeah, you can just ship things
00:33:28and share it with the world. Um, we love to see it. Um, so yeah, um, we'll wrap up with
00:33:34you guys. Um, I'm so inspired at the rate and the quality of the things that you're shipping,
00:33:40so super excited for the Nuxt journey, um, and what you're shipping next. Um, so yeah,
00:33:45thank you so much to you guys, to the rest of the Nuxt team, Nuxt maintainers, contributors,
00:33:50and of course the Nuxt community. Um, so yeah, thank you, Sebastian, Daniel and Hugo for joining
00:33:55us today.
00:33:56Thank you.
00:33:57Thanks.
00:33:58Bye.
00:33:59And audience, one more thing. Don't go anywhere. I want to bring on Eve from the Versailles
00:34:07Academy.
00:34:08Hello, Maya.
00:34:09Hello, Eve. Welcome back.
00:34:11Thank you so much. I love to see you. This is the most fun part of my month is launching
00:34:18a course and doing very little, hearing everybody talk. And that team is so full of goats, like
00:34:25so good. Um, but yeah, you are a goat included. Um, and I'd love to, I'd love to hear more
00:34:36about, uh, what you're, what you've cooked with the, uh, new course.
00:34:40Yeah. So we are super excited to launch today a new course. My screen is shared there. Nuxt
00:34:48on Versailles. It is a course for folks who are used to working in a React world. And this
00:34:55kind of provides that translation layer between React and Nuxt projects. So if you are signing
00:35:03onto a new job or if you're working on a side project and you're like, I really want to use
00:35:08this, but I don't know where to get started. This is the way, um, of course the agents
00:35:12will help you get there too. And you should use all of those tools, but this helps you
00:35:16build a project. We build a hot, hot spring finder app so that you can find your favorite
00:35:24hikes and hot springs. And yeah, so check it out. There's lots of new courses coming on
00:35:30Versailles Academy to a little pitch, but this one is the newest.
00:35:34Amazing. Thank you so much Eve, um, for the audience. Eve has the best courses and she
00:35:40really embraces the build to learn. Um, so yeah, definitely go check it out. We'll add
00:35:45a link as well. So, uh, to make it easy for you. Uh, I'm excited to go through this myself
00:35:50and build more with Nuxt. So yeah. Thank you so much for joining us today. Thank you. Okay.
00:35:59Thank you. We are at the end of our community session. Thank you so much to our community
00:36:03for spending time with us. We hope you enjoyed it. And if you want to join us for future
00:36:09community sessions, then you can find all the details on our community platform at community.versailles.com/live.
00:36:16We've also got lots of events upcoming and in the works. So check out our events page
00:36:20on our meetups page for those online and in your area. Um, and lastly, fresh off the press,
00:36:26um, tickets have dropped for Versailles ship, um, that will be held in locations across the
00:36:32world. So yes, super exciting. Make sure to go check out verailles.com/ship and apply
00:36:37for your tickets. And also it's worth a visit, um, just for the design and interactions alone.
00:36:43The team really cooks on that one. So yeah, that's all from me. Thank you so much, everyone.
00:36:47Have a good day. Bye.