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WTF, JS? (JS Party #229)

KBall, Ali & Nick explore a new type of segment: "WTFJS" talking about wild and wooly "it's not a bug it's a feature" examples in the JavaScript language. They also dive into code maintainability, and end by discussing the whiplash shift in the tech industry from "hottest market for engineers in history" to "oh noes everything is stopping!"

Jun 10, 20221h 2m

Going through the news (Go Time #233)

We're trying something new this week: discussing the news! Natalie, Kris & Ian weigh in on GopherCon's move to Chicago, Google DDoSing SourceHut, reflections on Go's success, and a new/old proposal for anonymous function syntax.

Jun 9, 20221h 0m

DevOps teams with shared responsibilities (Ship It! #56)

Today we are talking with Maikel Vlasman, technical lead for a large Dutch machine construction company, and a cloud engineer by heart. We cover self-updating GitLab & ArgoCD, Maikel's thinking behind dev environment setup and a Kubernetes workshop that he is preparing for his team. The goal is to function as a true DevOps team with shared responsibilities. This conversation started as a thread in our community Slack - link in the show notes. Thank you Maikel for being a long-time Changelog listener and for reaching out to us - we enjoyed telling this story.

Jun 8, 202258 min

Generalist models & Iceman's voice (Practical AI #180)

In this "fully connected" episode of the podcast, we catch up on some recent developments in the AI world, including a new model from DeepMind called Gato. This generalist model can play video games, caption images, respond to chat messages, control robot arms, and much more. We also discuss the use of AI in the entertainment industry (e.g., in new Top Gun movie).

Jun 7, 202240 min

Fireside chat with Jack Dorsey (Founders Talk #91)

Adam was invited by our friends at Square to interview Jack Dorsey as part of their annual developer conference called Square Unboxed. Jack Dorsey is one of the most prolific CEOs out there — he's a hacker turned CEO and is often working at the very edge of what's to come (at scale). Jack is focused on what the future has to offer, he's considered an innovator by many. He's also a Bitcoin maximalist and has positioned himself and Block long on Bitcoin. What you're about to hear is the fireside chat Adam had with Jack at Square Unboxed 2022. Jack and Adam discuss the vision Square has for the developer platform and why it’s so central to the company’s strategy.

Jun 3, 202243 min

Live from Remix Conf! (JS Party #228)

Ali & Divya recorded seven (!) awesome conversations all about Remix and the web ecosystem live on-stage at the first-ever Remix Conf after-party!

Jun 3, 20221h 16m

The myth of incremental progress (Go Time #232)

During a conversation in the #gotime channel of Gopher Slack, Jerod mentioned that some people paint with a blank canvas while others paint by numbers. In this 8th episode of the maintenance series, we’re talking about maintaining our knowledge. With Jerod’s analogy and a little help from a Leslie Lamport interview, our panel discusses the myth of incremental progress.

Jun 2, 20221h 12m

Optimising sociotechnical systems (Ship It! #55)

Today we are talking how to optimise sociotechnical systems with Ben Ford, founder & CEO of Mission Control. The correct order is: people, process & technology. The tools are important, and we talk about specific ones in the second half of this episode, but there are rules and principles that govern how people interact, and we need to start there.

Jun 2, 20221h 8m

🤗 The AI community building the future (Practical AI #179)

Hugging Face is increasingly becomes the "hub" of AI innovation. In this episode, Merve Noyan joins us to dive into this hub in more detail. We discuss automation around model cards, reproducibility, and the new community features. If you are wanting to engage with the wider AI community, this is the show for you!

May 31, 202247 min

JS logging & error handling (JS Party #227)

Nick and Chris welcome back Mik and Bret to discuss logging and error handling in Node and JavaScript and the subtleties and intricacies that extend far beyond console.log!

May 27, 20221h 11m

Stacked diffs for fast-moving code review (Changelog Interviews #491)

This week we're peeking into the future again — this time we're looking at the future of modern code review and workflows around pull requests. Jerod and Adam were joined by two of the co-founders of Graphite — Tomas Reimers and Greg Foster. Graphite is an open-source CLI and code review dashboard built for engineers who want to write and review smaller pull requests, stay unblocked, and ship faster. We cover all the details -- how they got started, how this product emerged from another idea they were working on, the state of adoption, why stacking changes is the way of the future, how it's just Git under the hood, and what they're doing with the $20M in funding they just got from a16z.

May 27, 20221h 19m

Berlin's transition to Go (Go Time #231)

The Berlin tech ecosystem was all about PHP/Python for a long time. In the recent years it became a tech hub and an early adopter of Go. In this conversation we'll see how this reflects in the 10+ years old Go meetup, with the meetup organizing team.

May 26, 20221h 1m

Knative, Sigstore & swag (KubeCon EU 2022) (Ship It! #54)

This is the post-KubeCon CloudNativeCon EU 2022 week. Gerhard is talking to Matt Moore, founder & CTO of Chainguard about all things Knative and Sigstore. The most important topic is swag, because none has better stickers than Chainguard. The other topic is the equivalent of Let's Encrypt for securing software.

May 25, 202248 min

Schneier on security for tomorrow’s software (Changelog Interviews #490)

This week we're talking with Bruce Schneier — cryptographer, computer security professional, privacy specialist, and writer (of many books). He calls himself a "public-interest technologist", a term he coined himself, and works at the intersection of security, technology, and people. Bruce has been writing about security issues on his blog since 2004, his monthly newsletter has been going since 1998, he’s a fellow and lecturer at Harvard's Kennedy School, a board member of the EFF, and the Chief of Security Architecture at Inrupt. Long story short, Bruce has credentials to back up his opinions and on today’s show we dig into the state of cyber-security, security and privacy best practices, his thoughts on Bitcoin (and other crypto-currencies), Tim Berners-Lee's Solid project, and of course we asked Bruce to share his advice for today’s developers building the software systems of tomorrow.

May 20, 20221h 15m

Securing K8s releases (KubeCon EU 2022) (Ship It! #53)

Today we are at KubeCon CloudNativeCon EU 2022, talking to Adolfo García Veytia about securing Kubernetes releases. Adolfo is a Staff Software Engineer at Chainguard, and one of the technical leads for SIG release, meaning that he helps ship Kubernetes. You most likely know him as Puerco, and have seen first-hand his passion for securing software via SBOMs, cosign and SLSA. Puerco's love for bikes and Chainguard are a great match 🚴‍♂️

May 20, 20221h 7m

The third year of the third age of JS (JS Party #226)

In 2020, Shawn (swyx) Wang wrote: > Every 10 years there is a changing of the guard in JavaScript. I think we have just started a period of accelerated change that could in thge future be regarded as the Third Age of JavaScript. We're now in _year three_ of this third age and Swyx joins us to look back at what he missed, look around at what's happening today, and look forward at what might be coming next.

May 20, 20221h 0m

Revisiting Caddy (Go Time #230)

Matt Holt & Mohammed S. Al Sahaf sit down with Natalie & Jon to discuss every gopher's favorite open source web server with automatic HTTPS! In addition to laying out what Caddy is and why it's interesting, we dive deep into how you can (and why you might want to) extend Caddy as a result of its modular architecture.

May 19, 202251 min

From GitHub TV to Rewatch (Founders Talk #90)

Connor Sears, founder and CEO of Rewatch, joins Adam to share the journey of creating Rewatch. What began inside of GitHub to help them thrive and connect is now available to every product team on the planet. Rewatch lets teams save, manage, and search all their video content so they can collaborate async and with greater flexibility. We talk about where the tool's inspiration came from (spoiler alert, inside GitHub it was called GitHub TV which you'll hear during the show), how teams leverage video to reduce the constraints of communication, how Connor and his co-founder knew they had product-fit and how they grew the team and product, and of course the flip side of that — we talk about some of Connor's failures along the way, and knowing when it's the right time to take a big swing.

May 18, 20221h 54m

Active learning & endangered languages (Practical AI #178)

Don't all AI methods need a bunch of data to work? How could AI help document and revitalize endangered languages with "human-in-the-loop" or "active learning" methods? Sarah Moeller from the University of Florida joins us to discuss those and other related questions. She also shares many of her personal experiences working with languages in low resource settings.

May 17, 202249 min

Run your home on a Raspberry Pi (Changelog Interviews #489)

This week we're joined by Mike Riley and we're talking about his book Portable Python Projects (Running your home on a Raspberry Pi). We breakdown the details of the latest Raspberry Pi hardware, various automation ideas from the book, why Mike prefers Python for scripting on a Raspberry Pi, and of course why the Raspberry Pi makes sense for home labs concerned about data security. Use the code `PYPROJECTS` to get a 35% discount on the book. That code is valid for approximately 60 days after the episode's publish date.

May 13, 20221h 20m

A JS framework for startups: Redwood goes 1.0 (JS Party #225)

KBall interviews TPW about the 1.0 release of Redwood - what it provides, why they've repositioned as a "JavaScript framework optimized for startups", and what's coming next.

May 13, 20221h 11m

What to do when projects get big and messy (Go Time #229)

Another entry in the maintenance series! Throughout the series we’ve discussed building versus buying, building actually maintainable software, maintaining ourselves, open source maintenance, legacy code, and most recently Go project structure. In this 7th installment of the series, we continue narrowing our focus by talking about what to do when projects get big and messy.

May 12, 20221h 5m

Priyanka's Happy Hour (KubeCon EU 2022) (Ship It! #52)

Today we talk to Priyanka Sharma (E.D. at the Cloud Native Computing Foundation) about all things KubeCon Europe 2022. We start with Gerhard's favourite subject - Priyanka's Happy Hour - and then we switch focus to the conference. For many, this will be the first in-person KubeCon since 2019. As for Gerhard, he is not sure that he remember how airports work. If he succeeds, he looks forward to meeting some of you in Valencia. If not, send help.

May 11, 202239 min

Leading GitLab to IPO (Founders Talk #89)

This week Sid Sijbrandij, Co-founder and CEO of GitLab, is back talking with Adam about all the details of their massive IPO last October 2021. To set the stage, this episode was recorded on Feb 1, 2022. During the show Adam mentioned they IPO'd at a $13B market cap, but they actually ended their opening day at approximately $15B. That's a massive win for open source, GitLab, Sid, and the rest of the team. For loyal listeners you know we've had Sid on this show before, so of course we had to get him back on the show post-IPO to get all the details of this new journey.

May 10, 20221h 10m

Mob programming deep dive (Changelog Interviews #488)

We’re talking with Woody Zuill today about all things Mob Programming. Woody leads Mob Programming workshops, he’s a speaker on agile related topics, and coaches and guides orgs interested in creating an environment where people can do their best work. We talk through it all and we even get some amazing advice from Woody’s dad. We define what Mob Programming is and why it’s so effective. Is it a rigid process or can teams flex to make it work for them? How to introduce mob programming to a team. What kind of groundwork is necessary? And of course, are mob programming’s virtues diminished by remote teams in virtual-only settings?

May 6, 20221h 27m

Were SPAs a big mistake? (JS Party #224)

Let the debate begin (again)! This time we're arguing whether or not single-page apps were a big mistake. This premise was inspired by Chris Ferdinandi's SPAs were a mistake post. Divya & Nick represent Team Yep and KBall goes solo on Team Nope. Jerod, as per our usual arrangement, is on Team Winner.

May 6, 202255 min

Go and PHP sitting in a tree... (Go Time #228)

Can Go help you write faster PHP apps? In this episode, we explore the unusual pairing of Go and PHP that led to the RoadRunner project, a high-performance PHP application server, load-balancer, and process manager that is all written in Go.

May 5, 202255 min

Making an open source Stripe for time (Founders Talk #88)

This week Peer Richelsen, Co-Founder and Co-CEO of Cal.com, joins the show to talk about building the "Stripe for Time" — with a grand mission to connect a billion people by 2031 through calendar scheduling. Cal has grown from an open-source side project to one of the fastest-growing commercial open source companies. We get into all the details — what it means to be an open source Calendly alternative, how they quantify connecting a Billion people by 2031, where there’s room for innovation in the scheduling space, and why being community first is part of their secret sauce.

May 5, 20221h 26m

From Kubernetes to PaaS - now what? (Ship It! #51)

Today we talk to Mark Ericksen about all the things that we could be doing on the new platform - this is a follow-up to episode 50. Mark specialises in Elixir, he hosts the Thinking Elixir podcast, and he also helps make Fly.io the best place to run Phoenix apps, such as changelog.com. In the interest of holding our new platform right, we thought that it would be a great idea to talk to someone that does this all day, every day, for many years now. We touch up on how to run database migrations safely, and how to upgrade our application config to the latest Phoenix version. We also talked about some of the more advanced platform features that we may want to start leveraging, like the multi-region PostgreSQL.

May 4, 202258 min

Learning the language of life (Practical AI #177)

AI is discovering new drugs. Sound like science fiction? Not at Absci! Sean and Joshua join us to discuss their AI-driven pipeline for drug discovery. We discuss the tech along with how it might change how we think about healthcare at the most fundamental level.

May 3, 202247 min

Nick's big rewrite (JS Party #223)

Nick rewrote our JS Danger game board app from Dojo to React for his talk at React Global Online Summit about componentizing application state with React and XState. On this episode Jerod, KBall, and Feross chat with Nick about the entire process and what he learned along the way. Oh, we also play an _epic_ round of Pro Tip Time!

Apr 29, 202250 min

Analyzing static analysis (Go Time #227)

Matan Peled from Technion University joins Natalie & Mat to discuss his PhD research on meta programming and static analyzers. How does Go's measure up? What would Matan's look like if he built one? All that and more!

Apr 28, 202258 min

Kaizen! We are flying ✈️ (Ship It! #50)

This is our 5th Kaizen where we talk about the next improvement to changelog.com: we are now running on Fly.io and our PostgreSQL is managed. This is a migration that many were curious about, including Simmy de Klerk, the person that requested this episode. After migrating all our media files to AWS S3 (check episode 40), we thought that this part was going to be easy. Plan met reality. Pull request 407 has all the details. We want to emphasise the type of partner relationships that we seek at Changelog & why they are important to us, as well as to our listeners. Honeycomb & Fly embody the principles that we care about, and Gerhard thinks that we are currently missing a Kubernetes partner.

Apr 27, 20221h 7m

Warp wants to be the terminal of the future (Changelog Interviews #487)

Today we’re talking with Zach Lloyd, founder of Warp — the terminal being re-imagined for the 21st century and beyond. Warp is a blazingly fast, rust-based terminal that's being designed from the ground up to work like a modern app. We get into all the details — why now is the right time to re-invent the terminal, where they got started, the business they aim to build around Warp, what it's going to take to gain adoption and grow, but more importantly — what's Warp like today to get developers excited and give it a try.

Apr 26, 20221h 14m

MLOps is NOT Real (Practical AI #176)

We all hear a lot about MLOps these days, but where does MLOps end and DevOps begin? Our friend Luis from OctoML joins us in this episode to discuss treating AI/ML models as regular software components (once they are trained and ready for deployment). We get into topics including optimization on various kinds of hardware and deployment of models at the edge.

Apr 26, 202245 min

Practical ways to solve hard problems (Changelog Interviews #486)

Frank Krueger joined us to talk about solving hard problems. Earlier this year he wrote a blog post titled "Practical Guide to Solving Hard Problems," and a lot of what he had to say really resonated with us. The premise is simple — if you have to write some code that you’re just not sure how to write...what do you do? What are the practical steps that you can take when you’re feeling stumped? Today’s show goes deep on that subject...practical ways to solve hard problems and ship your best work. Frank has his own podcast called Merge Conflict — check it out at mergeconflict.fm.

Apr 22, 20221h 15m

The Type Annotations proposal (JS Party #222)

Daniel Rosenwasser and Ryan Cavanaugh from the TypeScript team at Microsoft join Nick and Boneskull to catch us up on the latest happening with the TypeScript project, including what's exciting in the new 4.7 beta release. Then, we dive deep into the new, TC-39 stage 1 Type Annotations proposal, what it is, and what it means for the future of a _not really typed_ JavaScript!

Apr 22, 20221h 6m

Instrumentation for gophers (Go Time #226)

Björn Rabenstein & Bartlomiej Płotka join Mat & Johnny to discuss observability, monitoring and instrumentation for gophers.

Apr 21, 202259 min

Improving an eCommerce fulfilment platform (Ship It! #49)

Alex Sims, a Senior Software Engineer at James & James, an eCommerce fulfilment company, reached out to us about the Kaizen story of the third-party logistics (3PL) platform that he has been involved with for several years now. The system delivered 16 millions of orders in 10 years, and 4.5 million in the last year alone. All the numbers are going up, and there is only so much that a single PHP monolith deployed as VM images can handle. So how do you even start thinking about the architectural improvements, and inspire everyone involved to move towards better? We encourage you to look at the architectural diagrams in the show notes, especially the 10 year roadmap, and ask Alex for a blog post follow-up. While today's episode was a good conversation starter, there is a lot that we did not have time to cover.

Apr 20, 20221h 2m

🌍 AI in Africa - Agriculture (Practical AI #175)

In the fourth “AI in Africa” spotlight episode, we welcome Leonida Mutuku and Godliver Owomugisha, two experts in applying advanced technology in agriculture. We had a great discussion about ending poverty, hunger, and inequality in Africa via AI innovation. The discussion touches on open data, relevant models, ethics, and more.

Apr 19, 202251 min

The Oban Pro (Backstage #23)

We've been using Parker Selbert's Oban library for years and he even helped us hold it right by improving our open source implementation! So, Jerod invited him Backstage to discuss the library, how we're using it, Parker's plan to make it financially sustainable, his "freedom number" of Oban Pro subscribers, and a bunch of other random stuff along the way. Let's go!

Apr 19, 202259 min

Postgres.js (JS Party #221)

Rasmus Porsager created Postgres.js –the fastest full-featured PostgreSQL client for Node.js and Deno. Today he joins Jerod for a deep-dive on Postgres, why he created this open source library, and how you can use it to build pg-backed JavaScript applications.

Apr 15, 202250 min

Go code organization best practices (Go Time #225)

We often have code that's similar between projects and we find ourselves copying that code around. In this episode we discuss what to do with this common code, how to organize it, and what code qualifies as this common code.

Apr 14, 20221h 0m

This is JS Party! (JS Party)

trailer

JS Party is a weekly celebration of JavaScript and the web so fun is at the heart of every episode. We play games like Frontend Feud... (clip from episode #192) Discuss and analyze the news... (clip from episode #213) Explain technical concepts to each other like we're 5... (clip from episode #195) Debate hot topics like should websites work without JS? (clip from episode #87) Interiew amazing devs like Rich Harris and Una Kravets... (clip from episode #167) This is JS Party! Listen and subscribe today. We'd love to have you with us. 💚

Apr 13, 20221 min

Launching Dagger (Ship It! #48)

In this episode we talk about launching Dagger with all four founders: Andrea, Eric, Sam & Solomon. While you may remember Sam & Solomon from episode 23, this time we assembled all four superheroes in this story and went deeper, covering nearly three years of refinements, the launch, as well as the world-class team & community that is coming together to solve the next problem of shipping software. Container images and Kubernetes are great steps in the right direction, but now it's time for the next leap into the future. You can use Dagger to run your CI/CD pipelines locally, without needing to commit and push. You can also use Dagger as a Makefile alternative, which resonates with Gerhard, but go further and your perspective on documentation & automation may start shifting. Gerhard believes that this is the Docker moment of CI/CD.

Apr 13, 20221h 6m

The story of Vitess (Changelog Interviews #485)

This week we're joined by Deepthi Sigireddi, Vitess Maintainer and engineer at PlanetScale — of course we're talking about all things Vitess. We talk about its origin inside YouTube, how Vitess handles sharding, Deepthi's journey to Vitess maintainer, when you should begin using it, and how it fits into cloud native infra.

Apr 12, 20221h 31m

The Docker Swarm story (Ship It! #47)

This episode was requested by Tyler Smith who feels that he may not need Kubernetes just yet. Tyler has a few questions about Docker & Docker Swarm, so Andrea Luzzardi, former Docker Swarm Lead, joins us today to answer them. We talk about Docker Swarm beginnings, some of the challenges that it faced, and what Andrea's recommendation is for Tyler's journey with Docker Swarm. After dedicating four years of his professional career to Docker Swarm, Andrea is the best person that Gerhard knows to talk about this subject. And guess what, the same thing happened now as it did at KubeCon 2015: Sam pointed to Andrea. It will all make sense in the first five minutes. This one is going to be fun!

Apr 8, 202245 min

Headlines and HeadLIES! (JS Party #220)

KBall and Jerod digest and disect recent JS community news (React 18, Redwood 1.0, MDN Plus) then sit down for yet another game of HeadLIES! Can KBall fare better than Nick Nisi did last April Fools?!

Apr 8, 202255 min

Answering questions for the Go-curious (Go Time #224)

Has Go caught your interest, but you just haven't had the time/opportunity to really dig into it? Are you relatively productive in your current language/ecosystem but wonder if the grass truly is greener on Go's side of the fence? If so, this episode's for you!

Apr 7, 20221h 1m

Quick, beautiful web UIs for ML apps (Practical AI #174)

Abubakar Abid joins Daniel and Chris for a tour of Gradio and tells them about the project joining Hugging Face. What's Gradio? The fastest way to demo your machine learning model with a friendly web interface, allowing non-technical users to access, use, and give feedback on models.

Apr 5, 202242 min