McDonald’s is to Chipotle what REST APIs are to GraphQL (Ep. 424)

Ceora, Ben, and Matt talk with Danielle Mann, Director of Engineering at Apollo GraphQL, about how an MIT program for high school girls helped kick off her career, her path from IC to engineering manager, and how Apollo became what it is today. The post McDonald’s is to Chipotle what REST APIs are to GraphQL (Ep. 424) appeared first on Stack Overflow Blog.

https://stackoverflow.blog/2022/03/18/mcdonalds-is-to-chipotle-what-rest-apis-are-to-graphql-ep-424/

New data: What makes developers happy at work

Turns out developers and plants need mostly the same things. The post New data: What makes developers happy at work appeared first on Stack Overflow Blog.

https://stackoverflow.blog/2022/03/17/new-data-what-makes-developers-happy-at-work/

Celebrating the Stack Exchange sites that turned ten years old in Q1 2022

From camping to tenure to memory, the sites turning ten this quarter cover a lot of ground. The post Celebrating the Stack Exchange sites that turned ten years old in Q1 2022 appeared first on Stack Overflow Blog.

https://stackoverflow.blog/2022/03/16/celebrating-the-stack-exchange-site-that-turned-ten-years-old-in-q1-2022/

Visual Studio turns 25, new ideas for supporting open source, and of course…NFTs (Ep. 423)

The new home team—Matt, Ceora, and Cassidy—discuss Visual Studio’s 25th birthday, how to create a sustainable revenue source for open-source frameworks, why open-source business models contribute to a lack of diversity, and why NFTs are so unpopular with K-pop fans. The post Visual Studio turns 25, new ideas for supporting open source, and of course…NFTs (Ep. 423) appeared first on Stack Overflow Blog.

https://stackoverflow.blog/2022/03/15/visual-studio-turns-25-new-ideas-for-supporting-open-so

How sharding a database can make it faster

Sharding was one of the first ways databases were distributed to improve performance. Recent innovations have made it one of the best. The post How sharding a database can make it faster appeared first on Stack Overflow Blog.

https://stackoverflow.blog/2022/03/14/how-sharding-a-database-can-make-it-faster/

The Overflow #116: Stop aggregating away the signal in your data

This week: how to stop aggregating away the signal in your data, the hipster programming paradigm, and the junior software engineer making all the architecture decisions at their startup (are they working hard enough?). The post The Overflow #116: Stop aggregating away the signal in your data appeared first on Stack Overflow Blog.

https://stackoverflow.blog/2022/03/11/the-overflow-116-stop-aggregating-away-the-signal-in-your-data/

Crypto feels broken. That’s because it’s the internet circa 1996 (Ep. 422)

Ben talks with entrepreneur and venture capitalist David Pakman, who recently left his longtime role as a partner at veteran VC firm Venrock to become managing partner at CoinFund. The post Crypto feels broken. That’s because it’s the internet circa 1996 (Ep. 422) appeared first on Stack Overflow Blog.

https://stackoverflow.blog/2022/03/11/crypto-feels-broken-thats-because-its-the-internet-circa-1996-ep-422/

Rewriting Bash scripts in Go using black box testing

When rewriting software in a new language, how do you test that your new and old programs do the same thing? The post Rewriting Bash scripts in Go using black box testing appeared first on Stack Overflow Blog.

https://stackoverflow.blog/2022/03/09/rewriting-bash-scripts-in-go-using-black-box-testing/

Welcoming the new crew of Stack Overflow podcast hosts

We've got a new team of hosts and some big plans for the future. The post Welcoming the new crew of Stack Overflow podcast hosts appeared first on Stack Overflow Blog.

https://stackoverflow.blog/2022/03/08/welcoming-the-new-crew-of-stack-overflow-podcast-hosts/

Who says HTML and CSS aren’t real programming? (Ep. 421)

Welcome to the new Stack Overflow podcast. For our relaunch episode, the home team covers code scanning for security vulnerabilities in open-source registries, whether high-profile skills training programs from Google and Amazon really address systemic inequity in tech (spoiler: probably not), and how a James Bond character sparked Matt’s interest in security. The post Who says HTML and CSS aren’t real programming? (Ep. 421) appeared first on Stack Overflow Blog.

https://stackoverflow.blo


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