
An introduction to psychological safety and ways to evaluate the level of safety in your organization. The post Psychological safety is critical for high-performing teams appeared first on Stack Overflow Blog.
https://stackoverflow.blog/2022/01/27/psychological-safety-is-critical-for-high-performing-teams/

It’s hard to believe we’re already four weeks into the New Year, especially as everything we have to celebrate from 2021 is still fresh in my mind. The post Keeping technologists in the flow state appeared first on Stack Overflow Blog.
https://stackoverflow.blog/2022/01/26/keeping-technologists-in-the-flow-state/

Modern apps have been engineered to capture your attention. We explore how to break free and find more focus for your own programming. The post How to defend your attention and find a flow state appeared first on Stack Overflow Blog.
https://stackoverflow.blog/2022/01/25/attention-distraction-focus-flow-state-programming/

What would you do if your code repositories suddenly stopped working? The post Securing the data in your online code repository is a shared responsibility appeared first on Stack Overflow Blog.

Welcome to ISSUE #109 of The Overflow! This newsletter is by developers, for developers, written and curated by the Stack Overflow team and Cassidy Williams. This week: what the Great Resignation means for developers, the team helping underserved communities build their own LTE networks, and why Canon is telling customers how to defeat its DRM. From… The post The Overflow #109: Developers and the Great Resignation appeared first on Stack Overflow Blog.

Are occasional disasters among widely used open source projects inevitable, or can we find a way to better fund maintainers and security? The post Who’s going to pay to fix open source security? appeared first on Stack Overflow Blog.
https://stackoverflow.blog/2022/01/21/whos-going-to-pay-to-fix-open-source-security/

When the Log4j security issue was disclosed, developers came looking for answers. We took a look at our site data around it. The post Here’s how Stack Overflow users responded to Log4Shell, the Log4j vulnerability affecting almost everyone appeared first on Stack Overflow Blog.

From teachers to tutorials to peer groups, and now, video games, there are lots of ways to acquire skills on the AWS platform. The post A chat with the folks who lead training and certification at AWS appeared first on Stack Overflow Blog.
https://stackoverflow.blog/2022/01/18/aws-technical-training-certification-learning/

An essential part of requirements analysis is understanding which quality characteristics are the most important so that designers can address them appropriately. The post Plan for tradeoffs: You can’t optimize all software quality attributes appeared first on Stack Overflow Blog.

Welcome to ISSUE #108 of The Overflow! This newsletter is by developers, for developers, written and curated by the Stack Overflow team and Cassidy Williams. This week: UX headaches, the clear downsides of phantom braking, and testing with real dependencies instead of mockup or fakes. From the blog Favor real dependencies for unit testing stackoverflow.blogWhich dependencies should… The post The Overflow #108: Determining dependencies and phantom braking appeared first on Stack O