Fabrizio Ferri-Benedetti, who spent many years as a technical writer for Splunk and New Relic, joins Ben and Ryan for a conversation about the evolving role of documentation in software development. They explore how documentation can (and should) be integrated with code, the importance of quality control, and the hurdles to maintaining up-to-date documentation. Plus: Why technical writers shouldn’t be afraid of LLMs. https://stackoverflow.blog/2024/11/26/your-docs-are-your-infrastructure/
Accedi per aggiungere un commento
Altri post in questo gruppo

An update on recent launches and the upcoming roadmap https://stackoverflow.blog/2025/04/23/community-products-roadmap-update-april-2025/

Ryan chats with Dataiku CEO and cofounder Florian Douetteau about the complexities of the genAI data stack and how his company is orchestrating it. https://stackoverflow.blog/2025/04/22/visually-orch

On today’s episode, Ben and Ryan chat with Laly Bar-Ilan, Chief Scientist at Bit. https://stackoverflow.blog/2025/04/18/generating-components-not-tokens/

Is “agentic AI” just a buzzword, or is it the sea change it seems? https://stackoverflow.blog/2025/04/17/wait-what-is-agentic-ai/

Kyle chats with Jesse Tomchak a software engineer at ClickUp about all the spicy backend takes they could find. https://stackoverflow.blog/2025/04/09/wbit-6-be-curious-ask-questions-and-don-t-argue-w

AI is not a linear process. To scale effectively, engineering leaders must account for varied edge cases, presenting a new set of challenges. https://stackoverflow.blog/2025/04/16/engineering-teams-ne

Kyle interviews Michael Stum, a former Stacker who started (and returned) to answering questions on the community site. https://stackoverflow.blog/2025/04/16/wbit-7-exploring-webassembly-with-the-fir