This is a story about trying to rethink complex systems: the challenges you face when you try to rebuild them, the burdens you face as they grow, and how inaction itself can cause it’s own problems. When you’re weighing the risk and reward of replacing architecture, it can take several attempts to find a solution that works for you. The post Using Kubernetes to rethink your system architecture and ease technical debt appeared first on Stack Overflow Blog.
We chat with Netlify about its recent acquisition and plans to build more collaborative and accessible deploy previews. The post Podcast 340: Build engineering at Apple and the future of deploy previews appeared first on Stack Overflow Blog.
We chat with Stack Overflow's director of brand design about the way his work overlaps with our development. The post Podcast 339: Where design meets development at Stack Overflow appeared first on Stack Overflow Blog.
https://stackoverflow.blog/2021/05/18/podcast-339-where-design-meets-development-at-stack-overflow/
There are a lot of opinions out there about how to improve and scale sites “beyond the Jamstack” by adding in features that use a Node server in addition to the pre-built pages. One of those features is called Incremental Static Regeneration. Some people call it “hybrid web development” (or “hybrid serverless + static”) but let’s talk a bit more about what that means. The post Incremental Static Regeneration: Building static sites a little at a time appeared first on Stack Overflow Blog.
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Welcome to ISSUE #73 of the Overflow! This newsletter is by developers, for developers, written and curated by the Stack Overflow team and Cassidy Williams at Netlify. This week: open source contributions take a helicopter to Mars, bug bounties cause real damage, and GitHub Actions give you a shortcut to continuous deployment. From the blog Find knowledge faster:… The post The Overflow #73: Open source helicopters on Mars appeared first on Stack Overflow Blog.
Your early developers loved Ruby, so you center your company around that. Now you can't find young talent. The post Podcast 338: Why is it so hard to find Ruby developers? appeared first on Stack Overflow Blog.
https://stackoverflow.blog/2021/05/14/podcast-338-why-is-it-so-hard-to-find-ruby-developers/
We’ve talked about the software that flies SpaceX rockets, the team that tests the code to ensure it’s airtight, and the code that helps Starlink satellites communicate with customers and one another. For our last piece, we’re diving into the work of a team that helps the vehicles get built. The post Building the software that helps build SpaceX appeared first on Stack Overflow Blog.
https://stackoverflow.blog/2021/05/13/building-the-software-that-helps-build-spacex/
We’ve talked about the engineers who write the code that operates SpaceX spaceships. Now let’s talk about the people who build and maintain the tools and processes that enable the developers and ultimately, help accomplish the mission of flying astronauts to space. Stack Overflow talked with Erin Ishimoticha, an engineer in the Software Delivery Engineering… The post Testing software so it’s reliable enough for space appeared first on Stack Overflow Blog.
There are requirements that make software engineers sweat. Massive distribution to thousands of nodes. High reliability and availability. Multiple distinct platforms. Rapid network growth. his is the world SpaceX’s Starlink program, which has set a goal to provide high-speed broadband internet to locations where access has been unreliable, expensive, or completely unavailable. The post Building a space-based ISP appeared first on Stack Overflow Blog.
Rest assured, we'll be connecting on LinkedIn in the near future. The post Podcast 337: Saying goodbye to our co-host, Sara Chipps appeared first on Stack Overflow Blog.
https://stackoverflow.blog/2021/05/11/podcast-337-saying-goodbye-to-our-co-host-sara-chipps/