On today’s episode we speak with Kohsuke Kawaguchi, who won the Google-O’Reilly Open Source award for his work on the Hudson/Jenkins project. Kohsuke began his career at Sun Microsystems. He shares insights on the balance between community-driven open source and the need to monetize through enterprise services. https://stackoverflow.blog/2024/09/06/kohsuke-kawaguchi-jenkins-ci-cd-cloudbees/
On today’s episode we speak with Kohsuke Kawaguchi, who won the Google-O’Reilly Open Source award for his work on the Hudson/Jenkins project. Kohsuke began his career at Sun Microsystems. In 2010 he founded InfraDNA, which merged with Cloudbees shortly after. In 2014 he become the CTO of Cloudbees. He shares insights on the balance between community-driven open source and the need to monetize through enterprise services. https://stackoverflow.blog/2024/09/06//kohsuke-kawaguchi-jenkins-ci-cd-clou
It’s tempting to push projects out the door, to woo and impress colleagues and supervisors, but the stark truth is that even the smallest projects should have proper review periods. https://stackoverflow.blog/2024/09/05/the-hidden-cost-of-speed/
In today's data-driven world, Apache Kafka has emerged as a cornerstone of modern data streaming, particularly with the rise of AI and the immense volumes of data it generates. https://stackoverflow.blog/2024/09/04/best-practices-for-cost-efficient-kafka-clusters/
On today’s episode we chat with Pradeep Vincent, Senior Vice President and Chief Technical Architect for Oracle Cloud Infrastructure, or OCI for short. He shares experiences from his time as an engineer at IBM and what it was like to be a senior engineer working on AWS during the early years of its development as a commercial product. https://stackoverflow.blog/2024/09/03/pradeep-vincent-oracle-oci-cloud-redundancy-failover/
Today we chat with Austin Emmons, an iOS developer at Embrace, where he spent time rebuilding their SDK to work with OpenTelemetry. He discusses the challenge of tracking performance and watching for edge cases when your app is deployed across dozens of devices with enormous variability in their hardware, software, and network capabilities. https://stackoverflow.blog/2024/08/30/mobile-observability-open-telemetry-embrace-ios-android-austin-emmons/
Today we chat with Avthar Sewrathan, AI Lead at Timescale, about adapting developers’ favorite database management system, Postgres, to support a range of new technologies involved in the GenAI ecosystem, especially vector databases. Avthar details his long history with Postgres and how clients are weighing the build vs. buy question when it comes to choosing a database to support their newly minted GenAI initiatives. https://stackoverflow.blog/2024/08/27/postgres-genai-vector-databases-timesca
The decoder-only transformer architecture is one of the most fundamental ideas in AI research. https://stackoverflow.blog/2024/08/22/llms-evolve-quickly-their-underlying-architecture-not-so-much/
On today’s episode, we chat with a listener, Geshan Manandhar, who has been working in the world of software engineering for two decades. He started programming in a small village in Kathmandu during the days of dial-up. Since then he’s worked across three continents and today is a senior software engineer at Simply Wall Street. He gives his advice on how developers can change with the times and what it’s like to move into the era of serverless containers. https://stackoverflow.blog/2024/08/23/e
On today’s episode, we chat with Ryan Dahl, creator of Node.js and Deno. He explains why he feels the first version of Deno has reached certain limits and what he and his team are doing with Deno 2.0 to scale up the module system and ensure it's a great tool for the modern web. https://stackoverflow.blog/2024/08/20/ryan-dahl-deno-20-scale-improve-npm-nodejs/