![]() Friends #17: Kaizen! Slightly more instant.Friends #24: HATEOAS corpus with Kris Brandow.Friends #7: Dear Red Hat… with Jeff Geerling.Unpopular opinion! We’ll move from streaming back to owning content - YouTube.Matteo Collina on how he believes AWS fooled devs & sabotaged the industry (to make more money) - YouTube.Cory Doctorow on restoring the dream of tech workers - YouTube.Friends #18: Human skills to pay the bills with KBall.Go Time #291: Go templating using Templ.Friends #12: You call it tech debt I call it malpractice with Kris Brandow.JS Party #288: Refined thinking with Jim Nielsen.Interviews #534: LLMs break the internet with Simon Willison.Interviews #535: Examining capitalism’s chokepoints with Cory Doctorow.Friends #23: The state of the 2023 tech market with Gergely Orosz.JS Party #299: Tech by Choice with Valerie Phoenix.Friends #15: #define: a game of fake definitions.Interviews #547: Efficient Linux at the CLI with Danil J.Friends #16: The beginning of the end of physical media with Christina Warren.Interviews #527: What it takes to scale engineering with Rachel Potvin.Interviews #540: Engineering management (for the rest of us) with Sarah Drasner.Friends #9: Homelab nerds, unite! with Techno Tim.Interviews #523: Just Postgres with Craig Kerstiens.Interviews #533: A new path to full-time open source with Filippo Valsorda.Interviews #553: 30 years of Debian with Jonathan Carter.Interviews #537: Hard drive reliability at scale with Andy Klein.Interviews #549: Storytime with Steve Yegge.Interviews #558: Open source is at a crossroads with Steve O’Grady.Interviews #565: Pushing back on unconstrained capitalism with Cory Doctorow. ![]() Friends #20: Beat freak in residence with BMC.Interviews #545: Rebuilding DevOps from the ground up with Adam Jacob.Interviews #524: Mainframes are still a big thing with Cameron Seay.Interviews #453: Leading leaders who lead engineers with Lara Hogan.Interviews #551: DX on DX with Abi Noda.Friends #11: An aberrant generation of programmers with Justin Searls & Landon Gray.Typesense – Lightning fast, globally distributed Search-as-a-Service that runs in memory.Move beyond your content delivery network to their powerful edge cloud platform. Fastly powers fast, secure, and scalable digital experiences. Thanks for listening! □Ĭhangelog++ members get a bonus 5 minutes at the end of this episode and zero ads. Our 6th annual year-end wrap-up episode! This time we’re featuring 12 (yes, 12!) listener voice mails, our favorite episodes of the year & some insanely cool Breakmaster Cylinder beats made just for this occasion. Something missing or broken? PRs welcome! Letters to a New Developer - What I wish I had known when starting my development career.Jerod Santo – Mastodon, Twitter, GitHub, LinkedIn.Adam Stacoviak – Mastodon, Twitter, GitHub, LinkedIn, Website.Dan Moore – Twitter, GitHub, LinkedIn, Website.Learn more at fly.io/changelog and check out the speedrun in their docs. In minutes you can run your Ruby, Go, Node, Deno, Python, or Elixir app (and databases!) all over the world. Fly.io – The home of - Deploy your apps and databases close to your users.Sentry – Get $100 towards your error monitoring with Sentry! Use the code changelog.We separate storage and compute to offer autoscaling, branching, and bottomless storage. Neon – The fully managed serverless Postgres with a generous free tier.Install the GitHub app, book a demo or learn more Socket – Secure your supply chain and ship with confidence.So much wisdom and advice in this episode!Ĭhangelog++ members get a bonus 13 minutes at the end of this episode and zero ads. Dan shares his best advice for new developers, including the importance of saying no, leaving code better than you found it, and the value of skill stacking. We discuss the value of online communities for new developers, the importance of communication skills, and the need to stay relevant in a rapidly changing industry. Hello 2024! We’re kicking off the year with Dan Moore, author of ‘Letters to a New Developer’ - a blog series of letters of what Dan wished he had known when starting his developer career.
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