Conferences: GopherCon Europe, Berlin, June 26-29Gopher China, June 9-11Go Dev Survey 2023Q1 results StackOverflow Dev Survey 2023ProposalsA formal proposal to change loop variable semantics Limit cap of Buffer.Bytes() resultNew Proposal: Optional improved cachingCommunitySemanticDiff supports...
Serverless received significant attention when it first emerged in the middle of the 2010s. And although it has now entered the mainstream and is today used in a diverse range of scenarios and architectures, it nevertheless remains a topic that causes considerable confusion and debate: where should we use it? How should we use it? Sometimes, what even is it, exactly? In this episode of the Technology Podcast, Mike Mason and Prem Chandrasekaran are joined by former Thoughtworker Mike Roberts â author of "the canonical book on serverless," â to discuss the current state of serverless. They examine the ways that serverless is understood today and explore the impacts and challenges it has for both businesses and software developers. Read Mike Roberts' book Programming AWS Lambda: Read Mike's long-read on serverless on martinfowler.com: https://martinfowler.com/articles/serverless.html
Conferences are an integral part of the Go community, but the experience of conferences has remained the same even as the value propositions change. In this episode we discuss what conferences generally provide, how value propositions have changed, and what changes conference organizers could make to realign their conf...
This week Adam is joined by Michael Grinich, Founder & CEO at WorkOS. Michael shares his journey to build WorkOS, what it takes to cross the Enterprise Chasm, and how heâs building his sales organization for growth.
As businesses and individuals, we rely increasingly on digital services in our everyday lives. Our lives have become dependent on technology, from cloud services to mobile phones and streaming sites to the apps we use. And behind these technologies lies open source software. Open source software has become a vital part of building digital services. It has made it possible for developers to collaborate and share code, making it faster and more cost-effective to build software. But with this increase in use, the importance of security planning and governance has also grown. Amanda Brock, CEO of OpenUK, is a leading open-source software and governance expert. She has been an advocate for open source software for over a decade and has seen its impact on the industry. Amanda shares where we are with open source and why we must care about how our software gets put together and where it comes from. Amanda discusses the importance of understanding the source of the code and the licenses used. With the rise of open source software, it is essential to be aware of potential legal issues and ensure compliance with licensing requirements. She also highlights the importance of building and maintaining trust with open source communities and contributing back to them. Amanda also emphasizes the role of governance in ensuring the security and reliability of open source software. She points out that open source projects must have a strong governance structure to ensure that contributors are held accountable and that the code is secure. As Amanda notes, open source software has become too important to ignore. We must ensure that we are not only using it but also contributing to it and supporting its continued growth. By understanding where our software comes from and its governance structure, we can ensure the security and reliability of the technologies we rely on daily. As businesses and individuals, we must recognize the importance of open source software and take steps to ensure its continued growth and success. Sponsored VPN Offer
Feross and his team at Socket recently shipped a wrapper library for the ubiquitous npm package managerâs command-line interface that brings enhanced security when you need it most: before executing any code Bradly Farias lead this effort, so Jerod & Chris invited him on the show to learn all about it.
The panel dives into a topic that makes most software developers cringe: Professional networking. Starting with a definition - what does it even mean? - they go into hacks theyâve found for getting more comfortable with networking, building your network in person or online, and then using your network to find new job o...
This week weâre celebrating Maintainer Month along with our friends at GitHub. Open source runs the world, but who runs open source? Maintainers. Open source maintainers are behind the software we use everyday, but they donât always have the community or support they need. Thatâs why weâre celebrating open source maint...
Go 1.20.4 & 1.19.9 coming tomorrowConf42: Golang talks available onlineText marshaling & unmarshaling added to regexp package for 1.21Jonathan's video about the proposal, acceptance, and change processBlog post: WebSockets: Scale at Fractional Footprint in GoReddit question: Which books should I...
Dax Raad joins KBall and Nick to chat about SST, a framework that makes it easier to build full-stack applications on AWS. We chat about how the project got started and its goals. Then we discuss OpenNext, an open source, framework-agnostic server less adapter for Next.js.
Jeremy Howard thinks Mojo might be the biggest programming language advance in decades, Amelia Wattenberger is not impressed by AI chatbots, a leaked Google memo admits big tech has no AI moats & Werner Vogels reminds us that monoliths are not dinosaurs.
Go conferences are not as diverse as weâd like them to be. There are initiatives in place to improve this situation. Among other roles, Ronna Steinberg is the Head of Diversity at GopherCon Europe. In this episode weâll learn more about the goal, the process and the problems, and how can each one of us help make this b...
Go 1.20.3 & 1.19.8 released. Upgrade now!Proposal accepted: Opt-in transparent telementryNew proposal: sort: add Ordered, Min, MaxConf42: Golang, April 20Go OpenAI 1.7 releasedNatalie Pistunovich's GopherCon Israel talk: AI-Assisted Go: Up Your Game and Have More Fun (Hebrew)gofumpt 0.5.0...
Ben and Ceora talk through some thorny issues around AI-generated music and art, explain why creators are suing AI companies for copyright infringement, and compare notes on the most amusing/alarming AI-generated content making the rounds (Pope coat, anyone?).
Hyperswitch is like the adapter pattern for payments, Austin Henley writes about the future of programming by summarizing recent research papers, Thoughtworks published their 28th volume of their Tech Radar, the team at General Products reminds devs to scan our technical writing for words such as âeasyâ, âpainlessâ, âs...
The home team talks with Luca Galante of Humanitec about how platform engineering is more art than science, how self-service platforms empower developers with âgolden paths,â and why heâs excited, not anxious, about AI tools (at least for now).
On the news this week:đ§đˇ GopherCon Brasil CFP open until May 3 đŽđš GoLab 2023 CFP open closes on May 21 đŹ io/fs: writeable interface new discussion asking for use cases. If you have a project that uses a writeable abstraction interface, go there!â GOEXPERIMENT=loopvar is in! Will be included in...
This week weâre talking with Cory Doctorow (this episode contains explicit language) about his newest book Chokepoint Capitalism, which he co-autored with Rebecca Giblin. Chokepoint Capitalism is about how big tech and big content have captured creative labor markets and the ways we can win them back. We talk about cho...
Ken Thompsonâs 75-year-project is a jukebox for the ages, Tabby is a self-hosted AI coding assistant, Codeberg is a collaboration platform and Git hosting for open source software, content and projects, TheSequence explains The LLama Effect & Paul Orlando writes about Ghosts, Guilds and Generative AI.
Today's guest is Douglas Crockford. He's sharing the story of JSON, his discovery of JavaScript's good parts, and his approach to finding a simple way to build software. Also, his battles against XML, against complexity, his battles to say that there's a better way to build software. This is foundational stuff for the web, and Doug is an iconoclast. [âŚ]
This week I spiraled out with standup comedian & writer Clara Olshansky! (Flamethrowers, My First Joke.)Â We talked career shame, dating shame, shame embodied as the snake from the Garden of Eden, the horrible things you tell yourself when you...
Mike (â â https://twitter.com/ukmadlzâ â https://mastodon.social/@ukmadlz) and co-host Jim (https://twitter.com/secondej https://phpc.social/@SecondeJ) gather for the first time in a while and are joined by Stuart Langridge (https://twitter.com/sil https://mastodon.social/@sil https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stuart_Langridge). The usual variety of social tech chat goes truly off the rails to the point where it's more teachable moments than tech discussion. But some of what we cover is:
Elon is against Chat GPT 4+ https://www.digitaltrends.com/computing/pause-ai-development-open-letter-warning/
Don't deploy on Friday horseshit is BACK https://twitter.com/allenholub/status/1637111242610610182?t=EBkSZzQ6-zVpZ0I5lC4s4g&s=19
Dilbert
Twitter outage two weeks ago was because they fired everyone with access to mint certs https://izzodlaw.com/@IzzoD/110001516908481048
You can't avoid politics in tech sometimes https://twitter.com/AlyssaM_InfoSec/status/1637383087020548096
The topics list was a lot longer, and this is all we got to. I think we hit a new level of off-topic with this episode, so enjoy.
On this Episode of the APIs You Won't Hate Podcast, Mike chats with Tom Haconen from Svix about webhooks: a feature area that powers real-time event driven behaviors for API developers.
January 30, 2023Latest official pre-release: 1.20RC3 released Jan 12Changes to OS support in 1.20:Final version to support Windows 7, 8, Server 2008, and Server 2012Final version to support macOS 10.13 and 10.14Adds experimental support for FreeBSD/RISC-VProposal accepted: Optionally include file...
The big news this week: Go 1.20 is out!Profile-guided optimization is herecontext.WithCancelCause is addedGo 1.18 is no longer supportedProposals this week:Accepted: A proposal to improve forward compatibility with go.modAccepted: A proposal to add a new stdlib package with map...
[April Fool] Sound of Silence reactionGo 1.20.3 & 1.19.8 coming tomorrow[April Fool] Go Compiler Now Supports Morse CodeConf42: Golang, free online conference, April 20Ebitengine 2.5.0 with XBox supportProposals and discussionsOpen issue: Mockable time supportDiscussion: Should Plan9 support be...
Distributed databases are necessary for storing and managing data across multiple nodes in a network. They provide scalability, fault tolerance, improved performance, and cost savings. By distributing data across nodes, they allow for efficient processing of large amounts of data and redundancy against failures. They can also be used to store data across multiple locations
The increasing complexity of modern cloud-native architectures has led to the emergence Platform Engineering. This practice involves the development and upkeep of an integrated product, known as an âInternal Developer Platform,â which serves as a flexible and supported abstraction layer between application developers and the underlying technologies. Luca Galante leads Product at Humanitec and he
This week it's Scott and Zenzo Hanselman: a father-son tech talk. He chats with his son Zenzo, a curious and creative teenager, about the latest trends and topics in technology. From AI to VR, from gaming to social media, from coding to culture, Scott and Zenzo will explore the world of tech from their different perspectives and experiences.
Charles âCobihâ Obih and Radek Markiewicz of the Stack Overflow platform team join Ben and Ryan to talk about changes to the inbox and what itâs like to build Stack Overflowâs public platform.Â
After years of working for Google on the Go Team, Filippo Valsorda quit last year to experiment with more sustainable paths for open source maintainers. Good news, it worked! Filippo is now a full-time open source maintainer and he joins Jerod on this episode to tell everyone exactly how heâs making the equivalent to h...
Andy shares how heâs helping the OSI today and his thoughts on the Cyber Resilience Act. Ana Meta Dolinar and Gemma Penson talk about the Women @CL, how theyâre helping to fix the huge gender imbalance when it comes to open source and computer science, and their thoughts on the âleaky pipelineâ metaphor.
Coming in Go 1.21Blog post: Planning Go 1.21 Cryptography Work by Filippo Valsordadisallow anonymous interface cyclespurego implementation of hash/maphashReleasesv8go v0.9.0gitea v1.19.0go-github v50.2.0Community newsShay Nehmad's make-git-better CTFGo Time podcastchatGPT-plugin-template on...
This episode wasn't supposed to be an episode! I was invited by Jeff Fritz of Twitch fame to talk to his community team of Live Coders on Discord. They recorded it, and mentioned several times that it was useful content! So, why not try something new and make this an episode! Let me know on Twitter if you find my views on community, productivity, and life useful to you!
This week weâre talking with Nathan Sobo about his next big thing. Nathan is known for his work on the Atom editor while at GitHub. But his work wasnât finished when he left, soâŚhe started Zed, a high-performance multiplayer editor thatâs engineered for performance. And today, Nathan talks us through all the details.
Fern - Build APIs Twice as fast - https://buildwithfern.com/Fern on GitHub - https://github.com/fern-api/fernFern's Profile with YCombinator - https://www.ycombinator.com/companies/fern Danny Sheridan - CEO and cofounder of Fern danny@buildwithfern.combuf.build - protobuf codegen utility -...
StackAid is a simple way to donate to all the open source software projects you depend on. In this live session, Dudley Carr and Wes Carr chat with Cecil Phi...
The panel discuss the parts of Go they never use. Do they avoid them because of pain in the past? Were they overused? Did they always end up getting refactoring out? Is there a preferred alternative?
The home team talks with Wesley Faulkner, Senior Community Manager at AWS, about whatâs going on with this cycle of tech layoffs, how to position yourself for success on the job market, and why itâs worth interviewing for jobs you might not want. Plus: The two things you should do as soon as you get an offer.
In a world where most documentation sucks, large language models write better than humans, and people wonât be bothered to type full sentences with actual punctuation. Two men⌠against all odds⌠join an award-worthy podcast⌠hosted by a coin-operated, singing code monkey (?)⌠to convince the developer world theyâre doi...
Play APIs Unplugged - S3 E12 - Orghitecture and Team APIs with Matthew Skelton & Manuel Pais by MuleSoft on desktop and mobile. Play over 320 million tracks for free on SoundCloud.
Opting In to Transparent Telemetry by Russ CoxAccepted proposal: net/http: add ResponseController.EnableFullDuplexLast call for comments: log/slog: structured, leveled loggingBadgerDB v4.0.1 releaseddominikbraun/graph v0.16.0 releasedService Weaver announced by Googleconc v0.3.0...
Netlify is a cloud-based platform that provides web developers with an all-in-one workflow to build, deploy, and manage modern web projects. Matt Biilmann is the CEO of Netlify and he joins us today.  This episode is hosted by Mike Bifulco. To learn more about Mike visit mikebifulco.com  Â
This is our 9th Kaizen with Adam & Jerod. We start todayâs conversation with the most important thing: embracing change. For Gerhard, this means putting Ship It on hold after this episode. It also means making more time to experiment, maybe try a few of those small bets that we recently talked about with Daniel. Ka...
This week weâre joined by Brigit Murtaugh, Product Manager on the Visual Studio Code team at Microsoft, and weâre talking about Development Containers and the Dev Container spec. Ever since we talked with Cory Wilkerson about Coding in the cloud with Codespaces weâve wanted to get the Changelog.com codebase setup with ...