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<div class="span index">1</div> <span><a class="" data-remote="true" data-type="html" href="/series/everyday-ai-podcast-an-ai-and-chatgpt-podcast">Everyday AI Podcast – An AI and ChatGPT Podcast</a></span>


The Everyday AI podcast is a daily livestream, podcast and free newsletter where we help everyday people grow their careers with AI. The Everyday AI podcast is hosted by Jordan Wilson, a former journalist who's now the owner of a boutique digital strategy company with 20 years of martech experience. Our main focus is to help you keep up with AI trends to make your job easier. Get your work done faster. Increase your output. - Sign up for our free Prime Prompt Polish ChatGPT course: https://podPPP.com - Make sure to sign up for our daily newsletter at: https://youreverydayai.com - Email us: info@youreverydayai.com - Connect with Jordan on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jordanwilson04/ In the Everyday AI podcast, we'll cover all things artificial intelligence, machine learning, and practical tips on how to use both in your daily life. We'll include a touch on a variety of topics, software and applications. We may be covering the latest AI news from Microsoft, Google, Facebook, Adobe and social channels like Snapchat, Tiktok, and Instagram. Or, we may be diving into software like ChatGPT, Midjourney, Bard, or Runway ML.
Backend Banter explicit
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Boot.dev에서 제공하는 콘텐츠입니다. 에피소드, 그래픽, 팟캐스트 설명을 포함한 모든 팟캐스트 콘텐츠는 Boot.dev 또는 해당 팟캐스트 플랫폼 파트너가 직접 업로드하고 제공합니다. 누군가가 귀하의 허락 없이 귀하의 저작물을 사용하고 있다고 생각되는 경우 여기에 설명된 절차를 따르실 수 있습니다 https://ko.player.fm/legal.
The only podcast dedicated to backend development, technologies, and careers. Lane Wagner, the founder of Boot.dev, interviews successful backend engineers to get their takes on various trends, technologies, and career tips for new backend developers. Golang, Python, JavaScript, and Rust are the programming languages most commonly discussed, but speakers dabble in all sorts.
…
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Manage series 3476356
Boot.dev에서 제공하는 콘텐츠입니다. 에피소드, 그래픽, 팟캐스트 설명을 포함한 모든 팟캐스트 콘텐츠는 Boot.dev 또는 해당 팟캐스트 플랫폼 파트너가 직접 업로드하고 제공합니다. 누군가가 귀하의 허락 없이 귀하의 저작물을 사용하고 있다고 생각되는 경우 여기에 설명된 절차를 따르실 수 있습니다 https://ko.player.fm/legal.
The only podcast dedicated to backend development, technologies, and careers. Lane Wagner, the founder of Boot.dev, interviews successful backend engineers to get their takes on various trends, technologies, and career tips for new backend developers. Golang, Python, JavaScript, and Rust are the programming languages most commonly discussed, but speakers dabble in all sorts.
…
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1 The Tools Are Smarter. Are You? ft. YK Sugi | S02 E12 1:08:12
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Today we welcome YK Sugi—engineer, educator, and the mind behind CSS Dojo—for the final episode of season two. We talk about his journey from YouTube dev tutorials to building one of Sourcegraph’s most-used AI tools, and how the role of DevRel has changed (and in some cases, disappeared). YK also breaks down how senior engineers are actually using AI, why fundamentals still matter, and how Agent Chat was born during a company hackathon. If you’re curious about AI devtools, the future of DevRel, or just want to hear how a former YouTuber accidentally shipped a flagship feature—this one's for you. Learn back-end development - https://www.boot.dev Listen on your favorite podcast player - https://www.backendbanter.fm YK’s X: https://x.com/ykdojo YK's LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/ykdojo/ Sourcegraph's Youtube channel: https://www.youtube.com/@Sourcegraph/featured Timestamps: 00:00 - Intro and Meeting YK 03:05 - Starting Out with CSS Dojo 05:36 - DevRel Burnout and Market Whiplash 11:40 - Building Agent Chat at Sourcegraph 13:52 - Claude, Cursor, and AI Tool Comparisons 21:52 - AI Use: Juniors vs. Seniors 26:22 - Designing Dev Tools That Think 37:56 - Will AI Consolidate the Tooling Ecosystem? 44:21 - Should Codebases Change for AI? 50:52 - Advice for Learners, DevRels, and Job Seekers 01:07:02 - Outro and Where to find YK's work Like & subscribe for the algo if you enjoyed the video!…

1 How to Win at Learning ft. Quincy Larson | S02 E11 1:13:54
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In this episode, we sit down with Quincy Larson, founder of Free Code Camp, to explore his incredible path from high school dropout to influential tech educator. Quincy shares his unconventional journey — from living in his car and working fast food jobs to building one of the most impactful coding education platforms in the world. We discuss the power of self-learning, the evolution of coding education, and the philosophy behind building meaningful skills. Quincy also dives into his productivity habits, structured routines, and why he prioritizes lifelong learning over traditional memories. Lane's interview on Free Code Camp: https://www.freecodecamp.org/news/getting-a-developer-job-lane-wagner-podcast-157/ Free Code Camp podcast playlist: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YDLDCm3bPfU&list=PLWKjhJtqVAbm04DK8TSUCRheRjW2P9TR7 Learn back-end development: boot.dev Listen on your favorite podcast player: backendbanter.fm Follow Quincy on X/Twitter: @ossia Free Code Camp: freecodecamp.org Timestamps: 00:00 - Intro and Meeting Quincy 01:05 - Running a charity 03:58 - Getting deep into podcasts 11:58 - Quincy's lifestyle 17:47 - The Birth of Free Code Camp 25:47 - What has freecodecamp been working on 27:40 - Building Skills vs. Chasing Shortcuts 30:20 - How to Stand Out in Today's Tech Job Market 50:44 - What changed since Quincy wrote his book 54:06 - Obligatory AI talk 1:12:01 - Where to find Quincy Like & subscribe for the algo if you enjoyed the episode!…

1 Mitchell Hashimoto: From Terraform to Ghostty | S02 E10 1:04:29
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Today we welcome Mitchell Hashimoto, co-founder of HashiCorp and creator of Ghostty, a new terminal emulator built in Zig. In this episode, Mitchell shares the story behind Ghostty, how his curiosity about terminals evolved into a full-fledged project, and why Zig became his language of choice. We also dive into Ghostty’s unique features, the role of libghostty, and why Mitchell believes native-feeling apps are essential for developer experience. Plus, we explore his insights on computer science education, dynamic linking, and what really matters when learning to code. If you’re into terminals, low-level programming, or just love hearing how great software gets built, this one’s for you! Learn back-end development - https://www.boot.dev Listen on your favorite podcast player - https://www.backendbanter.fm Mitchell's X/Twitter: https://x.com/mitchellh Ghostty: https://ghostty.org/ Timestamps: 00:00 - Intro and Meeting Mitchell 01:06 - Mitchell’s Journey at HashiCorp 03:13 - What is Ghostty and Why Build It? 08:35 - Native Performance and Zig’s Advantage 15:25 - Why Mitchell Chose Zig Over Rust 31:15 - Ghostty’s Road to Package Repositories 52:00 - Future Plans for Ghostty 1:04:02 - Where to Find Mitchell and Ghostty Like & subscribe for the algo if you enjoyed the video!…
Today we welcome Malte Ubl, CTO of Vercel, to discuss the evolution of frontend development and the role of AI in shaping modern engineering workflows. Malte dives into V0, Vercel's innovative tool for generating frontend code using AI, and explains how it empowers developers—especially backend engineers—to build full-stack applications. We also explore the concept of verticalization in engineering roles, the challenges of balancing innovation with infrastructure, and how AI is redefining productivity in tech. Learn back-end development - https://www.boot.dev Listen on your favorite podcast player: https://www.backendbanter.fm Malte's X: https://x.com/cramforce Vercel: https://vercel.com/ V0: https://v0.dev/ Timestamps: 00:00 - Intro and Meeting Malte 01:23 - What is V0 and Why Did Vercel Build It? 04:00 - The Technical Challenges Behind V0 10:34 - How V0 Leverages Tailwind and TypeScript 19:15 - AI's Impact on Frontend Development 23:20 - Verticalization of Engineering Roles 32:01 - How AI is Changing Development Workflows 37:09 - The Future of Full-Stack Engineering 44:08 - How Vercel Balances Product Innovation with Core Infrastructure 46:06 - Final Thoughts and Where to Find Malte Like & subscribe for the algo if you enjoyed the video!…
Today we welcome Madison Kana—a self-taught dev who defied the traditional path. From dropping out and navigating a world of homeschooling to launching the Code Book Club, Madison transformed her unconventional journey into a thriving community of coders. In this episode, she shares how bypassing the typical education route fueled her passion, the real challenges of learning on your own, and the power of mentorship in building a dynamic tech career. If you’re ready to break the mold and carve your own path in software development. Learn back-end development - https://www.boot.dev Listen on your favorite podcast player: https://www.backendbanter.fm Madison's X: https://x.com/Madisonkanna Website: https://madisonkanna.com/ Learn out loud: learn0utloud.com Timestamps: 00:00 - Intro 00:30 - Where did it all start? 01:40 - Dropping out 08:42 - How Madison started learning code 22:00 - Team leading 30:30 - Code Book Club 38:50 - Learn out loud 46:20 - AI talk 54:18 - Book recommendations 56:05 - Outro Like & subscribe for the algo if you enjoyed the video!…

1 Roll your own auth or you’re ngmi. ft. Dreams of Code | S02 E07 1:13:59
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This time Elliot from @dreamsofcode joins us to talk about building his own course platform we dive into why he chose to go custom, the tech stack behind his platform, and the philosophy of building vs. buying in software. We also discuss the challenges of teaching programming, the role of AI in development, and what it really takes to create a great online course. If you're into coding, education, or the intersection of both, this one's for you! Learn back-end development - https://www.boot.devListen on your favorite podcast player: https://www.backendbanter.fm Elliott's Youtube: @dreamsofcode Elliott's Course: https://dreamsofcode.io/ Elliott's X: https://x.com/dreamsofcode_io Timestamps 00:00 - Intro and Meeting Elliot 02:36 - Why Build a Custom Course Platform? 08:13 - The Challenges of Serving Video Content 20:16 - The Build vs. Buy Debate 28:20 - What Was Bought vs. Built? 33:28 - How AI Is Changing Development 45:12 - GDPR, Privacy, and Analytics 54:19 - Tech Stack Behind the Platform 1:06:33 - AI’s Real Impact on Developer Jobs 1:13:16 - Where to Find Elliot and His Work Like & subscribe for the algo if you enjoyed the video!…

1 Programming Music with Sonic Pi feat. Sam Aaron | S02 E06 1:05:09
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Today we bring Sam Aaron, the creator of Sonic Pi, a free code-based music creation and performance tool that lets you use simple code to turn your computer into a fully networked live coding music studio! It is also used to engage students in computer science and programming through music creation! In this episode, we explore the origins of Sonic Pi, its deep connection with Raspberry Pi, and how it enables live coding for music creation, starting from it's Ruby-based language features, we discuss how Sonic Pi has evolved, the challenges of maintaining it as a sustainable open-source project and if you’re curious about coding, music, or both—this one’s for you! Learn back-end development - https://www.boot.dev Listen on your favorite podcast player: https://www.backendbanter.fm Sonic Pi - https://sonic-pi.net/ Sam's Youtube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/samaaron Sam's Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/samaaron/ Sam's X/Twitter: https://x.com/samaaron DJ Dave: https://www.youtube.com/@dj_dave____ Timestamps: 00:00 - Intro 01:11 - Sonic Pi Origin Story 03:03 - Connection To Raspberry Pi 04:23 - But What Is Sonic Pi? 06:25 - Is Ruby The Primary Language Used In Sonic Pi? 10:25 - A Small Sonic Pi Showcase 17:53 - Collaboration through Git 23:12 - How Did Sam Get Involved In All Of This? 25:14 - The Feedback Loop of Sonic Pi 26:56 - How Does The Live Coding Experience Work In Sonic Pi? 32:01 - The Two Different Working Modes Of Sonic Pi 33:42 - How Does Debugging Work In Sonic Pi 38:55 - How Do The Different Components Fit Into The Architecture Of The Project 51:33 - Has Sam Been Full-Time On Sonic Pi Since Its Inception? 53:25 - Does Sam Want To Try Something Different? 56:25 - How Is Sam Finding More Sustainable Revenue?…
Today, we bring a very special guest, one whose face you might recognise, one that appears on your homepages with a sporadic video and seemingly disappears. His name is Benjamin Burke, or simply Ben, he’s the co-creator of KRAZAM, a channel that consists of sketches that combine grotesque and absurdist humor with technological anxiety, satirizing the tech industry and the modern alienation of the corporate life in general. In this episode, which admittedly is a bit different from the usual, we’ll focus on KRAZAM and its origins, creative process, and what future plans and ambitions the duo has. Both Ben and Shiva started in software engineering, met in college and started doing sketches just for fun, not expecting this project to explode in popularity in the way it did. Ben will also share their unique approach to content and why KRAZAM prioritizes loyal viewers over virality, comedic inspirations. Stay tuned! Learn back-end development - https://www.boot.dev Listen on your favorite podcast player: https://www.backendbanter.fm KRAZAM'S Channel: https://www.youtube.com/@KRAZAM/videos KRAZAM's X/Twitter: https://x.com/krazamtv KRAZAM'S Website: https://www.krazam.tv/ Krazam's Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/KRAZAM Ben's X/Twitter: https://x.com/bb_fresh Ben's Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/bnjmnbrk/ Shiva's X/Twitter: https://x.com/shivakilaru Shiva's Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/shivakilaru/ Timestamps: 00:00 - Intro 01:58 - KRAZAM Origin Story 03:59 - How Much More Footage Is Left After the Recordings? 05:12 - Are Both Ben and Shiva Programmers? 06:46 - Inspiration Behind "The Hustle" 08:47 - Has Ben Read Marcus Aurelius' "Meditations"? 09:25 - The Actual Introduction to KRAZAM 10:49 - Microservices 14:04 - Sending Birthday Messages Is HARD 19:06 - On Shiva Not Being in the Microservices Video 20:48 - Favorite KRAZAM Videos 22:22 - Most Underrated KRAZAM Video 32:00 - KRAZAM's Viewers Are Very Loyal 36:03 - Ambitions for the KRAZAM Channel 39:04 - How Did You Know KRAZAM Had Product-Market Fit? 40:59 - Ben's Comedic Inspirations 43:08 - KRAZAM Does Not Aim for Virality 46:47 - Was It Stressful to Do a Live Talk? 49:40 - KRAZAM's Video Release Frequency 51:46 - Competitive Excel 55:34 - Site Reliability Engineer Video 57:50 - AI Bots on Spotify 01:00:27 - Self-Hosting and The Good Old Days 01:02:31 - What's the Churn in the Industry? 01:05:21 - Where to Find Ben and KRAZAM…

1 Does ADHD really make programming harder? ft. Chris Ferdinandi | S2 E04 1:20:12
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Lane chats with Chris Ferdinandi—creator of Go Make Things and ADHD for the Win—a frontend dev, educator, and all-around expert in making JavaScript (and learning) simpler. Chris has built a career helping devs cut through the noise, level up their skills, and embrace ADHD-friendly ways to stay focused and productive. We dive into his journey from discovering his own ADHD to reshaping how people learn to code. We talk about why so many devs have ADHD, how gamification can actually help (when done right), and how today’s tech is messing with our attention spans. Plus, we get into the psychology of learning and what actually works when it comes to staying engaged and motivated. Learn back-end development - https://www.boot.dev Listen on your favorite podcast player: https://www.backendbanter.fm ADHD ftw! : https://adhdftw.com/backend-banter/ Go Make Things: https://gomakethings.com/ https://bsky.app/profile/cferdinandi.bsky.social https://mastodon.social/@cferdinandi 00:00 - Intro 01:58 - Why so many devs have ADHD 03:21 - Quick explanation of ADHD 07:10 - Is ADHD actually more common now? 17:41 - ADHD, dopamine, and why we can’t put our phones down 20:50 - Trying meds for ADHD – what’s it like? 22:34 - How ADHDftw got started 24:21 - Why finishing big projects is so damn hard 25:54 - Best content styles for ADHD brains 28:40 - Gamification: What works and what’s just hype? 34:16 - Which gamer type fits ADHD folks best? 39:27 - Is TikTok basically junk food for your brain? 41:45 - Must-read books on focus and getting stuff done 43:43 - Where to find Chris and his content 46:26 - Is ADHD a gift or a curse? 59:30 - Brutally honest feedback for Boot.dev 01:18:58 - Outro Like & subscribe for the algo if you enjoyed the video!…

1 Why You Need To Stop Worrying About AI feat. Danny Thompson | S2 E03 1:09:43
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We’re joined by Danny Thompson, currently Director of Technology at This Dot Labs and technical leader and organizer of the Dallas Software Developers Group, where he fosters vibrant local tech ecosystem through workshops, cohorts, and meetups. With a passion to help others learn and find jobs, Danny shares his stories and insights that he gained throughout his extensive and fascinating career! From working as a cashier to now giving talks and organizing meetups for which people fly out to attend, Danny talks about how he got into coding in the first place and his progression, his advice to new developers, how does AI impact jobs now and his perspective on how it will change in the future and a lot more! Learn back-end development - https://www.boot.dev Listen on your favorite podcast player - https://www.backendbanter.fm Danny's X/Twitter: https://x.com/DThompsonDev Danny's LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/dthompsondev/ Timestamps: 00:00 - Intro 02:14 - How Danny Got Into Coding 05:08 - Meetups and Affordable Conferences 23:37 - Overview of This Dot Labs 29:28 - Building Apps on Top of Stripe 30:30 - Businesses Focus on Functionality Over Aesthetics 33:00 - Danny's Career Progression 38:39 - Pros and Cons of Product vs. Consulting 43:12 - This Dot Labs Regarding AI 46:46 - Interest Rates &. AI: Impact on Developer Jobs 55:31 - The Pressure to Perform at a High Level 57:51 - Why Recruiters Do Not Call You Back 01:03:41 - Getting Feedback After Interviews 01:04:49 - Danny's LinkedIn Courses and Where to Find Him…

1 Everyone is doing memory management wrong. feat. Ryan Fleury | S2 E02 1:11:49
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This week on Backend Banter, we’re joined by Ryan Fleury, a talented game developer currently working with Epic Games on their Rad Debugger project. Ryan shares his journey from building games to creating powerful developer tools, offering insights into arenas, memory management, and the fascinating world of programming from the ground up. In this episode, we dive deep into memory management, exploring the differences between stack, heap, and arenas, and how they shape modern development. We discuss the trade-offs of various allocation strategies, the magic of pointer stability, and how arenas simplify managing lifetimes in both games and other applications. Along the way, Ryan shares his approach to developing tools, insights into game development workflows, and practical tips for clean and efficient programming. Learn back-end development: https://www.boot.dev Listen on your favorite podcast player: https://www.backendbanter.fm Ryan's Socials: Rad Debugger: https://github.com/EpicGamesExt/raddebugger Website: https://www.rfleury.com/ X/Twitter: https://x.com/ryanjfleury Timestamps: 00:00 - Intro 00:54 - Ryan Fleury's Path to Game Development 02:49 - From Engines to Debugging Tools 06:51 - Arenas Explained: Memory Management Basics 16:51 - Arenas vs. Garbage Collectors 27:40 - Real-World Applications of Arenas 31:39 - Why Pointer Stability Matters 42:57 - Dynamic Allocation Made Simple 48:48 - How Arenas Streamline Development 01:01:38 - Debugging Tools and the Rad Debugger 01:09:43 - Where to find Ryan…
We're back for Backend Banter Season 2, and we bring a very special guest, José Valim, the creator of the Elixir Programming Language, one of the most popular and loved functional programming languages of today. (Fun fact: it's used in production at Discord). We cover the nitty-gritty of the language, ranging from simple topics such as the decision behind not making Elixir be statically typed, into the more complex cross-machine communication. We go over how Elixir's features compare with those of other languages, work habits of today's developers, José's own day-to-day development, and a lot more! Today's talk encompasses a great variety of themes, so grab your coffee and tune in! Learn back-end development - https://www.boot.dev Listen on your favorite podcast player: https://www.backendbanter.fm Livebook & Elixir Talk: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pas9WdWIBHs Elixir Programming Language: https://elixir-lang.org/ Livebook: https://livebook.dev/ Elixir In Action Book: https://www.manning.com/books/elixir-in-action-third-edition José's Socials: X/Twitter: https://x.com/josevalim LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/josevalim GitHub: https://github.com/josevalim Timestamps: 00:00 - Intro 01:06 - Embarrassing Stories with Foreign Languages 02:58 - Who is José Valim? (and Elixir's Popularity) 06:51 - Does José Use Phoenix a Lot? 08:28 - Why Isn't Elixir Statically Typed? 16:51 - External Input vs. Internal Code Logic 28:16 - Quick Overview of BEAM languages 31:23 - Elixir’s Equivalent to Golang’s Goroutines & Channels 42:43 - Cross-Machine Communication in Standard Libraries 49:15 - Do You Need RabbitMQ When Writing Elixir? 54:53 - Built-In Features in the Standard Library 01:01:52 - Why People Are Too Used To Work The Hard Way 01:04:22 - José and DHH 01:08:01 - Favorite Elixir Features & Immutability 01:17:49 - Purity in Functional Programming 01:21:35 - Where to find José…

1 #069 - Season Finale: The Boot.dev Origin Story w/ Allan 1:14:49
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Today, we bring you the final episode of the first season of Backend Banter! It’s a wrap up for now. With 69 episodes behind us, we want to tell you the story of Boot Dev and how far we’ve come from our beginnings, and for that, we bring Allan Lires, the first official employee and the second person to work on our platform! We’re going to cover our entire timeline, achievements, hardships, how Lane and Allan were able to go all-in on building Boot Dev and our visions and plans for the future. Learn back-end development - https://boot.dev Listen on your favorite podcast player: https://www.backendbanter.fm Allan's X/Twitter: https://x.com/AllanLires Boot.Dev Discord: https://discord.com/invite/EEkFwbv Timestamps: 00:00 Intro 00:01 Last episode of Season 1 of Backend Banter 01:45 Boot.dev Story and what this episode will be about 02:26 How and when Allan was hired to work at Boot.dev 05:33 Timeline on Boot.dev 08:53 Guessing game 10:34 The Rebranding Process 12:43 Going Full-time 14:56 What was the curriculum in the beginning? 18:38 What was the original vision for Boot.dev 19:17 Being honest about how long it'll take you to learn to code 22:48 Setting expectations for difficulty 29:55 On learning the fundamentals 34:42 The Long Term vision of Boot.dev 41:30 Old gamification features and why we changed them 50:26 The Track is Never Complete 55:01 We cover a lot of the basics that traditional colleges don't cover 01:00:06 Why do we want to remove JavaScript from the learning course 01:06:12 Million Lessons Completed in a single month 01:08:28 You got to be comfortable being uncomfortable 01:13:25 Where to find Allan…

1 #068 - Should you trust tech influencers? feat. Charles The III 1:12:50
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Today we welcome Chuck Carpenter aka Charles The 3rd, co-host at Whiskey Web and Whatnot. As two content creators in the tech scene, we discuss if and how celebrity developers and tech influencers are a good thing for the community, how we should be careful when choosing technologies based on influencers’ opinions, why so many people nowadays want to speedrun their whole career and how that could be self-sabotage, and a lot more! Learn back-end development - https://boot.dev Listen on your favorite podcast player: https://www.backendbanter.fm Whiskey Web and Whatnot: https://whiskey.fm/ Charles' X/Twitter: https://x.com/charleswthe3rd Timestamps: 00:00 Intro 01:27 Does Charles listen to his own podcast episodes? 03:33 Are celebrity developers a good thing? 09:11 Podcasts are usually centered around a business 10:06 We are essentially entertainers 14:04 Tech choices being influenced by creators 17:37 Why ThePrimeagen stood out from other tech influencers 20:26 Career speedrunning 23:44 The biggest miss when starting something 24:51 What is wrong with Full-Stack application frameworks? 29:03 How Frankenstein is the Boot.dev web application stack 37:41 Rolling your own stuff vs using a provider 46:01 It's easy to screw up your architecture 50:53 What is Charles building with in 2024 and what is his preferred stack 56:39 Does it seem like people don't talk about security anymore? 01:00:30 Accessibility 01:02:02 The amount of people that are "kinda" interested in cybersecurity 01:11:03 Have some patience 01:11:37 Where to find Charles…
In today’s episode, we bring back Aaron Francis. If you haven’t watched our previous episode with him, he is a software developer, fellow content creator and co-founder of Try Hard Studios. In the past he’s been an accountant at a Big 4 but now he focuses on Laravel, web development and all things business and video. This episode will step away from the usual tech focused content and we’ll talk a bit more about the business side of things, how you have to balance entertainment and education when creating courses, Aaron’s High Performance SQLite course, building a personal brand through the discomfort of centering it around yourself, how good presentation matters and how proactiveness puts you miles ahead of the majority, so stay tuned! Learn back-end development - https://www.boot.dev Listen on your favorite podcast player: https://www.backendbanter.fm Aaron's X/Twitter: https://x.com/aarondfrancis Aaron's Website: https://aaronfrancis.com/ High Performance SQLite: https://highperformancesqlite.com/ Screencasting: https://screencasting.com/ Mostly Technical Podcast: https://mostlytechnical.com/ Timestamps: 00:00 Intro 01:32 Podcast listening going up when having a kid 02:25 Podcast about earning the first million 08:54 You have to choose the entertainment vs education levels 10:37 You have to shape your material to the platforms 16:40 Long hour videos vs 2 minute ones 20:16 Are the videos in the High Performance SQLite in linear order? 24:19 Figuring out the metrics 28:06 Building courses on other domains 31:46 Building brands is difficult 35:55 quick disclaimer 36:30 Personal brand vs company 37:57 Is this sellable? 40:23 Do you need an audience? 44:26 The strategy is simple but it is also hard to execute 49:31 The presentation matters a LOT 51:54 On being proactive 57:00 Where to find Aaron…
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In today’s episode, we bring Adam Argyle, a CSS Dev Rel at Google, content creator, co-host at CSS Podcast, Bad At CSS Podcast and host of GUI Challenges. He’s also the creator of a bunch of tools and utilities for the front-end. We’re going to touch on a lot of hot topics, regarding the difficulty and power of CSS, how programmers most of the time underestimate and dismiss it as something trivial when in reality it’s one of the hardest things to master in the programming world. We also go over AI, the barriers between designers and developers and a bunch of other topics. Learn back-end development - https://www.boot.dev Listen on your favorite podcast player: https://www.backendbanter.fm Adam's Website: https://nerdy.dev/ Adam's X/Twitter: https://x.com/argyleink Adam on Chrome For Developers: https://chromeextensionsdocs.appspot.com/authors/argyle/ The CSS Podcast: https://thecsspodcast.libsyn.com/ Bad at CSS Podcast: https://badatcss.com/ Timestamps: 00:00 Intro 00:51 CSS Wizard has entered the chat 02:37 HTML and CSS are not programming languages 07:44 There's a case for complex things using CSS 10:28 CSS is declarative by nature 17:58 Writing CSS is a pain 20:43 AI isn't a threat to CSS 21:19 Breaking barriers between designers and developers 26:33 Getting to an entry-level competency on the backend is a bit more difficult when compared to the frontend 31:37 Adam's backstory 33:40 Knowing everything 34:56 The majority of the complexity lives on the frontend a lot of the times 38:48 South Park Reality 39:49 BFF vs BOF (Backend for frontend vs Backend of the Frontend) 47:03 CSS is typed in the browser 51:28 Take on why are there so many mormons and ex-mormons in the webdev and tech influencer scene? 54:08 Where to find Adam…
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1 #065 - I Quit Voice Coaching for Typescript feat. Matt Pocock 55:50
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In today’s episode, we welcome Matt Pocock, an educator, content creator and engineer who used to be a voice coach. Now, he teaches Typescript on his YouTube channel and is building Total Typescript, the most comprehensive TypeScript course available out there. We talk about his transition from a completely unrelated field into tech, the importance of great communication, TypeScript’s future, AI tooling and job hunts! A lot more else is covered in this video, so get cozy and tune in into this gem of an episode! Learn back-end development - https://boot.dev Listen on your favorite podcast player: https://www.backendbanter.fm Matt's X/Twitter: https://x.com/mattpocockuk Total Typescript: https://www.totaltypescript.com/ Timestamps: 00:00 Intro 01:15 What did Matt do before becoming a dev? 03:15 Career Transitions from a non-math background 04:02 What makes a good programmer? 06:46 Math knowledge > great communication? 08:55 On writing elaborate PR's 09:58 OCaml my Typescript 11:00 What is Typescript's Future? 14:21 Python type hinting and JSDoc 20:36 null vs undefined 25:02 interfaces vs type aliases 32:35 Does Matt have any rules of thumb when working with types? 37:14 How do you build nice encapsulated components with no external dependencies? 43:43 AI tooling integration 46:15 Will there be fewer jobs? 52:00 How often do you use classes? 54:29 Where to find Matt…
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1 #064 - You’re doing networking wrong feat. Lawrence Lockhart 1:04:14
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In today’s episode, we welcome Lawrence Lockhart, a former hospitality manager turned full stack software developer. Apart from his tech job, he’s also a developer advocate, a teaching assistant at a coding bootcamp and a tech meetup leader, so you know he spends a lot of his time helping others build and transfer their existing skills into tech, being a powerful voice in the tech space for upcoming developers. Today we talk briefly about how he managed to switch from hospitality to tech, and how that wasn’t as easy as a lot of people online make it out to be, the importance of local and in-person jobs as opposed to starting off remote, how learning with purpose is essential if you want to make progress and advice for people starting out! Learn back-end development - https://boot.dev Listen on your favorite podcast player: https://www.backendbanter.fm Code Connector: https://codeconnector.io Lawrence's X/Twitter: https://x.com/LawrenceDCodes Lawrence's TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@lawrencedlockhart Timestamps: 00:00 Intro 00:44 When did Lawrence start to be more involved in the online tech communities? 02:23 How did Lawrence meet James Q Quick 04:42 Transition from a Blue Collar job into Tech 10:59 6 months is not the standard anymore to get in the industry 13:44 The Timeline Discussion 15:56 Kelsey Hightower 18:09 Has Lawrence worked as a dev in non-tech companies and where he works now 23:33 It's IMPORTANT to go for local market and in-person jobs first 24:27 How networking actually works 28:46 Learning with a purpose 36:43 You shouldn't be trying to minmax your career path 39:43 Advice to people that are unsure in their skills 43:51 How to approach interviews 49:31 You have to practice interviewing 54:48 Learn the thing or get out 58:33 Disagree and commit 01:01:45 Where to find Lawrence…
In today’s episode, we bring Spiro Floropoulos, a senior developer and architect with over 20 years of experience. This episode is an unusual one, as Spiro recently got laid off due to a bizarre chain of events that involved HTMX, overworking, and technical debt. But we’ll learn from this story, as we want to shed some light on how situations that Spiro described could be avoided, namely how the tech industry is obsessing over developer experience and why that’s detrimental, why abstractions should be teaching you the technology as opposed to just doing the work for you, why you should be able to train your junior devs and much more! Learn back-end development - https://boot.dev Listen on your favorite podcast player: https://www.backendbanter.fm Spiro's X/Twitter: https://x.com/spirodonfl Spiro's Website: https://spirofloropoulos.com/ Timestamps: 00:00 Intro 00:35 Why are we having this conversation 01:33 How was HTMX involved in this? 03:38 Spiro's background 05:58 Why are we focusing so much on developer experience? 13:38 The Tech Industry as a whole is headed down the wrong path 16:17 Abstractions teaching you about the underlying technology rather than hiding it 18:47 What are the long-term consequences of unresolved technical debt? 26:46 There's things you can't blame frameworks for 28:27 We have to slow down 30:46 What happened after the introduction of HTMX into the project? 40:26 Hiring juniors is great, but you should have the resources to train them 47:00 The Technical Debt 50:32 The more complex the feature became, the bigger the struggle with HTMX 53:42 The reasons why Spiro was let go 57:10 Instead of Agile we should treat our programmers like adults 57:31 HTMX was instant and testing ability was better 01:01:21 Is Spiro looking for work? 01:02:00 Where to find Spiro…
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1 #062 - Declaring War Against the Frontend feat. Sam Selikoff 59:24
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In today’s episode, we go to war with Sam Selikoff, co-host of the Frontend First podcast, and specialist on everything Frontend related. We have an amazing conversation where we discuss Sam’s journey, as he also did some backend work in the past, we talk about abstractions, what JavaScript is doing differently from other languages and frameworks, why the frontend should be driving the backend and not the other way around, and finish it off with a discussion about RSCs (React Server Components). Learn back-end development - https://www.boot.dev Listen on your favorite podcast player: https://www.backendbanter.fm Frontend First: https://frontendfirst.fm/ Sam's X/Twitter: https://x.com/samselikoff Sam's Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/samselikoff Timestamps: 00:00 Intro 00:51 Who is Sam Selikoff 02:12 Abstractions - Should you go a level deeper? 06:37 What was Sam's talk about 10:51 What is JavaScript doing differently? 19:10 Do you want the frameworks to push more features out of the box for backend work? 24:04 Strong opinions on a library level 30:29 Shipping more standardized interfaces 37:06 The frontend should be driving everything in the backend 39:12 Your types should flow from the database to the frontend, but not the product decisions 46:53 React Server Components 58:49 Where to find Sam…
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1 #061 - Forget SQL, use Typescript feat. Thomas Ballinger 1:00:28
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Today we bring Thomas Ballinger, a developer at Convex, an open-source backend for application builders. We will be discussing mainly databases, and why at Convex they use Rust and Typescript. We'll also talk about systems scalability, infrastructure and go over different practices regarding abstractions Learn back-end development - https://www.boot.dev Listen on your favorite podcast player: https://www.backendbanter.fm Convex: https://www.convex.dev/ Thomas' X/Twitter: https://x.com/ballingt Thomas' Website: https://ballingt.com/ Timestamps: 00:00 Intro 00:33 Thomas' background 02:29 Convex - what it is and why should you use it? 03:16 What are query planners? 06:32 SQL is a very high level language 07:43 The primary differentiator of Convex 10:49 Who are Convex's biggest competitors? 14:20 How do you build the infrastructure 17:11 What type of database is Convex? 19:18 Why is Convex written in Rust? 23:35 Cheap abstractions 25:47 Productivity suffering from compile times 29:47 The different approaches for a backend developer to build scalable systems 32:28 Backend for Frontend 37:21 You want to be close to your data 42:13 Are there plans to support other languages at Convex? 47:06 Does the schema update the autocompletion in the editor 48:31 Naming and behavior of the queries with Convex 51:06 Why sqlc is great 52:28 Why TypeScript is a great "shortcut" for Convex 59:34 Where to find Thomas…
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Today we bring anothe returning guest, Adam Elmore! An AWS Hero, Teacher and fellow content creator! You might notice today's talk is a bit different, as we don't cover too much technical details but we do cover a lot of other interesting topics that permeate our everyday lives, such as kids and family time, religion and purpose in life... But don't worry, we also share some hot takes on indie hackers, business models of education platforms and finally content creation and how it can help you propel your career! Learn back-end development - https://www.boot.dev Listen on your favorite podcast player: https://www.backendbanter.fm Adam's Twitter: https://x.com/adamdotdev Adam's Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/@adamdotdev ProAWS: https://www.proaws.dev/ Timestamps: 00:00 Intro 01:42 Terminal Coffee 06:42 Kids' books 09:00 How serious is the Terminal Coffee business 12:51 Indie Hackers 19:11 Books 23:42 The March of Time 25:56 Commitment to the lessons 27:21 The problem with course platforms 28:31 ProAWS 35:45 The education industry isn't as cutthroat as it seems 39:13 What's Adams plan of attack with the courses? 40:00 How does streaming affect Adam? 44:05 Who is Adam's audience? 44:44 Podcasting 47:34 Who is TomorrowFM targeted at? 49:14 Burnout in podcasts 52:01 Growing up religious 57:34 Would you say that you've distanced yourself from religion for epistemological or cultural reasons? 01:03:00 Throwing the religious labels out 01:13:03 Where to find Adam…
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In today's episode, we bring back James Q Quick. Last time we talked about his best tips to land your first ever job as a developer. Today we talk about James' new startup and how he manages all his new tech adventures with being a parent and also provides some helpful insight as to why having an audience and personal connections in the industry is beneficial - but not strictly necessary to succeed. We also talk about AWS, abstraction and the current (healing) state of layoffs, so don't lose hope if you're demotivated in your job search. Learn back-end development - https://www.boot.dev Listen on your favorite podcast player: https://www.backendbanter.fm Deals for Devs: https://www.dealsfordevs.com/ James' Website: https://www.jamesqquick.com/ James' Twitter: https://x.com/jamesqquick James' Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/@JamesQQuick Timestamps: 00:00 Intro 00:55 On being a parent 04:28 Idiocracy 05:47 Deals for Devs 10:09 Comparison with Dixie Direct 12:22 How do you quantify the really high quality deals 15:57 The challenge with a two-sided marketplace 22:28 Doing stuff manually is actually pretty good 25:38 Having a personal connection helps A LOT 29:12 Zeta 34:05 The Web is being modeled on AWS 36:38 You shouldn't be learning one JavaScript framework 38:30 Know how to answer a question if you don't know the technology 41:43 When you learn to code, how much layers of abstraction you should go? 43:45 Should passion be required for a job in tech? 49:02 The state of layoffs 52:29 The ease of finding a job after a layoff when you're highly talented 55:58 Do you need an audience to find a job easily? 58:40 Developers of the world - Interviews in person 01:02:12 Where to find James…
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In today's episode, we bring back BadCop! Since last episode, she joined Boot.dev's team and is now writing courses with us! Today we will be discussing the approaches to writing good educational material, Bash (of course, duh), working outside cloud solutions, SSH, NAS systems, workflows with different editors and cultural shifts in different areas of programming. Enjoy! Learn back-end development - https://boot.dev Listen on your favorite podcast player: https://www.backendbanter.fm BadCop's Twitter: https://x.com/badcop_ BadCop's Twitch: https://www.twitch.tv/badcop_ Timestamps: 00:00 Intro 00:58 BadCop Joined the Boot.dev Team! 01:15 Writing courses is harder than it looks 03:45 Lane's approach to writing courses 05:21 What's the hardest part of writing a course for BadCop? 09:01 On writing Bash 13:19 How useful is it to know how to work outside the cloud solutions? 17:28 SSHing into the home network 20:49 What is a NAS? 23:26 Using VTuber Software off the shelf 25:55 When did BadCop start using NeoVim? 29:41 IRC talk 33:20 Cultural shift in the programming space 38:05 Getter and Setter functions 42:35 People are overusing the idea of encapsulation 48:41 Dependency Inversion Principle 51:11 The VTuber Project 52:58 Where to find BadCop…
In today's episode, we welcome Ken Wheeler, a dope programmer, who creates cool projects and just gives them away for free, helping thousands of developers worldwide, a based beatmaker and just in general a cool person. In this episode, we talk about AI, React, OCaml, why stressing over specific frameworks is not worth it, advice for new developers, HTMX, SPA's and a LOT of other stuff, so stay tuned! Ken's X/Twitter: https://x.com/ken_wheeler Timestamps: 00:00 Introduction 00:25 Do you hate AI? 02:10 How diffusion works 17:47 First impressions with writing Go 18:29 Where's the line between Backend Development and DevOps 24:11 Does anyone version their REST? 24:57 urql 25:38 Offloading the data work to the other side 29:55 Wordpress is 80% of the websites 31:15 HTMX 33:12 Single Page Apps 34:02 Is React still your go-to 36:38 Is it hard to switch from React to Vue? 39:37 Picking a first language to learn 40:43 OCaml 43:12 HEX and raw Binary Data 44:42 Bluetooth powered crossbow 52:20 What got Ken into doing talks 58:45 Where to find Ken…
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1 #056 - Maybe Programmers are Just Bad feat. Casey Muratori 1:17:47
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In today's episode, we welcome Casey Muratori, a seasoned programmer who specializes in game engine research and development who is currently working on a narrative game about organized crime in the 1930s in New York. And oh boy, is this episode packed with valuable knowledge! In this talk, we go over the differences between different job positions in the Game Development Industry and how it compares to the Web Development arena, as well as dive deep on the notions of technical knowledge, is it all useful or is some of it just a waste of time? We talk about bloated systems, how we already surpassed the tipping point of code written, so that new exploits will be appearing indefinitely. Casey gives us his opinions on what a programmer should ABSOLUTELY know to be the best at what they do, and a lot of other exciting and interesting topics. Learn back-end development - https://boot.dev Listen on your favorite podcast player: https://www.backendbanter.fm Computer, Enhance!: https://www.computerenhance.com/ Casey's Twitter/X: https://x.com/cmuratori Timestamps: 00:28 Casey's Background 02:43 Game Developer vs Game Designer 09:08 What are the different ways people should think about careers that exist for game developers 14:33 Is all knowledge useful or is some of it a waste of time? 16:16 Computer, Enhance! and Casey's teaching methodologies 24:00 Devil's advocate about understanding at the hardware level 29:48 Software is getting slower, bloatier and less performant 35:42 What is the primary reason behind the rise of slow software 38:20 Top 3 concepts that people SHOULD know 43:43 Do you need to know both ARM and x86? 57:03 30 million line problem 01:08:29 Is there any way to mitigate these types of problems? 01:13:39 Where to find Casey 01:14:50 Which was the best part of Twin Peaks…
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In today’s episode, we bring AnthonyGG, a highly requested guest, a Go developer with over a decade of experience with Golang and a fellow content creator. This episode will be all around Web Development with Go - from how Anthony started writing code with Go and why he chose this language, to tooling, migrations, integrations with databases, generics, Go job interviews and much, much more! Learn back-end development - https://boot.dev Listen on your favorite podcast player: https://www.backendbanter.fm Anthony's Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/@anthonygg_ Anthony's Twitch: https://www.twitch.tv/theanthonygg Anthony's Twitter/X: https://x.com/anthdm Timestamps: 00:00 Introduction 00:29 Anthony's backstory, how he learned to code and started writing code professionally 08:55 Going from go migrate to goose 13:20 What does Anthony use in tandem with goose/go migrate to interact with databases 14:46 Bun vs gorm vs sqlc 18:26 The way boot.dev is running goose at the moment 20:14 Problems with migration tools 23:47 Should HTTP handlers explicitly return an error? 29:05 Building your own middleware and helper functions 36:00 Generics 38:09 How often does AnthonyGG use a context package and for what purposes 44:57 Golang job interviews 46:12 Developer experience with working with Go on Web Applications 54:51 You still need community-built tools 57:08 Where to find Anthony…
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1 #054 - CS Programs Should NOT Teach Git feat. ThePrimeagen 59:41
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Today, we bring back a dear guest and friend of the podcast, ThePrimeagen! Now Ex-Netflix engineer who turned his full focus to content creation surrounding software engineering and tech. In today's episode, we talk about his new Git course on boot.dev, where he shares motivations on why he decided to write a course on Git, how he incorporates it into his workflow and shares some hot takes regarding today's tech education landscape, his opinion on bootcamps, colleges, and what his ideal way of teaching computer science is. To finish off, he shares some of his exciting new ventures, namely a coffee shop and a Doom game which you can play through twitch chat! Learn back-end development - https://boot.dev Listen on your favorite podcast player: https://www.backendbanter.fm ThePrimeagen's Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/c/theprimeagen ThePrimeagen's other Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/@ThePrimeTimeagen ThePrimeagen's Twitter: https://x.com/ThePrimeagen Terminal Coffee Shop: https://www.terminal.shop/ Timestamps: 00:00 Introduction 00:27 Why teach about Git? 02:55 Was Prime taught Git? 04:50 add files individually or git add . 07:22 Hot take about git in school 10:27 What should you learn in school in the first place? 11:34 Where did school come from? 16:42 You can't become a software engineer in 3 months 19:45 Contents of Part 1 and what will Part 2 of the Git course be about 22:58 Rebase vs Merge and Prime's current workflow 24:22 Why you shouldn't merge 29:10 A lot of the times, people just don't know the tools 32:29 The advantage of rebase 34:03 Rewriting history criticism 36:30 Prime's terminal coffee shop 44:22 Doom in the terminal? 54:08 Is the bandwidth the problem with the Doom game? 55:27 Ideas for the controls for Doom 58:57 Where to find Prime…
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In today's episode, we welcome Low Level Learning, a fellow programmer and content creator. With over 500k subscribers and his own course where he teaches low level programming topics, he came on the podcast to talk about what he knows most: C, low level concepts, AI, as well as share some of his own developer experiences and preferences that he garnered over the years. Learn back-end development - https://boot.dev Listen on your favorite podcast player: https://www.backendbanter.fm Low Level Learning’s Twitter/X: https://twitter.com/LowLevelTweets Low Level Learning's Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/c/lowlevellearning Low Level Learning's Twitch: https://www.twitch.tv/LowLevelLearning Low Level Academy: https://lowlevel.academy/ Timestmaps: 00:47 Who is Low Level Learning? 01:34 C is a High Level Language 02:47 Is C lower level than Rust or Zig? 04:33 Front-end vs Back-end, which is harder? 06:34 The Boot.dev stack 07:11 The Low Level Academy stack 07:59 Low Level Academy 09:56 Project-based learning 12:18 sqlc 14:44 How do you debug C? 17:26 Fuzzing Harness vs Unit Testing 22:28 Favorite Feature of C 23:45 If you could change one thing in C, what would it be? 26:53 Where do C programmers work? 29:16 The White House and Garbage Collectors 31:19 What is a side-channel attack? 33:56 Power side-channel attack 35:41 Side-channel attack on boot.dev 37:08 What tooling does Low Level Learning use to write C? 43:59 How do you deal with the lack of a package manager? 48:12 Opinion on statically compiled and dynamic libraries 50:36 Where to find Low Level Learning…
In today’s episode, we welcome Natalie Pistunovich, host of the Go Time podcast, OpenAI Ambassador and Google Developer Expert for Go. She advises companies on how to make the most of AI and adopt it properly and also teaches the Cloud and Infrastructure course for B.Sc. students at the HTW Berlin. In this episode, we talk all about AI driven development and how is Go one of the best languages suited for code generation, the future of LLM’s and how can we boost the average developer’s job with AI, creating custom GPT’s, changes in the area of AI Chips, and a lot of other fascinating topics. Learn back-end development - https://boot.dev Listen on your favorite podcast player: https://www.backendbanter.fm Natalie's Twitter/X: https://twitter.com/nataliepis Timestamps: 00:47 Who is Low Level Learning? 01:34 C is a High Level Language 02:47 Is C lower level than Rust or Zig? 04:33 Front-end vs Back-end, which is harder? 06:34 The Boot.dev stack 07:11 The Low Level Academy stack 07:59 Low Level Academy 09:56 Project-based learning 12:18 sqlc 14:44 How do you debug C? 17:26 Fuzzing Harness vs Unit Testing 22:28 Favorite Feature of C 23:45 If you could change one thing in C, what would it be? 26:53 Where do C programmers work? 29:16 The White House and Garbage Collectors 31:19 What is a side-channel attack? 33:56 Power side-channel attack 35:41 Side-channel attack on boot.dev 37:08 What tooling does Low Level Learning use to write C? 43:59 How do you deal with the lack of a package manager? 48:12 Opinion on statically compiled and dynamic libraries 50:36 Where to find Low Level Learning…
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Backend Banter

In today’s episode, we bring fellow developer and tech content creator NeetCode, to talk about his obstacles and observations on his path in becoming a FAANG engineer, where he shares his struggles and how he started both his tech career and content creation journeys. Among a variety of other topics, NeetCode shares his advice for anyone that’s open to receiving it, and explains the pros and cons of grinding LeetCode, if it is even worth doing it or not, while also dabbling into why networking is somewhat important and highlights the importance of standing out in today’s job market environment. Learn back-end development - https://boot.dev Listen on your favorite podcast player: https://www.backendbanter.fm Neetcode's Website: https://neetcode.io/ Neetcode's Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/c/neetcode Neetcode's Twitter: https://twitter.com/neetcode1 Neetcode's LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/navdeep-singh-3aaa14161/ Timestamps: 00:46 Who is NeetCode and a bit of his background 02:24 Why did NeetCode start a YouTube Channel? 03:40 People don't talk about where they mess up at these big companies 04:47 Portray yourself in the best possible light at interviews 07:37 Why LeetCode? 08:44 Why Grinding LeetCode is not the smartest choice 11:31 Why LeetCode is still important if your goal is a FAANG-level company 14:47 What would be the approach for someone with CS-degree knowledge that wants to get into Google in 2024/2025 17:26 How to know if you're having trouble getting or passing interviews? 19:01 You can put projects on a resume, not LeetCode solutions 21:47 Tutorial Hell 24:47 You have to be able to prove your knowledge, just putting it on the resume isn't enough 29:20 You don't have to do content creation to get a developer job 30:29 Social Media works well for networking 33:03 NeetCode philosophy 37:57 Monetizing education content 42:17 How to level up the product experience 44:04 Amazon vs Google's culture 46:24 As usual, managers don't know what they're doing a lot of the time 49:30 Managers at these companies should be technical 51:17 Difference between Engineers and other Tech Roles 55:40 Where to find NeetCode…
In today’s episode, we welcome John Crickett, veteran software engineer, having worked at Staff, VP, and C-Suite positions over the years, and now focusing on helping thousands of engineers worldwide, through his coding challenges that have you building real applications, as well as helping with the soft skills through his articles and posts about software development. Today we cover a LOT of ground where we explain exactly what a Software Architect is, discuss different leadership types, advice to get a software job, remote work, unpopular opinions on programming languages, performance and scale, and a couple other things, so stay tuned because this episode is a true fountain of knowledge. Learn back-end development - https://boot.dev Listen on your favorite podcast player: https://www.backendbanter.fm John Crickett's Twitter/X: https://twitter.com/johncrickett John Crickett's Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/johncrickett/ Coding Challenges: https://codingchallenges.fyi/ Coding Challenges on Substack: https://codingchallenges.substack.com/ Research mentioned at 27:33 : https://www.researchgate.net/publication/232514133_Effect_of_self-differentiation_and_anonymity_in_group_on_deindividuation More on the topic of Deindividuation: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deindividuation#Major_empirical_discoveries Timestamps: 00:12 Who is John Crickett 01:13 What is a Software Architect 03:04 People vs Technical Leadership 03:53 What kind of decisions does a software architect make? 04:43 Is there a lot of "Thought Leadership" involved? 05:23 Do you prefer Technical or People leadership? 07:47 How did John start his coding career? 11:39 Most people don't start working at "sexy" companies 13:58 Juggling off-topic 14:32 What are the Coding Challenges? 19:03 Remote work and downtime 22:56 The wrong culture might spoil the remote environment and people care less about the work 27:05 Anonymity turns people into assholes 29:58 Why did we have a phone call when this could've been an e-mail? 33:42 Doing LeetCode vs Building Projects 36:54 Most of the time you'll be using already existing solutions 40:05 Is there too much abstraction nowadays? 41:56 Using the Command Line is cool again! 43:44 When talking about scale, what matters most is the architecture, not the language or framework 51:30 Why just switching to a "faster" language isn't enough 53:48 Go vs Rust performance comparison 54:44 Learning how to write performant code is more important than the programming language itself 55:25 The importance of benchmarking 58:33 Where to find John…
In today’s episode, we bring Leandro Ostera, a seasoned software engineer, who’s currently leading the OCaml build system team, with the mission of making OCaml SaaS ready! Join us as this episode is packed with a variety of topics, where we mainly focus on the OCaml ecosystem, compare it to other languages and frameworks, but also dabble into very obscure topics such as Idris (hint: it’s a programming language), and explore concepts such as routine blocking, scheduling, types, and other issues. Learn back-end development - https://boot.dev Listen on your favorite podcast player: https://www.backendbanter.fm Check out Riot: https://riot.ml/ Leandro's Twitch: https://www.twitch.tv/leostera Leandro's Twitter/X: https://twitter.com/leostera Timestamps: 00:28 Leandro's Background 01:37 How Leandro got involved with OCaml 02:50 What the heck is Idris??? 07:03 When Leandro started working with OCaml 11:34 ReasonML 15:48 The Riot Library and OCaml issues 18:00 Type Inference in OCaml 23:10 What allowed Riot to move so fast 24:17 The ecosystem of a language 28:14 Is Riot a Concurrency Library or a Web Framework? 31:01 Goroutines refresher 33:02 How Riot implements the actor-model 38:34 Cooperative Scheduling vs Preemptive Scheduling 41:30 How to fix routine blocking 43:14 What has Leandro and other contributers shipped? 46:25 How does Leandro manage his time to work on all of these projects? 49:45 Where to find Leandro…
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Backend Banter

Today, we're excited to have Bashbunni join us, a software developer and fellow tech content creator currently rocking it as a DevRel at Charm, whose purpose is all about glamming up the CLI experience. In this episode, we cover a lot of ground, from diving into Charm's cool libraries and their real-world applications to chatting about the self-taught programming journey. We also touch on TikTok and addictive social media use, content creation and its intricacies, and share some insights into the world of Golang. Learn back-end development - https://boot.dev Listen on your favorite podcast player: https://www.backendbanter.fm Bashbunni's Twitter: https://twitter.com/sudobunni Bashbunni's Twitch: https://www.twitch.tv/bashbunni Bashbunni's Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/c/bashbunni Charm: https://charm.sh/ Charm's video that Bashbunni mentioned: https://charm.sh/blog/100k/ Timestamps: 00:36 When did Bashbunni start working with Go? 02:10 School during COVID and education nowadays 04:23 Is self-taught still a viable way to learn programming? 08:50 Discipline can be learned 10:04 Why it is much harder to focus nowadays? 11:08 TikTok and Addictive Social Media Use 14:31 What kind of media does BashBunni consume, if not short-form content 18:14 Is creating content for Charm a bit part of the job? 21:05 On Tech content creators being technical 24:41 Quality vs Quantity 25:31 What is Charm? 29:09 Why Golang is the best language for CLI Applications 32:52 US vs Canadian Accents 34:05 Melt - One of Charm's Libraries 36:24 Soft serve - Self hostable git server 37:39 VHS - Terminal GIFs as code 39:10 How many people are behind Charm? 39:17 How does Charm make money? 42:40 GUI's are bloated, Terminal is the GOAT 45:56 Bashbunni's beef with JavaScript 48:47 Where to find Bashbunni…
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Backend Banter

In this episode, we host Trash Puppy, with her amazing story of how she went from Nursing to becoming a Software Engineer. Today, we talk about her story, why she chose Golang, her exciting personal projects and her experiences and advice as a self-taught developer. As Trash Puppy is accepting job offers at the moment, we also dove into the current job market and job hunting process, as it definitely isn't an easy one to navigate these days, while also touching up on her thoughts of the threats of AI. Learn back-end development - https://boot.dev Listen on your favorite podcast player: https://www.backendbanter.fm Trash Puppy's Twitter: https://twitter.com/TrshPuppy Trash Puppy's Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/@trshpuppy Trash Puppy's Twitch: https://www.twitch.tv/trshpuppy Trash Puppy's Github: https://github.com/TrshPuppy Trash Puppy's LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/trshpuppy/ Timestamps: 00:31 How Trash Puppy went from a Nurse to a Software Engineer 05:06 Lane shares how his wife went from an X-Ray technician to Software Dev 07:00 When did Trash Puppy start learning to code? 08:24 Trash Puppy pivoted to Golang? 09:29 Was there anything else about the industry that motivated Trash Puppy to switch to WebDev? 10:38 NetPuppy 13:12 Coding in Cyber Security 18:10 Do you want to hire Trash Puppy? 18:27 Current Job Market and Job Hunting 22:51 You have a better chance applying to local jobs 25:25 Lack of experience in the field when searching for a job 29:26 Outlook on AI 30:15 Impact of not having a CS Degree 33:11 Building projects or studying up on foundations? 37:19 The learning happens during the struggle 41:47 What has been the hardest thing about learning Go so far? 45:27 What do you like the most about Go? 47:03 What's your least favorite part about Go? 48:20 Installing Go modules vs GOPATH 50:31 Where to find Trash Puppy…
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Backend Banter

Today, we're thrilled to have Tommy Graves, co-founder of RWX, a company focusing on building tools that optimize build and test performance, reliability, and developer experience. In this episode, we're delving deep into the realm of CI/CD (Continuous Integration and Continuous Deployment), with a special focus on Mint - their latest CI platform. We'll be exploring its unique features, how it differs from its competitors, caching, security, cost-efficiency in production pipelines. Apart from that, we'll also discuss GitHub Actions along with it's biggest flaws and finally demystifying CI/CD, as it is not the big monster a lot of developers perceive it to be. Learn back-end development - https://boot.dev Listen on your favorite podcast player: https://www.backendbanter.fm Mint: https://www.rwx.com/mint Timestamps: 00:54 Who is Tommy Graves 05:14 What is Continuous Integration? 06:57 What is Mint trying to solve, that isn't solved by other CI/CD platforms 09:57 Better Semantic Output on a CI/CD platform 14:20 What's the benefit to the structure of semantic logging, apart from visualization 15:23 CI/CD course on Boot.dev 17:59 Does Mint make it cheaper for companies that have high CI/CD expenses? 19:12 Why don't other companies do caching the way Mint does? 25:49 There are security implications of using the same platform for both CI and CD 30:42 How smaller teams could benefit from Mint 33:15 Verifying changes to the deployment workflow with GitHub Actions and Mint 36:49 Is GitHub Actions dominating the space or is there still competition? 39:04 One of the biggest frustrations with GitHub Actions 42:03 Does Mint relate to the Unix philosophy? 48:07 How does configuring the CI/CD tools drive the philosophy of Mint 50:36 Just understand CI/CD, you won't need those courses dedicated to CI/CD platforms 53:45 CI/CD is not as esoteric as it sounds 58:48 Where to find Mint…
Today, we bring a special "Whiskey, Web and Whatnot" edition to our podcast, where we welcome Travis Wagner and Robbie The Wagner, to talk about controversial takes regarding tech CEOs, their experiences in the field, the impact of AI and other personal preferences towards technologies Learn back-end development - https://boot.dev Listen on your favorite podcast player: https://www.backendbanter.fm Whiskey, Web and Whatnot podcast: https://whiskey.fm/Robbie's Twitter: https://twitter.com/RobbieTheWagnerTravis's Twitch: https://www.twitch.tv/techsavvytravvy Travis's Twitter: https://twitter.com/techsavvytravvy Timestamps: 01:22 Whiskey, Web and Whatnot 01:52 Elon Musk or Mark Zuckerberg, which Tech CEO of 2024 is your favorite? 03:28 Robbie's Background 04:42 Travis's background 06:23 Big company or small company? 10:07 Tenures, incentives and current market 12:33 Who would you pick for your team, Steve Ballmer or Sundar Pichai 13:41 AWS or GCP? 16:25 DevOps is not a real job 20:16 Be a DevRel or a Scrum Master? 23:38 What's the difference between DevRel and Dev Advocate? 24:56 AI or VR, which is more impactful on a developer's day-to-day? 31:53 Which Big Tech Company sucks the least? 36:21 Bigger Salary but Less Equity or Less Salary but More Equity? 41:19 Is Blockchain Gone Yet? 50:52 CS Degree or Being an Open Source Maintainer on a successful project? 55:10 Remote or On-site? 01:03:19 Where to find Robbie 01:03:43 Where to find Travis…
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Backend Banter

1 #044 - Managers should know how to code feat. Thorsten Ball 1:07:30
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In today's episode, we bring Thorsten Ball, author of "Writing An Interpreter In Go" and "Writing A Compiler In Go". In this talk, we discuss the different clashes and responsibilities between Product and Engineering teams, reignite the topic of working with technical managers, explain why cookie banners are dumb, and on a more interpersonal note, discuss how important coolness is in education, explain why a lot of the times, highly talented people just don't know how to work and also dabble into the ideas of fulfillment, responsibility and reliability. Thorsten's Twitter: https://twitter.com/thorstenball Register Spill: https://registerspill.thorstenball.com/ Thorsten's Books: https://thorstenball.com/books/ (01:08) - The idea behind Register Spill (02:20) - It's a Negotiation: When Product and Engineering meet (05:58) - Engineering vs Product (07:31) - Thorsten's view of the Product team (09:36) - Thorsten's view of the Engineering team (11:06) - Engineers should inform product before building something (14:57) - Real-life example from Thorsten (18:04) - Measuring completixy in T-Shirt sizes and Time Estimates (22:46) - Set a cap on time dedicated to a task (23:50) - Do we need more technical leadership? (27:58) - Working with Engineering Managers that are technical is a bliss (35:19) - Not Every Company Is For Everybody (41:14) - Cookie Banners are Dumb (50:13) - Educators underestimate how important coolness is (56:19) - There are a lot of highly capable people that just don't know how to work (01:02:20) - Getting fulfillment just from the effort (01:04:23) - Be reliable (01:06:34) - Where to find Thorsten…
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Backend Banter

1 #043 - Nuxt.js is better than Next.js feat. Daniel Roe 1:06:20
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In this episode, we bring Daniel Roe, the Lead Maintainer of Nuxt.js, an open source framework that makes web development intuitive and powerful. Today, he shares his journey into the framework and sheds some light on intriguing questions surrounding its development and usage. Today's talk ranges from the origins of Nuxt to its unique features and practical tips for developers, deliberate naming, comparison with Next.js and technical and detailed discussion regarding performance optimization and project structuring. Learn back-end development - https://boot.dev Listen on your favorite podcast player: https://www.backendbanter.fm Daniel's Twitter: https://x.com/danielcroe Daniel's Website: https://roe.dev/ Nuxt Framework: https://nuxt.com (00:14) - How did Daniel Roe join Nuxt? (02:53) - Elk, Moose and Wilderness (06:07) - Was it named Nuxt intentionally to confuse people? (08:32) - Next.js vendor lock-in criticism and does Nuxt have any similar issues (11:31) - Boot.dev moved from a Vue 3 SPA to Nuxt (14:19) - Auto-importing by default? (20:01) - Using longer variable names because of global namespace (21:58) - Explaining the default Nuxt payload behavior (26:59) - Default prefetching (30:17) - What are the most common use cases for Nuxt apps (32:32) - Who has control in your project? (33:45) - Enabling JavaScript or not? (37:25) - Updating head tags in Nuxt (39:09) - New feature that improves script handling in Nuxt (41:01) - What do you prioritize? Interactivity or Scripts? (42:06) - Google Tag Manager (46:07) - What's Daniel's favorite Nuxt feature? (47:11) - Types are amazing! (49:37) - How did the Idea of Boot.dev came to be? (51:24) - Gamification of coding (53:46) - Theory is picked up from practice (56:05) - What's one thing you'd instantly change about Nuxt if you could (59:04) - Separation of what goes on in the client vs the server in the same file (01:04:44) - Where to find Daniel…
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Backend Banter

1 #042 - Rust is the WORST language to learn first feat. Teej DeVries 1:09:30
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In today's episode, we bring back Teej DeVries, the first guest ever on our podcast! Today we are discussing Teej's new course on Boot.dev on Memory Management. In this talk, we discuss the importance of memory, why Go is a C-programmer minded language, garbage collectors, among other technical topics. We also talk about why understanding the fundamentals in crucial in helping you increase your learning ability, how different it is hiring juniors and seniors and why being curious gives you the advantage over everyone else. Learn back-end development - https://boot.dev Listen on your favorite podcast player: https://www.backendbanter.fm Teej's Twitter: https://twitter.com/teej_dv Teej's Channel: https://www.youtube.com/c/tjdevries (00:00) - Introduction (00:57) - Teej will have a course on Boot.dev! (01:35) - Why Memory Management is so important (05:17) - Go is a C-programmer minded language (07:00) - 25% off on boot.dev! (07:22) - How far in the curriculum will Teej's course be? (09:13) - Should you learn Rust or C first? (12:43) - Dropping out of college (13:49) - You should know WHY you're doing something (15:29) - Self motivated learning (18:52) - Internal Boot.dev tooling for this course (21:59) - OCamls' garbage collector (23:55) - Functional language, performance and immutability constraints (30:24) - Roc programming language (32:42) - Wasm (WebAssembly) vs Machine Code (36:07) - C's Standard Library vs Go's Standard Library (37:01) - Installing dependencies (41:09) - C as an educational tool (43:27) - You have to think when using C (45:42) - Enterprise machines are weaker compared to local machines (47:43) - Why this course is before the Job Search chapter (49:44) - Being curious gives you the advantage (51:16) - Every program uses memory, so we should have at least some level of understanding about it (54:28) - Just being able to speak like an engineer goes a long way (57:14) - There are still a ton of jobs that involve embedded systems, not just WebDev (01:00:13) - Be eager to learn (01:01:51) - Hiring Seniors vs Hiring Juniors (01:02:50) - You learn better if you understand fundamentals (01:04:10) - Analogy to Dota 2 (01:08:54) - Where to find Teej…
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Backend Banter

1 #041 - From Roblox to software founder feat. Lewis Menelaws 1:03:07
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In this episode, Lane chats with Lewis Menelaws, a Full-Stack developer and entrepreneur. Today he takes us through his coding journey and insights as a developer influencer. From his early days coding Roblox games, tech stacks, and the challenges of freelancing, to his shift into content creation and thoughts on the current programming meta. Learn back-end development - https://boot.dev Listen on your favorite podcast player: https://www.backendbanter.fm Lewis's Twitter: https://twitter.com/LewisMenelaws Lewis's Channel: https://www.youtube.com/c/CodingwithLewis (02:01) - Intro (02:18) - We need to talk about developer influencers (02:53) - When did Lewis first learn to code (05:17) - Java and PHP (06:17) - Shift from Python2 to Python3 (07:02) - Why Python (07:34) - Dynamic Typing Isn't Enjoyable (09:09) - Dynamic Languages are just a tool (09:47) - When did Lewis Start a WebDev Agency (12:30) - Pivotal moment at the agency (15:50) - Website vs WebApp (21:53) - Tech stacks (24:54) - Not so Open Source (27:09) - Opinion about TypeScript (29:13) - Understanding topics at a deeper level (33:23) - 1 layer deeper than where i do most of my work (35:45) - Be the glue (38:28) - Dependencies as a cost (39:57) - What motivated Lewis to start his own agency (40:52) - Freelancing is playing on hard mode (43:14) - Transition to content creation (46:42) - Confidence in your technical abilities (49:12) - We need to talk about developer Influencers (56:19) - Catering towards the algorithm (56:56) - Take on the current programming meta (58:55) - Future of Coding with Lewis channel (01:01:55) - Where to find lewis (00:00) - Chapter 28…
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Backend Banter

1 #040 - The man who wrote the book on DynamoDB feat. Alex DeBrie 58:08
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In this episode, Lane talks to Alex DeBrie, author of the DynamoDB book. Today's talk covers various aspects such as DynamoDB's comparison with Amazon S3, its benefits, use cases, constraints, and cost considerations, while also covering other AWS and Google Cloud services. Alex also shares his insights into his journey of writing the book on DynamoDB and touches on topics like access patterns, secondary indexes, and billing modes. Alex also shares his professional experiences, including consulting vs freelancing, thoughts of entrepreneurial aspirations, and gives helpful advice for those that are considering pursuing a similar career. Learn back-end development - https://boot.dev Listen on your favorite podcast player: https://www.backendbanter.fm Alex's Twitter: https://twitter.com/alexbdebrie Alex's Website: https://www.alexdebrie.com (00:00) - Introduction (01:27) - Who is Alex DeBrie? (02:39) - What is DynamoDB? (04:15) - EC2 instance (05:50) - Amazon S3 (06:25) - DynamoDB is more like S3 (07:40) - Difference between DynamoDB and S3 (08:20) - What do we mean when we say NoSQL (10:08) - BigQuery and BigTable (12:31) - Some of DynamoDB's benefits (13:15) - When to use DynamoDB (15:58) - Constraint of number of connections (18:06) - DynamoDB is a multi-tenant service (19:21) - How does DynamoDB shake up against something like MongoDB (22:22) - DynamoDB is opinionated, but it provides good results consistently (25:54) - You can only do certain things in DynamoDB, but they are guaranteed to be fast (26:42) - Relational Databases - Theory vs Practicality (31:08) - How Alex came to write a book about DynamoDB (32:15) - What happens when SQL runs, depends heavily on the system underneath (33:57) - DynamoDB doesn't have a query planner (36:08) - Access patterns (38:04) - Use case for Secondary Indexes (39:43) - Costs of DynamoDB (40:45) - Billing modes for DynamoDB (45:26) - Provisioning and planning for expenses (48:40) - Super Mario 64 Hack (49:34) - What Was Alex's Last Full Time Job (51:02) - Consulting vs Freelancing (52:23) - Does Alex see himself going back to a Full Time Job? (53:07) - Does Alex have any entrepreneurial urges? (54:01) - What you should think about before jumping into freelance/consulting (56:01) - Authority in the consulting world (57:11) - Where to find Alex…
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Backend Banter

In this episode, Lane talks to Dax Raad, a well rounded engineer that is currently a developer for SST, a framework that helps people build Full-Stack applications on AWS with ease. Today, they talk about personal opinions on industry practices, scale, financial decisions, infrastructure mistakes, reflections on long-term company commitments and many more! Learn back-end development - https://boot.dev Listen on your favorite podcast player: https://www.backendbanter.fm Dax's Twitter: https://twitter.com/thdxr (00:00) - Introduction (00:51) - Dax's Tweets and Personal Branding (01:31) - You have to learn to be yourself (02:56) - Intrusive thoughts (03:33) - When did Dax become active in the Tech Twitter scene (06:30) - What was the Zero Interest Rate Phenomenon (ZIRP) in the tech scene (09:33) - Should people choose fun early in their career? (12:22) - Lane's take on the expertise when abstracting (14:15) - SST's Philosophy in regards to abstractions (16:35) - Merging roles (19:28) - People don't want to care about the cloud (21:31) - Less stressed about work = better results (24:10) - Managers vs leaders (25:20) - Dax shares stories about managing vs leading (29:36) - Did Dax ever have users? (31:24) - Most Startups Fail (32:09) - Dax's reason for joining startups (33:25) - Staying at a company for decades (35:53) - Main downside of staying at an established company for a long time (36:34) - The World changes, so don't look at how already established companies do things (37:57) - Scale has a different meaning for different companies (40:07) - So much goes away when you have less people at the company (41:51) - Sometimes not saving money is a better option (43:35) - Moving off Stripe (46:54) - Rolling your own payment processor (49:05) - Which debate on Tech Twitter annoys Dax the most (50:52) - Stored Procedure debate (53:31) - What's a BIG mistake in the infrastructure space? (57:31) - Kubernetes (01:02:58) - What Dax misses from Google Cloud (01:03:19) - Is Sundar Pichai a bad CEO? (01:04:51) - Where to find Dax…
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Backend Banter

1 #038 - I Got Caught Rolling my Own Auth... feat. Dev Agrawal 1:06:56
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Lane chats with Dev Agrawal— content creator & Developer Advocate at Clerk! Tune in as they discuss DevRel, authentication vs. authorization, JWT, and so much more in this episode. Learn back-end development - https://boot.dev Listen on your favorite podcast player: https://www.backendbanter.fm Dev's Twitter: https://twitter.com/devagrawal09 Dev's Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/@devagr (00:00) - Introduction (00:50) - Is Dev's name really Dev? (02:10) - What is it about writing code that scares Dev? (02:50) - JavaScript is one of the worst with dependencies (03:09) - Dev's ideal world (03:20) - .NET and Blazor (03:59) - Blazor explained (04:36) - WASM on the Front-end (05:04) - Is Blazor unique to C# ? (06:11) - What is a DevRel? (08:07) - Lane's experience (09:13) - You shouldn't roll your own Auth (11:59) - Undifferentiated work (13:56) - Authentication vs Authorization (16:19) - Regarding Auth, which is a bigger pain point for companies (16:48) - Pain points of Authorization (18:38) - Pain Points of Authentication (20:23) - Lane's perspective (22:29) - Using a third party for authorization (24:27) - Is Clerk used for both Authentication and Authorization? (26:16) - JWT explained (28:39) - Where is the users' data stored? (29:27) - Features are developed as needed (29:52) - Auth coupling to the rest of the system (30:16) - Webhooks listeners to access user session data (31:03) - Postgres foreign-data wrapper (32:09) - Microservices sharing databases (34:29) - CQRS (37:37) - Average size of a company that uses Clerk (40:50) - What are the most used ways to sign-in (42:04) - Stances on passwords (46:56) - OAuth (50:33) - Why Lane dropped Sign-in with Twitter/X (51:14) - What do popular services usually use? (52:24) - Sign-in with Google (57:39) - Unpopular opinion on Auth related web architecture (01:00:17) - 2 ways of doing authentication (01:05:59) - Where to find Dev…
Lane chats with Matt Holt-- a renowned figure in backend engineering and the creator of Caddy, a leading platform for serving sites and apps written in Go. In this episode, they discuss the origins of Caddy, its unique features, and Matt's journey in Go programming and web development. Learn back-end development - https://boot.dev Listen on your favorite podcast player: https://www.backendbanter. fm Matt Holt Twitter: https://x.com/mholt6?s=20 Caddy Web Server Twitter: https://x.com/caddyserver?s=20…
Lane chats with BadCop-- a senior Bash engineer, Twitch streamer and the mastermind behind their online presence. From the origins of 'BadCop' to the recent emergence of 'BashCop,' they explore scripting languages, focusing on Bash, shells, terminals and more. Follow the conversation in this enlightening episode, unraveling the intricacies of online identity and the technical landscape of Unix shells! Learn back-end development - https://boot.dev Listen on your favorite podcast player: https://www.backendbanter.com BadCop Twitter: twitter.com/badcop_ BadCop Twitch: twitch.tv/badcop_…
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Backend Banter

1 #035 - Discussing Roc and functional systems with Richard Fieldman 1:02:05
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Lane chats with Richard Feldman, creator of the Roc programming language, about why he decided to create it. They discuss object oriented programming and whether it did irreparable damage to the industry - or not. Follow along as they talk about all of that and functional programming too! Learn back-end development - https://boot.dev Listen on your favorite podcast player: https://www.backendbanter.com Richard Feldmans Twitter: twitter.com/rtfeldman Roc Programming Language: https://www.roc-lang.org/ Software Unscripted can be found on any podcast platform!…
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Backend Banter

1 #034 - Brain Oriented Programming with Philip Winston 1:12:56
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Lane chats with Philip Winston, a software engineer with a storied history who recently published an article titled "Brain Oriented Programming". Tune in as Lane and Philip talk about the pros and cons of object oriented programming and... guitar hero? Don't miss this episode of Backend Banter! Learn back-end development - https://boot.dev Listen on your favorite podcast player: https://www.backendbanter.com Philip Winston's Twitter: https://twitter.com/pbwinston Brain Oriented Programming Article: https://tobeva.com/articles/brain-oriented-programming/…
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Backend Banter

1 #033 - WebI is not a package manager feat. AJ O'neal 1:28:22
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Lane chats with AJ O'Neal about giving up on Rust, the challenges of using brew from a permissions standpoint, and how, exactly, WebI is not a package manager. Tune in as they discuss why AJ developed WebI, and why you should be using it as well. AJ O'Neal's Twitter: https://twitter.com/coolaj86 WebI: https://webinstall.dev/…
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Backend Banter

In this episode of Backend Banter, Lane chats with JLarky about React server components... in GO. Why would anyone want to do that? Find out here! They also discuss how JLarky came up with the idea to use React in the backend, what other people think about the practice, and how he uses it to streamline his process. All this is intermixed with discussing the differences between frontend and backend, and how knowing how both work can make either job easier! Learn back-end development - https://boot.dev Listen on your favorite podcast player: https://www.backendbanter.com JLarky's Twitter: twitter.com/JLarky…
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Backend Banter

1 #031 - Trying (Practically) Every Functional Language and Landing on OCaml with Sabine 1:15:00
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Lane chats with Sabine, one of the primary maintainers of OCaml.org , about how she built web apps in Django on the side, only to land her first programming job working close to the OCaml ecosystem, and quickly become enveloped in the project. Her backstory about skipping grades, dropping out of school, and teaching herself various web languages is fascinating, give it a listen. Learn back-end development - https://boot.dev Listen on your favorite podcast player: https://www.backendbanter.com Sabine's Twitter: https://twitter.com/sabine_s_ OCaml Homepage: https://ocaml.org/…
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Backend Banter

1 #030 - The Future of Backend JavaScript with a Node.js Maintainer: Matteo Collina 55:14
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Matteo Collina is a member of the Node.js technical steering committee and has one of the most impressive developer resumes we've ever seen. His 500 NPM modules have over 17 billion downloads. Today, he sits down with Lane to discuss Node, the future of backend web development, and Platformatic, his new startup. Learn back-end development - https://boot.dev Listen on your favorite podcast player: https://www.backendbanter.com Matteo's Twitter: https://twitter.com/matteocollina…
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Backend Banter

Lane and Aaron Francis sit down to talk about Laravel and PHP, and why everyone who uses them tends to make a lot of money. There seems to be something to avoiding the technical hype cycle and just shipping web apps that people want to use. Learn back-end development - https://boot.dev Listen on your favorite podcast player: https://www.backendbanter.com Aaron Francis' Twitter: https://twitter.com/aarondfrancis Aaron Francis' YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@UCbixkBITOOa2XNviJLxMh2w Aaron Francis' SQL Course: https://planetscale.com/learn/courses/mysql-for-developers/introduction/course-introduction Learn to make Screencasts: Screencasting.com…
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Backend Banter

1 #028 - Learning Go: A Discussion of the Language with the Author, Jon Bodner 52:32
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Backend Banter

1 #027 - 2023 vs 2001 Tech Recessions and Distributed Systems with Russ Ross 1:15:55
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Lane chats with his distributed systems professor from when he was a computer science undergraduate, Dr. Russ Ross. They talk about the state of the hiring market in 2023, LLVM, and of course, distributed systems! Learn back-end development - https://boot.dev Listen on your favorite podcast player: https://www.backendbanter.com Russ Ross's Twitter: https://twitter.com/_russross?lang=en Like & subscribe for the algo if you enjoyed the video!…
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Backend Banter

1 #026 - Why PubSub Architectures are Still Cool with Byron Ruth and David Gee 1:26:05
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Byron Ruth and David Gee from the NATS and the Synadia team join Lane today to chat about distributed systems, and more specifically, PubSub architectures. If you've ever wondered about the difference between a distributed monolith and a truly distributed system, this episode is for you. We break down NATS and how it relates to other systems like RabbitMQ, Kafka, and more. Learn back-end development - https://boot.dev Listen on your favorite podcast player: https://www.backendbanter.com Byron's Twitter: https://twitter.com/thedevel David's Twitter: https://twitter.com/davedotdev NATS: NATS.io Nats By Example: https://natsbyexample.com/ Synadia: https://www.synadia.com Synadia Newsletter: https://www.synadia.com/newsletter Byron's website: byronruth.com NATSFM Podcast: Nats.FM Like & subscribe for the algo if you enjoyed the video!…
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Backend Banter

1 #025 - Rust Developer Admits to Enjoying Dynamic Types with Sean Walker 1:00:01
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Lane sits down with Sean Walker to talk about Ruby on Rails, dynamic typing, and even a bit of Rust. Sean's been writing Ruby on Rails for years, and has some opinions on DHH's recent articles. Sean Walker's Twitter: https://twitter.com/swlkr Sean Walker's Twitch: https://www.twitch.tv/swlkr
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Backend Banter

1 #024 - Behind HTMX: Carson Gross on the re-Rise of Hypermedia 1:11:08
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This is a podcast about backend development, so I couldn't miss the chance to chat with Carson Cross, the creator of HTMX and author of the book Hypermedia Systems. HTMX is all about giving backend developers the power to build modern webapps, without needing to write a line of frontend JavaScript. In a way, it's a return to the way the web used to work pre-React. Find more about HTMX below! https://htmx.org/ https://hypermedia.systems/ https://bigsky.software/ https://twitter.com/htmx_org…
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Backend Banter

1 #023 - Has Web Development Regressed? A Conversation with Wes Bos 1:01:31
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Has web development gone full circle? Should we really just be writing PHP monoliths? Maybe all go back to WordPress? Wes and Lane break down how web development has changed over the years, and where its heading next. Wes Twitter: https://twitter.com/wesbos Wes Insta: https://www.instagram.com/wesbos/ Wes YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@WesBos Wes site: https://wesbos.com/ Wes Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/wesbos/…
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Backend Banter

1 #022 - Job Hunting as a Self-Taught Programmer with Don the Developer 1:15:51
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If you're nervous about searching for programming jobs this episode is for you. Lane sits down with Don the Developer to chat about everything from resumes and cover letters to how to present yourself in an interview. DonTheDeveloper's YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/donthedeveloper
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