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Software Misadventures

Podcast Software Misadventures
Ronak Nathani, Guang Yang
A show about not just the technologies, but the people and stories behind them. In every episode, Ronak and Guang sit down with engineers, founders, and investo...

Episodios disponibles

5 de 55
  • Podcast update and news!
    Some reflections on running the podcast and Ronak has some eggciting news to share :)   Music: Vlad Gluschenko — Forest License: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/deed.en
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  • Uncrating the Oxide Rack | Bryan Cantrill, Steve Tuck (Oxide)
    Oxide co-founders Bryan and Steve are back on the show to give an impromptu peek at the Oxide server rack and to chat about writing their own manufacturing software, overcoming false summits before shipping the first rack, the #1 reason startups fail and more. Don't miss the full-circle moment on their "meet cute" story from last time, shared at the end of the conversation :)   Segments: (00:00:00) The Oxide rack uncrating experience (00:02:40) The office tour (00:04:03) Challenges of shipping and unboxing hardware (00:11:04) Hybrid hardware company? (00:13:38) Custom designing a crate for the rack (00:18:12) Optimizing for time to value (00:20:43) Writing custom manufacturing software (00:23:25) Taking ownership of the customer experience (00:25:29) Buy vs build (00:27:46) The false summits before shipping the first rack (00:30:05) “Missing just enough context to be optimistic” (00:33:07) The #1 reason startups fail (00:38:49) Hiring the first sales role (00:44:53) The dangers of “happy ears” (00:47:18) The pitfalls of rushing to market (00:51:03) The “third VP of sales” problem (00:56:06) The value of a good sales leader (01:00:07) Curiosity and empathy in sales (01:03:41) Grooming sales skills as an engineer (01:07:33) Learning from current customers (01:09:13) Talk to prospective customers “that we have 0% chance of closing” (01:11:25) Actionable bad news (01:14:11) The role of GPUs in data centers (01:18:50) Cloud repatriation (01:24:23) Full circle to the “meet cute”   Show Notes: Our previous convo: https://softwaremisadventures.com/p/oxide-ditching-the-rules Bryan on Twitter: https://x.com/bcantrill Steve on Twitter: https://x.com/sdtuck   Stay in touch: 👋 Make Ronak’s day by leaving us a review and let us know who we should talk to next! [email protected]
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  • LLMs are like your weird, over-confident intern | Simon Willison (Datasette)
    Known for co-creating Django and Datasette, as well as his thoughtful writing on LLMs, Simon Willison joins the show to chat about blogging as an accountability mechanism, how to build intuition with LLMs, building a startup with his partner on their honeymoon, and more.   Segments: (00:00:00) The weird intern (00:01:50) The early days of LLMs (00:04:59) Blogging as an accountability mechanism (00:09:24) The low-pressure approach to blogging (00:11:47) GitHub issues as a system of records (00:16:15) Temporal documentation and design docs (00:18:19) GitHub issues for team collaboration (00:21:53) Copy-paste as an API (00:26:54) Observable notebooks (00:28:50) pip install LLM (00:32:26) The evolution of using LLMs daily (00:34:47) Building intuition with LLMs (00:43:24) Democratizing access to automation (00:47:45) Alternative interfaces for language models (00:53:39) Is prompt engineering really engineering? (00:58:39) The frustrations of working with LLMs (01:01:59) Structured data extraction with LLMs (01:06:08) How Simon would go about building a LLM app (01:09:49) LLMs making developers more ambitious (01:13:32) Typical workflow with LLMs (01:19:58) Vibes-based evaluation (01:23:25) Staying up-to-date with LLMs (01:27:49) The impact of LLMs on new programmers (01:29:37) The rise of 'Goop' and the future of software development (01:40:20) Being an independent developer (01:42:26) Staying focused and accountable (01:47:30) Building a startup with your partner on the honeymoon (01:51:30) The responsibility of AI practitioners (01:53:07) The hidden dangers of prompt injection (01:53:44) “Artificial intelligence” is really “imitation intelligence”   Show Notes: Simon’s blog: https://simonwillison.net/ Natalie’s post on them building a startup together: https://blog.natbat.net/post/61658401806/lanyrd-from-idea-to-exit Simon’s talk from DjangoCon: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GLkRK2rJGB0 Simon on twitter: https://x.com/simonw Datasette: https://github.com/simonw/datasette   Stay in touch: 👋 Make Ronak’s day by leaving us a review and let us know who we should talk to next! [email protected]   Music: Vlad Gluschenko — Forest License: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/deed.en
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  • From "AI mid-life crisis" to the "time of my life" | Steve Yegge (Sourcegraph)
    A Silicon Valley veteran and known for his writings like "The Death of the Junior Developer", Steve Yegge joins the show to chat about his "AI Midlife Crisis", the unique writing process he employs, and building the future of coding assistants.   Segments: (00:00:00) The AI Midlife Crisis (00:04:53) The power of rants (00:09:55) “You gotta be able to make yourself laugh” (00:11:46) Steve's writing process (00:14:10) “I published them… and nothing happened for six months” (00:17:30) Key to perseverance in writing? Get pissed. (00:23:24) Writing in one sitting (00:29:05) The AI Midlife Crisis (00:35:04) Management to IC (00:38:35) The acceleration and evolution of programming (00:41:43) Picking up new skills in a new domain (00:43:40) The power of prompt engineering (00:47:27) Secondary hashing (00:50:47) The importance of context in coding assistants (00:53:56) “The future of coding assistants is chat” (00:57:15) The importance of platforms in coding assistants (01:02:30) The nefarious T-word in AI (01:06:32) The death of the junior developer and its consequences (01:09:35) The future of code understanding and semantic indexing (01:13:15) The power of context in AI platforms (01:16:21) Surprising capabilities of LLMs (01:21:04) Transferable skills in AI product development (01:23:53) Mental health and the innovator's dilemma   Show Notes The Death of the Junior Developer: https://sourcegraph.com/blog/the-death-of-the-junior-developer Steve’s blog rants: https://steve-yegge.blogspot.com/ Steve’s medium posts: https://steve-yegge.medium.com/ Sourcegraph’s blog: https://sourcegraph.com/blog Steve on twitter: https://x.com/steve_yegge   Stay in touch: 👋 Make Ronak’s day by leaving us a review and let us know who we should talk to next! [email protected]   Music: Vlad Gluschenko — Forest License: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/deed.en
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  • Early Twitter's fail-whale wars | Dmitriy Ryaboy
    A veteran of early Twitter's fail whale wars, Dmitriy joins the show to chat about the time when 70% of the Hadoop cluster got accidentally deleted, the financial reality of writing a book, and how to navigate acquisitions. Segments: (00:00:00) The Infamous Hadoop Outage (00:02:36) War Stories from Twitter's Early Days (00:04:47) The Fail Whale Era (00:06:48) The Hadoop Cluster Shutdown (00:12:20) “First Restore the Service Then Fix the Problem. Not the Other Way Around.” (00:14:10) War Rooms and Organic Decision-Making (00:16:16) The Importance of Communication in Incident Management (00:19:07) That Time When the Data Center Caught Fire (00:21:45) The "Best Email Ever" at Twitter (00:25:34) The Importance of Failing (00:27:17) Distributed Systems and Error Handling (00:29:49) The Missing README (00:33:13) Agile and Scrum (00:38:44) The Financial Reality of Writing a Book (00:43:23) Collaborative Writing Is Like Open-Source Coding (00:44:41) Finding a Publisher and the Role of Editors (00:50:33) Defining the Tone and Voice of the Book (00:54:23) Acquisitions from an Engineer's Perspective (00:56:00) Integrating Acquired Teams (01:02:47) Technical Due Diligence (01:04:31) The Reality of System Implementation (01:06:11) Integration Challenges and Gotchas Show Notes: - Dmitriy Ryaboy on Twitter: https://x.com/squarecog - The Missing README: https://www.amazon.com/Missing-README-Guide-Software-Engineer/dp/1718501838 - Chris Riccomini on how to write a technical book: https://cnr.sh/essays/how-to-write-a-technical-book Stay in touch: - Make Ronak's day by signing up for our newsletter to get our favorites parts of the convo straight to your inbox every week :D https://softwaremisadventures.com/ Music: Vlad Gluschenko — Forest License: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/deed.en
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A show about not just the technologies, but the people and stories behind them. In every episode, Ronak and Guang sit down with engineers, founders, and investors to chat about their paths, lessons they’ve learned and of course, the misadventures along the way.
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