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The InfoQ Podcast

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Software engineers, architects and team leads have found inspiration to drive change and innovation in their team by listening to the weekly InfoQ Podcast. They have received essential information that helped them validate their software development map. We have achieved that by interviewing some of the top CTOs, engineers and technology directors from companies like Uber, Netflix and more. Over 1,200,000 downloads in the last 3 years.
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Episodes

Uncle Bob Martin on Clean Software, Craftsperson, Origins of SOLID, DDD, & Software Ethics

Wes Reisz sits down and chats with Uncle Bob about The Clean Architecture, the origins of the Software Craftsperson Movement, Livable Code, and even ethics in software. Uncle Bob discusses his thoughts on how The Clean Architecture is affected by things like functional programming, services meshes, and microservices. Why listen to this podcast: * Michael Feathers wrote to Bob and said if you rearrange the order of the design principles, it spells SOLID. * Software Craftsperson should be used whe...

Aug 24, 201830 min

Arun Gupta on Managed Container Control Planes on AWS

Arun Gupta discusses with Wes Reisz some of the container-focused services that AWS offers, including differentiating ECS and EKS. Arun goes into some detail the role that Amazon Fargate plays and goals behinds EKS. Arun wraps ups discussing some of the open source work that AWS has recently been doing in the container space. Why liste to this podcast: - ECS & EKS are both managed control planes; Amazon Fargate is a technology used to provision clusters. - ECR is the Amazon Container registr...

Jul 06, 201825 min

Anastasiia Voitova on Cryptography and the Design of Cryptographic Libraries

In this podcast Wes Reisz is talking to Anastasiia Voitova, known as @vixentael in the security communities. She started her career as a mobile application developer, and in recent years has moved to focus mainly on designing and developing graphics software. We’re going to talk about cryptography, how to design libraries to be usable by developers, and designing cryptographic libraries. We’ll also discuss about her talk from the recent QCon New York , called “Making Security Usable”. Why listen...

Jun 29, 201827 min

Matt Klein on Lyft’s Envoy, Including Edge Proxy, Service Mesh, & Potential AI Use Cases

On today’s podcast, Wes Reisz talks to Matt Klein about Envoy. Envoy is a modern, high performance, small footprint edge and service proxy. While it was originally developed at Lyft (and still drives much of their architecture), it is a fully open source driven project. Matt addresses on this podcast what he sees as the major design goals of Envoy, answers questions about a sidecar performance impact, discusses observability, and thinks out loud on the future of Envoy. Why listen to this podcast...

Jun 22, 201835 min

Pam Selle on Serverless Observability

On this podcast, Pam Selle (an engineer for IOPipe who builds tooling for serverless observability) talks about the case for serverless and the challenges for developing observability solutions. Some of the things discussed on the podcast include tips for creating boundaries between serverless and non-serverless resources and how to think of distributed tracing in serverless environments. Why listen to this podcast: - Coca Cola was able to see a productivity gain of 29% by adopting serverless (a...

Jun 04, 201829 min

Serverless and the Serverless Framework with David Wells

The Serverless Framework is quickly becoming one of the more popular frameworks used in managing serverless deployments. David Wells, an engineer working on the framework, talks with Wes Reisz about serverless adoption and the use of the open source Serverless Framework. On this week’s podcast, the two dive into what it looks like to use the tool, the development experience, why a developer might want to consider a tool like the serverless framework, and finally wraps up with what the tool offer...

May 27, 201832 min

Colin Eberhardt on WebAssembly

In this podcast Wes Reisz talks to Colin Eberhardt, the Technology Director at Scott Logic, talks about what WebAssembly (WASM) is, a bit of the history of JavaScript, information about WebAssembly, and plans for WebAssembly 2.0 including the threading model and GC. Why listen to this podcast: - WebAssembly brings another kind of virtual machine to the browser that is a much more low-level language. - One of the goals of WebAssembly is to make a new assembly language that is a compilation target...

May 11, 201832 min

Martin Thompson on Aeron, Binary vs Text for Message Encoding, and Raft

Martin Thompson discusses consensus in distributed systems, and how Aeron uses Raft for clustering in the upcoming release. Martin is a Java Champion with over 2 decades of experience building complex and high-performance computing systems. He is most recently known for his work on Aeron and Simple Binary Encoding (SBE). Previously at LMAX he was the co-founder and CTO when he created the Disruptor. * Aeron is a messaging system designed for modern multi-core hardware. It is highly performant wi...

May 07, 201834 min

Building a Data Science Capability with Stephanie Yee, Matei Zaharia, Sid Anand and Soups Ranjan

In this podcast, recorded live at QCon.ai, Principal Technical Advisor & QCon Chair Wes Reisz and InfoQ Editor-in-chief Charles Humble chair a panel discussion with Stephanie Yee, data scientist at StitchFix, Matei Zaharia, professor of computer science at Stanford and chief scientist at Data Bricks, Sid Anand, chief data engineer at PayPal, and Soups Ranjan, director of data science at CoinBase. Why listen to this podcast: - Before you start putting a data science team together make sure yo...

Apr 27, 201843 min

Streaming: Danny Yuan on Real-Time, Time Series Forecasting @Uber

On this week’s podcast, Danny Yuan, Uber’s Real-time Streaming/Forecasting Lead, lays out a thorough recipe book for building a real-time streaming platform with a major focus on forecasting. In this podcast, Danny discusses everything from the scale Uber operates at to what the major steps for training/deploy models in an iterative (almost Darwinistic) fashion and wraps with his advice for software engineers who want to begin applying machine learning into their day-to-day job. Why listen to th...

Mar 31, 201827 min

Sander Mak on the Java Module System

Sander Mak and Wes Reisz discuss the Java module system and how adoption is going. Topics discussed on this podcast include Java modularity steps / migrations, green field projects, some of the concerns that caused the EC to initially vote no on Java 9, and a new tool for building custom JREs called JLink. Additionally, as Java 10 was recently released a short bit at the end was added to discuss some of the latest news with Java. Why listen to this podcast: • People quickly moved to Java 8 becau...

Mar 23, 201836 min

Jendrik Joerdening and Anthony Navarro on Self-Racing Cars Using Deep Neural Networks

Jendrik Joerdening and Anthony Navarro describe how a team of 18 Udacity students entered a self-racing car event They had very limited experience of building autonomous control systems for vehicles and had just 6 weeks to do it with only 2 days with the physical car. They describe the architecture, how they co-ordinated a very diverse team, and how they trained the models. Why listen to this podcast: - Last year a team of 18 Udacity Self-Driving Cars students competed at the 2017 Self Racing Ca...

Mar 16, 201838 min

Andrea Magnorsky on Paradigm Shifts and the Adoption of Programming Languages

On this podcast, we talk with Andrea Magnorsky, who is a tech lead at Goodlord on their engineering squads; she has a background in Scala, C#, and organised conferences. Today we’ll be talking about paradigm shifts. Why listen to this podcast: * A programming paradigm has a loose definition. It’s just about finding a way of doing things. * There are a number of different ways to think about problems - and different paradigms do this in different ways. * To shift paradigms, you have to un-learn s...

Mar 03, 201832 min

Anne Currie on Organizational Tech Ethics, including Scale, GDPR, Algorithmic Transparency

On this podcast, Anne Currie joins the tech ethics discussion started on the Theo Schlossnagle podcast from a few weeks ago. Wes Reisz and Anne discuss issues such as the implications (and responsibilities) of the massive amount of scale we have at our fingertips today, potential effects of GDPR (EU privacy legislation), how accessibility is a an example of how we could approach tech ethics in software, and much more. Why listen to this podcast: - Ethics in software today is particularly importa...

Feb 23, 201832 min

Oliver Gould on Service Mesh for Microservices, LinkerD, and the Recently Released Conduit

This week on The InfoQ Podcast Wes Reisz talks with the CTO of Bouyant Oliver Gould. Bouyant is the maker the LinkerD Service Mesh and the recently released Conduit. In the podcast, Oliver defines a service mesh, clarifies the meaning of the data and control plane, discusses what a Service Mesh can offer a Microservice application owners, and, finally, discusses some of the considerations they took into account developing Conduit. Why listen to this podcast: - Service mesh is dedicated infrastru...

Feb 09, 201833 min

Theo Schlossnagle on Software Ethics and the Presence of Doing Good

This week's podcast features a chat with Theo Scholossnagle. Theo is the CEO of Circonus and co-chairs the ACM Queue. In this podcast, Theo and Wes Reisz chat about the need for ethical software, and how we as technical leaders should be reasoning about the software we create. Theo says, "it's not about the absence of evil, it's about the presence of good." He challenges us to develop rigor around ethical decisions we make in software just as we do for areas like security. With the incredible im...

Feb 02, 201825 min

Chris Swan on DevOps and NoOps, plus Operations and Code Validation in a Serverless Environment

On this week’s podcast, Wes Reisz talks with Chris Swan. Chris is the CTO for the global delivery organisation at DXC Technology. Chris is well versed in DevOps, Infrastructure, Culture, and what it means to put all these together. Today’s topics include both DevOps and NoOps, and what Chris calls LessOps, what Operations means in a world of Serverless, where he sees Configuration Management, Provisioning, Monitoring and Logging heading. The podcast then wraps talking about where he sees validat...

Jan 19, 201835 min

Architecting a Modern Financial Institution with Vitor Olivier, Thoughts on Immutability, CI/CD, FP

This week’s podcast features a chat with Vitor Olivier. Vitor is a partner at NuBank (a technology-centric bank in Brazil). This podcast hits on topics from several of Nubank’s recent QCon talks and includes things like: Nubank’s stack, functional programming, event sourcing, defining service boundaries, recommendations on reasoning about services, tips (or tweaks) on the second iteration of their initial architecture and more. Why listen to this podcast: - Property-based testing and Schemas (or...

Jan 12, 201838 min

Charles Humble and Wes Reisz Take a Look Back at 2017 and Speculate on What 2018 Might Have in Store

In this podcast Charles Humble and Wes Reisz talk about Java 9 and beyond, Kotlin, .NET Core 2, the surge in interest in organisational culture, quantum computing and more. Why listen to this podcast: - Java had a big year with Java 9 shipping, Java EE going open-source and moving to Eclipse as EE4J, and IBM open-sprucing J9. From next year the platform will also be on a bi-annual release cycle with the next two versions (expected to be Java 10 and 11) both shipping during 2018. - Kotlin joined ...

Dec 29, 201729 min

Kolton Andrus on Gremlin’s Newly Announced SaaS Chaos Engineering Product and Running Game Days

Gremlin is a Software as a Service that lets you plan, control and undo Chaos engineering experiments built by engineers with experience from Netflix, AWS, Dropbox and others. In this podcast Wes talks to Kolton Andrus about the Gremlin product and architecture and related topics such as running Game Days. You can also subscribe to the InfoQ newsletter to receive weekly updates on the hottest topics from professional software development. bit.ly/24x3IVq Subscribe: www.youtube.com/infoq Like Info...

Dec 22, 201734 min

Fast Data with Dean Wampler

In this podcast, Deam Wampler discusses fast data, streaming, microservices, and the paradox of choice when it comes to the options available today building data pipelines. Why listen to this podcast: * Apache Beam is fast becoming the de-facto standard API for stream processing * Spark is great for batch processing, but Flink is tackling the low-latency streaming processing market * Avoid running blocking REST calls from within a stream processing system - have them asynchronously launched and ...

Dec 08, 201730 min

Changhoon Kim on Programmable Networking Switches with PISA and the P4 DSL

In this podcast, Werner Schuster talks to Changhoon Kim, who is a Director of System Architecture at Barefoot Networks, and is actively working for the P4 language consortium. They talk about the new PISA (protocol independence switch architecture) which promises multi-terabit switching, and P4, a domain-specific programming language designed for networking. You can subscribe to the InfoQ newsletter to receive weekly updates on the hottest topics from professional software development. bit.ly/24...

Nov 27, 201730 min

Apache Beam Founder Tyler Akidau Discusses Streaming System and Their Complexities

In this podcast, we are talking to Tyler Akidau, a senior engineer at Google, who leads the technical infrastructure and data processing teams in Seattle, and a founding member of the Apache Beam PMC and a passionate voice in the streaming space. This podcast will cover data streaming and the 2015 DataFlow Model streaming paper [http://www.vldb.org/pvldb/vol8/p1792-Akidau.pdf] and much of the concepts covered, such as why dealing with out-of-order data is important, event time versus processing ...

Nov 09, 201745 min

Guy Podjarny on OSS Security, Serverless, and the Equifax Hack

In this podcast, Wes talks to Guy Podjarny (Founder/CEO Synk). The two discuss the space between open source software and third-party dependencies, including a discussion of the Equifax hack (and what we can learn from it), the role of serverless architectures today (and what it means to application surface area), and then finally they wrap with security hygiene best practices with OSS and serverless. Why listen to this podcast: - The majority of security vulnerabilities that exist in applicatio...

Oct 30, 201746 min

Julien Viet on the Newly Released Eclipse Vert.x 3.5.0 and Plans for Vert.x 4.0

In this podcast, QCon Chair Wesley Reisz talks to Julien Viet. Viet is the project lead for Vert.x and a principal engineer at RedHat having taken over as project lead for Vert.x from Tim Fox in January 2016. They talk about the newly released Vert.x 3.5.0, and the plans for Vert.x 4.0. Why listen to this podcast: * Vert.x adds RxJava2 support for streams and backpressure. * Vert.x is a polyglot set of APIs, custom aligned for the specific language. * It is unopinionated and can be used with any...

Oct 23, 201730 min

Incident Response Across Non-Software Industries with Emil Stolarsky

What can software learn from industries like aerospace, transportation, or even retail during national disasters? This week’s podcast is with Emil Stolarsky and was recorded live after his talk on the subject at Strangeloop 2017. Interesting points from the podcast include several stories from Emil’s research, including the origin of the checklist, how Walmart pushed decision making down to the store level in a national disaster, and where the formalized conversation structure onboard aircraft o...

Oct 15, 201723 min

Charity Majors on Honeycomb.io, the Social Side of Debugging and Testing in Production

In this podcast, recorded live at Strange Loop 2017, Wes talks to Charity, cofounder and CEO of honeycomb.io. They discuss the social side of debugging and her Strange Loop talk “Observability for Emerging Infra: What got you Here Won't get you There”. Other topics include advice for testing in production, shadowing and splitting traffic, and sampling and aggregation. Why listen to this podcast: - Statistical sampling allows for collecting more detailed information while storing less data, and c...

Oct 07, 201735 min

Nora Jones on Establishing, Growing, and Maturing a Chaos Engineering Practice

Nora Jones, a senior software engineer on Netflix’ Chaos Team, talks with Wesley Reisz about what Chaos Engineering means today. She covers what it takes to build a practice, how to establish a strategy, defines cost of impact, and covers key technical considerations when leveraging chaos engineering. Why listen to this podcast: - Chaos engineering is a discipline where you formulate hypotheses, perform experiments, and evaluate the results afterwards. - Injecting a bit of failure over time is g...

Oct 01, 201743 min

Shubha Nabar Discusses Einstein, the Machine Learning System in Salesforce

Shubha Nabar is a senior director of data science for Salesforce Einstein. Prior to working for Salesforce, she was a data scientist at LinkedIn and Microsoft. In the podcast she discusses Salesforce Einstein and the problem space that they are trying to solve, explores the differences between enterprise and consumer for machine learning, and then talks about the Optimus Prime Scala library that they use in Salesforce. Why listen to this podcast: * The volume of data, and hardware advances have ...

Sep 29, 201726 min

Simon Brown on the Role of the Software Architect in a Continuous Delivery Environment

This week's podcast features Simon Brown well known for his work training software architects. Topics include the differences between a tech lead and an architect, how much documentation is enough and what that looks like in a continuous delivery environment. What you'll learn on this podcast: • As an industry we seem to have lost our knowledge of how to do architecture well in the context of modern agile software teams. • Architecture is about the expensive decisions; things that are costly to ...

Sep 23, 201729 min
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