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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.

Episodes

Neha Batra - Pivotal Labs Pair Programming

In this week’s podcast Wes Reisz talks to Neha Batra, a software engineer at Pivotal Labs. Neha spoke about pair programming in her recent QCon San Francisco 2016 presentation, and has taken time to discuss techniques to get started with the practice as well as tips for implementing it on your team. Neha also touches on vulnerability based trust and how it can help effectively build a trusting team environment. Why listen to this podcast: - If you successfully start with pair programming, other ...

Jan 06, 201729 min

Oliver Gould About Architecting to Avoid and Recover from Failure

In this week’s podcast, Robert Blumen talks to Oliver Gould at QCon San Francsico 2016. Oliver is the CTO of Buoyant where he leads open source development efforts. Prior to Buoyant he was a Staff Infrastructure Engineer at Twitter where he was technical lead on Observability, Traffic, Configuration and Co-ordination teams. Why listen to this podcast: - Stratification allows applications to own their logic while libraries take care of the different mechanisms, such as service discovery and load ...

Dec 30, 201633 min

Chris Richardson on Domain-Driven Microservices Design

In this week’s podcast, Thomas Betts talks with Chris Richardson, a developer, architect, Java Champion and author of POJOs in Action. Before his workshop on Microservices w/ Spring Boot and Docker at QCon San Francisco 2016, Richardson took time to discuss his ideas on how to use DDD and CQRS concepts as a guide for implementing a robust microservices architecture. Why listen to this podcast: - "Microservice architecture" is a better term than "microservices". The latter suggests that a single ...

Dec 23, 201625 min

Keith Adams on the Architecture of Slack, using MySql, Edge Caching, & the backend Messaging Server

In this week’s podcast, QCon chair Wesley Reisz talks to Keith Adams, chief architect at Slack. Prior he was an engineer at Facebook where he worked on the search type live backend, and is well-known for the HipHop VM [hhvm.com]. Adams presented How Slack Works at QCon SanFrancisco 2016. Why listen to this podcast: - Group messaging succeeds when it feels like a place for members to gather, rather than just a tool - Having opt-in group membership scales better than having to define a group on th...

Dec 16, 201636 min

Haley Tucker on Responding to Failures in Playback Features at Netflix

In this week’s podcast, Thomas Betts talks with Haley Tucker, a Senior Software Engineer on the Playback Features team at Netflix. While at QCon San Francisco 2016, Tucker told some production war stories about trying to deliver content to 65 million members. Why listen to this podcast: - Distributed systems fail regularly, often due to unexpected reasons - Data canaries can identify invalid metadata before it can enter and corrupt the production environment - ChAP, the Chaos Automation Platform...

Dec 09, 201625 min

Kolton Andrus on Lessons Learnt From Failure Testing at Amazon and Netflix and New Venture Gremlin

In this week's podcast, QCon chair Wesley Reisz talks to Kolton Andrus. Andrus is the founder of Gremlin Inc. He was a Chaos Engineer at Netflix, focused on the resilience of the Edge services. He designed and built FIT: Netflix’s failure injection service. Prior, he improved the performance and reliability of the Amazon Retail website. Why listen to this podcast: - Gremlin, Kolton Andrus' new start-up, is focused on providing failure testing as a service. Version 1, currently in closed beta, is...

Dec 02, 201629 min

Preslav Le on How Dropbox Moved off AWS and What They Have Been Able to Do Since

As InfoQ previously reported in March 2016, Dropbox announced that they had migrated away from Amazon Web Services (AWS). In this week's podcast Robert Bluman talks to Preslav Le. Preslav has been a software engineer at Dropbox for the past three years, contributing to various aspects of Dropbox’s infrastructure including traffic, performance and storage. He was part of the core oncall and storage oncall rotations, dealing with high emergency real world issues, from bad code pushes to complete d...

Nov 18, 201626 min

Randy Shoup on Stitch Fix's Technology Stack, Data Science and Microservices

In this week's podcast QCon chair Wesley Reisz talks to Randy Shoup. Shoup is the vice president of engineering at Stitch Fix. Prior to Stitch Fix, he worked for Google as the director of engineering and cloud computing, CTO and co-founder of Shopilly, and chief engineer at Ebay. Why listen to this podcast: - Stitch Fix's business is a combination of art and science. Humans are much better with the machines, and the machines are much better with the humans. - Stitch Fix has 60 engineers, with 80...

Nov 11, 201626 min

Tal Weiss on Observability, Instrumentation and Bytecode Manipulation on the JVM

In this week's podcast, QCon chair Wesley Reisz talks to Tal Weiss, CEO of OverOps, recently re-branded from Takipi. The conversation covers how the OverOps product works, explores the difference between instrumentation and observability, discusses bytecode manipulation approaches and common errors in Java based applications. A keen blogger, Weiss has been designing scalable, real-time Java and C++ applications for the past 15 years. He was co-founder and CEO at VisualTao which was acquired by A...

Nov 04, 201629 min

Cathy O'Neil on Pernicious Machine Learning Algorithms and How to Audit Them

In this week's podcast InfoQ’s editor-in-chief Charles Humble talks to Data Scientist Cathy O’Neil. O'Neil is the author of the blog mathbabe.org. She was the former Director of the Lede Program in Data Practices at Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism, Tow Center and was employed as Data Science Consultant at Johnson Research Labs. O'Neil earned a mathematics Ph.D. from Harvard University. Topics discussed include her book “Weapons of Math Destruction,” predictive policing models, ...

Sep 16, 201632 min

John Langford on Vowpal Wabbit, Used by MSN, and Machine Learning in Industry

In this week's podcast QCon chair Wesley Reisz talks to Machine learning research scientist John Langford. Topics include his Machine Learning system Vowpal Wabbit, designed to be very efficient and incorporating some of the latest algorithms in the space. Vowpal Wabbit is used for news personalisation on MSN. They also discuss how to get started in the field and it’s shift from academic research to industry use. Why listen to this podcast: - Vowpal Wabbit is a ML system that attempts to incorpo...

Aug 19, 201624 min

Shuman Ghosemajumder on Security and Cyber-Crime

In this week's podcast, professor Barry Burd talks to Shuman Ghosemajumder. Ghosemajumder is VP of product management at Shape Security and former click fraud czar for Google. Ghosemajumder is also the co-author of the book CGI Programming Unleashed, and was a keynote speaker at QCon New York 2016 presenting Security War Stories. Why listen to this podcast: With more of our lives conducted online through technology and information retrieval systems, the use of advanced technology gives criminals...

Aug 01, 201643 min

Caitie McCaffrey on Engineering Effectiveness, Diversity, & Verification of Distributed Systems

In this week's podcast, QCon chair Wes Reisz and Werner Schuster talk to Caitie McCaffrey. McCaffrey works on distributed systems with the engineering effectiveness team at Twitter, and has experience building the large scale services and systems that power the entertainment industry at 343 Industries, Microsoft Game Studios, and HBO. McCaffrey's presentation at QCon New York was called The Verification of a Distributed System. Why listen to this podcast: - Twitter's engineering effectiveness te...

Jul 22, 201633 min

Wendy Closson on Mindfulness and Algorithmic Approaches to Communicating

In this week's podcast, Barry Burd talks with Wendy Closson. With over a decade of experience immersed in development and championing agile practices, Closson coaches technology leaders to manage effectively, respond reasonably, and navigate the choppy waters of business. Closson's presentation at QCon New York was entitled Syntactic Sugar for English: Pragmatic Eloquence. Why listen to this podcast: - Software is a very abstract experience, so it can be difficult to communicate ideas about soft...

Jul 12, 201636 min

Courtney Hemphill on VR, Augmented Reality, and the Importance of Animation in UX

In this week's podcast, Barry Bird talks to Courtney Hemphill, a partner and tech lead at Carbon Five. With over ten years of experience in software development, Hemphill has done full stack development for both startup and enterprise companies. Hemphill's presentation at QCon New York was entitled Algorithms for Animation. Why listen to this podcast: - Why developers in startups or enterprise firms should care about creating animations - The interfaces we interact with in software are becoming ...

Jul 01, 201639 min

James Shore, Llewellyn Falco, and Rebecca Wirfs-Brock on TDD and Architecture

In this week's podcast Richard Seroter talks to James Shore, author of The Art of Agile Development and one of the original signatories of the Agile Manifesto. Also on the podcast are Llewellyn Falco, creator of the open source testing tool ApprovalTests and co-founder of Teaching Kids Programming, and Rebecca Wirfs-Brock, inventor of Responsibility-Driven Design, as well as the author of books including Designing Object: Oriented Software and Object Design: Roles, Responsibilities and Collabora...

Jun 03, 201630 min

Lisa Crispin and Justin Searls on Testing and Innovation in Front End Technology

In this week's podcast Richard Seroter talks to Lisa Crispin who works on the tracker team at Pivotal Labs, and is an organiser of the Agile Alliance Technical Conference. Lisa is the co-author of several books on Agile Testing, and is also the 2012 recipient of the Agile Testing Days award for Most Influential Agile Testing Professional Person. Richard also talks to Justin Searls, software craftsman, presenter of "How to Stop Hating Your Tests" and co-founder of Test Double, a company whose goa...

May 27, 201629 min

GILT VP Heather Fleming on Unlocking the "Secret Sauce" of Great Teams

In this week's podcast QCon chair Wesley Reisz talks to Heather Fleming, who is the VP of product and program management at GILT, where she is responsible for not only the customer-facing website, but also back office things from distribution to order processing. Why listen to this podcast: - GILT treats every person as an individual, with a skillset that is outside their responsibilities. - You should be able to be your authentic self wherever you are. - Google found creating a psychologically ...

May 20, 201616 min

Uber's Chief Systems Architect on their Architecture and Rapid Growth

In this week's podcast QCon chair Wesley Reisz talks to Matt Ranney who is the Chief Systems Architect at Uber, where he's helping build and scale everything he can. Why listen to this podcast: - Expanding a company and team at this rate is genuinely hard. Lots of mistakes have been made along the way. - Microservices allow companies to grow rapidly but have a cost in terms of aggregate velocity. - Uber is gradually moving its marketplace development from Node.js to Go and Java. Java is used for...

May 13, 201631 min

Mads Torgersen on C# 7 and Beyond

Summary: In this week's podcast QCon chair Wesley Reisz talks to Mads Torgersen who leads the C# language design process at Microsoft, where he has been involved in five versions of C#, and also contributed to TypeScript, Visual Basic, Roslyn and LINQ. Before he joined Microsoft a decade ago, he worked as a university professor in Aarhus, Denmark, doing research into programming language design and contributing to Java generics. Why listen to this podcast • The overall theme for C# 7 will be fea...

Apr 27, 201620 min

Adrian Cockcroft on Microservices, Terraservices and Serverless Computing

Summary: For our inaugural podcast QCon chair Wesley Reisz talks to Adrian Cockcroft, who works for Battery Ventures where he advises the firm and its portfolio companies about technology issues and also assists with deal sourcing and due diligence. Why listen to this podcast • Over the last year a large number of frameworks and libraries for building microservices have emerged and we're seeing a lot of rapid change. • The stack you choose will often be based on the main language you use, so for...

Apr 18, 201630 min
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