Player FM - Internet Radio Done Right
Checked 17d ago
اضافه شده در four سال پیش
محتوای ارائه شده توسط Modern Web. تمام محتوای پادکست شامل قسمتها، گرافیکها و توضیحات پادکست مستقیماً توسط Modern Web یا شریک پلتفرم پادکست آنها آپلود و ارائه میشوند. اگر فکر میکنید شخصی بدون اجازه شما از اثر دارای حق نسخهبرداری شما استفاده میکند، میتوانید روندی که در اینجا شرح داده شده است را دنبال کنید.https://fa.player.fm/legal
Player FM - برنامه پادکست
با برنامه Player FM !
با برنامه Player FM !
پادکست هایی که ارزش شنیدن دارند
حمایت شده
What makes some people supercommunicators? How can you become one too? This is the central lesson in Charles Duhigg’s bestseller Supercommunicators: How to Unlock the Secret of Communication. Charles and Chris dissect what makes messy conversations so great, how to ask deep questions, and whether women and men communicate differently. They also discuss the different rules for different technologies — from telephones to Facebook to Signal — and how cautious politeness may be the best method to communicate effectively online. Follow Host: Chris Duffy (Instagram: @ chrisiduffy | chrisduffycomedy.com ) Guest: Charles Duhigg (Instagram: @charlesduhigg | LinkedIn: @charlesduhigg | Website: https://charlesduhigg.com/ ) Links Supercommunicators: How to Unlock the Secret Language of Connection The Power of Habit: Why We Do What We Do in Life and Business Subscribe to TED Instagram: @ted YouTube: @TED TikTok: @tedtoks LinkedIn: @ted-conferences Website: ted.com Podcasts: ted.com/podcasts For the full text transcript, visit go.ted.com/BHTranscripts Interested in learning more about upcoming TED events? Follow these links: TEDNext: ted.com/futureyou Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.…
S09E05 Modern Web Podcast - The State of Angular with Mark Thompson
Manage episode 320142168 series 2927306
محتوای ارائه شده توسط Modern Web. تمام محتوای پادکست شامل قسمتها، گرافیکها و توضیحات پادکست مستقیماً توسط Modern Web یا شریک پلتفرم پادکست آنها آپلود و ارائه میشوند. اگر فکر میکنید شخصی بدون اجازه شما از اثر دارای حق نسخهبرداری شما استفاده میکند، میتوانید روندی که در اینجا شرح داده شده است را دنبال کنید.https://fa.player.fm/legal
In this episode, Rob Ocel discusses the present state and future goals of the Angular ecosystem with Mark Thompson, Developer Relations Engineer at Google, and Angular Core Team member. They talk about Angular’s most recent accomplishments, like the advancements afforded by Angular v12, and how the Angular team responds to RFCs and other forms of community feedback. Mark also explains how the community should interpret roadmaps, and the spectrum of stages at which an in-development project might be, and how developers and non-developers can contribute to the ecosystem. Rob and Mark also talk about the relationship between third-party solutions and the Angular team’s attitude toward potentially rolling these solutions into the core framework. Guest: Mark Thompson (@marktechson) - Developer Relations Engineer, Google Host: Rob Ocel (@robocell) - Architect, This Dot Labs This episode is sponsored by HARMAN & This Dot Labs.
…
continue reading
173 قسمت
Manage episode 320142168 series 2927306
محتوای ارائه شده توسط Modern Web. تمام محتوای پادکست شامل قسمتها، گرافیکها و توضیحات پادکست مستقیماً توسط Modern Web یا شریک پلتفرم پادکست آنها آپلود و ارائه میشوند. اگر فکر میکنید شخصی بدون اجازه شما از اثر دارای حق نسخهبرداری شما استفاده میکند، میتوانید روندی که در اینجا شرح داده شده است را دنبال کنید.https://fa.player.fm/legal
In this episode, Rob Ocel discusses the present state and future goals of the Angular ecosystem with Mark Thompson, Developer Relations Engineer at Google, and Angular Core Team member. They talk about Angular’s most recent accomplishments, like the advancements afforded by Angular v12, and how the Angular team responds to RFCs and other forms of community feedback. Mark also explains how the community should interpret roadmaps, and the spectrum of stages at which an in-development project might be, and how developers and non-developers can contribute to the ecosystem. Rob and Mark also talk about the relationship between third-party solutions and the Angular team’s attitude toward potentially rolling these solutions into the core framework. Guest: Mark Thompson (@marktechson) - Developer Relations Engineer, Google Host: Rob Ocel (@robocell) - Architect, This Dot Labs This episode is sponsored by HARMAN & This Dot Labs.
…
continue reading
173 قسمت
همه قسمت ها
×Rob Ocel and Danny Thompson go deep on intentionality, the developer “superpower” that can speed up your growth, sharpen your judgment, and keep you from getting automated away in the AI era. Rob unpacks a simple loop (state intent → act → measure → review) with real stories, including the ticket he challenged on day one that saved a team six figures, and the “it seems to work” anti-pattern that shipped a mystery bug. Together they show how being deliberate before you write a line of code changes everything: scoping tickets, estimating work, documenting decisions, reviewing PRs, and speaking up, even as a junior.What you’ll learn: • The intentionality loop: how to set a hypothesis, capture outcomes, and improve fast • The exact moment to ask “Should we even do this ticket?” and how to push back safely • Why code is the last step: design notes, edge cases, and review context first • Estimation that actually works: start naive, compare to actuals, iterate to ±10% • How to avoid DRY misuse, “tragedy of the commons” code reviews, and stealth tech debt • Where to keep your working notes (GitHub, Notion, SharePoint) so reviewers can follow your logic • How juniors can question assumptions without blocking the room or their careerRob Ocel on Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/robocel/ Danny Thompson on Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/dthompsondev/ This Dot Labs Twitter: https://x.com/ThisDotLabs This Dot Media Twitter: https://x.com/ThisDotMediaThis Dot Labs Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/thisdotlabs/This Dot Labs Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/thisdot/This Dot Labs Bluesky: https://bsky.app/profile/thisdotlabs.bsky.social Sponsored by This Dot Labs: https://ai.thisdot.co/…
On this episode of the Modern Web Podcast, hosts Rob Ocel and Danny Thompson welcome Miles Ward, CTO of SADA, for an in-depth conversation about the intersection of cloud computing and AI. Miles shares his career journey from early days at AWS and Google Cloud to leading SADA through its acquisition by Insight, offering a rare perspective on the evolution of solutions architecture and cloud adoption at scale.The discussion covers the realities of cloud “repatriation,” why GPUs have shifted some workloads back on-prem or to niche “neo-cloud” providers, and how cloud infrastructure remains the backbone of most AI initiatives. Miles breaks down practical concerns for organizations, from token pricing and GPU costs to scaling AI features without blowing budgets. He also highlights how AI adoption exposes weak organizational habits, why good data and strong processes matter more than hype, and how developers should view AI as intelligence augmentation rather than replacement.Key Takeaways:- Miles Ward, former early AWS Solutions Architect, founder of the SA practice at Google Cloud, and now CTO at SADA (acquired by Insight), brings a deep history in scaling infrastructure and AI workloads.- Cloud repatriation is rare. The main exception is GPUs, where companies may rent from “neo-clouds” like CoreWeave, Crusoe, or Lambda, or occasionally use on-prem for cost and latency reasons, though data-center power constraints make this difficult.- Cloud remains essential for AI. Successful initiatives depend on cloud primitives like data, orchestration, security, and DevOps. Google’s integrated stack (custom hardware, platforms, and models) streamlines development. The best practice is to build in cloud first, then optimize or shift GPU inference later if needed.- Costs and readiness are critical. Organizations should measure AI by business outcomes rather than lines of code. Token spending needs calculators, guardrails, and model routing strategies. On-prem comes with hidden costs such as power, networking, and staffing. The real bottleneck for most companies is poor data and weak processes, not model quality.Miles Ward on Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/rishabkumar7/ Rob Ocel on Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/robocel/ Danny Thompson on Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/dthompsondev/ This Dot Labs Twitter: https://x.com/ThisDotLabs This Dot Media Twitter: https://x.com/ThisDotMedia This Dot Labs Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/thisdotlabs/ This Dot Labs Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/thisdot/ This Dot Labs Bluesky: https://bsky.app/profile/thisdotlabs.bsky.social Sponsored by This Dot Labs: https://ai.thisdot.co/…
In this Modern Web Podcast, Rob Ocel and Danny Thompson break down the recent string of NPM supply chain attacks that have shaken the JavaScript ecosystem. They cover the NX compromise, the phishing campaign that hit libraries like Chalk, and the Shy Halood exploit, showing how small changes in dependencies can have massive effects. Along the way, they share practical defenses like using package lock and npm ci, avoiding phishing links, reviewing third party code, applying least privilege, staging deployments, and maintaining incident response plans. They also highlight vendor interventions such as Vercel blocking malicious deployments and stress why companies must support open source maintainers if the ecosystem is to remain secure. Key Points from this Episode: - Lock down installs. Pin versions, commit package-lock.json, use npm ci in CI, and disable scripts in CI (npm config set ignore-scripts true) to neutralize post-install attacks. - Harden people & permissions. Phishing hygiene (never click-through emails), 2FA/hardware keys, least-privilege by default, and separate/purpose-scoped publishing accounts. - Stage & detect early. Canary/staged deploys, feature flags, and tight observability to catch dependency drift, suspicious network egress, or monkey-patched APIs fast. - Practice incident response. Two-hour containment target: revoke/rotate tokens, reimage affected machines, roll back artifacts, notify vendors, and run a post-mortem playbook. Rob Ocel on Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/robocel/ Danny Thompson on Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/dthompsondev/ This Dot Labs Twitter: https://x.com/ThisDotLabs This Dot Media Twitter: https://x.com/ThisDotMedia This Dot Labs Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/thisdotlabs/ This Dot Labs Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/thisdot/ This Dot Labs Bluesky: https://bsky.app/profile/thisdotlabs.bsky.social Sponsored by This Dot Labs: https://ai.thisdot.co/…
In this episode of the Modern Web Podcast, Rob Ocel and Danny Thompson talk with Wes Eklund from AWS ProServe about interviews, practical AI, and the future of developer workflows. Wes shares what trips candidates up in coding and behavioral rounds, how to ask better questions, and why prepping multiple honest STAR narratives matters. Danny introduces the Thrive Framework for behavioral interviews and Rob underscores the discipline required to stand out in a crowded market. The trio then digs into 100 Days of Code in the AI era, smart ways juniors can learn with AI, and how Wes’s team uses MCP servers and Amazon Q to speed design, onboarding, and day-to-day delivery. They cover the lull in MCP hype, real security concerns, the “80 percent is a win” mindset when AI accelerates work, and when it actually makes sense to build agents. They close on thin, purpose-built agents, enterprise adoption patterns, and why frameworks like DSPy could reshape moats and costs. Key Takeaways from this episode: - Wes explains how candidates often fail because they neglect behavioral prep, and Danny introduces the Thrive Framework as a system to stand out. - The group debates whether juniors should use AI. Wes frames it as a tool for strategy and reflection, not a shortcut, while Danny emphasizes using it to deepen knowledge and accountability. - Wes shares how his AWS team leverages MCP servers and Amazon Q to speed design, boost onboarding, and solve problems faster, while Danny highlights enterprise-level use cases like multilingual documentation. - They discuss whether developers should build agents, the risks of security gaps, and how frameworks like DSPy could make optimized, lightweight agents a new competitive edge. Chapters 0:00 MCP servers: security reality check 0:33 Modern Web Podcast intro 0:55 Guest: Wes Ecklan (AWS ProServe) 2:02 Job hunt & interview mistakes 5:05 Danny’s THRIVE framework 7:39 Researching values & STAR stories 11:12 Sponsor + quality & discipline in applications 13:04 100 Days of Code in the AI era 18:03 Using AI at work (MCP + Amazon Q) 23:13 Hackathons & making time to innovate 25:06 MCPs in practice: adoption & security 36:00 Agents: when they help vs. hype — close & links Wes Eklund on Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/weseklund/ Rob Ocel on Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/robocel/ Danny Thompson on Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/dthompsondev/ This Dot Labs Twitter: https://x.com/ThisDotLabs This Dot Media Twitter: https://x.com/ThisDotMedia This Dot Labs Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/thisdotlabs/ This Dot Labs Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/thisdot/ This Dot Labs Bluesky: https://bsky.app/profile/thisdotlabs.bsky.social Sponsored by This Dot Labs: https://ai.thisdot.co/…
M
Modern Web
1 Every AI Cloud-Native Expert Starts with Kubernetes | API Gateways vs Service Mesh Explained 36:07
Danny Thompson sits down with Marino Wijay, Staff Solutions Architect at Kong and CNCF Ambassador, for a wide-ranging conversation on modern cloud-native development. They start with Kubernetes as the entry point into the ecosystem and explore what it really means to be a CNCF ambassador. Marino explains the difference between an API gateway and a service mesh, when small teams should adopt each, and why managed services often make more sense than running infrastructure yourself.The discussion then shifts to reliability and observability, with a focus on automation, pipelines, and creating a seamless developer experience. Finally, Marino shares lessons from working with enterprises rolling out AI, covering vector caching, cost optimization, latency concerns, and the importance of data governance when dealing with LLM traffic. It’s an episode full of practical advice for builders navigating the realities of APIs, microservices, and AI in production today.Key points from this episode:- Kubernetes remains the entry point into the cloud-native ecosystem, giving teams the foundation to operationalize applications and join the CNCF community.- Marino breaks down the distinction between an API gateway and a service mesh, showing how a gateway like Kong secures APIs at the edge while a mesh like Kuma manages traffic, authentication, and encryption between services.- For smaller teams, the smartest path is to rely on managed services and an API gateway, introducing a service mesh only when scale and complexity demand it.- As organizations adopt AI, Marino highlights how vector caching, governance policies, and PII sanitization help control costs, cut latency, and protect sensitive data when working with LLMs.Marino Wijay on Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/mwijay/ Rob Ocel on Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/robocel/ Danny Thompson on Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/dthompsondev/ This Dot Labs Twitter: https://x.com/ThisDotLabs This Dot Media Twitter: https://x.com/ThisDotMedia This Dot Labs Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/thisdotlabs/ This Dot Labs Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/thisdot/ This Dot Labs Bluesky: https://bsky.app/profile/thisdotlabs.bsky.social Sponsored by This Dot Labs: https://ai.thisdot.co/…
Rob Ocel and Danny Thompson sit down with Andy Bell to treat CSS as a craft, not a chore. Andy explains why he mentors the browser instead of micromanaging it, how progressive enhancement keeps products resilient, and which modern features deserve attention right now, including has, anchor positioning, and clamp. The conversation gets practical on grid versus flexbox, why grid is often simpler than people think, and how ecosystems and tooling skew usage. They unpack the real reasons Tailwind spread across teams, where it helps with speed and onboarding, and why core CSS skills plus a clear methodology prevent long-term debt. Expect candid consultancy stories, smarter debugging with today’s devtools, and a reminder that play, standards knowledge, and strong communication habits lead to cleaner, more maintainable front ends.Key Takeaways:- Andy Bell stresses mentoring the browser instead of micromanaging it, leaning on progressive enhancement and letting it adapt to context.- Features like :has(), anchor positioning, and clamp are changing how developers approach layouts, interactions, and responsive design.- Despite its power, Grid hasn’t caught on like flexbox, partly due to ecosystem and tooling choices. Andy suggests learning grid first for a clearer foundation.- Tailwind solves organizational and onboarding challenges, but without solid CSS fundamentals and consistent methodologies, teams risk piling up technical debt. Andy Bell on Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/andy-bell-347971255/ Rob Ocel on Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/robocel/ Danny Thompson on Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/dthompsondev/ This Dot Labs Twitter: https://x.com/ThisDotLabs This Dot Media Twitter: https://x.com/ThisDotMedia This Dot Labs Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/thisdotlabs/ This Dot Labs Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/thisdot/ This Dot Labs Bluesky: https://bsky.app/profile/thisdotlabs.bsky.social Sponsored by This Dot Labs: https://ai.thisdot.co/…
In this episode of the Modern Web Podcast, Rob Ocel and Danny Thompson are joined by Rishab Kumar, Staff Developer Evangelist at Twilio, to explore the evolving landscape of voice and AI interactions. They discuss the rise of conversational AI, how voice interfaces are becoming the natural medium for human-computer interaction, and the tools and best practices for integrating AI into real-world applications. Rishab shares insights from Twilio on building voice-enabled AI experiences, tackling challenges like latency and prompt design, and how AI is shaping the future of productivity and problem-solving. The conversation also highlights community-focused events, like the upcoming Commit Your Code Conference in Dallas, where networking, learning, and giving back to charity take center stage. Key Takeaways: - Voice interfaces are becoming more natural and conversational, moving beyond simple commands to context-aware, agentic interactions that can assist with tasks in real time. - AI is being integrated into real-world use cases, from coding assistants and productivity tools to hands-on guidance for tasks like furniture assembly, car troubleshooting, and lab work. - Platforms like Twilio provide APIs, Conversation Relay, and integrations with voice models to streamline AI voice interactions, handling challenges like latency, speech-to-text, and interruption management. - There’s a growing need for specialized, reliable AI tools tailored to specific industries and tasks, as well as careful consideration of ethical implications, user trust, and contextual accuracy. Rishab Kumar on Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/rishabkumar7/ Rob Ocel on Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/robocel/ Danny Thompson on Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/dthompsondev/ This Dot Labs Twitter: https://x.com/ThisDotLabs This Dot Media Twitter: https://x.com/ThisDotMedia This Dot Labs Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/thisdotlabs/ This Dot Labs Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/thisdot/ This Dot Labs Bluesky: https://bsky.app/profile/thisdotlabs.bsky.social Sponsored by This Dot: https://ai.thisdot.co/…
In this episode, Rob Ocel and Danny Thompson enjoy a conversation with Kilian Valkhof, founder of Polypane, a browser built for developers who care deeply about their craft. The discussion explores the shifting landscape of online developer communities as conversations migrate from Twitter to Blue Sky, Mastodon, Discord, and local meetups. Kilian shares how this decentralization has shaped advocacy around accessibility, performance, and front-end principles, while Rob and Danny reflect on what developers lose and gain when there’s no longer a single central hub. They also dig into guiding principles for building quality front-end experiences, from usability and accessibility to balancing trade-offs between performance, readability, and SEO. Key points from this episode - Developers are finding their communities scattered across Blue Sky, Mastodon, Discord, and meetups, changing how ideas about accessibility and performance spread. - Practical frameworks like “rule of three” and “make it run, make it right, make it fast” give developers clearer guidance than vague advice such as “don’t repeat yourself.” - Building with craft means going beyond visual accuracy to include accessibility, usability, and small details that improve the overall user experience. - Teams need to agree on priorities so they can navigate trade-offs between things like accessibility, performance, SEO, and readability. Kilian Valkhof on Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/kilianvalkhof/ Rob Ocel on Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/robocel/ Danny Thompson on Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/dthompsondev/ This Dot Labs Twitter: https://x.com/ThisDotLabs This Dot Media Twitter: https://x.com/ThisDotMedia This Dot Labs Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/thisdotlabs/ This Dot Labs Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/thisdot/ This Dot Labs Bluesky: https://bsky.app/profile/thisdotlabs.bsky.social Sponsored by This Dot Labs: https://ai.thisdot.co/…
This episode of the Modern Web Podcast features Cody De Arkland, Head of Developer Experience at Sentry, in conversation with hosts Rob Ocel and Danny Thompson. They explore how Sentry has embraced a culture of experimentation with AI, from grassroots innovation in Slack channels to leadership setting the tone for rapid adoption. Cody shares insights into Sentry’s new AI monitoring tools, including MCP support and agent tracing, which give developers visibility into token usage, tool calls, and debugging flows. The discussion also touches on how AI is reshaping developer workflows, the balance between writing code and prompting, and why structured thinking is key to getting useful results.Keypoints from this episode:- Sentry fosters a playful, experimental environment where both grassroots initiatives and leadership drive AI adoption.- Sentry has rolled out AI monitoring with MCP support and agent tracing to give visibility into token usage, tool calls, and debugging.- AI is changing how developers approach coding, blending prompting with traditional programming.- Success with AI depends on framing problems clearly, not just relying on raw prompts.Cody De Arkland on Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/codydearkland/ Rob Ocel on Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/robocel/ Danny Thompson on Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/dthompsondev/ This Dot Labs Twitter: https://x.com/ThisDotLabs This Dot Media Twitter: https://x.com/ThisDotMedia This Dot Labs Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/thisdotlabs/ This Dot Labs Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/thisdot/ This Dot Labs Bluesky: https://bsky.app/profile/thisdotlabs.bsky.social Sponsored by This Dot Labs: https://ai.thisdot.co…
M
Modern Web
In this episode of the Modern Web Podcast, Rob Ocel and Danny Thompson talk with Philipp Krenn, Head of Developer Advocacy at Elastic, about how Elasticsearch has evolved from a search engine into a foundation for observability, security, and AI-powered systems. Philipp explains how Elastic approaches information retrieval beyond just vector search, using tools like LLMs for smarter querying, log parsing, and context-aware data access. They also discuss how Elastic balances innovation with stability through regular releases and a focus on long-term reliability. For teams building with AI, Elastic offers a way to handle search, monitoring, and logging in one platform, making it easier to ship faster without adding complexity. Key points from this episode: Elasticsearch has expanded beyond search to support observability and security by treating all of them as information retrieval problems. Elastic integrates with AI tools like LLMs to improve search relevance, automate log parsing, and enable features like query rewriting and retrieval-augmented generation. Vector search is just one feature in a larger toolkit for finding relevant data, and Elastic supports hybrid and traditional search approaches. Elastic maintains a steady release cadence with a focus on stability, making it a reliable choice for both fast-moving AI projects and long-term production systems. Philipp Krenn on Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/philippkrenn/ Rob Ocel on Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/robocel/ Danny Thompson on Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/dthompsondev/ This Dot Labs Twitter: https://x.com/ThisDotLabs This Dot Media Twitter: https://x.com/ThisDotMediaThis Dot Labs Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/thisdotlabs/ This Dot Labs Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/thisdot/ This Dot Labs Bluesky: https://bsky.app/profile/thisdotlabs.bsky.social Sponsored by This Dot Labs: ai.thisdot.co…
In this episode of the Modern Web Podcast, hosts Rob Ocel and Danny Thompson talk with Sean Roberts, Head of AX Architecture and Distinguished Engineer at Netlify, about the emerging discipline of Agentic Experience (AX). They explore how AX is reshaping how we design services for AI agents, what makes an agent experience successful, and why traditional user flows often break down in agent-driven systems. Sean discusses the role of MCPs, the challenges of discoverability, and the future of content delivery in an agent-first web. They also dig into real-world examples, like how an agent accidentally took down Netlify’s homepage, and debate whether CMSs still have a place in this new landscape. Key points from this episode- Agent experience is already part of every digital service and needs to be intentionally designed to ensure agents can interact effectively- SEO still matters but new practices like lightweight pages, structured content, and llm dot txt files help improve discoverability for agents- Systems that require human confirmation for basic actions create friction for agents and should be redesigned to allow autonomous task completion- LLMs make it possible to turn unstructured content into structured data on demand which raises questions about whether traditional CMS platforms are still necessary.Sean Roberts: https://www.linkedin.com/in/developsean/ Danny Thompson: https://www.linkedin.com/in/dthompsondev/ Rob Ocel: https://www.linkedin.com/in/robocel/ This Dot Labs Twitter: https://x.com/ThisDotLabs This Dot Media Twitter: https://x.com/ThisDotMedia This Dot Labs Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/thisdotlabs/ This Dot Labs Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/thisdot/ This Dot Labs Bluesky: https://bsky.app/profile/thisdotlabs.bsky.social Sponsored by This Dot Labs: ai.thisdot.co…
In this episode of Modern Web, Danny Thompson chats with MelkeyDev, a Machine Learning Infrastructure Engineer at Twitch, about AI’s real-world applications, developer productivity, and the future of careers in Go. They cover everything from the rise of tiny AI-driven teams competing with large enterprises to how system prompts may matter more than model choice. Melkey shares his thoughts on cost-effective LLMs, production pitfalls, and the cognitive downsides of over-relying on AI. The conversation also explores backend development with Go, what makes it great for fast-moving teams, and how new developers can get started.Keypoints from this episode:- AI’s real value lies in business use cases. Melkey emphasizes that AI isn’t just a productivity tool; it enables small teams to build faster, cheaper, and more effectively than ever before. - System prompts are underrated. When it comes to LLM performance, prompt engineering often matters more than the model itself, especially for UI generation and agent design. - Cognitive cost of AI reliance. Referencing recent research, Melkey warns that overusing AI tools can reduce your ability to retain knowledge and perform certain tasks independently.- Go remains a strong backend choice. Despite being “boring,” Go continues to power developer velocity and scalable infrastructure, making it a smart language for backend-focused engineers.Follow MelkeyDev on Twitter: https://x.com/MelkeyDev Sponsored by This Dot Labs: thisdot.co…
In this episode of the Modern Web Podcast, hosts Rob Ocel and Danny Thompson sit down with Andre Landgraf, Senior Developer Advocate at Neon (now part of Databricks), to explore the evolving role of AI agents in developer workflows. They discuss how more Neon databases are being spun up by agents than humans, what that means for developer and agent experience (DX vs AX), and how tools like MCP and step functions are enabling scalable agent orchestration. The conversation also touches on agent security concerns, real-time vs. async UX, and how developers can build resilient, human-in-the-loop AI systems today. Plus, Andre shares practical insights from building his own personal CRM agent and experimenting with tools like Cortex and Ingest.Keypoints from this episode:- Agents now outpace humans in provisioning databases on Neon, thanks to agent-friendly APIs, early MCP support, and seamless integration with platforms like Replit and v0.dev.- Developer experience (DX) principles directly inform agent experience (AX), tools designed for simplicity and clarity often translate well to agent interactions, but agents still need unique guardrails like resumability and fine-grained permissions.- Agent orchestration is the next big frontier, with tools like LangBase, Ingest, and step functions offering patterns for chaining tasks, running agents in parallel, and retrying failed steps—enabling more resilient and scalable AI systems.- Async UX patterns are crucial for agent-powered apps, especially as LLMs become slower and more complex. Real-time feedback, task progress indicators, and human-in-the-loop controls will define effective agent interactions.Chapters00:00 Why apps don’t talk to each other 01:44 Meet Andre Landgraf from Neon 02:39 Agents now outnumber humans on Neon 05:03 DX vs AX: Building for agents 08:58 Security and authorization for agents 13:06 What’s missing for real adoption 17:06 Building a personal CRM with agents 20:04 MCP as the universal app interface 23:32 Agent orchestration and async UX 26:46 Step functions and background tasks 30:04 Are agents ready for real-time UX? 33:19 Human-in-the-loop patterns 35:59 Where to find Andre Follow Andre Landgraf on Social Media:Twitter: https://x.com/AndreLandgraf94 Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/andre-landgraf/ Sponsored by This Dot Labs: thisdotlabs.com…
On this episode of the Modern Web Podcast, Rob Ocel and Danny Thompson talk with Brian Morrison, Senior Developer Educator at Clerk. They cover the state of authentication today, what makes Clerk stand out for small teams and indie builders, and how thoughtful developer experience design can make or break adoption.Brian shares why bundling tools like auth, billing, and user management is becoming more common, how Clerk handles real-world concerns like bot protection and social login, and why starting with a great developer experience matters more than ever.The conversation also explores the role of AI in software development and content creation, where it helps, where it hurts, and how to use it responsibly without losing quality or trust.Keypoints for this Episode: Modern auth is about experience, not just security. Clerk simplifies user management, social login, bot protection, and subscription billing with developer-friendly APIs and polished default UIs. Bundled platforms are making a comeback. Developers are shifting from handpicking tools to using tightly integrated services that reduce setup time and complexity. Developer education needs more care and creativity. Brian emphasizes the importance of visual storytelling, thoughtful structure, and anticipating confusion to help devs learn faster and retain more. AI is a productivity multiplier, not a replacement. The group discusses how AI can accelerate development and content creation when used with oversight, but warn against using it to blindly build entire apps. Follow Brian Morrison on Social MediaTwitter: https://x.com/brianmmdev Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/brianmmdev/ Sponsored by This Dot: thisdotlabs.com…
On this episode of the Modern Web Podcast, hosts Rob Ocel, Danny Thompson, and Adam Rackis are joined by Tejas Kumar, host of The Contagious Code podcast, author of Fluent React , and Developer Relations Engineer for Generative AI at DataStax. They unpack the current wave of AI announcements from Google I/O and Microsoft Build, and zoom in on the significance of MCP (Model Context Protocol) as a foundational shift in how AI-powered apps will be built and used. Tejas breaks down what MCP is, why it's catching on across the industry, and how it could become the HTTP of AI apps. The group explores real-world examples, like AI apps managing your inbox or booking flights without ever opening a browser, and discuss how MCP servers enable secure, agent-driven experiences that can act on your behalf. They also touch on hallucinations, the role of fine-tuning vs. tool integration, and the future of checkout flows powered by AI agents. Keypoints from this Episode: - MCP enables structured communication between AI apps and servers, allowing agents to perform real tasks like sending emails or booking flights - Users will increasingly interact with applications through natural language, with agents handling workflows behind the scenes - Connecting models to tools via MCP helps reduce hallucinations by ensuring actions and responses are grounded in real data - Most use cases benefit more from retrieval-augmented generation and strong tool integration than from expensive model fine-tuning Follow Tejas on Social Media Twitter: https://x.com/TejasKumar_ Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/tejasq/…
In this episode of the Modern Web Podcast, Rob Ocel, Danny Thompson, and Adam Rackis sit down with Ahmad Awais, CEO and founder of LangBase, to talk about agents, context, and the future of AI-assisted software development. Ahmad shares the origin story of Chai.new, an agent that builds agents, and why he believes context, not code, is the true value layer in the AI era. The group unpacks how "vibe coding" is reshaping who can build software, why Chai isn’t just another AI assistant, and how agents might evolve into personalized, production-grade tools for everyone, technical or not. Plus: Tailwind analogies, Stanford lectures, sports nutrition agents, and a CLI that went viral in a hospital.Key points from this episode:- Ahmad Awais explains that AI agents aren't magic; they're just a new paradigm for writing software. What makes them powerful is their ability to act autonomously with relevant context, not just generate text.- Chai.new helps developers (and non-developers) create purpose-built agents without needing deep ML expertise. It abstracts complex concepts like memory, retrieval, and orchestration into an approachable interface.- Ahmad emphasizes that the real opportunity lies in agents tailored to individual users and use cases. Personal agents with custom context outperform generic ones, much like small teams beat massive frameworks for specific problems.- Chai and LangBase aim to bring AI development to the millions of engineers who aren't AI researchers. With tools like Chai, you don’t need a PhD to build powerful, production-ready AI agents.Follow Ahmad Awais on Social MediaTwitter: https://x.com/MrAhmadAwais Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/mrahmadawais/ Sponsored by This Dot: thisdot.co…
M
Modern Web
1 Building a TikTok-Style App with React Native & Expo: Interview w Skylight Social CTO, Reed Harmeyer 35:02
In this episode of the Modern Web Podcast, Danny Thompson sits down with Reed Harmeyer, CTO of Skylight Social, and Brandon Mathis, React Native engineer at This Dot Labs. They unpack the technical and strategic decisions behind Skylight’s meteoric growth: why they built on the AT Protocol, how they tackled video discovery and scaling challenges, and how a fast-tracked in-app video editor gave them an edge. Keypoints from this episode: Skylight Social was built on the AT Protocol, allowing users to retain followers across platforms like Blue Sky and enabling creators to publish interoperable content in a decentralized social network. The team used React Native with Expo to achieve rapid development and cross-platform performance—launching a high-quality, TikTok-like video experience in just days. An in-app video editor was prioritized to reduce friction for creators, built using a native SDK wrapped with Expo Modules, enabling features like clip rearranging, overlays, voiceovers, and AI-generated captions. User behavior data—specifically watch time—drives content recommendations, not just likes or follows, helping Skylight offer a personalized experience while navigating scaling challenges from hypergrowth. Follow Reed Harmeyer on Social Media Bluesky: https://bsky.app/profile/reedharmeyer.bsky.social Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/reed-harmeyer/…
In this episode of the Modern Web Podcast, Rob Ocel and Danny Thompson sit down with Julián Duque, Principal Developer Advocate at Heroku, to talk about Heroku’s evolution into an AI Platform-as-a-Service. Julián breaks down Heroku’s new Managed Inference and Agents (MIA) platform, how they’re supporting Claude, Cohere, and Stable Diffusion, and what makes their developer experience stand out. They also get into Model Context Protocols (MCPs)—what they are, why they matter, and how they’re quickly becoming the USB-C for AI. From internal tooling to agentic infrastructure and secure AI deployments, this episode explores how MCPs, trusted environments, and better AI dev tools are reshaping how we build modern software. Key Points from this episode: - Heroku is evolving into an AI Platform-as-a-Service with its new MIA (Managed Inference and Agents) platform, supporting models like Claude, Cohere, and Stable Diffusion while maintaining a strong developer experience. - MCPs (Model Context Protocols) are becoming a key standard for extending AI capabilities—offering a structured, secure way for LLMs to access tools, run code, and interact with resources. - Heroku's AI agents can perform advanced operations like scaling dynos, analyzing logs, and self-healing failed deployments using grounded MCP integrations tied to the Heroku CLI. - Despite rapid adoption, MCPs still have rough edges—developer experience, tooling, and security protocols are actively improving, and a centralized registry for MCPs is seen as a missing piece. Chapters 0:00 – What is MCP and why it matters 3:00 – Heroku’s pivot to AI Platform-as-a-Service 6:45 – Agentic apps, model hosting, and tool execution 10:50 – Why REST isn’t ideal for LLMs 14:10 – Developer experience challenges with MCP 18:00 – Hosting secure MCPs on Heroku 23:00 – Real-world use cases: scaling, healing, recommendations 30:00 – Common scaling challenges and hallucination risks 34:30 – Testing, security, and architecture tips 36:00 – Where to start and final advice on using AI tools effectively Follow Julián Duque on Social MediaTwitter/X: https://x.com/julian_duque Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/juliandavidduque/ Sponsored by This Dot: thisdotlabs.com…
In this episode of the Modern Web Podcast, Rob Ocel and Danny Thompson talk with Hannes Rudolph, Community Manager at RooCode, to explore how this fast-moving, community-driven code editor is rethinking what AI-assisted development looks like. Hannes breaks down Roo’s agentic coding model, explains how their “boomerang tasks” tackle LLM context limits, and shares lessons from working with contributors across experience levels. Keypoints from this episode: - RooCode's "boomerang" architecture breaks complex coding tasks into structured, recursive subtasks, helping AI agents stay focused while avoiding context bloat and hallucination chains. - Developers can build their own orchestrator and agent modes in Roo, tailoring persona and instructions to fit specific workflows—crucial for long-term productivity. - Unlike many tools, RooCode shows developers exactly how much each LLM call costs in real time, empowering teams to manage both quality and budget. - RooCode is deeply community-driven, with user-submitted PRs frequently reshaping priorities. The team emphasizes transparency, collaboration, and accessibility for contributors at all levels. Follow Hannes Rudolph on Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/hannes-rudolph-64738b3b/ Sponsored by This Dot: thisdotlabs.com…
In this episode of the Modern Web Podcast, Rob Ocel is joined by Danny Thompson, Adam Rackis, and special guest Coston Perkins for a lively discussion on the evolving role of AI in software development. The group swaps thoughts on everything from the rise of AI agents like RooCode and Claude, to what makes tools like Vercel’s v0 surprisingly powerful for frontend work. They debate Tailwind’s dominance as the styling output of choice for AI tools, unpack the implications of Shopify’s AI-mandate memo, and tackle the big question: will AI reshape team structures or just amplify developer productivity?Keypoints from this episode:- AI agents in everyday development – The hosts discuss how tools like RooCode, Claude, and Cursor are reshaping daily coding workflows, enabling everything from automated documentation to feature planning and refactoring.- Vercel's v0 is changing perceptions – Originally seen as a landing page generator, v0 is now appreciated for its live, code-focused interface, showing promise for serious frontend development with real-time editing and deployment.- Tailwind’s dominance in AI output – The conversation dives into why Tailwind has become the styling default for AI-generated components, and whether that’s a productivity boost or a future limitation.- AI’s impact on hiring and team structure – The group debates whether AI will reduce developer headcount or empower mid-level devs to produce senior-level output—suggesting AI may reshape team dynamics more than replace them.Follow Coston Perkins on Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/costonperkins/ Sponsored by This Dot: thisdot.co…
In this episode of the Modern Web Podcast, host Danny Thompson and co-host Adam Rackis chat with James Perkins, CEO of Unkey, an open-source API management platform built for scale, security, and developer simplicity. James shares the challenges of building globally distributed infrastructure, and why his team ditched serverless and TypeScript in favor of Go and servers. They talk candidly about the realities of API management at scale, how Unkey balances open source transparency with enterprise-grade performance, and what it takes to build developer trust—both as a brand and as a product. Keypoints from this episode Unkey simplifies API management by acting as middleware for authentication, rate limiting, and security—without requiring deep backend expertise. It's designed for developers to go from idea to production with minimal setup. Go over serverless – James and his team initially explored TypeScript and serverless architecture but ultimately returned to Go and servers for better performance, scalability, and developer experience at scale. Open-source transparency is core to Unkey’s philosophy – The entire codebase is public, and the team maintains a radically open company culture, where even investor updates and customer support emails are shared internally. Customer obsession drives every decision – Regardless of whether a user is paying $0 or $2,000/month, Unkey responds quickly, prioritizes community support, and encourages a culture of ownership and responsiveness across the team. Chapters 00:00 – Intro + Why Unkey exists 02:00 – James' background and API pain points 03:50 – What Unkey actually does 05:45 – Engineering challenges + scaling architecture 07:30 – Tech stack changes: Go, TypeScript, Serverless 08:45 – Unkey as middleware: auth, rate limiting, analytics 10:40 – Future vision: making APIs as easy as deploying on Vercel 11:45 – Why Go instead of Node or TypeScript 13:30 – Go vs TypeScript: hiring, dependencies, developer experience 15:00 – Why API management is hard at scale 17:15 – Case study: Fireworks and Google Apigee performance issues 19:00 – The complexity of modern API platforms 20:00 – Sponsor break: This Dot Labs 20:35 – Will Unkey expand into app hosting? 22:00 – Unkey's focus on doing one thing really well 23:45 – Content strategy: personal brand vs corporate marketing 26:20 – Customer obsession: internal culture and open company model 30:30 – Open source dynamics and being fully transparent 33:45 – Advice for developer-entrepreneurs 36:24 – Wrap up + where to find the speakers Follow James Perkins on Social Media Twitter/X: https://x.com/james_r_perkins Blue Sky: https://bsky.app/profile/jamesperkins.dev Unkey: https://www.unkey.com/ Sponsored by This Dot: thisdot.co…
In this episode of the Modern Web Podcast, Rob Ocel and Danny Thompson talk with Corbin Crutchley — founder of Playful Programming, Microsoft MVP, GitHub Star, and maintainer of multiple TanStack libraries including TanStack Form, Store, and Config.They dive into Corbin’s work maintaining open source at scale, what makes TanStack Form different (and a bit esoteric), and why the design decisions behind it matter, especially for enterprise teams. They also unpack the tradeoffs of abstraction, type safety in large-scale apps, and best practices for migrating form logic.Later in the episode, the conversation shifts to Corbin’s nonprofit and developer education philosophy: why Playful Programming focuses on deep conceptual understanding over task-based tutorials, how AI is changing how people learn, and what’s next for guiding developers from beginner to intermediate and beyond.Key points from this episode:– Corbin explains how TanStack Form’s architecture, though verbose and esoteric, enables strong type safety, SSR support, and integration with modern frameworks like Next.js and Remix.– The group discusses common pain points in migrating from other form libraries, especially around type inference and validation layers, and how TanStack Form encourages a clean separation of concerns.– Maintaining open source at scale requires balancing community feedback with a strong guiding philosophy; Corbin highlights the importance of civility and staying true to the project’s design principles.– Playful Programming focuses on deep, conceptual education over task-based tutorials, aiming to help learners move from beginner to intermediate with free, accessible content and personalized learning in the future.Chapters 0:00 – Why TanStack Form Is Built This Way 1:06 – Meet Corbin Crutchley and the TanStack Ecosystem 3:34 – How Corbin Joined and Shaped TanStack Form 6:17 – Why Use TanStack Form (Despite the Verbosity) 10:28 – Type Safety, Generics, and Enterprise-Ready Patterns 14:50 – Validation Best Practices and SSR Integration 18:45 – Handling Feedback in Open Source 21:22 – Playful Programming: Teaching Concepts Over Tasks 27:33 – Bridging the Developer Education Gap 35:54 – Is It Still Worth Learning Programming? 38:25 – The Evolving Role of Developers and Soft Skills 41:57 – Wrap-Up and Where to Connect OnlineFollow Corbin Crutchley on Social MediaLinkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/corbincrutchley X/Twitter: https://x.com/crutchcorn Sponsored by This Dot: thisdot.co…
In this episode of the Modern Web Podcast, host Danny Thompson sits down with Ben Peeri, Lead Solutions Architect and Entrepreneur, for a candid and energetic conversation on how AI tools are reshaping the way developers build software. They explore the strengths and tradeoffs of platforms like v0, Bolt, and Replit, diving into how these tools fit into modern dev workflows—from quick POCs to potential production use.Ben shares his unique approach to local LLMs, including how he uses them for pen testing and simulating malicious actors to harden apps before release. The conversation also covers the shifting landscape for junior developers, why thinking like a product owner is more critical than ever, and what it means to lead a team of AI agents.Keypoints from this episode:- AI tools compared – v0, Bolt, and Replit each serve different purposes, from fast prototyping to more complex backend support, but all come with trade-offs in control and scalability.- Local LLMs for security – Running local models allows for safe pen testing by simulating bad actors, something API-based LLMs can’t do due to usage restrictions.- The role of prompting – Effective prompting, even using “carrot and stick” tactics, makes a big difference in the quality of LLM outputs and testing accuracy.- The evolving dev role – Junior devs will need to shift from building everything from scratch to refining and scaling AI-generated code—thinking more like operators of agent-powered dev studios.Follow Ben Peeri on Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/benpeeri/ Sponsored by This Dot: thisdotlabs.com…
In this episode of the Modern Web Podcast, Rob Ocel and Danny Thompson get real about the current state of AI in software development. They talk about what’s working, what’s frustrating, and why so much of the conversation around AI feels repetitive or disconnected from reality. They explore how AI is actually being used day to day—and where it still falls short. They also discuss the risks of relying too heavily on AI, especially for junior devs, and why understanding fundamentals still matters. Keypoints from this episode: - AI fatigue is setting in among developers, with many eager to move beyond hype and explore tools that solve real problems and deliver everyday value. - Danny built a conversational AI agent named Nexie, trained specifically on Next.js and Vercel documentation, showing how personalized agents can provide focused, meaningful assistance. - Over-relying on AI can backfire for junior developers. Using it to generate code without understanding the underlying logic undermines learning and growth. - AI tools are starting to shift how we think about software quality. In some cases, speed and cost-effectiveness may outweigh traditional goals like maintainability. Chapters 00:00 – Should Juniors Use AI? 01:04 – Real Talk on AI Conferences 03:00 – Building Nexi: A Personal Dev Agent 05:13 – Beyond the Hype: Finding Real AI Use Cases 09:36 – Why Senior Devs Struggle with AI Tools 15:55 – Mentorship, Theory, and Learning the Right Way 21:10 – When to Use AI (and When Not To) 26:50 – The Growing Gap in Dev Skills 30:31 – AI Is Redefining “Good Software” 32:09 – Final Thoughts + Where to Find Us Follow This Dot Media on Twitter/X: x.com/thisdotmedia Follow Danny and Rob on Twitter. Sponsored by This Dot: thisdotlabs.com…
Join hosts Rob Ocel and Danny Thompson for another episode of the Modern Web Podcast, where they sit down with Brad Garropy, senior front-end engineer at Stripe, YouTuber, and all-around tech enthusiast. Brad shares insights from his journey through big tech—from Dell to Adobe, Atlassian, and now Stripe—while discussing the challenges of scaling front-end engineering across different companies. The conversation covers TypeScript’s major performance boost, the Go vs. Rust debate, and how engineering teams are evolving their tooling for speed and efficiency. They also explore Remix, why Brad prefers building projects with minimal dependencies, and his approach to self-hosting and keeping costs low for side projects. He reflects on balancing breadth vs. depth in a career, how developers can shape their personal brand, and the importance of learning through building. Key Points from this Episode: - TypeScript’s shift to Go has resulted in massive performance improvements, highlighting the impact of language choice on tooling speed and efficiency. - Scaling front-end engineering in big tech comes with unique challenges, and each company operates differently despite similarities in structure. - Keeping projects lean with minimal dependencies and self-hosting can reduce costs and provide greater control over development. -Balancing breadth vs. depth in a career is crucial, as developers must decide whether to specialize deeply or explore a wide range of technologies. Chapters 0:00 – Intro: Tailwind, Remix, and Thin Abstractions 1:09 – Meet the Hosts & Guest: Brad Garrapy 2:16 – Brad’s Career Journey: Dell → Adobe → Atlassian → Stripe 3:34 – TypeScript Gets 10x Faster: Why Go? 7:55 – Performance, Tooling, and Multi-threading Insights 14:59 – Why Remix? Building with Thin, Flexible Stacks 16:56 – Deployment Strategies & Avoiding SaaS Lock-in 19:57 – Cost, Free Tiers & the Case for DIY Infrastructure 28:13 – Creator Goals: Streaming, Tutorials & Building in Public 33:12 – Identity, Community, and Being Known for Something 38:23 – Where to Find Brad Online + Closing Follow Brad Garropy on Social Media YouTube - https://youtube.com/bradgarropy Bluesky - https://bradgarropy.com/bluesky Twitter - https://x.com/bradgarropy Website - https://bradgarropy.com Sponsored by This Dot: thisdot.co…
In this episode of the Modern Web Podcast, hosts Rob Ocel, Adam Rackis, and Danny Thompson, examine the technical side of modern web development with guest Dennis Ivy, a developer advocate at Appwrite. The discussion explores HTMX, its approach to extending HTML for dynamic UIs, and how it challenges the dominance of JavaScript-heavy SPAs. They examine where HTMX fits in the web ecosystem, its strengths and limitations, and its potential for enterprise applications. The conversation then shifts to backend-as-a-service platforms, with Dennis breaking down how Appwrite provides authentication, databases, and real-time updates as an open-source alternative to Firebase and Supabase. They discuss performance considerations, architectural trade-offs, and the evolving landscape of server-side development.Keypoints for this Episode- HTMX and Its Role in Web Development – The discussion explores how HTMX extends HTML to enable dynamic UIs without heavy JavaScript frameworks, making it a compelling option for certain applications, particularly for backend developers and server-rendered apps.- Backend-as-a-Service with Appwrite – Dennis Ivy explains how Appwrite offers authentication, databases, and real-time eventing as an open-source alternative to Firebase and Supabase, highlighting its performance advantages and developer-friendly approach.- Trade-offs in Modern Web Architectures – The group discusses the evolution of SPAs, the resurgence of server-side rendering, and how tools like HTMX and backend-as-a-service platforms challenge traditional frontend-heavy workflows.- Performance and Scalability Considerations – The conversation touches on Appwrite's efficient architecture compared to other backend solutions, examining how its lightweight design impacts real-world applications and developer experience.Chapters0:00 - Introduction 0:35 - Welcome to the Modern Web Podcast 1:26 - Dennis Ivy’s Journey into Tech 4:03 - Selling a Project for $40K+ 6:39 - Different Paths into Development 8:49 - Learning Through Building 11:16 - The Importance of Side Projects 14:05 - Introduction to HTMX 16:41 - HTMX for Enterprise and Scalability 19:34 - The HTMX Learning Curve and Adoption 24:41 - Comparing Modern Web Development Approaches 27:12 - Introduction to Appwrite's Features 30:46 - Appwrite vs. Competitors like Firebase and Supabase 33:41 - Appwrite's Performance and Scalability 37:49 - Where to Find Dennis Ivy Online 38:54 - Podcast Wrap-Up and ClosingFollow Dennis Ivy on Social MediaTwitter: https://x.com/dennisivy11 Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/dennis-ivanov/ Sponsored by This Dot: thisdot.coFollow This Dot Labs on Social MediaThis Dot Media X: https://x.com/ThisDotMedia This Dot Labs X: https://x.com/ThisDotLabs This Dot Labs Linkedin: h ttps://www.linkedin.com/company/thisdotlabs/ This Dot Labs BlueSky: https://bsky.app/profile/thisdotlabs.bsky.social…
M
Modern Web
In this episode of the Modern Web Podcast, hosts Rob Ocel and Danny Thompson chat with Søren Bramer Schmidt, CEO and Founder of Prisma, about the evolution of Prisma to a widely adopted ORM used by 50% of Fortune 2000 companies. Søren shares insights on balancing open-source growth with enterprise adoption, optimizing ORM performance, and addressing concerns like N+1 queries and vendor lock-in.The discussion also covers the launch of Prisma Postgres, a managed database designed to make provisioning as easy as creating a Notion page, and the shift from Rust to TypeScript for better efficiency. With AI transforming development, Søren explores how Prisma is adapting to new demands in database tooling. Keypoints from this episode:1. Prisma’s Evolution – Søren Schmidt discusses how Prisma started as Graphcool and evolved into a widely used ORM, now adopted by 50% of Fortune 2000 companies.2. Balancing Open Source and Enterprise – The conversation explores Prisma’s approach to maintaining an open-source community while ensuring enterprise-grade performance and stability.3. Prisma Postgres & Tech Shifts – Søren introduces Prisma Postgres, a managed database aimed at simplifying provisioning, and explains the decision to shift Prisma’s query engine from Rust to TypeScript.4. AI and the Future of Databases – The episode highlights how AI-driven development is shaping modern database tooling and how Prisma is adapting to meet the needs of today’s developers.Follow Søren Bramer Schmidt on Social MediaTwitter: https://x.com/sorenbs Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/sorenbs/?originalSubdomain=de Chapters Introduction and Host Banter (00:00 - 02:26) The Origins of Prisma (02:26 - 07:31) Building an Open-Source Community (07:31 - 12:36) Rearchitecting Prisma: Moving from Rust to TypeScript (12:36 - 18:31) Prisma’s Role in Startups and Enterprises (18:31 - 25:40) Introducing Prisma Postgres and the Future of Databases (25:40 - 33:10) AI, Serverless, and the Evolution of App Development (33:10 - 42:25) Optimizing Database Performance with Prisma (42:25 - 45:00) Final Thoughts and Closing Remarks (45:00 - End)Sponsored by This Dot: thisdot.co…
On this episode of the Modern Web Podcast, Rob Ocel and Adam Rackis talk with Noah Harris, Senior Engineering Manager at Launch, to discuss the impact of mob programming and how it can transform engineering teams. Noah shares how pairing and mobbing helped him rapidly level up in his early career, how it fosters stronger communication, and why it’s particularly valuable for remote teams. The conversation also explores engineering leadership, breaking past career plateaus, and the importance of soft skills in advancing your career. Noah shares insights on servant leadership, how engineers can take ownership without waiting for permission, and the role of code reviews in shaping strong technical leaders. Key Points Mob Programming for Team Growth – Noah explains how mob programming enhances collaboration, speeds up knowledge sharing, and improves code quality, especially in remote teams. The Role of Pair Programming in Skill Development – Pairing with experienced engineers helped Noah rapidly learn JavaScript and asynchronous programming, reinforcing the importance of hands-on mentorship. Breaking the Engineering Career Ceiling – Engineers looking to step into leadership roles need to be proactive, take ownership, and engage in code reviews to build influence and credibility. Servant Leadership & Soft Skills Matter – Leadership isn’t about authority—it’s about removing blockers, supporting the team, and improving communication. Engineers who master this mindset naturally transition into leadership roles. Follow Noah Harris on Social Media LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/nharris31/ BlueSky: https://bsky.app/profile/nharris31.bsky.social…
On this episode of the Modern Web Podcast, Rob Ocel and Danny Thompson sit down with Marc Backes, a freelance full-stack engineer with a wild journey through Vue.js, Nuxt, and DevRel. Marc shares what makes the Vue community stand out, why DevRel often misses the mark, and how Wikipedia uses Vue 3 to scale content across thousands of languages.Then, things get real. Marc opens up about a $250,000 startup disaster that changed his view on business forever. Meanwhile, Danny breaks down what it takes to run a tech conference on a shoestring budget—and why developers hate traditional marketing.Key Points from this episode:- The Power of Vue & Nuxt – Marc shares why he chose Vue.js, how he built his website with Nuxt, and what makes the Vue community unique.- DevRel: Hype vs. Reality – A discussion on whether DevRel is truly valuable for companies, how it's often misused, and what actually works in developer advocacy.- A $250K Startup Mistake – Marc’s story of losing $250,000 in a failed startup and the crucial lesson about contracts and trust in business.- Scaling Tech & Community – Insights on Wikipedia’s use of Vue 3 for translation, plus Danny’s experience running a tech conference with limited resources.Chapters0:00 - Introduction to Entrepreneurship and Failure 0:43 - Podcast Introduction and Guest Welcome 4:25 - Mark’s Experience in the Vue Community 9:22 - Working with Large-Scale Organizations 13:05 - Transitioning Between Developer and DevRel 19:00 - Is DevRel Worth It? 24:25 - The Challenges of Running a Tech Conference 26:02 - Lessons from Entrepreneurship 30:56 - The Emotional Toll of Failure 35:03 - Revisiting the $250,000 Grant Story 39:42 - Handling Failure and Moving Forward 41:14 - Where to Find Mark OnlineFollow Marc Backes on Social MediaTwitter: https://x.com/themarcba Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/themarcba/ Sponsored by This Dot: thisdot.co…
In this episode of the Modern Web Podcast, Danny Thompson and Adam Rackis talk with Abdel Sghiouar, Cloud Developer Advocate at Google, Kubernetes Podcast co-host, and CNCF Ambassador. Abdel shares insights from his global tech journey, from Morocco to Google's largest data center in Belgium, and now Sweden. They discuss cloud computing trends, including WebAssembly, AI-driven serverless workloads, and the shifting lines between frontend and backend. They also explore AI’s impact on cloud development, from simplifying tooling to raising questions about job automation. Abdel offers a pragmatic take on AI’s role, emphasizing that those who learn to leverage it will thrive. Key points from this episode: - Cultural Differences in Tech – Abdel’s global experience shaped his view on work culture, from Morocco’s relationship-driven workplaces to Europe’s structured work-life balance. - Making Cloud Simpler – He focuses on breaking down cloud concepts and making them more approachable for developers, from high-level serverless tools to hands-on infrastructure. - AI in Cloud & Serverless – AI is improving cloud navigation, troubleshooting, and serverless efficiency, with tools like Google Cloud Assist and Vercel’s Fluid Compute. - AI & Tech Jobs – AI won’t replace developers but will automate simpler tasks. Understanding fundamentals and problem-solving remain key to staying relevant. 0:00 - The challenge of opinionated platforms and integration in cloud 0:46 - Welcome to the Modern Web Podcast with Danny Thompson & Adam Rackis 1:15 - Guest introduction: Abdel Sghiouar, Cloud Developer Advocate at Google 2:01 - Abdel’s international journey and how different work cultures shape tech perspectives 7:08 - Bridging the cloud knowledge gap for web developers 9:38 - Cloud fundamentals: compute, storage, and networking 12:19 - Emerging trends: WebAssembly, AI, and serverless evolution 16:07 - AI’s impact on cloud development: Hype vs. reality 22:27 - The future of serverless and infrastructure automation 28:22 - Google Cloud vs. Firebase: Balancing simplicity and scalability 31:50 - What Abdel is geeking out about: Content creation and AI tools 34:51 - Closing thoughts & where to connect 🔗 Find Abdellfetah online: 📍 Twitter/X: @BoredAbdel 📍 LinkedIn: Abdellfetah Sghiouar 📍 Kubernetes Podcast: kubernetespodcast.com…
به Player FM خوش آمدید!
Player FM در سراسر وب را برای یافتن پادکست های با کیفیت اسکن می کند تا همین الان لذت ببرید. این بهترین برنامه ی پادکست است که در اندروید، آیفون و وب کار می کند. ثبت نام کنید تا اشتراک های شما در بین دستگاه های مختلف همگام سازی شود.






























