Episodi
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Tom Wilkie, the CTO of Grafana Labs, talks to us about his professional journey. We cover how he got into software engineering, his first startup, working as an EM at Google, and what motivated him to go back to an IC role. We talk about his time at Grafana from when they were only 25 people to now when Grafana Labs has more than a thousand employees. Tom’s journey cannot be told without diving deeper into the technical side of things - we discuss observability, distributed systems, and hard technical problems.
Where to find more about Tom and Grafana Labs:
- LinkedIn - https://www.linkedin.com/in/tomwilkie
- X - https://x.com/tom_wilkie
- Grafana Labs - https://grafana.com/
- Grafana Labs events - https://grafana.com/events/
Where to find Bartek:
- LinkedIn - https://www.linkedin.com/in/bwplotka/
- X - https://x.com/bwplotka
Where to find Ivan:
- LinkedIn - https://www.linkedin.com/in/ivan-valkov/
- X - https://x.com/ivvalkov
As always, feedback and questions are welcome! You can use this form -https://forms.gle/NmUGeqMtyP6H6mMP9
0:00 - Tom’s intro
7:09 - How Tom got into software engineering
15:05 - Tom’s first startup 21:25 - Tom’s experience as EM at Google
28:04 - Joining Weaveworks as employee number 7
38:51 - Tom joining Grafana
45:32 - Grafana’s Third Act
53:12 - Startup advice
59:41 - Perseverance and motivation
1:04:35 - How Grafana acquires startups
1:10:25 - Where to find out more
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Monica Sarbu, the CEO and founder of Xata.io, talks to us about her inspiring journey from getting into tech to building Xata - the serverless database platform for modern apps. We chat about the founding of her first company, Packetbeat, its acquisition by Elastic, and her time as a director there. We talk about mentoring, diversity, and hiring engineers that have high agency. We also cover some of the technical decisions at Xata - we even chat a bit about the Zig programming language :)
Where to find more about Monica and Xata:
- LinkedIn - https://www.linkedin.com/in/monicasarbu
- X - https://x.com/monicasarbu
- Xata - https://xata.io/
- pgroll - https://github.com/xataio/pgroll
- Tupu - https://www.tupu.io/
Where to find Bartek:
- LinkedIn - https://www.linkedin.com/in/bwplotka/
- X - https://x.com/bwplotka
Where to find Ivan:
- LinkedIn - https://www.linkedin.com/in/ivan-valkov/
- X - https://x.com/ivvalkov
As always, feedback and questions are welcome! You can use this form - https://forms.gle/NmUGeqMtyP6H6mMP9
Episode breakdown:
0:00 - Episode intro
2:25 - Monica's introduction
4:00 - Monica's software engineering background
5:52 - Founding her first company Packetbeat
15:30 - Elastic acquisition and being a director there
25:34 - The role of managers
28:38 - Founding Tupu and diversity in tech
38:44 - The founding story of Xata
44:35 - Open source, serverless, and Zig vs Go
51:17 - Hiring high-agency engineers
1:00:37 - Where to find out more
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Episodi mancanti?
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In this episode, we talk with Jimmy Zelinskie, co-founder and CPO of AuthZed, about his journey in building a global scale OSS authorization startup. Jimmy shares insights into the creation and evolution of SpiceDB, an open-source database optimized for authorization decisions. We chat about Jimmy’s story of transitioning from an engineer to a product manager, the importance of open-source in building the business, and the strategies that helped AuthZed find its first customers. Jimmy also discusses the inspiration behind AuthZed, Google’s Zanzibar paper, and the unique challenges of building a startup grounded in cutting-edge research.
Where to find more about Jimmy and AuthZed:
- LinkedIn - https://www.linkedin.com/in/jzelinskie/
- X - https://x.com/jimmyzelinskie
- Jimmy’s Github - https://github.com/jzelinskie
- AuthZed - https://authzed.com/
- SpiceDB on Github - https://github.com/authzed/spicedb
- The Zanzibar Paper annotated by AuthZed - https://authzed.com/zanzibar
- Discord - https://authzed.com/discord
Where to find Bartek:
- LinkedIn - https://www.linkedin.com/in/bwplotka/
- X - https://x.com/bwplotka
Where to find Ivan:
- LinkedIn - https://www.linkedin.com/in/ivan-valkov/
- X - https://x.com/ivvalkov
As always, feedback and questions are welcome! You can use this form - https://forms.gle/NmUGeqMtyP6H6mMP9
Episode breakdown:
0:00 Episode intro
2:05 Jimmy’s introduction
3:53 Jimmy’s software engineering background
9:06 On becoming a founder
14:47 Experimenting with different startup ideas
20:41 The Zanzibar paper and using research in startups
26:44 Finding your first customers
31:56 Building SpiceDB
38:11 Monetization in an OSS startup
42:34 Authorization deep-dive
52:19 Product management in a startup
1:01:47 Where to find out more
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In this episode, we talk with Michel Tricot, co-founder and CEO of Airbyte, about his journey in building a successful open-source data movement platform, the challenges faced during the COVID-19 pandemic, and insights into startup culture and balancing work with family life. Michel shares his experiences from being a software engineer to leading a unicorn company, emphasizing the importance of community, open-source, and the strategic pivots that led to Airbyte's success.
Where to find more about Michel and Airbyte:
LinkedIn - https://www.linkedin.com/in/micheltricot/X - https://x.com/micheltricotAirbyte - https://airbyte.com/Github - https://github.com/airbytehq/airbyteAirbyte's blog - https://airbyte.com/blogWhere to find Bartek:
LinkedIn - https://www.linkedin.com/in/bwplotka/X - https://x.com/bwplotkaWhere to find Ivan:
LinkedIn - https://www.linkedin.com/in/ivan-valkov/X - https://x.com/ivvalkovAs always, feedback and questions are welcome! You can use this form - https://forms.gle/NmUGeqMtyP6H6mMP9
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In this episode, we sit down with Frederic Branczyk, founder of PolarSignals, to explore the intersection of advanced profiling techniques, AI-driven optimizations, and the nuances of building a successful startup culture. Frederic shares his journey from a technical contributor to a startup leader, offering insights into both the technological and business aspects of running a tech company.
Where to find more about Frederic and Polar Signals:
LinkedIn - https://www.linkedin.com/in/frederic-branczyk/X - https://x.com/fredbranczMastodon - https://hachyderm.io/@branczPolar Signals - https://www.polarsignals.com/Parca - https://github.com/parca-dev/parca/FrostDB - https://github.com/polarsignals/frostdbPolar Signals Seed announcement - https://www.polarsignals.com/blog/posts/2024/03/12/ai-funding-and-exciting-customersLet's Profile YouTube series - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tScFlySdSAc&list=PLhTDiyZ1B3JkDCzGKp_3K3J-au054MQ_zWhere to find Bartek:
LinkedIn - https://www.linkedin.com/in/bwplotka/X - https://x.com/bwplotkaWhere to find Ivan:
LinkedIn - https://www.linkedin.com/in/ivan-valkov/X - https://x.com/ivvalkovAs always, feedback and questions are welcomed! You can use this form - https://forms.gle/NmUGeqMtyP6H6mMP9
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Today we have a very special guest, Björn Rabenstein, ultra experienced engineer, long time Prometheus maintainer. In this episode we touch on the topic of versioning and backward or forward compatibility of software APIs and interfaces. Learn how to make your code nice for others or use versioned components effectively for yourself. We discuss semver, and why you also seen many projects, escaping this model with lifetime version of v0. The main topic starts at 18m35s. References:
No lens camera: https://futurism.com/the-byte/camera-no-lens-location-ai
Crab: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=36122270
Paying for GH stars: https://the-guild.dev/blog/judging-open-source-by-github-stars?utm_source=unknownews
Stack Overflow seeing lower traffic: https://www.similarweb.com/blog/insights/ai-news/stack-overflow-chatgpt/?utm_source=unknownews
Nvidia passes 1 trillion $ of evaluation: https://www.theguardian.com/business/2023/may/30/nvidia-chipmaker-value-ai-chip-shares-artificial-intelligence
Beautifully edited by amazing Yanitsa Spassova! As always, feedback and questions are welcomed! You can use this form - https://forms.gle/NmUGeqMtyP6H6mMP9
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In this episode we discuss an important topic of productivity in our live and work. We explore often forgotten topic of motivation for our work, self-compassion, energy balance to tackle tedious tasks and healthy habits for software development, meetings and more! We also touch on the topic of social media use. References:
Amazon Prime moving out of AWS Lambda: https://www.primevideotech.com/video-streaming/scaling-up-the-prime-video-audio-video-monitoring-service-and-reducing-costs-by-90
Leaked memo, AI alone is not a moat: https://www.semianalysis.com/p/google-we-have-no-moat-and-neither
Epic, inspiring episode about embracing death (Limitless): https://www.imdb.com/title/tt11714334/
Atomic Habits Book: https://jamesclear.com/atomic-habits
Rollup Meeting Notes Template: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1AHgEyaNdI0YQgPnxDqF1BD1K8b-VJzFOgBAoS4IhSJo/edit
Beautifully edited by amazing Yanitsa Spassova! As always, feedback and questions are welcomed! You can use this form - https://forms.gle/NmUGeqMtyP6H6mMP9
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Working from a tent, prioritizing your electricity between your monitor or cooking dinner, canal boat life, and more. These are some of the things we talked about with Becky Pauley at KubeCon Europe 2023. This episode covers all the great things about the digital nomad lifestyle, but also dives into some of the challenges. Join us for the interesting story and stay for the helpful tips. As always, before the main part we cover some of the news that got our attention in the previous weeks.References:
Our amazing guest, Becky Pauley: https://twitter.com/BeckyPauley
Reddit's API going paid: https://www.theverge.com/2023/4/18/23688463/reddit-developer-api-terms-change-monetization-ai
Reddit's Apollo reader thread on effects of pricing change: https://www.reddit.com/r/apolloapp/comments/12srosz/reddit_api_going_paid_what_are_the_changes_we/
A Completely Non-Technical Explanation of AI and Deep Learning: https://www.parand.com/a-completely-non-technical-explanation-of-ai.html
YC Winter 2023 Batch summary: https://www.ycombinator.com/blog/meet-the-yc-winter-2023-batch
Another columnar DB: XTDB 2.0: https://www.xtdb.com/v2
Apache Arrow: https://arrow.apache.org/
Talking to dead people with AI: https://futurism.com/ai-dead-woman-talk-people-funeral?utm_source=unknownews
As always, feedback and questions are welcomed! You can use this form - https://forms.gle/NmUGeqMtyP6H6mMP9
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In this episode we do a little retrospective on the last week KubeCon EU 2023 in Amsterdam. We also share and discuss amazing answers from a few quick interviews Bartek performed with epic KubeCon attendees. You won't believe what we learned! Big THANKS to all interviewees for amazing answers: Christina, Harsh, Michael, Jimmy and Raphaël!
References:
KubeCon EU: https://events.linuxfoundation.org/kubecon-cloudnativecon-europe/
Observability Day: https://events.linuxfoundation.org/kubecon-cloudnativecon-europe/co-located-events/observability-day/ You Tube: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLj6h78yzYM2ORxwcjTn4RLAOQOYjvQ2A3
Efficient Go book: https://bwplotka.dev/book/
Mentoring Opportunities (as mentee, but also to mentor): https://github.com/cncf/mentoring
WASM: https://webassembly.org/
GitLab AI: https://about.gitlab.com/blog/2023/03/16/what-the-ml-ai/
eBPF: https://ebpf.io/
authzed/spicedb: https://github.com/authzed/spicedb
Running DB in browser: https://authzed.com/blog/some-assembly-required
OpenTelemetry: https://opentelemetry.io/
As always, feedback and questions are welcomed! You can use this form - https://forms.gle/NmUGeqMtyP6H6mMP9
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AI is already changing how different industries operate with tools like ChatGPT and Github Copilot. Today we talk about a new tool, k8sgpt, that gives you SRE superpowers using AI. We are joined by its creator, Alex Jones - Director of Kubernetes Engineering at Canonical. We talk about how tools that utilize AI are built, how they change our day to day work, and what the future might hold for AI in the workplace. And as always we cover the news of the week before we dive into the interview.
References:
Alex Jones - https://twitter.com/AlexJonesax
K8sGPT: https://k8sgpt.ai/
Amazon Bedrock: https://aws.amazon.com/bedrock/
Amazon Code Whisperer: https://aws.amazon.com/blogs/aws/amazon-codewhisperer-free-for-individual-use-is-now-generally-available/
Hacking Cars with CAN injection: https://kentindell.github.io/2023/04/03/can-injection/?utm_source=unknownews
Phind, ChatGPT for devs - https://www.phind.com/
OSS Funding via Thanks Dev - https://thanks.dev/home
Github Accelerator’s first cohort - https://github.blog/2023-04-12-github-accelerator-our-first-cohort-and-whats-next/
As always, feedback and questions are welcomed! You can use this form - https://forms.gle/NmUGeqMtyP6H6mMP9
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In this episode Ivan asks Bartek to solve the problems presented in the book "The Phoenix Project". We talk about DevOps, organizational structures, the mythical 10x engineer, the value of mentors, and why Kubernetes does not just magically solve all of the above. No prior reading of "The Phoenix Project" required - we also try to keep spoilers to the minimum. As always, we also cover some of the news that got our attention this week. Show notes:The Phoenix Project: https://www.goodreads.com/en/book/show/17255186Twitter Open Sources their algorithm: https://github.com/twitter/the-algorithm & https://www.wired.com/story/twitters-open-source-algorithm-is-a-red-herring/ Duolingo's Love Island April Fools Commercial: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ezI5izBvZboObsidian's "Unhelper" AI assistant: https://twitter.com/obsdmd/status/1642228672923877381?s=20Razer Razer April's Fool announcement: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qvSmM68xW5QChatGPT: The Revolutionary Bullsh*t Parrot - https://www.reasonfieldlab.com/post/chatgpt-the-revolutionary-bullshit-parrotHow to be a -10x Engineer: https://taylor.town/-10x As always, feedback and questions are welcomed! You can use this form - https://forms.gle/NmUGeqMtyP6H6mMP9
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Have you ever wondered how people find performance bottlenecks and improve them in complex systems? What tools and techniques work in real life applications? When should you stop optimizing? Well, this is the episode for you. Our first ever guest, Bryan Boreham from Grafana Labs, sits down with us and walks us over his experience of optimizing the popular open-source project Prometheus. Before the super insightful discussion on this topic, we cover the tech news from the week that got our attention. Show notes:
Bryan Boreham - follow at @bboreham
Prometheus - https://github.com/prometheus/prometheus
Docker puts a stop to sunsetting their free team plans - https://www.docker.com/blog/no-longer-sunsetting-the-free-team-plan/
ChatGPT announces plugins - https://openai.com/blog/chatgpt-plugins
Github Copilot X is announced - https://github.blog/2023-03-22-github-copilot-x-the-ai-powered-developer-experience/
As always, feedback and questions are welcomed! You can use this form - https://forms.gle/NmUGeqMtyP6H6mMP9
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episode{pod="oat"} 0 # Welcome to our first, number 0 (ofc, arrays always start from zero), episode! The first episode is about something very hands-down and actionable in the software--the middleware coding pattern! What is it? Is it under-hyped? What are the alternatives? Before the main topic, Ivan & Bartek discuss (20m) some exciting tech news from the last week. Want to ask a question or give feedback? Use this form: https://forms.gle/NmUGeqMtyP6H6mMP9