Software Huddle Software Huddle
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- 과학 기술
Join Alex DeBrie and Sean Falconer in insightful and in-depth interviews with tech experts, covering software development, entrepreneurship, and technology trends.
Alex is the author of The DynamoDB Book and a DynamoDB expert as well as AWS Data Hero. Sean Falconer has over 20 years of experience working in research and technology as an engineer, founder, and marketing executive. Sean is a Snowflake Data Superhero.
For more on Software Huddle, visit softwarehuddle.com or contact team@softwarehuddle.com.
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Enterprise-grade Dev Environments with Ivan Burazin
Today’s guest is Ivan Burazin, the co-founder and CEO of Daytona, an actual creator of the Shift Developer Conference that he sold some time ago to Infobip. Ivan has tons of experience building developer tools, he has been working on dev environments for over a decade.
In this interview, we talk about another company he founded called CodeAnywhere that eventually led to the founding of Daytona. Daytona is a dev environment management platform. It sits between your IDE and the cloud, taking care of standardizing your dev environments, regardless of whether you're building on your desktop or deploying to production.
They're taking the best of what leading technology companies like Google, Uber, and Meta have built internally and bringing that to the rest of the world.
Software Huddle ⤵︎
X: https://twitter.com/SoftwareHuddle
Substack: https://softwarehuddle.substack.com/ -
Operational Data Warehouse with Nikhil Benesch
Today's episode is with Nikhil Benesch, who's the co-founder and CTO at Materialize, an Operational Data Warehouse. Materialize gets you the best of both worlds, combining the capabilities of your data warehouse with the immediacy of streaming. This fusion allows businesses to operate with data in real-time.
We discussed the data infrastructure stuff of it, how they built it, how they think about billing, how they think about cloud primitives and what they wish they had. -
Multi-tenancy with Khawaja Shams
Today's episode is with Khawaja Shams. Khawaja is the CEO and co-founder of Momento, which is a Serverless Cache.
He used to lead the DynamoDB team at AWS and now he's doing Memento. We talk about a lot of different things, including multi-tenancy and cellular architecture and what it's like to build on AWS and sell infrastructure products to end customers and just a lot of other really good stuff.
We hope you enjoy this episode.
01:12 Introduction
03:38 multi-tenancy
08:13 S3 and Tigris
15:09 Aurora
19:11 Momento
31:21 Cellular Architecture
41:16 Most people are doing cross-AZ wrong
52:23 Elasticsearch
01:03:08 Rapid Fire -
All about Rust with Tim McNamara
In today's episode with Tim McNamara, we talk all about Rust. Tim is one of the leading educators in the whole Rust educational space. He wrote the Rust in Action book, which is probably the best Rust book out there. He has a YouTube channel, he taught and did a lot of educational work on Rust at Amazon AWS.
We talked about object ownership and object lifetimes and just all these interesting things that Rust has and why is this language loved by so many and why it's continuing to grow.
He also gets into what it's like being an independent educator, creator, and some of the difficulties with that, how to get started, and how he deals with doubt. -
Becoming an Epic Web Developer with Kent C Dodds
Today, we have Kent C Dodds on the show. If you don't know Kent, he's a well known expert in JavaScript, Web Development and Teaching. His courses like Testing JavaScript, Epic React, and Epic Web Dev have helped countless developers uplevel their skills and develop whole new ones.
During our conversation, we discussed how he got to start in creating courses in the background on his latest project, Epic Web Dev. We also picked his brain about JavaScript. Why the heck do we have so many JavaScript frameworks? Are we just perpetually dissatisfied with what we have? Or is there a fundamental problem with how the web is actually designed?
There's a lot of meat in the bone on this one, and we hope you enjoy it.
Show Notes:
The Web’s Next Transition
https://www.epicweb.dev/the-webs-next-transition
Epic Web Conference 2024
CONFERENCE DAY April 11th, 2024
WORKSHOP DAY April 10th, 2024
https://www.epicweb.dev/conf
Timestamps
01:46 Kent’s Background
05:38 Epic Web Dev
15:07 Creating an engaging course
19:07 How long does it take to finish the course
23:01 JavaScript and CS
25:47 Things that you should know
29:09 JS frameworks
36:28 Re-building the Web from Scratch?
42:59 PESPA Architecture
53:04 Rapid Fire -
SQL Meets Vector Search with Linpeng Tang of MyScale
Welcome back to an episode where we're talking Vectors, Vector Databases, and AI with Linpeng Tang, CTO and co-founder of MyScale. MyScale is a super interesting technology. They're combining the best of OLAP databases with Vector Search. The project started back in 2019 where they forked ClickHouse and then adapted it to support Vector Storage, Indexing, and Search.
The really unique and cool thing is you get the familiarity and usability of SQL with the power of being able to compare the similarity between unstructured data.
We think this has really fascinating use cases for analytics well beyond what we're seeing with other vector database technology that's mostly restricted to building RAG models for LLMs. Also, because it's built on ClickHouse, MyScale is massively scalable, which is an area that many of the dedicated vector databases actually struggle with.
We cover a lot about how vector databases work, why they decided to build off of ClickHouse, and how they plan to open source the database.
Timestamps
02:29 Introduction
06:22 Value of a Vector Database
12:40 Forking ClickHouse
18:53 Transforming Clickhouse into a SQL vector database
32:08 Data modeling
32:56 What data can be Vectorized
38:37 Indexing
43:35 Achieving Scale
46:35 Bottlenecks
48:41 MyScale vs other dedicated Vector Databases
51:38 Going Open Source
56:04 Closing thoughts