53 min

#52 - Software Qualities for Quality Software - Marco Faella Tech Lead Journal

    • Technology

“Seriously good software is not just software that works. It is not just software that satisfies its functional requirements, so it does the right thing, but it also does it in the right way."

Marco Faella is an associate professor at the University of Naples Federico II and the author of “Seriously Good Software”. In this episode, Marco explained what he means by seriously good software, looking at software quality from multiple different perspectives. We then dived deep into several of those software qualities with some practical tips on how software engineers can improve their craft to produce high-quality software. Towards the end, we also touched on the concept of minimum viable code, why it is important to have an idea of what the ideal code looks like, while still being practical in finding the right compromise.

Listen out for:


Career Journey - [00:05:00]
Role of Education for Software Engineers - [00:07:18]
Seriously Good Software - [00:12:02]
Software Quality Quadrants - [00:17:15]
Speed and Time Efficiency - [00:20:23]
Space and Memory Efficiency - [00:24:10]
Reliability Through Monitoring - [00:26:54]
Invariants - [00:32:11]
Reliability Through Testing - [00:33:43]
Readability - [00:36:15]
Reusability - [00:39:25]
Thread-Safety - [00:41:17]
Minimum Viable Code - [00:46:29]
3 Tech Lead Wisdom - [00:48:44]

_____

Marco Faella’s Bio
Marco Faella is an associate professor in the Department of Electrical Engineering and Information Technologies at the University of Naples Federico II in Italy. Besides his research on theoretical computer science, Marco is a passionate teacher and programmer. For the last 13 years he has been teaching classes on advanced programming and has published a Java certification manual and a video course on Java streams. More recently, Marco has released his book titled “Seriously Good Software” that teaches techniques for writing high quality software.

Follow Marco:


LinkedIn – https://www.linkedin.com/in/marco-faella-8675574/
Twitter – https://twitter.com/m_faella
Website – http://wpage.unina.it/m.faella



Our Sponsor

This episode is proudly sponsored by Emergence, the journal of business agility. This quarterly publication brings you inspiring stories from the most innovative companies and explores themes of new ways of working, reclaiming management, and humanizing business. Each issue is hand illustrated and 100% content. Use the promo code “techlead” to get a 10% discount on your annual subscription. Visit businessagility.institute/emergence to get your edition and support the publication supporting your podcast.



Like this episode?
Subscribe on your favorite podcast app and submit your feedback.
Follow @techleadjournal on LinkedIn, Twitter, and Instagram.
Pledge your support by becoming a patron.
For more info about the episode (including quotes and transcript), visit techleadjournal.dev/episodes/52.

“Seriously good software is not just software that works. It is not just software that satisfies its functional requirements, so it does the right thing, but it also does it in the right way."

Marco Faella is an associate professor at the University of Naples Federico II and the author of “Seriously Good Software”. In this episode, Marco explained what he means by seriously good software, looking at software quality from multiple different perspectives. We then dived deep into several of those software qualities with some practical tips on how software engineers can improve their craft to produce high-quality software. Towards the end, we also touched on the concept of minimum viable code, why it is important to have an idea of what the ideal code looks like, while still being practical in finding the right compromise.

Listen out for:


Career Journey - [00:05:00]
Role of Education for Software Engineers - [00:07:18]
Seriously Good Software - [00:12:02]
Software Quality Quadrants - [00:17:15]
Speed and Time Efficiency - [00:20:23]
Space and Memory Efficiency - [00:24:10]
Reliability Through Monitoring - [00:26:54]
Invariants - [00:32:11]
Reliability Through Testing - [00:33:43]
Readability - [00:36:15]
Reusability - [00:39:25]
Thread-Safety - [00:41:17]
Minimum Viable Code - [00:46:29]
3 Tech Lead Wisdom - [00:48:44]

_____

Marco Faella’s Bio
Marco Faella is an associate professor in the Department of Electrical Engineering and Information Technologies at the University of Naples Federico II in Italy. Besides his research on theoretical computer science, Marco is a passionate teacher and programmer. For the last 13 years he has been teaching classes on advanced programming and has published a Java certification manual and a video course on Java streams. More recently, Marco has released his book titled “Seriously Good Software” that teaches techniques for writing high quality software.

Follow Marco:


LinkedIn – https://www.linkedin.com/in/marco-faella-8675574/
Twitter – https://twitter.com/m_faella
Website – http://wpage.unina.it/m.faella



Our Sponsor

This episode is proudly sponsored by Emergence, the journal of business agility. This quarterly publication brings you inspiring stories from the most innovative companies and explores themes of new ways of working, reclaiming management, and humanizing business. Each issue is hand illustrated and 100% content. Use the promo code “techlead” to get a 10% discount on your annual subscription. Visit businessagility.institute/emergence to get your edition and support the publication supporting your podcast.



Like this episode?
Subscribe on your favorite podcast app and submit your feedback.
Follow @techleadjournal on LinkedIn, Twitter, and Instagram.
Pledge your support by becoming a patron.
For more info about the episode (including quotes and transcript), visit techleadjournal.dev/episodes/52.

53 min

Top Podcasts In Technology

No Priors: Artificial Intelligence | Technology | Startups
Conviction | Pod People
All-In with Chamath, Jason, Sacks & Friedberg
All-In Podcast, LLC
Lex Fridman Podcast
Lex Fridman
Acquired
Ben Gilbert and David Rosenthal
Hard Fork
The New York Times
TED Radio Hour
NPR