Chats with Kent C. Dodds

Kent C. Dodds

Kent C. Dodds chats with developers.

  1. Human factors, product debt, and industrial design - product engineering with Will King

    3D AGO

    Human factors, product debt, and industrial design - product engineering with Will King

    Will's path runs from designing bucket trucks to self-taught software engineering, education products, and database tooling, and that background gives this episode a distinctive lens: software is still a product people use with bodies, habits, emotions, and mental models. The conversation makes product sense concrete through examples like onboarding timing, course complexity, support workflows, and the small confidence signals that separate stable-feeling products from merely functional ones. You'll hear why watching users work keeps surfacing across this series, how to tell broken experiences from merely unpopular ones, why user feedback usually improves polish more than strategy, and how product engineers can stay valuable in an agent-heavy future by understanding both the user and the constraints of the software medium. Homework Use AI agents more for gathering than executing: explore multiple solution paths, adjacent domains, and missing context before you ship. Give agents richer context like user demographics, constraints, and likely mental models, then use your own judgment to evaluate what comes back. Slow down long enough to question assumptions before implementation; use AI as a creativity and critique tool, not just a code accelerator. Resources Will King - site Deploy Empathy (Michele Hansen) The Mom Test (Rob Fitzpatrick) Interface Craft (Josh Puckett) Guest: Will King Company: Crunchy Data GitHub: @wking-io 𝕏: @wking__ Host: Kent C. Dodds Website: kentcdodds.com 𝕏: @kentcdodds GitHub: @kentcdodds Youtube: Kent C. Dodds Video Watch this episode on YouTube

    1h 2m
  2. Vertical slices, Solo, and empathy — product engineering with Aaron D. Francis

    APR 8

    Vertical slices, Solo, and empathy — product engineering with Aaron D. Francis

    Aaron builds in public—Laravel roots, education, and now Solo, a terminal multiplexer–style desktop app for organizing agents and dev stacks. This episode is a practical tour of product sense for developers: watching people work, reading support email with empathy, cow paths vs. fences, and why the “right” architecture can still lose if humans go home furious. You’ll hear how Aaron reasons from problem → solution when users ask for worktrees, when to duplicate UI affordances even when the model is “one,” and how introverts can still do discovery by treating outreach like an optimization mission—plus niche opportunities outside the Cursor clone gold rush. Homework When someone asks for a solution (e.g. a feature), slow down and ask what problem they’re really trying to solve—users often lead with implementations. Practice user empathy: imagine someone stressed, trying to finish work; question “technically correct” UX that blames the user instead of protecting them (confirmations, back-button data loss, etc.). If talking to people is hard, reframe discovery as a systematic search (spreadsheet energy, trusted partners, or domain friends)—or pair with someone who loves conversations. Resources Aaron D. Francis — X Jobs to Be Done (Clay Christensen) The Design of Everyday Things (Don Norman) Guest: Aaron D. Francis Company: Solo & Laravel education GitHub: @aarondfrancis 𝕏: @aarondfrancis Host: Kent C. Dodds Website: kentcdodds.com 𝕏: @kentcdodds GitHub: @kentcdodds Youtube: Kent C. Dodds Video Watch this episode on YouTube

    46 min
  3. Foundations, feedback, and agents — Dillon Mulroy on product at Cloudflare

    APR 1

    Foundations, feedback, and agents — Dillon Mulroy on product at Cloudflare

    Dillon's path runs from internal insurance tools to Vercel Domains to Cloudflare's agent and dashboard work-always with the same through-line: care about the user, get real feedback, and invest in primitives so delighters don't collapse under bad foundations. This episode covers metrics and paging as a product habit, learning from customer escalations, scoping small when AI speeds up coding, and building cross-functional relationships (support, sales, finance) as part of engineering judgment. You'll hear practical parallels with episodes on delighters and onboarding tension, plus why reviewing agent-written code still matters for system intuition when things break at 2 a.m. Homework Try hard and care a lot; more practically, focus on foundations and primitives. Put good feedback systems in place so you know what's going on with your product and where it doesn't feel good-alerting and metrics, customer journey signals, or customer interviews. If you have a customer support team, sit with them and watch them triage cases for your product; get to know support-they're sitting on a gold mine of product signal-and empathize with them like you do with users. Kent's shorthand for the mindset Dillon agreed with: make pain painful-if your users are hurting, you should feel it too. Resources Cloudflare - Developers Cloudflare Agents Dillon Mulroy - site Dillon Mulroy - GitHub Guest: Dillon Mulroy Company: Cloudflare GitHub: @dmmulroy X: @dillon_mulroy Host: Kent C. Dodds Website: kentcdodds.com X: @kentcdodds GitHub: @kentcdodds Youtube: Kent C. Dodds Video Watch this episode on YouTube

    49 min
  4. Of Things Epic: The Principles Behind Great Decisions with Kent C. Dodds

    03/09/2025

    Of Things Epic: The Principles Behind Great Decisions with Kent C. Dodds

    Kent C. Dodds sits down with Jason Lengstorf to discuss his talk at Epic Web Conf, Of Things Epic, where he dives into the principles behind effective decision-making in web development. Rather than focusing on which tools to pick, Kent emphasizes the need for a framework that enables developers to make confident decisions that scale. He draws from his experience with the Epic Stack, highlighting the importance of clear reasoning behind technical choices. Key topics in this conversation include: Why decision paralysis is unnecessary in modern web development. How the Epic Programming Principles provide a solid foundation for making smart tech choices. Why Laravel's opinionated approach has been so successful and what we can learn from it. The importance of structuring your projects so they can evolve without unnecessary rewrites. How in-person conferences create opportunities for career growth and deeper relationships. Kent also shares his excitement about the hallway track at Epic Web Conf, encouraging attendees to come talk to him about real-world experiences with the Epic Stack, scaling web apps, and even personal interests like family life, one-wheeling, and snowboarding. Watch this episode. Meet Kent at Epic Web Conf. Guest: Kent C. Dodds Website: kentcdodds.com 𝕏: @kentcdodds GitHub: @kentcdodds YouTube: Kent C. Dodds Epic Web: epicweb.dev Host: Jason Lengstorf Website: CodeTV.dev 𝕏: @jlengstorf GitHub: @jlengstorf YouTube: CodeTV

    13 min
4.8
out of 5
19 Ratings

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Kent C. Dodds chats with developers.

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