Around IT in 256 seconds

Un podcast de Tomasz Nurkiewicz

Catégories:

98 Épisodes

  1. #57: Kotlin: Much more than 'better Java'

    Publié: 16/11/2021
  2. #56: Test-driven development: It's not about testing

    Publié: 02/11/2021
  3. #55: Percentages, percentage points and basis points: understand your metrics

    Publié: 25/10/2021
  4. #54: Immutability: from data structures to data centers

    Publié: 19/10/2021
  5. #53: CDN: Content Delivery Network: global scale caching

    Publié: 11/10/2021
  6. #52: How computers work: from electrons to Electron

    Publié: 04/10/2021
  7. #51: Cloud computing: more than renting servers per minute

    Publié: 27/09/2021
  8. #50: Property-based testing: find bugs automatically by generating thousands of test cases

    Publié: 21/09/2021
  9. #49: Functional programming: academic research or new hope for the industry?

    Publié: 13/09/2021
  10. #48: Distributed tracing: find bottlenecks in complex systems

    Publié: 07/09/2021
  11. #47: Terraform: managing infrastructure as code

    Publié: 05/07/2021
  12. #46: Kubernetes: Orchestrating large-scale deployments

    Publié: 29/06/2021
  13. #45: Node.js: running JavaScript on the server (!)

    Publié: 21/06/2021
  14. #44: RESTful APIs: much more than JSON over HTTP

    Publié: 15/06/2021
  15. #43: Public-key cryptography: math invention that revolutionized the Internet

    Publié: 07/06/2021
  16. #42: Flow control and backpressure: slowing down to remain stable

    Publié: 31/05/2021
  17. #41: Unicode: can you see these: Æ, 爱 and 🚀?

    Publié: 24/05/2021
  18. #40: Docker: more than a process, less than a VM

    Publié: 18/05/2021
  19. #39: DNS: one of the fundamental protocols of the Internet

    Publié: 11/05/2021
  20. #38: HTTP cookies: from saving shopping cart to online tracking

    Publié: 30/03/2021

3 / 5

Podcast for developers, testers, SREs... and their managers. I explain complex and convoluted technologies in a clear way, avoiding buzzwords and hype. Never longer than 4 minutes and 16 seconds. Because software development does not require hours of lectures, dev advocates' slide decks and hand waving. For those of you, who want to combat FOMO, while brushing your teeth. 256 seconds is plenty of time. If I can't explain something within this time frame, it's either too complex, or I don't understand it myself. By Tomasz Nurkiewicz. Java Champion, CTO, trainer, O'Reilly author, blogger

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