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The Developers' Bakery
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コンテンツは Nicola Corti によって提供されます。エピソード、グラフィック、ポッドキャストの説明を含むすべてのポッドキャスト コンテンツは、Nicola Corti またはそのポッドキャスト プラットフォーム パートナーによって直接アップロードされ、提供されます。誰かがあなたの著作物をあなたの許可なく使用していると思われる場合は、ここで概説されているプロセスに従うことができますhttps://ja.player.fm/legal。
A developer podcast about tools, libraries, and productivity. The Developers' Bakery is a place for open-source developers and maintainers to share their experience and projects. A journey through the tools and libraries that help developers worldwide baking great software daily. Join Nicola Corti through this journey among open source and beyond.
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96 つのエピソード
すべての項目を再生済み/未再生としてマークする
Manage series 2836526
コンテンツは Nicola Corti によって提供されます。エピソード、グラフィック、ポッドキャストの説明を含むすべてのポッドキャスト コンテンツは、Nicola Corti またはそのポッドキャスト プラットフォーム パートナーによって直接アップロードされ、提供されます。誰かがあなたの著作物をあなたの許可なく使用していると思われる場合は、ここで概説されているプロセスに従うことができますhttps://ja.player.fm/legal。
A developer podcast about tools, libraries, and productivity. The Developers' Bakery is a place for open-source developers and maintainers to share their experience and projects. A journey through the tools and libraries that help developers worldwide baking great software daily. Join Nicola Corti through this journey among open source and beyond.
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96 つのエピソード
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The Developers' Bakery

Time for a new episode of The Developers’ Bakery! 🎉 In this episode, we dive into the world of http4k with David Denton , exploring how you can treat your server as a function! Thanks to Kotlin expressivity, http4k allows you to develop server applications that are easy to test and maintain. David created and maintains the http4k together with Ivan Sanchez, and will share his story in creating this framework, which they claim it stands out as the most testable web toolkit. We will also discuss their journey from an open-source project to becoming a full-fledged company. Tune in to learn everything http4k! Enjoy the show 👨🍳 Show Notes 00.00 Intro 00.45 Episode Start 01.16 David’s Introduction 03.01 What is http4k? 04.37 Your server as a function 06.38 The http4k ecosystem 08.20 The most testable web toolkit 10.39 Kotlin-specific features in http4k 12.14 http4k vs ktor 14.16 http4k’s performances 15.53 Success stories 19.35 Running http4k on Android 20.37 Plugins and integrations 22.22 The story of http4k 26.46 From an OSS project to a company 29.03 Who’s maintaining http4k? 30.40 Best way to contribute 32.49 http4k v6 35.55 Coroutines support 37.51 http4k and AI 39.55 Further reading 41.47 Where people can find you online? Resources http4k/http4k on GitHub http4k Official Website @http4k on Twitter http4k/http4k-android-examples on GitHub Mentioned Resources: Server as a Function in Kotlin - Video from KotlinConf 2018 Exploring the Testing Hyperpyramid with Kotlin and http4k - Video from KotlinConf 2023 Introduction to http4k - Video by Dmitry Kandalov Pairing with Duncan McGregor playlist @daviddenton on GitHub David on Clockwork David Denton on LinkedIn Show links Podcast Website The Developers’ Bakery on Spotify The Developers’ Bakery on Apple Podcasts The Developers’ Bakery on Google Podcasts @thebakerydev on Twitter @cortinico on Twitter…
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The Developers' Bakery

In this episode of The Developers’ Bakery, we explore Astro , the modern web framework, with Elian Van Cutsem , one of its maintainers. Elian will walk us through Astro’s content-first approach, how it compares to other web frameworks, and its support for server-side/hybrid rendering. We also dive into Astro’s governance model and the challenges of maintaining an open-source project at this scale. Elian will also share his insights on the latest Astro 5 release and what’s next for the project. Finally, we chat about FOSDEM! We’ll share some of our personal anecdotes from the conference which just happened in Brussels, so you don’t want to miss this episode! Enjoy the show 👨🍳 Show Notes 00.00 Intro 00.46 Episode Start 01.07 Elian’s Introduction 01.58 What is Astro? 03.16 What does it mean to be content-first? 05.41 Astro’s main use case 06.28 Astro vs other static-site-generator 07.37 Server side rendering with Astro 10.15 Hybrid Rendering 11.01 The Island architecture 12.57 Astro’s performances 14.45 Where do you deploy your applications? 16.00 Astro success stories 19.41 Astro’s governance model 23.03 How did you feel when you became a maintainer? 24.08 Maintainers vs Core team member 25.40 The biggest challenge of maintaining Astro 29.09 Getting funding 31.17 What’s new in Astro 5? 33.35 What’s next for Astro? 35.26 What brings you to FOSDEM? 36.48 FOSDEM vibe and anecdotes 40.54 Further reading 43.41 Where people can find you online? Resources withastro/astro on GitHub Astro Official Website Mentioned Resources: Getting Started with Astro Astro Themes Gallery Astro Studio - All Secrets Reveiled - Video from React Alicante @ElianCodes on GitHub @ElianCodes on Twitter Show links Podcast Website The Developers’ Bakery on Spotify The Developers’ Bakery on Apple Podcasts The Developers’ Bakery on Google Podcasts @thebakerydev on Twitter @cortinico on Twitter…
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The Developers' Bakery

Let’s kickoff 2025 with a fresh new episode of The Developers’ Bakery! 🎉 Today, we talk about KotlinPoet with Egor Andreevich . KotlinPoet is a library from Square used to generate Kotlin code. It’s a great tool to generate code at compile time, and it’s used by many libraries and frameworks for Android and not only. Egor has been involved with KotlinPoet for multiple years and today will share with us how KotlinPoet works, when to use it, and how to contribute to the project. Enjoy the show 👨🍳 Show Notes 00.00 Intro 00.46 Episode Start 01.07 Egor’s Introduction 02.07 What is Kotlinpoet? 06.34 KotlinPoet use case 08.43 When to use code generation? 13.58 Templates vs KotlinPoet 17.32 Generating code that definitely compiles 19.46 Kotlin Poet 2.0 24.13 The challenges of KotlinPoet 27.44 Doing OSS at Square 32.55 Who’s maintaining KotlinPoet? 34.01 How to contribute to KotlinPoet? 36.53 How Egor got involved with KotlinPoet? 38.48 What’s next for KotlinPoet? 42.05 Further reading 43.38 Where people can find you online? Resources square/kotlinpoet on GitHub KotlinPoet Official Website Exploring Kotlin Symbol Processing: A Practical Guide - Video From Droidcon London @Egorand on GitHub @egorand.dev on Bluesky Egor’s Blog Show links Podcast Website The Developers’ Bakery on Spotify The Developers’ Bakery on Apple Podcasts The Developers’ Bakery on Google Podcasts @thebakerydev on Twitter @cortinico on Twitter…
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The Developers' Bakery

We’re back with another episode about developer tools! Today, we’re diving into Daytona 🚀, a self-hosted and secure open source development environment manager . I’m thrilled to have on stage Ivan Burazin , CEO and co-founder of Daytona, to tell us more about this project. Do you recall how much time it takes you to have your development environment ready? Think about how many hours you spend setting up your machine, installing dependencies, and configuring your IDE. Daytona aims to solve exactly this problem by providing a development environment that can get you up to speed in seconds! In addition, Ivan will walk us through the story of Daytona: how it started and what’s next for this tool. Ivan also has a lot of experience in conference organization. In this episode, we’ll touch on what he learned from creating tech conferences and how that skills helped him build Daytona today. Enjoy the show 👨🍳 Show Notes 00.00 Intro 00.46 Episode Start 01.22 Ivan’s Introduction 02.43 What is Daytona? 04.20 How developers would use Daytona? 06.46 Running Daytona 10.55 Browser based IDEs vs Daytona 12.03 Accessing shared environments 14.27 Using Daytona with Open Source projects 17.53 Pricing 21.02 Who’s funding Daytona? 24.04 The story of Daytona 29.51 From organizing conferences to building tools 33.57 The hardest part of organizing a conference 39.51 What’s next for Daytona? 45.31 Further reading 46.48 Where people can find you online? Resources daytonaio/daytona on GitHub Daytona Official Website Daytona Dotfiles Insiders @ivanburazin on Twitter @ivan-burazin on GitHub Ivan Burazin on LinkedIn Show links Podcast Website The Developers’ Bakery on Spotify The Developers’ Bakery on Apple Podcasts The Developers’ Bakery on Google Podcasts @thebakerydev on Twitter @cortinico on Twitter…
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The Developers' Bakery

Today we’re going to talk about Excalidraw 🎨, a web tool to sketch diagrams with a hand-drawn style. I’m glad to have on stage Aakansha Doshi , one of the maintainer of Excalidraw, to tell us more about this project. Aakansha will tell us the story of Excalidraw, how it evolved over time, and its secret to achieve the distinctive hand-drawn style. We’ll also talk about the community around Excalidraw, and Aakansha will share some tips on how to start contributing to your first open-source project. Enjoy the show 👨🍳 Show Notes 00.00 Intro 00.46 Episode Start 01.13 Akansha’s Introduction 02.21 What is Excalidraw? 03.51 Excalidraw’s hand-written style 06.32 Storing and sharing diagrams 09.16 excalidraw.com vs OSS 10.10 The Excalidraw tech stack 11.12 Your story with Excalidraw 14.42 Who’s maintaining Excalidraw? 16.22 Suggestions for getting started with open source 19.04 How to contribute to Excalidraw? 21.33 Isn’t Excalidraw feature complete? 25.20 How do you test Excalidraw? 26.27 Biggest challenge in maintaining Excalidraw 30.32 Refactoring Excalidraw 32.11 What’s next for Excalidraw? 35.33 AI & Excalidraw 37.08 Further reading 39.17 Where people can find you online? Resources excalidraw/excalidraw on GitHub Excalidraw Official Website Excalidraw Discord server Mentioned Resources: Excalidraw Documentation excalidraw/mermaid-to-excalidraw on GitHub react-tags/react-tags on GitHub @ad1992 on GitHub @aakansha1216 on Twitter Aakansha Doshi on LinkedIn Show links Podcast Website The Developers’ Bakery on Spotify The Developers’ Bakery on Apple Podcasts The Developers’ Bakery on Google Podcasts @thebakerydev on Twitter @cortinico on Twitter…
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The Developers' Bakery

It’s time for another special episode, 90! Together with our own Nicola, we’re diving into the world of Chucker , an open-source library that helps you debug network requests in Android. With Chucker you can simply inspect the HTTP and GraphQL requests and responses, visualize the body such as JSON or images, and even export them to share with your team. Nicola will tell us the story of how this library was born, how it evolved over time, and how you can use it in your projects. Enjoy the show 👨🍳 Show Notes 00.00 Intro 00.46 Episode Start 01.38 What is Chucker? 04.13 Installing Chucker 06.51 Chucker features 13.44 v4 17.03 Crash reporting? 19.51 Configuring Chucker 22.34 From Chuck to Chucker 33.04 Use Chucker to catch-em-all! 34.14 Supporting Chucker 37.22 Further reading Resources ChuckerTeam/chucker on GitHub TheBakery Official Website Mentioned Resources Use Chucker to Catch ‘Em All - Video from Droidcon Berlin Debugging Network Requests in Android with Chucker: A Comprehensive Guide @cortinico on GitHub @cortinico on Twitter Show links Podcast Website The Developers’ Bakery on Spotify The Developers’ Bakery on Apple Podcasts The Developers’ Bakery on Google Podcasts @thebakerydev on Twitter @cortinico on Twitter…
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The Developers' Bakery

We’re back with another episode about developer tooling and this time we’re diving into the world of Language Servers ! We have the pleasure to have on stage Gorkem Ercan , the CTO of Jozu and member of the Eclipse Foundation Board. Gorkem will walk us through his journey in the world of Language Servers, from writing Visual Studio Code plugins to building both the Java and the YAML Language Server. We’ll also talk a lot about Eclipse IDE, the Eclipse Foundation, and we’ll touch also on his new project: Kitops . Enjoy the show 👨🍳 Show Notes 00.00 Intro 00.55 Episode Start 01.19 Gorkem’s Introduction 02.55 What are Language Servers? 05.05 Gorkem’s language servers journey 10.50 Writing Visual Studio Code plugins 12.42 Syntax Highlightning vs Language Servers 14.33 Challenges of writing a Language Server 17.47 The YAML Language Server 20.16 YAML vs Java 23.22 Moving to the Eclipse Foundation 25.02 Life in the Eclipse Foundation 28.50 Being a member of the board 30.17 Eclipse IDE today 33.46 What is Jozu? 38.21 From Language Servers to ML models handoff? 42.14 Takeaways from writing Language Servers 44.13 OSS in Startups vs Foundations 47.54 Further reading 50.21 Where people can find you online? Resources eclipse-jdtls/eclipse.jdt.ls on GitHub redhat-developer/yaml-language-server on GitHub redhat-developer/vscode-java on GitHub redhat-developer/vscode-yaml on GitHub Language Server Protocol Reference Kitops Official Website Kitops Discord server @gorkem on GitHub @GorkemErcan on Twitter Show links Podcast Website The Developers’ Bakery on Spotify The Developers’ Bakery on Apple Podcasts The Developers’ Bakery on Google Podcasts @thebakerydev on Twitter @cortinico on Twitter…
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The Developers' Bakery

It’s time to spotlight another amazing Android library in this episode of The Developers’ Bakery! Today, I’m joined by Himanshu Singh , author and maintainer of Charty . Charty is a chart library entirely written for Jetpack Compose. In this episode, Himanshu will walk us through the complexities of building custom UI libraries and his passion for open-source. Enjoy the show 👨🍳 Show Notes 00.00 Intro 00.46 Episode Start 01.19 Himanshu’s Introduction 02.19 What is Charty? 03.43 What is Jetpack Compose 05.43 The story of Charty 08.54 MPAndroidChart vs Charty 10.27 Writing libraries for Compose 12.28 The challenges of building a chart library 14.53 Learning to say no 17.34 The most requested feature 18.48 Making Charty multiplatform 19.53 Charty 2.0.0? 22.21 How to contribute to Charty? 26.22 How open-source accelerated your career 29.59 Which other libraries are you maintaining? 31.46 Further reading 33.12 Where people can find you online? Resources hi-manshu/Charty on GitHub Charty Documentation hi-manshu/Kalendar on GitHub @hi-manshu on GitHub @hi_man_shoe on Twitter Show links Podcast Website The Developers’ Bakery on Spotify The Developers’ Bakery on Apple Podcasts The Developers’ Bakery on Google Podcasts @thebakerydev on Twitter @cortinico on Twitter…
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The Developers' Bakery

We keep on exploring the world of data with another amazing guest: Christina Lin , Developer Advocate at RedPanda . RedPanda is a data streaming platform, entirely built with C++ that aims to be faster and more efficient than Kafka. In this episode, Christina tells us all about RedPanda, its features, and how it’s different from other streaming platforms. Christina also shares her journey into Developer Advocacy, and share some of her tips to create engaging content for developers. Enjoy the show 👨🍳 Show Notes 00.00 Intro 00.46 Episode Start 01.10 Christina’s Introduction 02.01 What is RedPanda? 03.04 RedPanda in action 05.46 RedPanda features 09.53 Picking C++ 13.41 Attracting C++ contributors 15.20 How faster is RedPanda? 17.10 Self-hosting vs Cloud 20.11 Single binary architecutre 22.29 The history of RedPanda 24.59 Who’s maintaining RedPanda? 26.35 How Christina got involved in RedPanda 28.29 Being a DevRel 31.18 The best way to reach developers 33.39 The art of drawings 35.42 DevRel success metrics 37.38 From SWE to DevRel 39.21 Further reading 40.42 Where people can find you online? Resources redpanda-data/redpanda on GitHub Redpanda Official Website Mentioned Resources: Redpanda Youtube Channel Redpanda University @weimeilin79 on GitHub @Christina_wm on Twitter Christina Lin on Linkedin Show links Podcast Website The Developers’ Bakery on Spotify The Developers’ Bakery on Apple Podcasts The Developers’ Bakery on Google Podcasts @thebakerydev on Twitter @cortinico on Twitter…
Today is time to talk about Data Pipelines and Data Engineering. I’m really excited to have on stage Sandy Ryza , Lead Engineer of Dagster . If you’re a software engineer and you’re afraid of dealing with data pipelines , fear no more! Sandy is on a mission to make data pipelines easier to handle for software engineers. Join us in this episode to learn more about Dagster, and how it can make it easier for you to build and manage your data assets. Enjoy the show 👨🍳 Show Notes 00.00 Intro 00.46 Episode Start 01.09 Sandy’s Introduction 02.29 What is Dagster? 05.14 How is Dagster affecting software engineers? 06.13 Data engineering as software engineering 11.34 Cloud vs Self-hosted 13.42 Dagster Plus vs Dagster Plus Pro 14.41 The history of Dagster 19.43 Who’s maintaining Dagster? 20.59 Contributing to Apache Spark 24.42 Being an Open Source Data Scientist 29.18 Speaking a different language than SWE 31.44 Moving from SWE to Data Scientist 34.38 Approaching the Data Scientist world 35.59 What’s next for Dagster 37.53 Further reading 39.46 Where people can find you online? Resources dagster-io/dagster on GitHub Dagster Official Website Mentioned Resources Getting Started with Dagster Dagster University Dagster on YouTube @sryza on GitHub @s_ryz on Twitter Show links Podcast Website The Developers’ Bakery on Spotify The Developers’ Bakery on Apple Podcasts The Developers’ Bakery on Google Podcasts @thebakerydev on Twitter @cortinico on Twitter…
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The Developers' Bakery

1 Kotlin Multiplatform at Google I/O with Marcello Galhardo 27:54
27:54
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Welcome to a special in-person episode of The Developers’ Bakery, recorded live in Berlin at Google I/O Connect 2024! There, I had the privilege of having on stage Marcello Galhardo , Software Engineer at Google. Marcello is working in the AndroidX team responsible for adding Kotlin Multiplatform support for several popular AndroidX libraries. If you’re an Android Developer, you probably used one of those libraries in your projects, such as Lifecycle or Room. Marcello is going to walk us through the latest announcements about Kotlin Multiplatform at Google I/O, and how they’re going to impact the way we build Android apps. Enjoy the show 👨🍳 Show Notes 00.00 Intro 00.50 Episode Start 01.37 Marcelo’s Introduction 02.18 What is Kotlin Multiplatform? 03.11 KMP @ Google IO 04.00 KMP announcement excitement 05.32 Convince us to use KMP for a new app 07.20 KMP support in AndroidX libraries 08.29 Migrating from Android to KMP 09.02 Which library has you contributed to? 09.27 Which library was the hardest to KMP migrate? 10.28 How many developers are involved in KMP compatibility? 11.28 alpha and versioning for AndroidX libraries 12.57 Where is the AndroidX source code? 13.42 KMP compatible vs KMP supported 15.19 Google’s stance on cross-platform 16.59 How is Google is using KMP? 17.53 Marcello’s journey 18.19 Foldable devices and large screens 20.17 Which IDE to use for KMP? 22.25 AI and KMP 25.49 Further reading 26.42 Where people can find you online? Resources Kotlin Multiplafrom Mobile Overview Mentioned Resources: Android Support for KMP Announcement Making development across platforms easier for developers Kotlin Multiplatform in Google Workspace by Jason Parachoniak - Video from KotlinConf @marcellogalhardo on GitHub @marcellogalhard on Twitter Marcello’s Website Show links Podcast Website The Developers’ Bakery on Spotify The Developers’ Bakery on Apple Podcasts The Developers’ Bakery on Google Podcasts @thebakerydev on Twitter @cortinico on Twitter…
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The Developers' Bakery

Today we talk about a completely new topic: DevOps and System configuration. I’m really excited to have on stage Adam Jacob , CEO and Co-founder of System Initiative . Adam is challenging the status quo of DevOps tools with a completely new approach to system configuration. While System initiative looks like a no-code tool at first, it comes with all the power of TypeScript to let you build and manage your infrastructure in a completely new way. We will talk about the history of System Initiative, the challenges of building a new tool in a crowded space, and the future of DevOps. Adam is also the co-founder of Chef , a really popular configuration management tool, and he will share with us some of the lessons learned from that previous experience. Enjoy the show 👨🍳 Show Notes 00.00 Intro 00.46 Episode Start 01.03 Adam’s Introduction 03.19 What is a System Initiative? 07.54 What are the System Initiative feature? 11.16 Is this a drag-n-drop tool to create AWS infras? 14.37 No-code tools & quality of their output 20.12 Frontend engineers doing DevOps? 23.06 How is System Initiative doing Open Source? 25.18 The history of System Initiative 34.10 From demo to production 36.13 AI & DevOps 39.18 What you learned from building Chef? 43.51 Further reading 45.06 Where people can find you online? 46.07 Sysadmin in disguise Resources systeminit/si on GitHub System Initiative Official Website System Initiative Discord server Talk at Config Mgmt Camp 2023 - What if Infrastructure as Code never existed @adamhjk on GitHub @adamhjk on Twitter @adamhjk on Mastodon Show links Podcast Website The Developers’ Bakery on Spotify The Developers’ Bakery on Apple Podcasts The Developers’ Bakery on Google Podcasts @thebakerydev on Twitter @cortinico on Twitter…
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The Developers' Bakery

Hi everyone, today is time to talk about GraphQL ! We have on stage Tanmai Gopal , CEO and co-founder of Hasura . Hasura is an open-source GraphQL engine that helps you build and scale your GraphQL APIs, basically ‘without’ limits! We’ll talk about the history of Hasura, how it works, and what’s next for this project. Join us in this episode as Tanmai will tell us his story founding Hasura and how they’re building a vibrant ecosystem around this project. Enjoy the show 👨🍳 Show Notes 00.00 Intro 00.46 Episode Start 01.09 Tanmai’s Introduction 02.04 What is a Hasura? 04.12 Exposing DBs via GraphQL 07.41 Self-hosting Hasura 13.00 Subscriptions in Hasura 16.07 Hasura Supergraph 21.15 Single Point of Failure 23.51 The history of Hasura 33.12 Founding Hasura 35.22 Haskell in the backend 40.12 Doing Open Source at Hasura 43.50 What’s next for Hasura? 50.27 Further reading 52.47 Where people can find you online? Resources hasura/graphql-engine on GitHub Hasura Official Website Mentioned Resources: Getting Started with Hasura Hasura Discord server @coco98 on GitHub @tanmaigo on Twitter Tanmai Gopal on Linkedin Show links Podcast Website The Developers’ Bakery on Spotify The Developers’ Bakery on Apple Podcasts The Developers’ Bakery on Google Podcasts @thebakerydev on Twitter @cortinico on Twitter…
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The Developers' Bakery

Time for a brand-new topic today, as we’re going to talk about Marketing Automation . I’m excited to have on stage Ruth Cheesley , who’s going to tell us all about Mautic . Mautic is a marketing automation software, that helps you manage your email campaigns, track your user engagement, and much more. It’s fully open-source (written in PHP 🐘) and works either as self-hosted or as a cloud solution. But we’re also going to talk about another crucial topic in open-source: governance models . Ruth has been supporting the Mautic community for years, and helped them navigate through a governance model change. She’s going to share what worked and what not for Mautic and give us some tips on how to manage a community project. Enjoy the show 👨🍳 Show Notes 00.00 Intro 00.46 Episode Start 01.14 Ruth’s Introduction 03.08 What is a Mautic? 04.27 Mautic competitors 05.29 Self-hosting Mautic 07.22 The open-source and business model 10.02 Who’s working full-time for Mautic? 11.35 The history of Mautic 14.01 Tech Stack 15.23 How Ruth got involved in this project? 19.09 Collecting metrics about Mautic 21.29 Mautic on mobile 22.13 Growing a community 25.58 Testing at Mautic 28.00 Using Gitpod to help contributions 29.22 Governance models 39.20 Voting in the open 43.56 Who can vote? 45.08 Ruth’s suggestions on doing governance 48.36 Code of conducts 49.47 Woman in Open Source 52.04 Further reading 54.30 Where people can find you online? Resources mautic/mautic on GitHub Mautic Official Website Mentioned Resources: Mautic on YouTube Lead Scoring Best Practices with Mautic @RCheesley on GitHub @RCheesley on Twitter Ruth Cheesley on LinkedIn Ruth’s Website Show links Podcast Website The Developers’ Bakery on Spotify The Developers’ Bakery on Apple Podcasts The Developers’ Bakery on Google Podcasts @thebakerydev on Twitter @cortinico on Twitter…
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Today we touch on a brand-new topic: device management! I’m excited to have on stage Zach Wasserman , co-founder and CTO at Fleet . Fleet is a Mobile device management (MDM) software, that helps you manage your device fleet. It’s fully open-source and works either as self-hosted or as a cloud solution. Zach is going to guide us through the world of fleet management, talking about challenges such as managing vulnerabilities and updating devices. If you ever worked with a managed device, you’ll be amazed to learn some of the secrets from the device management world! Enjoy the show 👨🍳 Show Notes 00.00 Intro 00.45 Episode Start 01.14 Zac’s Introduction 02.04 What is a Fleet? 05.57 Fleet vs other MDM tools 08.08 Fleet vs chef 10.40 Challenges in building MDM software 12.21 The journey of a new device 15.53 Updating OS version 17.50 Integrating with user’s calendar 18.55 Incident Stories 21.17 Who’s using Fleet? 23.15 Self-hosting vs cloud 24.14 Handling malwares 26.25 The history of Fleet 30.12 Introducing osquery 31.48 Being part of the Linux Foundation 34.56 Being part of a steering commitee of a an OSS project 37.04 What’s next for Fleet? 39.17 Provisioning Vision Pros 40.03 Integrating AI? 41.12 Further reading 42.46 Where people can find you online? Resources fleetdm/fleet on GitHub Fleet Official Website Open Source GitOps for Detection Engineering - Video from BSides Las Vegas 2023 Collect First, Ask Questions Later - Video from GopherCon 2022 @zwass on GitHub @thezachw on Twitter Zach Wasserman on LinkedIn Show links Podcast Website The Developers’ Bakery on Spotify The Developers’ Bakery on Apple Podcasts The Developers’ Bakery on Google Podcasts @thebakerydev on Twitter @cortinico on Twitter…
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