Around IT in 256 seconds

A podcast by Tomasz Nurkiewicz

Categories:

98 Episodes

  1. #77: DDoS: take down a server, one request at a time

    Published: 6/13/2022
  2. #76: 12th Factor App: portable and resilient services start here. Part 8-12/12

    Published: 6/6/2022
  3. #75: 12th Factor App: portable and resilient services start here. Part 1-7/12

    Published: 5/31/2022
  4. #74: SOAP: (not really) Simple Object Access Protocol

    Published: 5/16/2022
  5. #73: Neo4j: all your data as a graph?

    Published: 5/10/2022
  6. #72: React.js: library that won frontends?

    Published: 5/6/2022
  7. #71: Erlang: let it crash!

    Published: 4/26/2022
  8. #70: CRDT: Conflict-free Replicated Data Type (guest: Martin Kleppmann)

    Published: 4/12/2022
  9. #69: DevOps: not a job position, but culture and mindset

    Published: 2/14/2022
  10. #68: ACID transactions: don't corrupt your data

    Published: 2/1/2022
  11. #67: Version control systems: auditing source code, tracking bugs and experimenting

    Published: 1/25/2022
  12. #66: Aspect-oriented programming: another level of code modularization

    Published: 1/18/2022
  13. #65: Zero Downtime deployment: If it hurts, do it more often

    Published: 1/10/2022
  14. #64: TypeScript: will it entirely replace JavaScript?

    Published: 1/3/2022
  15. #63: Logging libraries: auditing and troubleshooting your application

    Published: 12/27/2021
  16. #62: Object-relational mapping: hiding vs. introducing complexity

    Published: 12/20/2021
  17. #61: Spring framework: 2 decades of building Java applications

    Published: 12/15/2021
  18. #60: Haskell: purely functional and statically typed programming language

    Published: 12/7/2021
  19. #59: How compilers work: from source to execution

    Published: 11/29/2021
  20. #58: Consumer-driven Contracts: TDD between services

    Published: 11/22/2021

2 / 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