Fork Pull Merge Push

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Fork Pull Merge Push is a podcast about topics developers obsess over. In the first season, developer Esko Lahti talks to engineers around the world about the topics that have sent them down to their deepest, most mind-bending rabbit holes. Fork Pull Merge Push is a podcast by Reaktor, a strategy, design and technology company changing how the world works.

Reaktor


    • Mar 30, 2023 LATEST EPISODE
    • infrequent NEW EPISODES
    • 40m AVG DURATION
    • 20 EPISODES


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    Latest episodes from Fork Pull Merge Push

    Why Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion in Tech is More Important Than Ever

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 30, 2023 46:22


    In toDEI's episode, we discuss the past, the present, and the future of diversity, equity, and inclusion in the tech field. Starting with the basics, like what DEI actually means and what's its purpose, but also addressing more complex topics, like the importance of having diverse leadership, how to measure DEI, and how to build a proper DEI strategy. Come as you are and join the talk with our guests, Cassandra Shapiro & Jasmin Assulin. GuestsCassandra Shapiro is Reaktor's Global Head of DEI. Together with Jasmin Assulin from deidei she is working to embed DEI into Reaktor's global strategy and operational practises. She has a background in communications and marketing at social enterprises. Jasmin Assulin is the CEO and co-founder of the Helsinki-based DEI agency deidei and an award-winning DEI professional. Following a collaboration with Reaktor in 2021, the collaboration expanded and deidei was brought on to be the external partner for Reaktor's global DEI efforts. HostsAnna Fröblom is a great programmer, problem-solver, hobby photographer, lego enthusiast, and simply a nice person.Oles Datsko is a tech impostor and Fork Pull Merge Push podcast producer who oftentimes cannot resist and chips in to the conversation. In his free time, Oles loves making silly art and taking his cat Miksi on adventures.  ReferencesDear Future Colleague, I learned to embrace my neurodiversity as a developer. And so can you. Dear Tech Industry: How to be a good ally to womenThe digital rights of LGBTQ+ communities: Five steps towards an inclusive design processDEI requires vision, persistence, and patienceAbout ReaktorFork Pull Merge Push is a podcast created for developers by developers. It's brought to you by Reaktor, a global technology consultancy that designs, builds, and scales transformative digital products for today's most forward-thinking companies. 

    Future of Work. Making Sense of the AI Hype

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 9, 2023 37:53


    We continue discussing the future of work, and in today's episode, we look at it from the AI angle. What can we expect from AI democratization, and what are the dangers of AI hype? Is today's AI-assisted software development any better than just auto-fill? How to make sense of the emerging generative models and expand your creativity? Tune in as we address these and more questions with our guests Johan Himberg and Jimi Hyvärinen.GuestsJimi Hyvärinen is an Art Director with a strong background in visual storytelling through films and photography. He is also a big tech geek and loves approaching briefs through tech glasses. He's always hungry to create unexpected concepts. For the past five-plus years, he has been working with big global brands locally in Finland, as well as at the Nordic level. He's experienced in building brands that operate in all Nordic countries. Johan Himberg has been marinated in working with data and AI-related things in research, start-ups, and corporations for 25 years. His field is currently called data science or even artificial intelligence.HostsAnna Fröblom is a great programmer, problem-solver, hobby photographer, lego enthusiast, and simply a nice person.Oles Datsko is a tech impostor and Fork Pull Merge Push podcast producer who oftentimes cannot resist and chips in to the conversation. In his free time, Oles loves making silly art and taking his cat Miksi on adventures.  ReferencesElements of AI — free online courses developed by Reaktor in partnership with the University of Helsinki and designed to be empowered, not threatened, by artificial intelligence. Together, they built the Elements of AI to teach the basics of AI to people from a wide range of backgrounds.Do You Really Need Artificial Intelligence in Your Softwate? — Fork Pull Merge Push s2e2jambo - maailma — music video created with Stable DiffusionAbout ReaktorFork Pull Merge Push is a podcast created for developers by developers. It's brought to you by Reaktor, a global technology consultancy that designs, builds, and scales transformative digital products for today's most forward-thinking companies.

    Make Your Team Click: The Fundamentals of Agile

    Play Episode Listen Later Feb 16, 2023 42:09


    Is the future of work co-located, hybrid, or online? How can we efficiently integrate design & development teams around agile ways of working? Are there any shortcuts in that process? Our guests, Gabi & Panu, bring unique theoretical and practical perspectives to the table. Tune in and share this with your teammates.

    Is Software Development Becoming Obsolete?

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 25, 2023 53:59


    Is development becoming obsolete? We invited Miku and Pauliina to talk about software engineering — how the roles have been shaping, what the current trends and challenges are, and how we can shape the future of our profession. Tune in and join our semi-practical, semi-philosophical conversation.GuestsPauliina started her career as a communications consultant, but slowly life took her back to her childhood hobby - coding. She moved all the way to Australia to study at a coding bootcamp and has now been working as a software developer for over 5 years. She still thinks it was the best decision of her life. What she loves most about coding is how tangible it feels to build software one piece at a time and how rewarding it is to solve problems with technology. In her free time,, you will find her on a yoga mat or wandering in a forest.With nearly 20 years of experience, Mikael is a passionate, future-oriented technology leader with a cultivated interest in cutting-edge technologies and the methodologies of creating exceptional digital products. While he currently has limited time to actually code at work, he still does it as a hobby. Mikael is a fan of functional programming and loves exploring new tech, surfing, and cooking.Mikael's core expertise and interests are the design of technology organizations, technology strategy, business, and digital strategy, innovation, software and enterprise architectures, modern process methodologies, modern leadership, self-organization, systems thinking, data, and AI.HostAnna Fröblom is a great programmer, problem-solver, hobby photographer, lego enthusiast, and simply a nice person.Guest HostRoss Langley is a human-centered designer from Reaktor Helsinki. He loves helping teams excel in challenging environments. Ross shines when he does concept modeling, validates ideas, or makes celebrity impressions. References:Malan, Pais, Skelton: Team Topologies: Organizing Business and Technology Teams for Fast FlowCagan: Inspired: How to Create Tech Products Customers Love (Silicon Valley Product Group)Forsgren, Humble, Kim: Accelerate: The Science of Lean Software and DevOps: Building and Scaling High Performing Technology OrganizationsGoogle Cloud 2022: Announcing the 2022 Accelerate State of DevOps Report: A deep dive into securityAbout ReaktorFork Pull Merge Push is a podcast created for developers by developers. It's brought to you by Reaktor,  a creative technology partner for forward-thinking companies and societies, based in Helsinki, New York, Amsterdam, Stockholm, Lisbon, and Tokyo.We at Reaktor are looking for exceptional talent and new friends. Check our open positions and apply now!

    Truth over convenience. The data analytics episode

    Play Episode Listen Later Jul 11, 2022 34:16


    In many organizations, analytics are still often put on the back burner. Why? We invited analytics expert Matias Muhonen to talk about that in this episode. We touch upon the basics of analytics, the whys and hows of data collection, management, and security.GuestMatias Muhonen is an analyst, make-it-happener and a full-stack developer. He has been gathering and analysing data, doing experimentation, building services and making work better at Reaktor for six years now. Matias's passion is creating online services that produce actual outcomes and both business and end-user value. In his free time he enjoys cycling both on paved and unpaved surfaces. Matias is also interested in philosophy and psychology — and trying to better understand the world and us humans. Hosts Anna Fröblom is a great programmer, problem-solver, hobby photographer, lego enthusiast, and simply a nice person.Esko Lahti is an engineer who now works in the company that got him into Clojure. Now, his party trick at meetups is to rapid-fire through an extensive list of parentheses jokes.ReferencesGoogle Analytics - good default analytics toolKlipfolio - simple but powerful tool for visualising data No analytics, no outcomes, feature factoryGood books:General thinking for everybodyExperimentation and Growth Hacking About ReaktorFork Pull Merge Push is a podcast created for developers by developers. It's brought to you by Reaktor, a strategy, design, and technology company changing how the world works.We at Reaktor are looking for exceptional talent and new friends. We have open positions in New York, Amsterdam, Helsinki, Lisbon, and more. Check them out and apply today!

    Solve it like an admin. Why it's important to ask 'why'?

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 21, 2022 36:40


    In today's episode, we dive into the admin world in the Reaktor context. For that, we invited Robin Laurén, a full-stack admin, who's been with Reaktor for over nine years. We talk about what qualities make a great sysadmin and why empathy and people skills are as necessary as tech skills. We touch upon the topics of data security and mobile device management (MDM). Finally, Robin shares some fascinating stories from his years of experience working in IT. GuestRobin Laurén is a full-stack admin who's been delivering hugs to users, workstations, servers, and networks since 2001. Robin aspires to provide usable and honest security. His main objective is to enable people to do their best work. Outside of work, Robin is interested in singing, theatre, IoT and home automation, photography, radio, and video production.Hosts Anna Fröblom is a great programmer, problem-solver, hobby photographer, lego enthusiast, and simply a nice person.Esko Lahti is an engineer who now works in the company that got him into Clojure. Now, his party trick at meetups is to rapid-fire through an extensive list of parentheses jokes.ReferencesRobin's ex-boss: José Ramos-Horta (then foreign minister, now president, of Timor-Leste)Robin's theatre gigs: Fallåker (soon playing Panik på kliniken - it runs in the family)Finns (now playing Pinocchio

    Learning by Teaching. Embracing Continuous Learning as a Developer

    Play Episode Listen Later May 23, 2022 44:14


    In this episode, we talk about continuous learning with Laura Beatris, full-stack developer from Reaktor Amsterdam. Laura opens up about why teaching others also helps her grow professionally. She also shares her learning techniques & processes. GuestLaura Beatris is a Software Developer at Reaktor, originally from Brasil but currently based in the Netherlands. In addition to writing code, Laura also loves learning by teaching others. She's currently studying more in-depth GraphQL and Elixir.When not coding, she's playing music and traveling around the world. Concerts and music festivals are the ultimate reasons to travel for Laura. She loves to take photos of singers and fans having their best time.Hosts Anna Fröblom is a great programmer, problem-solver, hobby photographer, lego enthusiast, and simply a nice person.Esko Lahti is an engineer who now works in the company that got him into Clojure. Now, his party trick at meetups is to rapid-fire through an extensive list of parentheses jokes.ReferencesNotability/Notion for digital note taking"How to Take Smart Notes" book - Get more in depth about the whole science behind writing good notes during study sessions"The Power of Habit" book - Understand how habit loops are important for a consistent study journeyLaura's social media:InstagramLinkedinTwitterAbout ReaktorFork Pull Merge Push is a podcast created for developers by developers. It's brought to you by Reaktor, a strategy, design, and technology company changing how the world works.We at Reaktor are looking for exceptional talent and new friends. We have open positions in New York, Amsterdam, Helsinki, Lisbon, and more. Check them out and apply today!

    Code it Aside: How to Plan, Launch, and Promote your Side-Project

    Play Episode Listen Later May 2, 2022 40:41


    In today's episode, we talk about open source, developer communities, and side-projects. Jesse Luoto from Reaktor Helsinki shares his hard-earned lessons from planning, launching, and promoting dozens of side projects of all shapes and sizes. What's the right balance between the speed and quality of your open source project? When you should launch, how to promote your work, and how to maintain it with the help of dev communities? Tune in to get answers to these and many more questions.GuestJesse Luoto is a full-stack developer and an open-source advocate at Reaktor. Jesse is driven by imperfection and irritation. He likes to solve practical problems and makes indie games in his free time.Hosts Anna Fröblom is a great programmer, problem-solver, hobby photographer, lego enthusiast, and simply a nice person.Esko Lahti is an engineer who now works in the company that got him into Clojure. Now, his party trick at meetups is to rapid-fire through an extensive list of parentheses jokes.ReferencesGoogle Analytics library (37M monthly downloads)VerbalExpressions (12k stars)Faker.jsOpen collective (they have Fiscal Host service now!)NoSXHacker NewsGithubTwitter About ReaktorFork Pull Merge Push is a podcast created for developers by developers. It's brought to you by Reaktor, a strategy, design, and technology company changing how the world works. We at Reaktor are looking for exceptional talent and new friends. We have open positions in New York, Amsterdam, Helsinki, Lisbon, and more. Check them out and apply today!

    Let's Map This Out! Working with GIS and OpenStreetmap Data

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 1, 2022 22:47


    In this Fork Pull Merge Push episode, we discuss geographic information system (GIS) - not a well-known domain to many. Henna Kalliokoski, a GIS professional and functional programming enthusiast will share her knowledge on GIS data, coordinate systems and e.g. accessibility. GIS data can be used in many different ways and she will shed light on e.g. how open source communities contribute to GIS data and service development.GuestHenna Kalliokoski a full-stack developer and a GIS professional at Reaktor. Henna gets inspired by people and wants to make the world a better place. She believes in the power of open source and open data. In her free time, Henna learns Chineese and enjoys painting.Hosts Anna Fröblom is a great programmer, problem-solver, hobby photographer, lego enthusiast, and simply a nice person.Esko Lahti is an engineer who now works in the company that got him into Clojure. Now, his party trick at meetups is to rapid-fire through an extensive list of parentheses jokes.Useful linksOpen Street MapSource code of Digitransit Microsoft AI buildings in Humanitarian OpenStreetMapOpen Source vector tilesOSGeo foundationOpen Geospatial Consortium About ReaktorFork Pull Merge Push is a podcast created for developers by developers. It's brought to you by Reaktor, a strategy, design, and technology company changing how the world works.We at Reaktor are looking for exceptional talent and new friends. We have open positions in New York, Amsterdam, Helsinki, Lisbon, and more. Check them out and apply today!

    Curiosity Drive or Why I Moved from the US to Finland

    Play Episode Listen Later Feb 15, 2022 49:04


    In today's episode, we talk with product designer Ross Langley about the feeling of belonging. We talk about change — whether it's changing your career path or moving to another country. Ross walks us through the practicalities of relocation. About different working cultures, in Finland and the US. About dealing with the pandemic, impostor syndrome, and difficult clients. Ross opens up about his experience of burn-out and how he recovered from it. We know that it's common for people in the tech industry to move places for work, so we hope Ross' story will help you. p.s. Reaktor has open positions in offices around the globe. Make sure to check them out and join the team: https://www.reaktor.com/careersGuestRoss Langley is a human-centered designer from Reaktor Helsinki office. He loves helping teams excel in challenging environments. You can see Ross shine when he does concept modeling, validates ideas, or makes celebrity impressions. Hosts Anna Fröblom is a great programmer, problem-solver, hobby photographer, lego enthusiast, and simply a nice person.Esko Lahti is an engineer who now works in the company that got him into Clojure. Now, his party trick at meetups is to rapid-fire through an extensive list of parentheses jokes.About ReaktorFork Pull Merge Push is a podcast created for developers by developers. It's brought to you by Reaktor, a strategy, design, and technology company changing how the world works.We at Reaktor are looking for exceptional talent and new friends. We have open positions in New York, Amsterdam, Helsinki, Lisbon, and more. Check them out and apply today!

    Do You Really Need Artificial Intelligence in Your Software?

    Play Episode Listen Later Feb 1, 2022 33:37


    Guest:Henrik Aalto is a data science generalist with a background in systems analysis and operations research. He works in the intersection of technology and business and loves creating data-driven solutions to complex problems. Despite his passion for AI, sometimes he thinks a simple BI-report will do all that's needed. In his spare time, he likes to keep it simple - cook from season's veggies and do mostly outdoor sports that fit the weather.Hosts: Anna Fröblom is a great programmer, problem-solver, hobby photographer, lego enthusiast, and simply a nice person.Esko Lahti is an engineer who now works in the company that got him into Clojure. Now, his party trick at meetups is to rapid-fire through an extensive list of parentheses jokes.References:Hidden Technical Debt in Machine Learning SystemsWhat robots want? Hearing the inner voice of a robotIntroduction to AIBuilding AI No matter the levels of automation nor intelligence – your tools always need a human touch About ReaktorFork Pull Merge Push is a podcast created for developers by developers. It's brought to you by Reaktor, a strategy, design, and technology company changing how the world works.We at Reaktor are looking for exceptional talent and new friends. We have open positions in New York, Amsterdam, Helsinki, Lisbon, and more. Check them out and apply today!

    Code and Emotion. Why Anthropology is Important for Creating Good Digital Products

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 18, 2022 34:32


    GuestAnna Haverinen is a Design Anthropologist and she holds a PhD in Digital Culture. She works at the intersection of design, technology, and business by providing strategic and qualitative insight into people, communities, and individuals. In her academic work, she has studied grief and death in online environments, and in the past years, she has worked with clients such as UPM, Suunto, Aarikka, and Janssen Pharmaceuticals. Her favorite thing in the world is Fazer chocolate.HostsAnna Fröblom is a great programmer, problem-solver, hobby photographer, lego enthusiast, and simply a nice person.Esko Lahti is an engineer who now works in the company that got him into Clojure. Now, his party trick at meetups is to rapid-fire through an extensive list of parentheses jokes.ReferencesMadjsberg, Christian & Rasmussen, Mikkel: The Moment of Clarity: Using the Human Sciences to Solve Your Toughest Business ProblemsHasbrouck, Jay: Ethnographic Thinking: From Method to MindsetTett, Gillian: Anthro‑Vision: How Anthropology Can Explain Business and LifeAbout ReaktorFork Pull Merge Push is a podcast created for developers by developers. It's brought to you by Reaktor, a strategy, design, and technology company changing how the world works.We at Reaktor are looking for exceptional talent and new friends. We have open positions in New York, Amsterdam, Helsinki, Lisbon, and more. Check them out and apply today!

    Deep dive into advanced TypeScript

    Play Episode Listen Later May 31, 2021 52:44


    Microsoft is arguably taking over the open source world. Esko, Paavo, Juuso and Sam debate the role the company plays in today’s open source community – TypeScript, GitHub, VS Code, npmjs.com and all – and discuss the advanced features of TypeScript.GuestsPaavo Huhtala joined Reaktor at the age of 19. A self-taught hobbyist programmer since middle school, he likes pretty much everything – from writing compilers in Rust to adding that missing 0.5 pixels of left padding to the signups form's submit button.Juuso Mikkonen has been programming professionally since 2015 but still learns – mostly through mistakes – something new every day. His day-to-day tasks usually involve programming in TypeScript, building web services, remote teamwork and managing time zone differences.Sam Grönblom is from Finland but relocated to Tokyo a decade ago. He’s partial to pragmatic, statically typed functional languages, and he wishes he could only program in F#.HostEsko Lahti is a programmer who loves to have his weekly mind blowing experience caused by a yet another neat TypeScript typing system trick.Episode linksTypeScript: https://www.typescriptlang.orgC#: https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/dotnet/csharp/Visual Studio Code: https://code.visualstudio.comSublime Text: https://www.sublimetext.comAtom editor: https://atom.ioGitHub: https://github.comnpm: https://www.npmjs.comDart programming language: https://dart.devFlow: https://flow.orgRamda: https://ramdajs.comLodash: https://lodash.comTypera, type-safe routes for Express and Koa: https://github.com/akheron/typeraDeno, secure runtime for JavaScript and TypeScript: https://deno.landAbout ReaktorFork Pull Merge Push is a podcast by Reaktor, a strategy, design and technology company changing how the world works. Reaktor has offices in New York, Amsterdam, Stockholm, Tokyo and Helsinki, Turku and Tampere.Reaktor is always on the lookout for bright software developers to work in health, security, emerging technologies, and much more.See www.reaktor.com/careers.@ReaktorNow#FPMPod

    Clojure and Its Superpower, The REPL

    Play Episode Listen Later May 6, 2021 48:54


    Cheers to the 14th trip around the sun of the language that’s made up of data! In this episode, Esko, Matti and Toni discuss Clojure, REPL, and how you can use them in your next project.GuestsMatti Lankinen’s programming career started from the little boy's dream of making his own games. C++ was too hard at the time, so he started making his own programming language. It was never finished. (Hands up, who can relate?)Toni Vanhala learned the alphabet by typing on the keyboard and copying BASIC programs his mother read aloud. A couple decades later, Toni got his Ph.D. after programming a custom gaze tracker, virtual humans that react to facial expressions, and a chair that senses emotions.HostEsko Lahti is an engineer who now works in the company that got him into Clojure. Now, his party trick at meetups is to rapid fire through an extensive list of parentheses jokes.Episode linksThe Clojure programming language: https://clojure.org/Shadow CLJS: https://shadow-cljs.github.io/docs/UsersGuide.htmlLeiningen: https://leiningen.org/Pedestal: https://github.com/pedestal/pedestalclojurians.slack.com community (invite link): http://clojurians.net/Reitit, data-driven router for Clojure(Script): https://github.com/metosin/reititclj-kondo, a linter for Clojure: https://github.com/clj-kondo/clj-kondocljfmt, a tool for formatting Clojure: https://github.com/weavejester/cljfmtHiccup, a library for representing HTML in Clojure: https://github.com/weavejester/hiccupIntegrant: https://github.com/weavejester/integrantCursive, the Clojure(Script) IDE: https://cursive-ide.com/Nightlight, an embedded editor for Clojure: https://sekao.net/nightlight/Reagent, React for ClojureScript: https://reagent-project.github.io/re-frame, a ClojureScript framework for UIs: https://github.com/day8/re-frameRich Hickey’s most influential talks: https://changelog.com/posts/rich-hickeys-greatest-hitsAbout ReaktorFork Pull Merge Push is a podcast by Reaktor, a strategy, design and technology company changing how the world works. Reaktor has offices in New York, Amsterdam, Stockholm, Tokyo and Helsinki, Turku and Tampere.Reaktor is always on the lookout for bright software developers to work in health, security, emerging technologies, and much more.See www.reaktor.com/careers.@ReaktorNow#FPMPod

    Category Theory for the Non-PhD – and What to Use It For

    Play Episode Listen Later Apr 15, 2021 37:52


    Category theory may strike you as intimidating, but trust us, you can (and after this episode, are probably itching to) talk applicative functors and parser combinators over afterwork drinks. Listen in to learn why Esko and Antti – both of whom started programming with dynamically typed languages – are so into category theory right now that they see applications of it everywhere.GuestAntti Holvikari is endlessly fascinated by pure functional programming languages such as Haskell and PureScript. Software quality and personal productivity are two things he’s constantly improving.HostEsko Lahti is an engineer who always wanted to learn about category theory in practice – but never knew where to start. Then he met Antti Holvikari.Episode linksPureScript: https://www.purescript.org/Parser Combinators, a Walkthrough: https://hasura.io/blog/parser-combinators-walkthrough/fp-ts: https://github.com/gcanti/fp-tsio-ts: https://github.com/gcanti/io-tsAlgebraic Data Types: https://dev.to/gcanti/functional-design-algebraic-data-types-36kfDiscriminated Unions in TypeScript: https://basarat.gitbook.io/typescript/type-system/discriminated-unionsMaybe Not, a talk by Rich Hickey: https://youtu.be/YR5WdGrpoug

    Finding the Corner of the Internet You Love with Amsterdam Hackers

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 25, 2021 45:29


    Two years ago, David and Tijn formed Amsterdam Hackers: a group of developers willing to conquer and learn from tech problems they had previously found impossible. In this episode, Esko talks to the two Amsterdam-based engineers about the group’s philosophy, as well as their two largest projects; the gbforth and Delisp.GuestsDavid Vázquez grew up sitting next to his father, watching him code in Clipper. Having coded in Microsoft Access and Visual Basic, he got into Linux and C around 2002. David then learned Emacs and Lisp that introduced him to programming language design and implementations. The rest is history.Tijn Kersjes discovered programming as a kid when he realised you can create games rather than just play them. Eventually, he decided to combine his two passions (drinking coffee and writing code) into a software development career.HostEsko Lahti is an engineer who enjoys team work over solo work of any kind.Episode linksAmsterdam Hackers: https://github.com/ams-hackersDelisp: https://github.com/liphe/delispHindley-Milner type system: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hindley%E2%80%93Milner_type_systemRacket: https://racket-lang.org/gbforth, a Forth-based Game Boy development kit: https://github.com/ams-hackers/gbforthChip-8: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CHIP-8Sokoban Game: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SokobanAbout ReaktorFork Pull Merge Push is a podcast by Reaktor, a strategy, design and technology company changing how the world works. Reaktor has offices in New York, Amsterdam, Stockholm, Tokyo and Helsinki, Turku and Tampere.Reaktor is always on the lookout for bright software developers to work in health, security, emerging technologies, and much more. See www.reaktor.com/careers.@ReaktorNow#FPMPod

    The Promise of Tasks: Concurrency in a Single Threaded World

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 11, 2021 32:51


    Multiple threads or only one thread, and why should it matter? Blocking or non-blocking IO, and what benefits do each of them offer? What’s the problem of using callbacks? Hold on to your hats, folks – in this episode, Esko, Andy and Otto plow through some of the most fundamental questions regarding runtime environments. GuestsAndy Davies is a software developer who likes making other developers’ lives easier, usually by providing libraries, tooling, infrastructure, build systems, and ways of working. He likes keeping things simple. He doesn't like Kubernetes.Otto Paaso also likes simple things (and static types). For the past 12 years he has been working on embedded, desktop and web products, as well as the necessary backend and infrastructure technologies to make things rock. HostEsko Lahti is an engineer who wants to know how things work under the hood, no matter how many threads are involved. He has no horse in the Node.js vs JVM race.Episode linksV8 JavaScript Engine: https://v8.dev/The Node.js Event Loop: https://nodejs.dev/learn/the-nodejs-event-loopA Guide to CompletableFutures in Java: https://www.baeldung.com/java-completablefutureOverview of blocking and non-blocking IO: https://nodejs.org/en/docs/guides/blocking-vs-non-blocking/Asynchronous programming in C#: https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/dotnet/csharp/asyncAbout ReaktorFork Pull Merge Push is a podcast by Reaktor, a strategy, design and technology company changing how the world works. Reaktor has offices in New York, Amsterdam, Stockholm, Tokyo, Helsinki, Turku and Tampere.Reaktor is always on the lookout for bright software developers to work in health, security, emerging technologies, and much more. See www.reaktor.com/careers.@ReaktorNow#FPMPod

    Time to Ditch the Boilerplate: Safe, Fast and Easy Data Manipulation with Statically Typed Optics

    Play Episode Listen Later Feb 25, 2021 32:35


    Still writing bespoke functions and boilerplate to immutably manipulate a complex data structures? Statically typed optics will both do the heavy lifting for you, AND give your TypeScript hustle an unforeseen boost.GuestPetri Lehtinen started programming with Basic in the mid-90s. Open source projects and functional programming in typed programming languages are close to his heart.HostEsko Lahti is an engineer who saw the light after first encountering the partial.lenses optics library in 2017. Episode linksoptics-ts: https://github.com/akheron/optics-tsMonocle: https://www.optics.dev/MonocleMonocle-ts: https://github.com/gcanti/monocle-tspartial.lenses: https://github.com/calmm-js/partial.lensescalmm.js: https://github.com/calmm-jsProfunctor optics: http://www.cs.ox.ac.uk/people/jeremy.gibbons/publications/poptics.pdfA comprehensive study about different optic types: http://oleg.fi/gists/posts/2017-04-18-glassery.htmlAbout ReaktorFork Pull Merge Push is a podcast by Reaktor, a strategy, design and technology company changing how the world works. Reaktor has offices in New York, Amsterdam, Stockholm, Tokyo, Helsinki, Turku and Tampere.Reaktor is always on the lookout for bright software developers to work in health, security, emerging technologies, and much more. See www.reaktor.com/careers.@ReaktorNow#FPMPod

    GraphQL is the God Mode of Web Development

    Play Episode Listen Later Feb 10, 2021 53:11


    GraphQL has arguably changed the entire paradigm of writing full-stack web applications. In today’s episode, Esko, Ian and Dirk discuss GraphQL, Apollo, and Relay, and why they can, in good conscience, be called a web developer’s cheat codes.GuestsIan Fosbery is a big believer in good communication—both face-to-face, and through code. For the past 15 years, he has been building products, writing code, and getting excited about everything from good software design to devops and scale.Dirk Geurs is a technologist interested in creating high-performing software teams. Over the last year, he worked on various cross-platform mobile applications.HostEsko Lahti is an engineer who is lazy and loves to take the easy way out. (Editor’s note: No one has ever witnessed Esko take an easy way out of anything.)Episode LinksGraphQL: https://graphql.org/GraphQL.js: https://github.com/graphql/graphql-jsRelay: https://relay.dev/Apollo: https://www.apollographql.com/Falcor: https://netflix.github.io/falcor/Hasura: https://hasura.io/Om Next: https://github.com/omcljs/omAbout ReaktorFork Pull Merge Push is a podcast by Reaktor, a strategy, design and technology company changing how the world works. Reaktor has offices in New York, Amsterdam, Stockholm, Tokyo, Helsinki, Turku and Tampere.Reaktor is always on the lookout for bright software developers to work in health, security, emerging technologies, and much more. See www.reaktor.com/careers.@ReaktorNow#FPMPod

    Will Harmaja be the React Killer we've been waiting for?

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 27, 2021 27:56


    React, it turns out, is not what lies at the end of the web development rainbow. In this episode, Esko, Juha and Jussi talk about achieving super fast user interfaces by combining functional programming techniques and embedding observables directly into the DOM with Harmaja.GuestsJuha Paananen started coding with Commodore computers in the 80s and is a proud holder of both IBM WebSphere and XML certificates. Juha is the author of Harmaja, but perhaps best known in the open source community as the creator of the Bacon.js library. He loves functional programming, electronics and generally writing stuff from scratch.He loves functional programming, electronics, and generally writing stuff from scratch.Jussi Saurio quit his job as an English teacher in late 2016 and started teaching himself software development. After three months of intense self-study, he scored his first tech job, and the rest is (fairly recent) history.HostEsko Lahti is an engineer who still remembers the days of using Apache Wicket and JSP to create web applications. Episode LinksReact: https://reactjs.org/Harmaja: https://github.com/raimohanska/harmajaLonna: https://github.com/raimohanska/lonnaBacon.js: https://baconjs.github.io/Calmm.js: https://github.com/calmm-jspartial.lenses: https://github.com/calmm-js/partial.lensesr-board: https://github.com/raimohanska/r-boardAbout ReaktorFork Pull Merge Push is a podcast by Reaktor, a strategy, design and technology company changing how the world works. Reaktor has offices in New York, Amsterdam, Stockholm, Tokyo, Helsinki, Turku and Tampere.Reaktor is always on the lookout for bright software developers to work in health, security, emerging technologies, and much more. See www.reaktor.com/careers.@ReaktorNow#FPMPod

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