The TTL Podcast focuses features conversations with experienced front-end developers at organizations facing interesting challenges in terms of the scale and complexity of their web applications. Hosted by Rebecca Murphey.
Ilya is a web performance engineer, a developer advocate at Google, and the author of High Performance Browser Networking. We talk about HTTP/2 and what it's going to mean to you.
Boki, a web architect at Intuit, talks about standardizing the approach to UI across 14 teams on a 25-year-old product, and a philosophy of building components with their ultimate replacement in mind.
Patrick and Seb explain the process of bringing The Guardian's internal and external web applications up to modern standards -- and why the organization believes in doing much of the work in the open.
Emily shares her story of becoming a developer at Github, the company's approach to front-end performance, and why github.com has a lot less JavaScript on it than you might think.
How do you bring some sanity to hundreds of web properties at a 127-year-old company? In this episode, Andrew Betts and I talk about Origami, the answer to that question at the Financial Times.
What's it like to take a six-year-old codebase and bring it in line with modern best practices? In this episode, Dan Lee and I talk about how his team at Yammer did just that.
Dave is a software engineering manager on the Core Web team at WalmartLabs. We talk about his path to front-end development, the perils of functional testing, and a framework that his team is working on to help smooth some of those bumps.
Daniel and Seth are on the front-end infrastructure team at Etsy, an offshoot of the performance team. We talk about how their team came to be, and the work they're doing to improve the front-end development story at Etsy.
In the inaugural episode of the podcast, I talk to Alex Sexton, my former podcast co-host, a product engineer at Stripe, and the name-er of many things, including Front-End Ops.
Burak, a front-end lead at Disqus, is a third-party JavaScript kindred spirit. In this episode, we talk about the challenges of 3PJS, the importance of the developer experience, and when to stop optimizing for performance.