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saas.unbound is a podcast for and about founders who are working on scaling inspiring products that people love, brought to you by https://saas.group/, a serial acquirer of B2B SaaS companies. In episode #14 of season 5, Anna Nadeina talks with Anthony, Founder & CEO for DNSimple, a hosting and domain management automation solution. --------------Episode's Chapters---------------- 00:00 - Anthony's Journey into Domain Management 04:04 - Bootstrapping DNSimple 08:05 - Transition from Consulting to Product 14:06 - Customer Support and Team Dynamics 20:31 - Scaling and Team Growth 28:42 - AI in Business: A Measured Approach 32:47 - Setting Annual Objectives and Key Results 37:13 - Long-Term Vision and Exit Strategy 41:55 - Biggest Wins and Failures 43:50 - Secret Hacks for Motivation and Growth Anthony - https://www.linkedin.com/in/aeden/ DNSimple - https://dnsimple.com/ Subscribe to our channel to be the first to see the interviews that we publish twice a week - https://www.youtube.com/@saas-group Stay up to date: Twitter: https://twitter.com/SaaS_group LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/14790796
Anthony Eden, Founder & CEO of DNSimple, joins the show to talk about the world of managed hosting for DNS and more.
Anthony Eden, Founder & CEO of DNSimple, joins the show to talk about the world of managed hosting for DNS and more.
Anthony Eden is a gray beard in terms of internet time, being around when Netscape was released. He was studying music at the University of Miami, and decided to build a website to show off his music and other peoples work - and was hooked. Outside of tech, he grew up surfing, living in Hawaii, France and now Florida. He enjoys writing software for fun - when he has time - and playing board games with this kids - when they are around.In the past, Anthony was coming off of a failed startup. At the time, he was using a different vendor to manage domains and DNS - which he did not like at all. He decided to go forward and build a better solution, and one that is - you guessed it - simple.This is the creation story of DNSimple.SponsorsPropelAuthTeclaSpeakeasyQA WolfSnapTradeLinkshttps://dnsimple.com/https://www.linkedin.com/in/aeden/Our Sponsors:* Check out Kinsta: https://kinsta.com* Check out Red Hat: https://www.redhat.com* Check out Vanta: https://vanta.com/CODESTORYSupport this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/code-story/donationsAdvertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy
How do you manage your DNS? Carl and Richard talk to Anthony Eden of DNSimple about his latest product, the Domain Control Plane. Anthony talks about how everyone has DNS—and usually in more than one place. Getting a common view of all your DNS entries, no matter where they are, is valuable, but being able to automate changes is even more important, especially as things scale up! The conversation ranges over development, cloud, scaling systems, and some old-fashioned geekery!
How do you manage your DNS? Carl and Richard talk to Anthony Eden of DNSimple about his latest product, the Domain Control Plane. Anthony talks about how everyone has DNS—and usually in more than one place. Getting a common view of all your DNS entries, no matter where they are, is valuable, but being able to automate changes is even more important, especially as things scale up! The conversation ranges over development, cloud, scaling systems, and some old-fashioned geekery!
Get ready to revolutionize your perspective on customer support as Sarah Caminiti joins me, Charlotte Ward, to unveil the power of all-hands support. Imagine a workplace where the CEO and the newest developer alike roll up their sleeves to tackle daily customer queries. This is the reality at Sarah's company, DNSimple, where fostering a deep understanding of customer needs across all team levels has led to a transformative support experience. We delve into the nuances of creating a knowledge-rich environment that empowers both customers and engineers, ensuring the latter aren't swamped by trivial issues. Sarah's approach has not only streamlined support but has also cultivated an atmosphere where engineers embrace customer interaction with confidence and stress-free ease.In our second chapter, the art of managing a remote support team takes center stage. Striking the perfect balance between responsiveness and team cohesion in a virtual environment is no small feat. I open up about the meticulous orchestration behind our 24-hour response policy, highlighting the vital role of documentation and transparent communication in keeping our remote wheels turning smoothly. Through mentorships and performance reviews, I strive to spotlight process optimization over finger-pointing, fostering a culture where feedback leads to growth. We share our strategies for keeping dialogue channels open, ensuring that our team feels supported in voicing any concerns. Join us for this compelling exploration of cultivating trust and efficiency in the ever-evolving realm of customer support.Support the show
Web and Mobile App Development (Language Agnostic, and Based on Real-life experience!)
If you create video content regularly, there's a good chance you host it somewhere (or happen to be looking for a good place to host them). At Snowpal, we use videos for a variety of purposes and one of them relates to Snowpal Education where we create and publish courses for purchase (such as this one). We explored a few different ways to host these videos, and arrived at an approach that works best for us. In this course, we will go over that approach and walk you through OS X Final Cut Pro, Canva, Vimeo and DNSimple. We are confident that this will answer a few questions for you. Purchase course in one of 2 ways: 1. Go to https://getsnowpal.com, and purchase it on the Web 2. On your phone: (i) If you are an iPhone user, go to http://ios.snowpal.com, and watch the course on the go. (ii). If you are an Android user, go to http://android.snowpal.com.
Anthony Eden chats with Benedicte and Benedikt about DNSimple, marketing, how they delegate decision making in their team, and more. DNSimple Follow DNSimple on Mastodon Follow Anthony on Twitter, Mastodon, and LinkedIn When Anthony and his brother created the product in 2010, they had developers in mind from day one. And unlike other domain registrars and DNS providers in the market, DNSimple lets you unlock what you can do with your domain so you can automate whatever you want.Anthony, Benedicte, and Benedikt talk about marketing tactics, delegating decision making, what's next for DNSimple, and more!
How do you automate DNS changes? And why would you? Carl and Richard talk to Enrique Comba, the DNSimple Ambassador, about programming against the DNSimple API. Enrique talks about automating migration from other DNS services - in fact, there are community-created products for migrating from various 'popular' DNS providers to DNSimple. The conversation also ranges over other tasks that are difficult to do manually, like certificate generation and renewal. If you're creating multi-tenant applications, configuration of DNS is a normal part of the job, and it should be automated - there are lots of reasons to dive into the API!
How do you automate DNS changes? And why would you? Carl and Richard talk to Enrique Comba, the DNSimple Ambassador, about programming against the DNSimple API. Enrique talks about automating migration from other DNS services - in fact, there are community-created products for migrating from various 'popular' DNS providers to DNSimple. The conversation also ranges over other tasks that are difficult to do manually, like certificate generation and renewal. If you're creating multi-tenant applications, configuration of DNS is a normal part of the job, and it should be automated - there are lots of reasons to dive into the API!Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/net-rocks/donations
How do you automate DNS changes? And why would you? Carl and Richard talk to Enrique Comba, the DNSimple Ambassador, about programming against the DNSimple API. Enrique talks about automating migration from other DNS services - in fact, there are community-created products for migrating from various 'popular' DNS providers to DNSimple. The conversation also ranges over other tasks that are difficult to do manually, like certificate generation and renewal. If you're creating multi-tenant applications, configuration of DNS is a normal part of the job, and it should be automated - there are lots of reasons to dive into the API!Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/net-rocks/donations
Anthony Eden talks about building a domain management service with Rails, Go and Erlang. It's hosted on bare metal, AWS and Heroku.
Related StoriesEpisode 463.5 | Be Part of “The State of Independent SaaS”Episode 513 | SaaS Valuations + Dos and Don’ts When Selling A SaaSEpisode 509 | Revisiting the Six Stages of SaaS Growth with DNSimple
Rob is joined by Anthony Eden from DNSimple as they answer your listener questions. They cover topics ranging from tax liabilities with contractors, getting feedback on a prototype, and finding a technical cofounder. If you have questions about starting or scaling a SaaS that you’d like for us to cover, please submit your question for the next […] Related StoriesEpisode 462 | Competing Against a 900 lb. Gorilla, Splitting from Your Co-founder, and More Listener Questions (with Jeff Epstein)Episode 430 | What to Look For In a Co-Founder
This is a story of how Anthony Edent founded DNSimple to become the fastest DNS management solution provider in the world. He built himself a company that not only cares about their customers, but also created the perfect place for their employees. They work hard, but they also do it remotely, from around the globe. How did he do it, and what lessons does Anthony have for fellow founders and entrepreneurs? It’s all in this podcast!A few few additional resources you might enjoy:How DNSimple was founded, a cartoon!How HTTPS works, a comic!How DNS works, a comic too :)Lastly, if you are thinking of buying a domain or switching your DNS provider, here's $5 you can use right away.
Show Notes Today, we have a conversation between Rob and Anthony Eden from DNSimple as they revisit the six stages of SaaS growth starting with pre-launch and pre product-market fit to scaling and company building. Be sure to listen in until the end of the podcast as they talk about what lies beyond company building, […] Related StoriesEpisode 488 | A Bluetick Progress Update from Mike TaberEpisode 483 | Building a Mindset for SaaS Growth with Andy BaldacciEpisode 463.5 | Be Part of “The State of Independent SaaS”
http://microconfonair.comA new segment of MicroConf On Air, we're going to host founders who have joined the MicroConf Connect community to share their stories, their successes and failures, and more. Shownotes: Today, we are featuring Anthony Eden, Founder of DNSimple.Anthony Eden is the founder of DNSimple, a 25-year software developer, and a seasoned international speaker. In addition to bootstrapping DNSimple, Anthony has been an early-stage member of numerous small businesses and startups since the late 90s. Anthony has a large portfolio of open source projects that he either created or contributed to, using multiple languages including Java, Python, Ruby, Clojure, Go, Erlang and Elixir. Anthony has spoken at conferences in both the US and Europe on topics such as software development techniques, best practices for systems design, and how to build a sustainable business. When he's not working you can find him surfing, snowboarding, playing board games, and traveling. Anthony currently lives near Melbourne, Florida.https://microconf.comMicroConf Connect ➡️ http://microconfconnect.comTwitter ➡️ https://twitter.com/MicroConfE-mail ➡️ support@microconf.comMicroConf 2020 Headline PartnersStripehttps://stripe.comTwitter ➡️ https://twitter.com/StripeBasecamphttps://basecamp.comTwitter ➡️ https://twitter.com/Basecamp
http://microconfonair.comA new segment of MicroConf On Air, we're going to host founders who have joined the MicroConf Connect community to share their stories, their successes and failures, and more. Shownotes: Today, we are featuring Anthony Eden, Founder of DNSimple.Anthony Eden is the founder of DNSimple, a 25-year software developer, and a seasoned international speaker. In addition to bootstrapping DNSimple, Anthony has been an early-stage member of numerous small businesses and startups since the late 90s. Anthony has a large portfolio of open source projects that he either created or contributed to, using multiple languages including Java, Python, Ruby, Clojure, Go, Erlang and Elixir. Anthony has spoken at conferences in both the US and Europe on topics such as software development techniques, best practices for systems design, and how to build a sustainable business. When he's not working you can find him surfing, snowboarding, playing board games, and traveling. Anthony currently lives near Melbourne, Florida.https://microconf.comMicroConf Connect ➡️ http://microconfconnect.comTwitter ➡️ https://twitter.com/MicroConfE-mail ➡️ support@microconf.comMicroConf 2020 Headline PartnersStripehttps://stripe.comTwitter ➡️ https://twitter.com/StripeBasecamphttps://basecamp.comTwitter ➡️ https://twitter.com/Basecamp
Today, I'm talking with , the Founder and CEO of where they offer simple, secure domain management. Not only is Anthony and his team doing well into 7-figures a year of revenue, but they're completely bootstrapped, fully remote, and only have 12 employees. Staying lean as a growing remote company is incredibly challenging and in our chat today Anthony walks through what makes DNSimple such an effective company. We cover how they handle management and meetings, where they've used automation to become more efficient, and how they use OKRs to keep everything on track. I can't speak for you, but Anthony and his team have built the sort of company I aspire to build because they strike an amazing balance between growth, profitability, and having a life along the journey. It was great having the opportunity to pick Anthony's brain and I know you'll get a lot out of it, too.
On this week's episode, Chris is joined by Edward Loveall, former thoughtbot design apprentice and now thoughtbot developer. After a quick chat about Edward's thoughtbot origin story, podcasts, and DNS, they dig into the heart of the conversation talking about their respective "must have" developer tools on new machines. edwardloveall.com thoughtbot apprenticeship Domain Name Sanity Heroku DNSimple Amazon Route53 Giant Robots podcast Edward's episode on Giant Robots talking about the apprenticeship Tweet about using a podcast as internal onboarding Hammerspoon Slate Spectacle Divvy Vim Tmux VSCode Live share tmate Alfred Alfred clipboard AppleScript Arch Linux Jeff Goldblum iMac Commercials Feedly Feedbin ReadKit JSON Feed CSS & Privacy - Why can't I set the font size of a visited link? Lobsters Thank you to CircleCI for sponsoring this episode.
Jamie Phillips is writing infrastructure as code. This episode is not sponsored! Want to be a sponsor? You can contact me or check out my sponsorship gig on Fiverr Show Notes: PhillipsJ.net Terraform HCL, and yes it does kinda look like CSS DNSimple Terraform Guides Terraform on Azure Book: Terraform: Up and Running It was just last week, but make sure you don’t miss Jamie’s episode on Packer! Jamie Phillips is on Twitter Want to be on the next episode? You can! All you need is the willingness to talk about something technical.
Sponsors Sentry use the code “devchat” for 2 months free on Sentry small plan .TECH– tech/MRS use the coupon code “TECH” and get a 1 year .TECH Domain at $9.99 and 5 Year Domain at $49.99. Hurry! CacheFly Host: Charles Max Wood Special Guest: Luca Guidi Episode Summary In this episode of My Ruby Story, Charles hosts Luca Guidi, Senior Software Developer at DNSimple and creator of Hanami ( previously Lotus framework) from Italy. Listen to Luca on the podcast Ruby Rogues on this episode and this episode. Luca grew up playing video games and took his first programming class when he was 12. His dream was to become a programmer. After studying Information Technology, Luca started working as a programmer and Ruby felt the most natural to him. He found that Rails was a great to start off applications with but not necessarily maintain with. So he created Ruby web framework Lotus which he renamed as Hanami after IBM created software named Lotus as well. Luca is currently working on Hanami preparing for a 2.0 alpha release, he will also be a speaker at the RubyDay2019 conference that will be held in Verona in April. Links Ruby Rogues: Ruby Elapsed Time with Luca Guidi Ruby Rogues: The Lotus Framework with Luca Guidi Hanami aculo.us Prototype Luca’s LinkedIN Luca’s Twitter com Luca’s GitHub RubyDay2019 https://devchat.tv/my-ruby-story/ https://www.facebook.com/DevChattv Picks Luca Guidi: The Innovation Secrets of Steve Jobs by Carmine Gallo Charles Max Wood: Podfest Multimedia Expo MicroConf The Gifted TV Show
Sponsors Sentry use the code “devchat” for 2 months free on Sentry small plan .TECH– tech/MRS use the coupon code “TECH” and get a 1 year .TECH Domain at $9.99 and 5 Year Domain at $49.99. Hurry! CacheFly Host: Charles Max Wood Special Guest: Luca Guidi Episode Summary In this episode of My Ruby Story, Charles hosts Luca Guidi, Senior Software Developer at DNSimple and creator of Hanami ( previously Lotus framework) from Italy. Listen to Luca on the podcast Ruby Rogues on this episode and this episode. Luca grew up playing video games and took his first programming class when he was 12. His dream was to become a programmer. After studying Information Technology, Luca started working as a programmer and Ruby felt the most natural to him. He found that Rails was a great to start off applications with but not necessarily maintain with. So he created Ruby web framework Lotus which he renamed as Hanami after IBM created software named Lotus as well. Luca is currently working on Hanami preparing for a 2.0 alpha release, he will also be a speaker at the RubyDay2019 conference that will be held in Verona in April. Links Ruby Rogues: Ruby Elapsed Time with Luca Guidi Ruby Rogues: The Lotus Framework with Luca Guidi Hanami aculo.us Prototype Luca’s LinkedIN Luca’s Twitter com Luca’s GitHub RubyDay2019 https://devchat.tv/my-ruby-story/ https://www.facebook.com/DevChattv Picks Luca Guidi: The Innovation Secrets of Steve Jobs by Carmine Gallo Charles Max Wood: Podfest Multimedia Expo MicroConf The Gifted TV Show
Sponsors Sentry use the code “devchat” for 2 months free on Sentry small plan .TECH– tech/MRS use the coupon code “TECH” and get a 1 year .TECH Domain at $9.99 and 5 Year Domain at $49.99. Hurry! CacheFly Host: Charles Max Wood Special Guest: Luca Guidi Episode Summary In this episode of My Ruby Story, Charles hosts Luca Guidi, Senior Software Developer at DNSimple and creator of Hanami ( previously Lotus framework) from Italy. Listen to Luca on the podcast Ruby Rogues on this episode and this episode. Luca grew up playing video games and took his first programming class when he was 12. His dream was to become a programmer. After studying Information Technology, Luca started working as a programmer and Ruby felt the most natural to him. He found that Rails was a great to start off applications with but not necessarily maintain with. So he created Ruby web framework Lotus which he renamed as Hanami after IBM created software named Lotus as well. Luca is currently working on Hanami preparing for a 2.0 alpha release, he will also be a speaker at the RubyDay2019 conference that will be held in Verona in April. Links Ruby Rogues: Ruby Elapsed Time with Luca Guidi Ruby Rogues: The Lotus Framework with Luca Guidi Hanami aculo.us Prototype Luca’s LinkedIN Luca’s Twitter com Luca’s GitHub RubyDay2019 https://devchat.tv/my-ruby-story/ https://www.facebook.com/DevChattv Picks Luca Guidi: The Innovation Secrets of Steve Jobs by Carmine Gallo Charles Max Wood: Podfest Multimedia Expo MicroConf The Gifted TV Show
Panel: Charles Max Wood David Richards Dave Kimura Special Guests: Luca Guidi In this episode of Ruby Rogues, the panelists talk to Luca Guidi about Ruby elapsed time. Luca works remotely for DNSimple and is most well known in the Ruby community for his open source projects, such as Hanami. They talk about NTP, time drifts, and the pros and cons to using a monoatomic clock. They also touch on the importance of being exposed to different languages in order to be a well-rounded developer. In particular, we dive pretty deep on: Luca intro His elapsed time blog post Why he wrote the blog post What is NTP? NTP = Network Time Protocol The importance of keeping your computer time in sync with an external NTP server Time drifts World clock and monatomic clock The blindness around time Building a system around time Working on time and attendance The things you don’t think about are what you take for granted RailsConf How did you come about finding this conclusion? Go Computer Language Being exposed to different languages Ruby is flexible and high-level The dangers of coming to Ruby as their first language Rails And much, much more! Links: DevChat.tv YouTube DNSimple Ruby Hanami Elapsed Time Blog Post RailsConf Go Language Rails LucaGuidi.com Luca’s GitHub @jodosha Picks: Charles Zoom H6 Facebook Marketplace Dave Marvel Strike Force Hondata Mockaroo David Trifacta Luca Tasty Daily Stoic by Yyan Holiday Digitakt
Panel: Charles Max Wood David Richards Dave Kimura Special Guests: Luca Guidi In this episode of Ruby Rogues, the panelists talk to Luca Guidi about Ruby elapsed time. Luca works remotely for DNSimple and is most well known in the Ruby community for his open source projects, such as Hanami. They talk about NTP, time drifts, and the pros and cons to using a monoatomic clock. They also touch on the importance of being exposed to different languages in order to be a well-rounded developer. In particular, we dive pretty deep on: Luca intro His elapsed time blog post Why he wrote the blog post What is NTP? NTP = Network Time Protocol The importance of keeping your computer time in sync with an external NTP server Time drifts World clock and monatomic clock The blindness around time Building a system around time Working on time and attendance The things you don’t think about are what you take for granted RailsConf How did you come about finding this conclusion? Go Computer Language Being exposed to different languages Ruby is flexible and high-level The dangers of coming to Ruby as their first language Rails And much, much more! Links: DevChat.tv YouTube DNSimple Ruby Hanami Elapsed Time Blog Post RailsConf Go Language Rails LucaGuidi.com Luca’s GitHub @jodosha Picks: Charles Zoom H6 Facebook Marketplace Dave Marvel Strike Force Hondata Mockaroo David Trifacta Luca Tasty Daily Stoic by Yyan Holiday Digitakt
Panel: Charles Max Wood David Richards Dave Kimura Special Guests: Luca Guidi In this episode of Ruby Rogues, the panelists talk to Luca Guidi about Ruby elapsed time. Luca works remotely for DNSimple and is most well known in the Ruby community for his open source projects, such as Hanami. They talk about NTP, time drifts, and the pros and cons to using a monoatomic clock. They also touch on the importance of being exposed to different languages in order to be a well-rounded developer. In particular, we dive pretty deep on: Luca intro His elapsed time blog post Why he wrote the blog post What is NTP? NTP = Network Time Protocol The importance of keeping your computer time in sync with an external NTP server Time drifts World clock and monatomic clock The blindness around time Building a system around time Working on time and attendance The things you don’t think about are what you take for granted RailsConf How did you come about finding this conclusion? Go Computer Language Being exposed to different languages Ruby is flexible and high-level The dangers of coming to Ruby as their first language Rails And much, much more! Links: DevChat.tv YouTube DNSimple Ruby Hanami Elapsed Time Blog Post RailsConf Go Language Rails LucaGuidi.com Luca’s GitHub @jodosha Picks: Charles Zoom H6 Facebook Marketplace Dave Marvel Strike Force Hondata Mockaroo David Trifacta Luca Tasty Daily Stoic by Yyan Holiday Digitakt
Anthony built DNSimple on the side and didn't come on board full-time until after there were two other full-time employees. We discussed some of the advantages and disadvantages of running a complex infrastructure product, marketing a complicated business with comics, and fighting domain fraud through it all. Special Guest: Anthony Eden.
Anthony Eden is on the podcast today. He has been running DNSimple since 2010, which helps entrepreneurs with Domain Name Services. As a father of 15yr old triplets (and a 7yr old) he’s been forced to become efficient at managing his business and time with his family. He talks about raising a family while doing extensive travel as well as the practice of having his kids to do internships at local companies to broaden their exposure to work and careers. A native of Florida, he currently lives in France with his family.
Download this episode, in which Ian and Andrey discuss names, getting punished for good deeds, fast-food burgers, Authorize.NET, HelpSpot mobile apps, making money from mobile games in the app store, a decade of running HelpSpot and Antair, life checkboxes, HelpSpot 4, and making games. DNSimple blog – Switching from Authorize.NET to Stripe. YTD Revenue for […] The post Bootstrapped, Episode 53, “$1000 join” appeared first on Bootstrapped.fm.
In this episode I talk about why I’m pulling my domains from GoDaddy, and making DNSimple their new home. Download: 7MS #20: Moving from GoDaddy to DNSimple (audio) Show notes: The service I’m talking about in this podcast is DNSimple. Troy Hunt‘s humorous/awesome article pushed me over the edge and convinced me to give DNSimple a…
Carl and Richard chat with Anthony Eden about his work creating DNSimple and the languages he uses to create awesome. Yeah, the boys fangirl a bit on DNSimple, since they do love it so. But so what? It's a great product and you should use it. Anthony talks about his inspiration for building DNSimple, his experiences working in Erlang to build parts of the server, as well as Google's super-cool language Go. This is what polyglot programming is all about - using the best languages for the job.Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/net-rocks/donations
Carl and Richard chat with Anthony Eden about his work creating DNSimple and the languages he uses to create awesome. Yeah, the boys fangirl a bit on DNSimple, since they do love it so. But so what? It's a great product and you should use it. Anthony talks about his inspiration for building DNSimple, his experiences working in Erlang to build parts of the server, as well as Google's super-cool language Go. This is what polyglot programming is all about - using the best languages for the job.Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/net-rocks/donations
The panelists talk to Bryan Helmkamp, of Code Climate, and Anthony Eden, of DNSimple, about building and running a SaSS company.
The panelists talk to Bryan Helmkamp, of Code Climate, and Anthony Eden, of DNSimple, about building and running a SaSS company.
Ben talks with Anthony Eden about DNSimple, programming languages and code retreats. dnsimple Anthony Eden's Twitter
本期由 Terry Tai 主持,Dingding Ye 协作主持,邀请到Richard Huang 和 XDite 一起回顾了这一次RedDotRubyConf之行,扯扯淡,谈谈收获。同时也谈谈他们两人在这次大会上名为 "Building Asynchronous APIs" 和 "Secure Your Rails Application: The Basics"两个演讲。 RedDotRubyConf 珍宝海鲜楼 天天海南鸡饭 Universal Studios Singapore Refactoring Rails JRuby For The Win Building Asynchronous APIs Concurrency In Ruby Ruby 2.0 on Rails in Production LessConf Secure Your Rails Application Security is Hard em-synchrony Goliath Grape Sinatra sinatra-synchrony async-rails 构建异步的API服务 Strong Parameters Yehuda Katz DHH slice pattern Double Your Freelancing Rate in 14 Days The blueprint Don't Let Your Business Run You DNSimple Reform Warden Github Rails gosu gem LogDown COOKPAD 24-hour Hackathon Competition Medium 南京第一次Ruby聚会 Special Guests: Richard Huang and xdite.