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In this episode, we talk to Cloudflare's CTO John Graham-Cumming about how to respond to an outage at your company. We also discuss why the company bans the use of the word "Edge," and talk about the company's 'Supercloud.'
Welcome to another episode of Softcat's Explain IT podcast.We are here to Explain IT. Our team of experts will be here to talk tech in simple, jargon free language. We'll be discussing new trends and ideas as well as solutions to everyday problems in this fascinating and ever changing world of tech.An edge towards cloud, dramatic huh?To share insights and answers, regular podcast guest Adam Louca, Softcat's Chief Technologist for Security joins us today. So does our very special guest, Author, Engineer and currently CTO at Cloudflare, John Graham-Cumming.What is an edge location?Are edge locations different from a Cloud platform?Are datacentres closing or evolving into edge locations? Should edge be factored into an organisations IT strategy as cloud is today?Join us as we answer these and much more on another episode of Explain I.T.This episode is hosted by Dean Gardner, Field CTO at Softcat .If you have a burning question, or an opinion on our topics you'd like to share, send us an email to explainit@softcat.comYou can also get in touch with us through live chat or directly on WhatsApp. Text us or send a voice note to +447548759732.Make sure you follow the ExplainIT podcast in all the usual places and join us on a fascinating journey through the wonderful world of tech. You can also find out more anytime you like at Softcat.comThis podcast is produced by www.thepodcastcoach.co.uk Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Robby has a chat with Professor of Computer Science at Stanford University, John Ousterhout. John founded Electric Cloud with John Graham-Cumming. Ousterhout was a professor of computer science at the University of California, Berkeley where he created the Tcl scripting language and the Tk platform-independent widget toolkit and proposed the idea of co-scheduling. Ousterhout led the research group that designed the experimental Sprite operating system and the first log-structured file system. Ousterhout also led the team that developed the Magic VLSI computer-aided design (CAD) program.When it comes to the maintainability of software, John is more interested in the design aspects of software and feels that indeed the core goal of good software design is to make it easier to maintain software and continually improve it. He explains what problem decomposition is all about and why his course on the art of software design is probably the only one of its kind in the world. Join the convo as he also talks about how to write good code comments and why they are so important, the main differences between tactical and strategic programming, how engineers can discuss long-term improvements with their boss, how his curriculum has students approach a project with two different designs before deciding which to proceed with, and so much more. Enjoy!Book Recommendations:Talent is Overrated By Geoff Colvin Helpful LinksA Philosophy of Software Design By Professor John OusterhoutTcl/TkJohn on TwitterJohn's WebpageSubscribe to Maintainable on:Apple PodcastsOvercastSpotifyOr search "Maintainable" wherever you stream your podcasts.Join the discussion in the Maintainable Discord Community
In this episode we speak with John Graham-Cumming, CTO of Cloudflare, a global web platform built for security and performance. We discuss the philosophy behind the idea that the network is a computer, why developers should be able to ignore the low level details of where their code runs, and the challenges of deploying data centers on Mars.About John Graham-CummingJohn Graham-Cumming is the CTO of Cloudflare and is a computer programmer and author. He studied mathematics and computation at Oxford and stayed for a doctorate in computer security. As a programmer, he has worked in Silicon Valley and New York, the UK, Lisbon, Germany, and France. His open source POPFile program won a Jolt Productivity Award in 2004.He is the author of a travel book for scientists published in 2009 called The Geek Atlas and has written articles for The Times, The Guardian, The Sunday Times, The San Francisco Chronicle, New Scientist, and other publications.Things mentioned:Apple siliconArmIBMIntelStarlinkDonald KnuteCloudflare WorkersV8GoRustWebAssembly (Wasm)COBOLGreen ComputeCloudflare WranglerJ programming languageRaspberry PiJgc.orgLet us know what you think on Twitter:https://twitter.com/consoledotdevhttps://twitter.com/davidmyttonhttps://twitter.com/jgrahamcOr by email: hello@console.devAbout ConsoleConsole is the place developers go to find the best tools. Our weekly newsletter picks out the most interesting tools and new releases. We keep track of everything - dev tools, devops, cloud, and APIs - so you don't have to. Sign up for free at: https://console.dev.We are always on the lookout for interesting tools to feature in the newsletter, so please say hello if you're working on something new or have recently used a tool you think we'd like.We only include things that would be of interest to experienced developers and do not accept payment for product inclusion. Read our selection criteria.Recorded: 2021-11-24
Distributed Denial of Services attacks continue to grow in size, frequency and sophistication, and it's in every organization's best interest to properly prepare themselves against this sort of online attack. The team at Cloudflare recently published their 2021 Q3 report on DDoS, outlining their observations and recommendations for mitigating DDoS attacks. Joining us is John Graham-Cumming, CTO at Cloudflare, to share his insights on the state of the DDoS threat, and where things may be headed.
Recorded Future - Inside Threat Intelligence for Cyber Security
Distributed Denial of Services attacks continue to grow in size, frequency and sophistication, and it's in every organization's best interest to properly prepare themselves against this sort of online attack. The team at Cloudflare recently published their 2021 Q3 report on DDoS, outlining their observations and recommendations for mitigating DDoS attacks. Joining us is John Graham-Cumming, CTO at Cloudflare, to share his insights on the state of the DDoS threat, and where things may be headed.
Starting with Cloudflare CTO, John Graham-Cumming on 6 Jan 2022, in season 2 of the Console DevTools Podcast we'll be speaking to 11 interesting people currently working in devtools about a specific technical topic. Upcoming guests:Dev infrastructure, with John Graham-Cumming (Cloudflare)Security, with Thomas Ptacek (Fly.io)Observability, with Charity Majors (Honeycomb)Decentralization, with Brooklyn Zelenka (Fission)Devtools investing, with Ed Sim (Boldstart)Homomorphic Encryption, with Rand Hindi (Zama)Dev communities, with Rosie Sherry (Orbit)Web standards & privacy, with Desigan (Dees) Chinniah (Tor / Ex-Mozilla)Designing dev products, with Ellen Chisa (Boldstart)Terminal tools, with Michelle Lim & Zach Lloyd (Warp)Developer experience, with Jean Yang (Akita)Join David for our first episode, on 6th January 2022. In the meantime, subscribe to the Console newsletter for weekly reviews of the best 2-3 devtools.Follow us on Twitter:https://twitter.com/consoledotdevhttps://twitter.com/davidmytton
This time I spoke to John Graham-Cumming, the CTO of
For our 25th episode, our host and CEO, Joe Saunders, reflects on his lessons learned over the past 24 episodes. He focuses on 6 specific episodes: John Graham-Cumming, Greg Touhill, Tony Sager, Gary McGraw, Rick Howard, and Ron Ross. He shares his insight on how these episodes touch on three different kinds of lessons: personal development & leadership, business, and technical.
No 11º episódio John Graham-Cumming, CTO da gigante Cloudflare, fala sobre os hábitos online dos portugueses, segurança online, VPN no teletrabalho e sobre quem deve decidir que sites banir. @emot
Today's Guest is John Graham-Cumming, CTO at CloudFlare. In this episode, John Graham-Cumming discusses his early background, his role at CloudFlare, how internet infrastructure differs in China, his book "The Geek Atlas", code breaking, email filtering, movie code, what keeps him up at night, 5G, and more.
I skuggan av det snöblandade regnet utspelar sig det kritiska tvåhundrafyrtioandra avsnittet av bjoreman://melin. Kritiska dryckesproblem löses Krya på dig Christian Hjälp, har jag slitit ut GT?! Fredrik besöker veterinären Det känns inte som om arbetsåret börjat riktigt. Bieffekt av corona? Gemini - äntligen, den felande länken mellan webben och … Gopher? Alpine i macOS Fredrik bygger ut sitt meshnät, lite men lagom överdrivet Poddlistan är tom. Rätt skönt Har Fredrik lagt 25 timmar i veckan på poddlyssnande? Det är inte omöjligt! Elpriset skjuter i höjden. Jocke stänger av saker. Fredrik testar mp3-enkodare. Now behold the power of this fully operational battle station Hejdå Trump! Extremt bra avsnitt av The Talk Show med Mike Monterio som gäst Film och TV Jocke med son och Fredrik har sett klart Mandalorian S02. Vi spoilar från första början! Säsong ett: Fredrik: 4/5BM, Jocke: 5/5BM Säsong två: Fredrik: 3,5/5BM, Jocke: 3/5BM Länkar Ichat Hernö gin - rekommenderas Gemini Tofubitar Samuels bloggar om VoIP och 46Elks ihop med sin mobiltelefon 46elks SIP Gopher Lagrange - klient för Gemini till macOS Brew - Homebrew Alpine - mejlklienten Pine Amplifi instant Amplifi HD Cortex CGP Grey Ida Teknikpäron On the metal John Graham-Cumming-avsnittet Charles Babbage Ada Lovelace Jonathan Blow Braid Indie game: the movie The Witness idrive.com LAME Hindenburg Superfast Fre:ac Smooth Forecast Jason Snells text om Forecast Jules Suzdaltsev minns Donald Trump Mike Monteiro Mule The Talk Show - Total Landscaping - The Talk Show med John Gruber och Mike Monteiro Fuck you, pay me How to fight facism Mandalorian säsong 2 Front 242 Fredrik Björeman och Joacim Melin. Fullständig avsnittsinformation finns här: https://www.bjoremanmelin.se/podcast/avsnitt-242-ingen-relation-till-boba-fett.html.
You can find John on Twitter at [twitter.com/jgrahamc](https://twitter.com/jgrahamc).- Babbage overview and the Difference Engine: https://www.computerhistory.org/babbage/overview/- Difference Engine No. 2 at the London Science Museum: https://collection.sciencemuseumgroup.org.uk/objects/co526657/difference-engine-no-2-designed-by-charles-babbage-built-by-science-museum-difference-engine- BBC Micro: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BBC_Micro- Sinclair ZX81: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ZX81- BBC Micro Advanced User Guide: http://stardot.org.uk/mirrors/www.bbcdocs.com/filebase/essentials/BBC%20Microcomputer%20Advanced%20User%20Guide.pdf- Sharp MZ-80K: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sharp_MZ- John's TED Talk, The greatest machine that never was: https://www.ted.com/talks/john_graham_cumming_the_greatest_machine_that_never_was- Hilbert's Problems: https://mathworld.wolfram.com/HilbertsProblems.html- Gödel's incompleteness theorems: https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/goedel-incompleteness/- The Lovelace–De Morgan mathematical correspondence - A critical re-appraisal: https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0315086017300319- The mathematical correspondence of Ada Lovelace and Augustus De Morgan: https://dl.acm.org/doi/10.1145/2867731.2867738- Douglas Engelbart: https://www.britannica.com/biography/Douglas-Engelbart- "Mother of all demos": https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yJDv-zdhzMY- John's OSCON talk "Turing's Curse": https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hVZxkFAIziA- Design of the RISC-V Instruction Set Architecture: https://people.eecs.berkeley.edu/~krste/papers/EECS-2016-1.pdf- Engines of Creation - The Coming Era of Nanotechnology: https://www.amazon.com/Engines-Creation-Nanotechnology-Scientific-Revolution/dp/1872180469/ref=tmm_hrd_swatch_0?_encoding=UTF8&qid=&sr=
For better or for worse, the internet today is funded by advertising. While ads can be annoying, the real issue isn't having to watch ads - it's when then ads watch us. AdTech today is premised on invasive personal data collection. Companies like Google and Facebook amass voluminous dossiers on each of us, and sell highly-targeted ads based on our income, gender, age, location, buying habits, personal interests, sexual orientation, and much, much more. But it doesn't have to be that way. And Cloudflare is going to show us how. Today, I'll talk again with the CTO, John Graham-Cumming, about Cloudflare Radar and much more. John Graham-Cumming is a British software engineer and writer best known for starting a successful petition to the Government of the United Kingdom asking for an apology for its persecution of Alan Turing. As of 2020, he serves as Chief Technology Officer (CTO) at Cloudflare. Further Info: Cloudflare Radar: Election 2020 https://radar.cloudflare.com/election-2020Cloudflare 1.1.1.1 DNS and Warp VPN: https://1.1.1.1/ VOTE! https://www.vote.org/
Website attacks are very common. They are often not personal, but they can create a mess for website operators. As website owners and operators, we need website privacy and security especially if we are collecting data and personal information. As I was making more money from my business in 2015, the need for better performance became an issue. I also needed to be able to keep my site up 24/7 and not have to deal with outages. My website started getting sustained 500-bit denial service attacks. I realized very quickly that this was not my expertise, but that is when I began my partnership with Cloudflare. Cloudflare provides services that increase the security performance of over 26 million internet properties around the world from individual blogs to governments to Fortune 500 companies. Cloudflare offers services to accelerate internet applications and mobile experiences, mitigate DDoS attacks, prevent customer data breaches, stop malicious bot abuse, and more. Our guests on today’s show are John Graham and Evan Johnson. John Graham is a British software engineer and the current CTO at Cloudflare. Evan is a Product Security Manager at Cloudflare. We talk about attacks on websites, distributed denial of service attacks, and how to protect your own website. If you want to keep your website up and running without skipping a beat, this is a must-listen episode. Show Notes: [00:58] - Chris is a Cloudflare customer and shares how he became a Cloudflare customer. He shares his history of working with Cloudflare. [03:05] - In 2015 Chris started getting sustained 500-bit denial services attacks. He realized it was not his expertise and he needed help with this. [04:23] - John and Evan share the risks that Cloudflare helps website owners protect against. [05:53] - What things should we worry about as website operators? [07:09] - Evan is recommending businesses move more of their applications to the edge with workers with Cloudflare Workers. It has real security benefits. [08:29] - The big benefit of Cloudflare Workers is that there is no back-end server to overwhelm. It just moves the application to all of their servers. [10:38] - Often hackers are using automated tools to scan websites, so you really want to limit the ability for that scanner to see something. Then they will just move on. [11:39] - Anyone that has a database should prepare for the contingency if you get your database breached. Know your legal obligations in dealing with that especially if you are storing personally identifiable information. [14:01] - With Cloudflare, you can identify a problem and have it blocked almost immediately. [14:58] - It is really hard to patch your website fast enough. So a WAF can give you some breathing room while you patch the back end systems. Everyone should have a WAF, it is an extra layer that can really, really help. A WAF is a web application firewall. [17:16] - If you are connected to the public internet and you provide a service or website Cloudflare can protect that. [18:13] - Use a good password and have two-factor identification. [21:11] - Cloudflare Workers is super flexible and easy to write since you use Javascript. [21:46] - John shares how Cloudflare is able to offer free DDos services to their users. [23:12] - Cloudflare believes that your data is your data. They analyze it for you to provide your analytics and to look for attacks but they don’t use your data. [24:34] - Cloudflare is a way to get a level of protection for an inexpensive price. [26:40] - With your back-end servers, you want to make sure you orange cloud things. Cloudflare is seeing the requests and it is being proxied through their network. [28:09] - With Cloudflare’s new project Magic Transit they can take over the IP space and become your network. The traffic comes to Cloudflare so they can run the services they provide and then pass the good traffic back on to you. [30:30] - Cloudflare tries to take things that are expensive and complex and make them easy to use and cheap so that everyone gets access to these cool tools. [32:16] - People started to realize that they are using the internet for absolutely everything from banking to dating and it really matters that they protect that and use things that are trustworthy. [32:51] - If there is one password and two-factor you are going to use, put it on your personal email because if someone breaks into your personal email they can probably reset the password on every other service you use. Secure your email first. Thanks for joining us on Easy Prey. Be sure to subscribe to our podcast on iTunes and leave a nice review. Links and Resources: Podcast Web Page Facebook Page whatismyipaddress.com Easy Prey on Instagram Easy Prey on Twitter Easy Prey on LinkedIn Easy Prey on YouTube Easy Prey on Pinterest Cloudflare Cloudflare on Facebook Cloudflare on Twitter Cloudflare on LinkedIn Cloudflare on YouTube Cloudflare on Instagram
Jaana, Jon, and Mat are joined by John Graham-Cumming, the CTO of Cloudflare, to discuss Go at Cloudflare along with John’s unique involvement in Gordon Brown’s apology to Alan Turing. How did Cloudflare get started with Go? What problems do they use Go for and when to they turn to other languages? And how exactly did John’s petition for an apology to Turing get so popular?
Jaana, Jon, and Mat are joined by John Graham-Cumming, the CTO of Cloudflare, to discuss Go at Cloudflare along with John’s unique involvement in Gordon Brown’s apology to Alan Turing. How did Cloudflare get started with Go? What problems do they use Go for and when to they turn to other languages? And how exactly did John’s petition for an apology to Turing get so popular?
Jaana, Jon, and Mat are joined by John Graham-Cumming, the CTO of Cloudflare, to discuss Go at Cloudflare along with John’s unique involvement in Gordon Brown’s apology to Alan Turing. How did Cloudflare get started with Go? What problems do they use Go for and when to they turn to other languages? And how exactly did John’s petition for an apology to Turing get so popular?
Why do most VPN apps suck so badly? How do you know which VPN service providers you can trust with your privacy? How is it that our internet service providers know so much about our web surfing habits? Today I explore these questions and more with John Graham-Cumming, the CTO of the internet performance and security company. He will also tell us about a new VPN service coming soon from Cloudflare called Warp that may finally address all of these problems. John is a computer programmer and author. He studied mathematics and computation at Oxford and stayed for a doctorate in computer security. As a programmer he has worked in Silicon Valley and New York, the UK, Germany, and France. His open source POPFile program won a Jolt Productivity Award in 2004. John is the author of a travel book for scientists published in 2009 called The Geek Atlas. Further Info: Cloudflare's 1.1.1.1 App: https://1.1.1.1/Cloudflare's Crypto Week Blog: https://blog.cloudflare.com/welcome-to-crypto-week-2019/ Big Brother 2.0: https://firewallsdontstopdragons.com/big-brother-2-0/
What do you get when you cross cryptography with a wall of lava lamps? Believe it or not, a much more secure Internet. Cloudflare’s CTO John Graham-Cumming will explain why all our modern communications require sources of randomness to remain secure, and how his company has used a wall of 100 lava lamps to serve as a serious source of entropy. John will explain how to pick strong passwords using dice, how you can predict random numbers, and whether quantum computing will render all of our crypto technology useless. Book: The Code Book: The Science of Secrecy from Ancient Egypt to Quantum Cryptography John Graham-Cumming, CTO of Cloudflare, is a computer programmer and author. He studied mathematics and computation at Oxford and stayed for a doctorate in computer security. As a programmer he has worked in Silicon Valley and New York, the UK, Germany, and France. His open source POPFile program won a Jolt Productivity Award in 2004. John is the author of a travel book for scientists published in 2009 called The Geek Atlas and has written articles for The Times, The Guardian, The Sunday Times, the San Francisco Chronicle, New Scientist and other publications. For Further Insight: Website: jgc.org Follow on Twitter: https://twitter.com/jgrahamc Help me to help you! Visit: https://patreon.com/FirewallsDontStopDragons
Wouldn’t it be great if you could speed up every single website you visit without paying a dime? Every time you go to a website, your computer or smartphone first has to look up how to get to get there - just like we used to have to look up people’s numbers in the phone book. The service we all use is the Domain Name System (DNS), and by default, your DNS provider is probably not very fast. Today, John Graham-Cumming (the CTO of Cloudflare) will carefully explain how this works and why his company’s 1.1.1.1 DNS service is so much faster than the default one you’re probably all using. Furthermore, Cloudflare’s service will keep your web surfing habits totally private - something your default service is almost surely NOT doing. John Graham-Cumming, CTO of Cloudflare, is a computer programmer and author. He studied mathematics and computation at Oxford and stayed for a doctorate in computer security. As a programmer he has worked in Silicon Valley and New York, the UK, Germany, and France. His open source POPFile program won a Jolt Productivity Award in 2004. John is the author of a travel book for scientists published in 2009 called The Geek Atlas and has written articles for The Times, The Guardian, The Sunday Times, the San Francisco Chronicle, New Scientist and other publications. For Further Insight: Website: jgc.org Follow on Twitter: https://twitter.com/jgrahamc Cloudflare’s 1.1.1.1 DNS service Steve Gibson’s DNS Benchmarking tool: https://www.grc.com/dns/benchmark.htm DNS Perf speed check: https://www.dnsperf.com/
Do you have a “smart” TV? Or an Internet-connected baby monitor? Then you are a part of the Internet of Things (IoT)! Welcome to the world of everyday devices being connected to the network, allowing you to change the temperature of your home while traveling, check up on your dogs from work, and have a Bluetooth speaker that can also fetch tomorrow’s weather forecast. While there are lots of great uses for these devices, their security (or lack thereof) is making many of us vulnerable to attack. Today I speak at length with John Graham-Cumming, CTO of Cloudflare, about the Internet of Things and how it’s already wreaking havoc on our world. We’ll tell you how to be smart about your smart devices! We’ll also talk about the massive OneLogin password system breach and how hackers are increasingly turning to social media to target people for phishing attacks. John Graham-Cumming is a computer programmer and author. He studied mathematics and computation at Oxford and stayed for a doctorate in computer security. As a programmer he has worked in Silicon Valley and New York, the UK, Germany and France and currently works at CloudFlare. His open source POPFile program won a Jolt Productivity Award in 2004. He is the author of a travel book for scientists published in 2009 called The Geek Atlas and has written articles for The Times, The Guardian, The Sunday Times, The San Francisco Chronicle, New Scientist and other publications. In 2009 he successfully petitioned the British Government to apologize for the mistreatment of British mathematician Alan Turing. He is a licensed radio amateur. For Further Insight: Website: http://jgc.org Follow on Twitter: https://twitter.com/jgrahamc Additional Resources: Save 40% off next year’s domain registration (and get FREE privacy) https://hover.com/transfermydomain Social media increasingly used by hackers: https://www.nytimes.com/2017/05/28/technology/hackers-hide-cyberattacks-in-social-media-posts.html The Geek Atlas: https://www.amazon.com/Geek-Atlas-Places-Science-Technology/dp/0596523203 EFF’s page to help send comments to FCC on Net Neutrality: https://dearfcc.org/
A modern nerd legend for you this week, as we chat to John Graham-Cumming about his new project, Plan 28, which aims to "finish Babbage's work" by raising the cash to build an Analytical Engine from original plans. John has previously successfully petitioned the Government to formally apologise for the treatment of Alan Turing, and [...]
iPhone 4 Glassgate, rebuilding the analytical machine from 173 years ago, commemorating 10/10/10, and more. Host: Leo Laporte Guests: John C. Dvorak, Ryan Block, John Graham-Cumming, and Tom Merritt Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/twit. For additional show notes, visit the wiki page for this episode. Links to stories we covered (and then some) are available from Deliciousor in our Friendfeed Room. Transcript posted 24 hours after show release by PodsInPrint.
iPhone 4 Glassgate, rebuilding the analytical machine from 173 years ago, commemorating 10/10/10, and more. Host: Leo Laporte Guests: John C. Dvorak, Ryan Block, John Graham-Cumming, and Tom Merritt Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/twit. For additional show notes, visit the wiki page for this episode. Links to stories we covered (and then some) are available from Deliciousor in our Friendfeed Room. Transcript posted 24 hours after show release by PodsInPrint.
iPhone 4 Glassgate, rebuilding the analytical machine from 173 years ago, commemorating 10/10/10, and more. Host: Leo Laporte Guests: John C. Dvorak, Ryan Block, John Graham-Cumming, and Tom Merritt Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/twit. For additional show notes, visit the wiki page for this episode. Links to stories we covered (and then some) are available from Deliciousor in our Friendfeed Room. Transcript posted 24 hours after show release by PodsInPrint.