242 avsnitt • Längd: 60 min • Månadsvis
Pragmatic talk about software design best practices: design patterns, software architecture, coding for performance, object oriented programming, database design and implementation, tips, tricks and a whole lot more.
You’ll be exposed to broad areas of information as well as deep dives into the guts of a programming language. Most topics discussed are relevant in any number of Object Oriented programming languages such as C#, Java, Ruby, PHP, etc.. All three of us are full stack web and database / software engineers so we discuss Javascript, HTML, SQL and a full spectrum of technologies and are open to any suggestions anyone might have for a topic. So please join us, subscribe, and invite your computer programming friends to come along for the ride.
The podcast Coding Blocks is created by Allen Underwood, Michael Outlaw, Joe Zack. The podcast and the artwork on this page are embedded on this page using the public podcast feed (RSS).
Well, this is awkward.
Coding Blocks is signing out for now, in this episode we’ll talk about what’s happening and why. We have had an amazing run, far better than we ever expected. Also, Joe recommends 50 games, Allen goes for the gold, and Outlaw is totally normal. (And we’re not crying you’re crying!)
Thank you for the support over the last 11 (!!!) years. It’s been a wild ride, and the last thing we ever expected when starting a tech podcast was getting to meet so many fantastic people.
View the full show notes here:
https://www.codingblocks.net/episode242
It’s time to talk about the types of things you should consider when diving into multi-tenant applications and things to be especially aware of if you attempt to make things faster by going multi-threaded at the same time. Join us as Allen continues is non-winning / non-losing streak, JZ is taken out by a storm, and Outlaw continues to ignore the notes for the intro to the show…
As mentioned in the episode, Claude’s answers seem to be very database heavy
Can you elaborate on the data isolation?
Data isolation is crucial in multi-tenant systems to prevent unauthorized access and ensure data privacy. Here are some key strategies to ensure data isolation:
Grab your headphones because it’s water cooler time! This episode we’re catching up on feedback, putting our skills to the test, and wondering what we’re missing. Plus, Allen’s telling it how it is, Outlaw is putting it all together and Joe is minding the gaps!
View the full show notes here:
https://www.codingblocks.net/episode240
Thank you again for taking the time to share your review with us!
Atlanta Dev Con
September 7th, 2024
https://www.atldevcon.com/
DevFest Central Florida
September 28th, 2024
https://devfestflorida.com/
We were asked in one of our recent reviews in Apple Podcasts if we would share our career paths and how we got started and how we arrived where we are today. We took some of that info, threw it at Microsoft’s CoPilot / DALL E 3 and that’s the artwork for this episode – you may be a little surprised at how the 3 of us got started as software developers. We also have some fun things to share about recent purchases, tweaks, mistakes made and some information about the CrowdStrike outage that recently occurred.
Thank you again for taking the time to share your review with us!
Atlanta Dev Con
September 7th, 2024
https://www.atldevcon.com/
DevFest Central Florida
September 28th, 2024
https://devfestflorida.com/
It’s Water Cooler Time! We’ve got a variety of topics today, and also Outlaw’s lawyering up, Allen can read QR codes now, and Joe is looking at second careers.
View the full show notes here:
https://www.codingblocks.net/episode238
As always, thank you for leaving us a review – we really appreciate them! Almazkun, vassilbakalov, DzikijSver
Atlanta Dev Con
September 7th, 2024
https://www.atldevcon.com/
DevFest Central Florida on September 28th, 2024
Interested? Submit your talk proposal here:
https://sessionize.com/devfest-florida-orlando-2024/
In the past couple of episodes, we’d gone over what Apache Kafka is and along the way we mentioned some of the pains of managing and running Kafka clusters on your own. In this episode, we discuss some of the ways you can offload those responsibilities and focus on writing streaming applications. Along the way, Joe does a mighty fine fill-in for proper noun pronunciation and Allen does a southern auctioneer-style speed talk.
View the full show notes here:
https://www.codingblocks.net/episode237
As always, thank you for leaving us a review – we really do appreciate them!
From iTunes: Abucr7
Atlanta Dev Con
September 7th, 2024
https://www.atldevcon.com/
DevFest Central Florida on September 28th, 2024
Interested? Submit your talk proposal here:
https://sessionize.com/devfest-florida-orlando-2024/
Why? Because running any type of infrastructure requires time, knowledge, and blood, sweat and tears
Topics, Partitions, and APIs oh my! This episode we’re getting further into how Apache Kafka works and its use cases. Also, Allen is staying dry, Joe goes for broke, and Michael (eventually) gets on the right page.
The full show notes are available on the website at https://www.codingblocks.net/episode236
We finally start talking about Apache Kafka! Also, Allen is getting acquainted with Aesop, Outlaw is killing clusters, and Joe was paying attention in drama class.
The full show notes are available on the website at https://www.codingblocks.net/episode235
Apache Kafka is an open-source distributed event streaming platform used by thousands of companies for high-performance data pipelines, streaming analytics, data integration, and mission-critical applications.
kubectl annotate kafka my-kafka-cluster strimzi.io/pause-reconciliation="true" --context=my-context --namespace=my-namespace
kubectl delete strimzipodsets my-kafka-cluster --context=my-context --namespace=my-namespace
kubectl annotate kafka my-kafka-cluster strimzi.io/pause-reconciliation- --context=my-context --namespace=my-namespace
Joe Zack was on a brief holiday so Allen and Michael took over the helm for an episode. What would a new episode be without a little something regarding AI, some more love for Kotlin, and a number of excellent tips throughout (as well as at the end of) the episode.
Atlanta Dev Con
September 7th, 2024
https://www.atldevcon.com/
Please leave us a review!
https://www.codingblocks.net/review
Docker Blog is pretty excellent
Car Research
Utilizing wood sheet goods by utilizing cut lists
Docker’s chicken-n-egg problem
Download the file using the server suggested name With wget …--content-disposition
https://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man1/wget.1.html
Wth curl …
-JO
-J, –remote-header-name
-O, –remote-name
https://curl.se/docs/manpage.html#-J
In this episode Joe introduces us to more security items you should be aware of in the world of CWE’s, Michael bends to the will of Joe and Allen in his favorite portion of the show, and Allen pontificates on the time spent setting up IDE’s and environments.
Pre-warning – probably wouldn’t recommend installing this!
Saw a cool Windows utility called “Windrecorder” that records video and text from your desktop, and lets you rewind and search.
MacOS’s Spotlight is more powerful than you maybe knew
https://www.intego.com/mac-security-blog/spotlight-secrets-15-ways-to-use-spotlight-on-your-mac/
https://beebom.com/spotlight-tips-tricks/
If you’re grep command isn’t working like you thought it should, you might be a victim of content getting kicked out of the buffergrep --line-buffered
iOS – get text from images
https://support.apple.com/guide/iphone/use-live-text-iphcf0b71b0e/ios
En liten tjänst av I'm With Friends. Finns även på engelska.