An Open Letter To Auth Providers
tl;dr: The first job of any auth company is to protect its customers – before anything else. Somewhere along the way it feels like a lot of auth providers lost sight of the thing that matters: You, their customers.featured in #507
featured in #507
5 Non-Verbal Behaviors Killing Team Health
- Raviraj Achar tl;dr: Raviraj shares annoying non-verbal behaviors, how he avoids exhibiting them, and how to deal with them. These include: (1) Silent but Irritated - the person that rolls their eyes when they hear something “stupid” or exhales heavily when someone disagrees with them. (2) Annoying Interrupter - they appear eager to interrupt the speaker and can’t seem to wait for their turn. This behavior can be distracting when the speaker is trying to make their point. (3) Ever Confused - The person gives a puzzled look to everything you say but asks no follow-up questions.featured in #506
Overcoming Event-Driven Architecture Complexity With An Event Gateway
- James Higginbotham tl;dr: EDA offers flexibility and scalability, but as your architecture grows, complexities arise. Message receivers struggle with filtering, third-party orchestration consumes developer time, and webhook integration becomes challenging. James explores how event gateways can address common scenarios that increase EDA complexity.featured in #506
featured in #506
featured in #506
Meetings For An Effective Eng Organization
- Will Larson tl;dr: "I’d like to recommend 6 core meetings that I recommend every organization start with, and that I’ve found can go a surprisingly long way. These six are split across three operational meetings, two developmental meetings and finally a monthly engineering Q&A to learn what the organization is really thinking about." Will discusses each in depth.featured in #506
Meetings For An Effective Eng Organization
- Will Larson tl;dr: "I’d like to recommend 6 core meetings that I recommend every organization start with, and that I’ve found can go a surprisingly long way. These six are split across three operational meetings, two developmental meetings and finally a monthly engineering Q&A to learn what the organization is really thinking about." Will discusses each in depth.featured in #505
An Open Letter To Auth Providers
tl;dr: The first job of any auth company is to protect its customers – before anything else. Somewhere along the way it feels like a lot of auth providers lost sight of the thing that matters: You, their customers.featured in #505
featured in #504