The Stack Overflow Podcast

What's left for infrastructure-as-code after AI moves in?

30 min · 8. juli 2026
episode What's left for infrastructure-as-code after AI moves in? cover

Beskrivelse

SPONSORED BY IBM Ryan is joined by Rosemary Wang, Developer Advocate at IBM, to explore what infrastructure as code looks like once AI starts writing and deploying it. They discuss why guardrails still lag adoption, breaks down what it means when “anyone can deploy,” and why deep systems knowledge still matters.  Episode notes: Try out Bob [https://bob.ibm.com/trial], IBM’s coding agent that Rosemary talked about in the episode.  Connect with Rosemary on X [https://x.com/joatmon08], LinkedIn [https://www.linkedin.com/in/rosemarywang/], or Bluesky [https://bsky.app/profile/joatmon08.com]. See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy [https://art19.com/privacy] and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info [https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info].

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Alle episoder

963 episoder

episode What's left for infrastructure-as-code after AI moves in? cover

What's left for infrastructure-as-code after AI moves in?

SPONSORED BY IBM Ryan is joined by Rosemary Wang, Developer Advocate at IBM, to explore what infrastructure as code looks like once AI starts writing and deploying it. They discuss why guardrails still lag adoption, breaks down what it means when “anyone can deploy,” and why deep systems knowledge still matters.  Episode notes: Try out Bob [https://bob.ibm.com/trial], IBM’s coding agent that Rosemary talked about in the episode.  Connect with Rosemary on X [https://x.com/joatmon08], LinkedIn [https://www.linkedin.com/in/rosemarywang/], or Bluesky [https://bsky.app/profile/joatmon08.com]. See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy [https://art19.com/privacy] and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info [https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info].

8. juli 202630 min
episode Agent orchestration is so two-years ago cover

Agent orchestration is so two-years ago

Ryan welcomes Saahil Jain, CTO of You.com, to discuss why building agents with a 2024 mindset is a mistake as modern models improve at long-horizon tasks, why heavy orchestration layers can hurt model performance more than help it, and why the 2026 competitive edge actually comes from information retrieval and unique data paired with end-to-end evaluation.  Episode notes:  You.com [http://you.com] is an AI-powered search and productivity engine helping enterprises find information, create content, and automate complex tasks using web search APIs, multi-model AI access, and agentic intelligence.  Connect with Saahil on LinkedIn [https://www.linkedin.com/in/saahiljain/] or reach out to him at  saahil@you.com [saahil@you.com].  Today’s shoutout goes to user knittl [https://stackoverflow.com/users/112968/knittl] for winning a Populist badge on their answer to Remove all null values [https://stackoverflow.com/questions/39500608/remove-all-null-values]. See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy [https://art19.com/privacy] and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info [https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info].

I går31 min
episode The good, the bad, and the AI apps cover

The good, the bad, and the AI apps

Ryan welcomes Benny Chen, co-founder of Fireworks AI, to the show to explore what actually makes an AI application good or not, how to balance qualitative signals with quantitative metrics when evaluating AI, and how open-source eval protocols and community efforts are setting the standard for AI evaluation.  Episode notes:  Fireworks AI [https://fireworks.ai/] is a cloud platform designed for developers and enterprises to run, customize, and scale open-source generative AI models.  Connect with Benny on LinkedIn [https://www.linkedin.com/in/benny-yufei-chen-2238575a/]. Congrats to user techtabu [https://stackoverflow.com/users/1257729/techtabu] for winning a Stellar Answer badge for answering How can I delete all local Docker images? [https://stackoverflow.com/questions/44785585/how-can-i-delete-all-local-docker-images]. See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy [https://art19.com/privacy] and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info [https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info].

3. juli 202625 min
episode How do you turn AI coding chaos into a repeatable playbook? cover

How do you turn AI coding chaos into a repeatable playbook?

Vivek Raghunathan, SVP of engineering at Snowflake, joins Leaders of Code at Snowflake Summit to break down the five-stage framework his org used to go from "let chaos reign" to a repeatable, org-wide system for AI-assisted engineering. Vivek explains how Snowflake systematically rolled out coding agents across its engineering org — starting with unrestricted experimentation, then codifying what worked into a shared vocabulary of 14 "AI design patterns," from plan-in-English to fencing off parallel agents to reducing on-call toil through continuously updated skills. Vivek walks through the "inner loop" and "outer loop" of software development, explains Snowflake's internal Yegge scale for measuring how far engineers have progressed along that continuum, and shares how a three-person team used coding agents to deliver a 40x improvement on Snowflake's query compiler. The discussion also: * Breaks down Snowflake's "focus weeks," where engineers get dedicated time to either catch up on best practices or push the frontier further. * Explores the pioneers/settlers/skeptics framework for meeting engineers where they are in adopting AI tools, and why the shift can trigger something like the stages of grief. * Covers how Snowflake cut release validation time from 15 days to a single day, and why more automated testing hasn't come at the cost of production stability. * Looks ahead to a four-step maturity model for on-call and incident response, where agents may eventually take primary on-call duty. Connect with Vivek Raghunathan on LinkedIn [https://www.linkedin.com/in/raghunathanvivek]. See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy [https://art19.com/privacy] and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info [https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info].

2. juli 202622 min
episode Why intent prediction needs more than an LLM cover

Why intent prediction needs more than an LLM

Ryan sits down with Frank Portman, CTO at Yobi, to talk about why next-token prediction, though great for language, isn’t the right inductive bias for forecasting human behavior. They discuss how Yobi builds a “foundation model of behavior” using transformers and graph neural networks instead of chat-style LLMs, and what it takes to run millions of personalization decisions per second while keeping consumer data private. Episode notes: Yobi [https://www.yobi.ai/] is a behavioral AI company building foundation models that predict future behavior for ad tech, marketing, and more. Connect with Frank via fportman.com [http://fportman.com] or at yobi.ai [http://yobi.ai]. Congrats to Hooked [https://stackoverflow.com/users/249341/hooked] on winning a Populist badge for their answer to Removing whitespace around a saved image [https://stackoverflow.com/questions/11837979/removing-white-space-around-a-saved-image]. See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy [https://art19.com/privacy] and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info [https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info].

30. juni 202629 min