The BugBash Podcast

Programming as an Act of Building Vocabulary

49 min · 2 de abr de 2026
portada del episodio Programming as an Act of Building Vocabulary

Descripción

Why do LLMs struggle to build complex architecture?  According to Unmesh Joshi, Distinguished Engineer at ThoughtWorks, it often comes down to a lack of shared abstractions, of a shared vocabulary. Today he joins Will Wilson and David Wynn to unpack how we learn about, build, and test distributed systems. We cover the value of building miniature versions of systems like Kafka to grasp the basics, why Deterministic Simulation Testing (DST) is a highly effective tool for teaching as well as finding bugs , and why Guy Steele's 1998 keynote holds the secret to successfully collaborating with modern AI tools.

Comentarios

0

Sé la primera persona en comentar

¡Regístrate ahora y forma parte de la comunidad de The BugBash Podcast!

Prueba gratis

Empieza 7 días de prueba

$99 / mes después de la prueba. · Cancela cuando quieras.

  • Podcasts solo en Podimo
  • 20 horas de audiolibros al mes
  • Podcast gratuitos

Todos los episodios

19 episodios

episode Semmathesy and the Agentic Era: Learning Systems in 2026 artwork

Semmathesy and the Agentic Era: Learning Systems in 2026

With the "Agentic Era" coming online, teams are onboarding new AI "minions" into our codebases every thirty minutes. So a critical question emerges: Are we actually becoming more productive, or just more busy?Jessica Kerr (Jessitron) joins me to explore symmathesis—the theory of learning systems made of learning parts. We dive into viewing software as a teammate, how the definition of "legacy code" is shifting to anything an AI can't understand, and why our most important human contribution is moving from writing lines of code to orchestrating the flows of learning across the entire system.We dive into the shifting boundaries between the social and technical worlds, and why the "productivity unlock" of AI might actually make software engineering a more human endeavor than ever before.

18 de mar de 202651 min
episode From Scale to Rigor: An Engineering Journey at Meta and Oxide artwork

From Scale to Rigor: An Engineering Journey at Meta and Oxide

Today we’re talking with Rain from Oxide Computing, tracing their journey from the massive, data-driven scale of Meta to the high-stakes, air-gapped world of shipping a 'cloud in a box'. We talk about moving from an environment of over 10,000 engineers—where a 10% tooling improvement is worth a thousand people—to a culture where you’re shipping hardware that simply cannot be patched once it leaves the building. Rain shares how they realized that technical writing is a senior engineer’s ultimate force multiplier for justifying complex designs. We also dive deep into the 'invisible superpower' of property-based testing and using Oracles to kill bugs in the developer’s inner loop long before they ever have a chance to reach production. Mentioned: https://rfd.shared.oxide.computer/rfd/0576 Further reading: https://oxide-and-friends.transistor.fm/episodes/engineering-rigor-in-the-llm-age

11 de mar de 20261 h 1 min