Forsidebilde av showet The Weekly Dev's Brew

The Weekly Dev's Brew

Podkast av Jan-Niklas Wortmann

engelsk

Teknologi og vitenskap

Tidsbegrenset tilbud

2 Måneder for 19 kr

Deretter 99 kr / MånedAvslutt når som helst.

  • 20 timer lydbøker i måneden
  • Eksklusive podkaster
  • Gratis podkaster
Kom i gang

Les mer The Weekly Dev's Brew

The people building AI developer tools have stories most of us never hear. Stories of failed experiments, unexpected wins and workflows they swear by. The Weekly Dev's Brew host Jan-Niklas Wortmann pulls those stories out through honest conversations about what AI actually changes for developers and how we write software.

Alle episoder

18 Episoder

episode A Google Engineer's Honest Take on AI, Angular, and the Future of Your Career cover

A Google Engineer's Honest Take on AI, Angular, and the Future of Your Career

In this episode, I sit down with Minko Gechev — Google Engineer, former Angular team lead, and one of the most thoughtful voices on AI and developer productivity.We get into why AI won't replace engineers anytime soon (and what that actually means for your career), how Google's Angular team is affected by AI, the security risks of the current AI coding wave, and the single most valuable skill developers should be building right now.If you're a developer trying to figure out where you fit in the age of AI, I hope this one helps you.Connect with Minko:X/Twitter: https://twitter.com/mgechevGitHub: https://github.com/mgechevLinkedIn: https://linkedin.com/in/mgechev Topics covered: AI-powered developer productivity • LLM skill evaluation • Angular + AI • Software engineering career • Imposter syndrome • Open source security • Future of coding

I går - 54 min
episode Microfrontends: Cutting Through the Hype and Misconceptions (w/ Luca) cover

Microfrontends: Cutting Through the Hype and Misconceptions (w/ Luca)

Micro-frontends promise to help teams scale development, but AWS Principal Architect Luca Mezzalira has seen some succeed and some just fall apart. In this conversation, he shares what he's learned from years of implementation work at companies like DAZN and through consulting with Fortune 500 organizations. Luca explains why micro-frontends are fundamentally different from components—something many teams get wrong from the start. He discusses the common pitfalls he encounters: teams treating them like distributed components, sharing state across boundaries, and copying architectures from companies with completely different constraints and resources. The discussion covers practical implementation details—from communication patterns and tooling strategies to when approaches like iframes actually make sense. Luca also touches on newer developments in server-side rendering and how they're changing the micro-frontend landscape. This isn't about micro-frontends being good or bad, but about understanding when and how to use them appropriately. Luca emphasizes the importance of context and organizational design in making these architectural decisions work. Our Fantastic Guest - Luca Mezzalira I’m a software architect with over 20 years of experience helping organizations—from startups to Fortune 500s—design scalable, resilient, and modern architectures. My focus: evolving frontend systems, driving cloud-native modernizations, and enabling autonomy at scale through architectural clarity. As Principal Serverless Specialist Solutions Architect at AWS, I advise global enterprises on designing and implementing efficient, event-driven systems. I specialize in serverless, micro-frontends, and distributed architectures that align technology strategy with long-term business outcomes. LinkedIn [http://linkedin.com/in/lucamezzalira/] X/Twitter [https://twitter.com/lucamezzalira] Links and Resources Luca's Newsletter [https://www.buildingmicrofrontends.com/]  Single-spa [https://single-spa.js.org/]  Module Federation [https://webpack.js.org/concepts/module-federation/]  Native Federation [https://www.npmjs.com/package/@angular-architects/native-federation]  Web Fragments (Microsoft) [https://github.com/microsoft/web-fragments]  Astro Server Islands [https://docs.astro.build/en/concepts/islands/]  Thank you very much for listening! We are also pretty much on all social media platforms, so make sure to like and subscribe! Homepage - https://www.weeklybrew.dev/ BlueSky - https://bsky.app/profile/weeklybrew.dev Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/weeklydevsbrew/ TikTok - https://www.tiktok.com/@weeklybrew.dev YouTube - https://www.youtube.com/@theweeklydevsbrew LinkedIn - https://linkedin.com/company/the-weekly-dev-s-brew

19. sep. 2025 - 1 h 11 min
episode Why CSS is Now the Fastest-Moving Space in Web Development (with Una Kravets) cover

Why CSS is Now the Fastest-Moving Space in Web Development (with Una Kravets)

Why CSS is Now the Fastest-Moving Space in Web Development (with Una Kravets) While everyone's talking about AI disrupting development, Una Kravets from Google Chrome reveals a surprising twist: CSS has quietly become the fastest-evolving part of web development. In this conversation, Una breaks down how features that required months of JavaScript engineering are now landing as native platform capabilities. Think customizable dropdowns, anchor positioning, and scroll-driven animations. She shares insights from working directly with Chromium engineers and explains why senior developer expertise is becoming more valuable than ever, even as AI lowers the barrier to building applications. Una walks through her process for identifying platform gaps and working with standards bodies like Open UI. She also tackles the unique challenge of scaling web platform knowledge in an AI-driven development landscape, sharing her mixed feelings about AI's current applications. From her success building Chrome extensions with Gemini to her frustration with chat-based customer service, Una argues for using AI where it makes sense while maintaining the human elements that make the web engaging. Whether you're skeptical about AI's role in development or curious about the cutting-edge of CSS, this conversation offers a grounded yet forward-thinking perspective on the future of web development. Our Fantastic Guest Una Kravets Una Kravets leads the Web UI Developer Relations Team at Google Chrome with a mission to make the web platform easier to build on and more powerful. She hosts the CSS Podcast and has spoken at over 100 conferences around the world helping folks build better web interfaces. When Una isn't online, she loves to craft and recently became a mom. X [https://twitter.com/una] Bluesky [https://bsky.app/profile/una.im] Website [https://una.im/] Links and Resources Emil Kowalski's React motion course animations.dev [https://animations.dev/] Google's web development guidance and feature announcements [https://web.dev/]Open UI Community Group [https://open-ui.org/] CSS Working Group GitHub [https://github.com/w3c/csswg-drafts ] Web Platform Tests [https://wpt.fyi/] Thank you very much for listening! We are also pretty much on all social media platforms, so make sure to like and subscribe! Homepage - https://www.weeklybrew.dev/ BlueSky - https://bsky.app/profile/weeklybrew.dev Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/weeklydevsbrew/ TikTok - https://www.tiktok.com/@weeklybrew.dev YouTube - https://www.youtube.com/@theweeklydevsbrew LinkedIn - https://linkedin.com/company/the-weekly-dev-s-brew

12. sep. 2025 - 52 min
episode Writing a Web Browser in 2025 (with Andreas Kling) cover

Writing a Web Browser in 2025 (with Andreas Kling)

What does it take to build a web browser when everyone says it's impossible? In this episode, we sit down with Andreas Kling, the engineer behind Ladybird—the only major browser project that doesn't take money from Google. Andreas breaks down a uncomfortable truth: Google funds every major browser through search deals. Chrome, Firefox, Safari—they're all dependent on Google's advertising revenue. Ladybird is building the first truly independent alternative since the early Firefox days. We dive deep into the technical challenges of implementing web standards from scratch, why their 700,000 lines of code can compete with Chrome's 100+ million, and how they're making browser code that actually mirrors the specifications. Andreas reveals why they switched from UTF-8 to UTF-16, why they didn't choose Rust, and how they handle the constant evolution of living web standards. From the "draw the owl" problem of CSS specifications to building a sustainable nonprofit model with sponsors like Shopify, Andreas shares the engineering and business decisions behind their ambitious timeline: alpha in 2026, beta in 2027, and v1.0 by 2028. Our Fantastic Guest Andreas Kling President of the Ladybird Browser Initiative. X [https://twitter.com/awesomekling] Links and Resources Ladybird Browser Website [https://ladybird.org] Web Platform Tests [https://wpt.fyi] Fil-C (memory-safe C++ compiler) [https://github.com/FilipBraun/FilC] Thank you very much for listening! We are also pretty much on all social media platforms, so make sure to like and subscribe! Homepage - https://www.weeklybrew.dev/ BlueSky - https://bsky.app/profile/weeklybrew.dev Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/weeklydevsbrew/ TikTok - https://www.tiktok.com/@weeklybrew.dev YouTube - https://www.youtube.com/@theweeklydevsbrew LinkedIn - https://linkedin.com/company/the-weekly-dev-s-brew

29. aug. 2025 - 1 h 7 min
episode From Discord Helper to OSS Maintainer (w/ Dominik Dorfmeister) cover

From Discord Helper to OSS Maintainer (w/ Dominik Dorfmeister)

What does it take to accidentally become the maintainer of one of React's most popular libraries? In this episode, we sit down with Dominik Dorfmeister (aka. TkDodo), maintainer of React Query (now TanStack Query), to unpack his unexpected journey from answering Discord questions during COVID to maintaining a library with 10 million weekly downloads. Dominik reveals how spending months just helping people on Discord led to becoming a core maintainer of the TanStack ecosystem. We dive deep into React Query's stability-first approach, the challenges of managing breaking changes across multiple frameworks, and why the React adapter is surprisingly the most complex to maintain. From deleting 20,000 lines of dead code at Sentry to building platform teams that enable developer productivity, Dominik shares insights into maintaining software at scale. Our Fantastic Guest Dominik Dorfmeister Software Engineer from 🇦🇹, working at Sentry, maintaining TanStack Query BlueSky [https://bsky.app/profile/tkdodo.eu] Links and Resources Dominik's Blog [https://tkdodo.eu/blog/] Query.gg [https://query.gg/] Knip Docs [https://knip.dev/]  Thank you very much for listening! We are also pretty much on all social media platforms, so make sure to like and subscribe! Homepage - https://www.weeklybrew.dev/ BlueSky - https://bsky.app/profile/weeklybrew.dev Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/weeklydevsbrew/ TikTok - https://www.tiktok.com/@weeklybrew.dev YouTube - https://www.youtube.com/@theweeklydevsbrew LinkedIn - https://linkedin.com/company/the-weekly-dev-s-brew

22. aug. 2025 - 53 min
Enkelt å finne frem nye favoritter og lett å navigere seg gjennom innholdet i appen
Enkelt å finne frem nye favoritter og lett å navigere seg gjennom innholdet i appen
Liker at det er både Podcaster (godt utvalg) og lydbøker i samme app, pluss at man kan holde Podcaster og lydbøker atskilt i biblioteket.
Bra app. Oversiktlig og ryddig. MYE bra innhold⭐️⭐️⭐️

Velg abonnementet ditt

Mest populær

Tidsbegrenset tilbud

Premium

20 timer lydbøker

  • Eksklusive podkaster

  • Ingen annonser i Podimo shows

  • Avslutt når som helst

2 Måneder for 19 kr
Deretter 99 kr / Måned

Kom i gang

Premium Plus

100 timer lydbøker

  • Eksklusive podkaster

  • Ingen annonser i Podimo shows

  • Avslutt når som helst

Prøv gratis i 14 dager
Deretter 169 kr / måned

Prøv gratis

Bare på Podimo

Populære lydbøker

Kom i gang

2 Måneder for 19 kr. Deretter 99 kr / Måned. Avslutt når som helst.