Break

Break

Rebellious, Not Revolutionary

40 min · 28. Feb. 2026
Episode Rebellious, Not Revolutionary Cover

Beschreibung

Welcome back to Break, a Fallthrough aftershow! Kris and Matt continue the Go repository structure conversation by zooming in on the details. The pair discuss what they dislike about database libraries in Go, with a particular distaste for mocking. Then they have an extended discussion of Bryan Cantrill's "Complexity of Simplicity" quadrant framework from TalosCon. They argue Go was rebellious, but modules have been slid it into the accreted quadrant. Enjoying the aftershow? Let us know on social media! If you prefer to watch instead of just listen, head over to YouTube where you can watch this episode of Break! Thanks for tuning in and happy listening! Chapters: * Prologue (00:00:00) * Chapter 1: Go's database/sql Package Design and Magic Imports (00:01:24) * Chapter 2: SQL Mocking Is Painful, Just Use a Real Database (00:04:23) * Chapter 3: Global Side Effects and Why Nobody Will Fix Go's SQL (00:08:07) * Chapter 4: Go Package Design and the Limits of Import Paths (00:12:31) * Chapter 5: Bryan Cantrill's "Complexity of Simplicity" Quadrant Framework (00:17:49) * Chapter 6: Where Does Go Actually Fit? Rebellious, Not Revolutionary (00:24:15) * Chapter 7: Go Is Sliding Into "Accreted" Territory (00:33:04) * Epilogue (00:39:30) Hosts * Kris Brandow [https://break.show/people/kris-brandow] - Host * Matthew Sanabria [https://break.show/people/matthew-sanabria] - Host Socials: * Website [https://break.show/] * Bluesky [https://bsky.app/profile/fallthrough.fm] * Threads [https://www.threads.net/@fallthroughfm] * X/Twitter [https://x.com/fallthroughfm] * LinkedIn [https://linkedin.com/company/fallthrough] * Instagram [https://www.instagram.com/fallthroughfm/]

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29 Folgen

Episode Rebellious, Not Revolutionary Cover

Rebellious, Not Revolutionary

Welcome back to Break, a Fallthrough aftershow! Kris and Matt continue the Go repository structure conversation by zooming in on the details. The pair discuss what they dislike about database libraries in Go, with a particular distaste for mocking. Then they have an extended discussion of Bryan Cantrill's "Complexity of Simplicity" quadrant framework from TalosCon. They argue Go was rebellious, but modules have been slid it into the accreted quadrant. Enjoying the aftershow? Let us know on social media! If you prefer to watch instead of just listen, head over to YouTube where you can watch this episode of Break! Thanks for tuning in and happy listening! Chapters: * Prologue (00:00:00) * Chapter 1: Go's database/sql Package Design and Magic Imports (00:01:24) * Chapter 2: SQL Mocking Is Painful, Just Use a Real Database (00:04:23) * Chapter 3: Global Side Effects and Why Nobody Will Fix Go's SQL (00:08:07) * Chapter 4: Go Package Design and the Limits of Import Paths (00:12:31) * Chapter 5: Bryan Cantrill's "Complexity of Simplicity" Quadrant Framework (00:17:49) * Chapter 6: Where Does Go Actually Fit? Rebellious, Not Revolutionary (00:24:15) * Chapter 7: Go Is Sliding Into "Accreted" Territory (00:33:04) * Epilogue (00:39:30) Hosts * Kris Brandow [https://break.show/people/kris-brandow] - Host * Matthew Sanabria [https://break.show/people/matthew-sanabria] - Host Socials: * Website [https://break.show/] * Bluesky [https://bsky.app/profile/fallthrough.fm] * Threads [https://www.threads.net/@fallthroughfm] * X/Twitter [https://x.com/fallthroughfm] * LinkedIn [https://linkedin.com/company/fallthrough] * Instagram [https://www.instagram.com/fallthroughfm/]

28. Feb. 202640 min
Episode The Chat Interface Is The Keyboard Cover

The Chat Interface Is The Keyboard

Welcome back to Break, a Fallthrough aftershow! Kris and Matt continue the hardware and AI conversation by zooming in on the tooling. Matt calls out the AI hype cycle of "this is the new thing" followed a week later by "I got my identity stolen" and they dig into why AI agents can't pair program. The centerpiece is an extended analogy comparing the chat interface to piano keyboards on early synthesizers: it was the obvious first interface, but we need to evolve toward drum pads, Kanban boards, and purpose-built tools. Enjoying the aftershow? Let us know on social media! If you prefer to watch instead of just listen, head over to YouTube where you can watch this episode of Break! Thanks for tuning in and happy listening! Chapters: * Prologue (00:00:00) * Chapter 1: The AI Hype Cycle (00:00:30) * Chapter 2: From AI Skeptic to Nuanced User (00:02:37) * Chapter 3: Context Window Collapse (00:04:58) * Chapter 4: AI Agents and the Pair Programming Gap (00:08:41) * Chapter 5: Balancing Verbosity and Token Budgets (00:12:10) * Chapter 6: Beyond the Chat Interface (00:16:53) * Chapter 7: The Synthesizer Analogy (00:23:03) * Chapter 8: Customizing Your Tools (00:27:35) * Chapter 9: The Codex Personality Controversy (00:32:28) * Chapter 10: Go Generic Methods Teaser (00:36:31) * Epilogue (00:38:42) Hosts * Kris Brandow [https://break.show/people/kris-brandow] - Host * Matthew Sanabria [https://break.show/people/matthew-sanabria] - Host Socials: * Website [https://break.show/] * Bluesky [https://bsky.app/profile/fallthrough.fm] * Threads [https://www.threads.net/@fallthroughfm] * X/Twitter [https://x.com/fallthroughfm] * LinkedIn [https://linkedin.com/company/fallthrough] * Instagram [https://www.instagram.com/fallthroughfm/]

14. Feb. 202639 min
Episode Innovation Looks Like Chaos Cover

Innovation Looks Like Chaos

Welcome back to Break, a Fallthrough aftershow! Kris, Matt, and Steve pick up where the main episode left off, asking whether copyright actually matters to working developers. Kris draws parallels to the U.S. tax system as an example of messy-but-functional policy, Matt vents about the frantic pace of AI "standards" like MCP and agents.md, and Kris argues that ossification is worse than chaos  by pointing to TCP and Von Neumann architecture as cautionary tales of things that got locked in and never changed. Enjoying the aftershow? Let us know on social media! If you prefer to watch instead of just listen, head over to YouTube where you can watch this episode of Break! Thanks for tuning in and happy listening! Chapters: * Prologue (00:00:02) * Chapter 1: Does Copyright Actually Matter to Developers? (00:00:57) * Chapter 2: The Tax System: A Lesson in Messy Policy (00:04:08) * Chapter 3: The Frantic Pace of AI Standards (00:09:17) * Chapter 4: Innovation Is Chaos (TCP, Von Neumann & Ossification) (00:12:31) * Chapter 5: Sleep Deprivation and the Cost of Keeping Up (00:17:33) * Chapter 6: Tech Layoffs (00:18:16) * Epilogue (00:19:30) Hosts * Kris Brandow [https://break.show/people/kris-brandow] - Host * Matthew Sanabria [https://break.show/people/matthew-sanabria] - Host * Steve Klabnik [https://break.show/people/steve-klabnik] - Guest Socials: * Website [https://break.show/] * Bluesky [https://bsky.app/profile/fallthrough.fm] * Threads [https://www.threads.net/@fallthroughfm] * X/Twitter [https://x.com/fallthroughfm] * LinkedIn [https://linkedin.com/company/fallthrough] * Instagram [https://www.instagram.com/fallthroughfm/]

7. Feb. 202620 min
Episode Breaking Changes Cover

Breaking Changes

Welcome back to Break, a Fallthrough aftershow! It's just Kris and Steve for this one! After brief reflections on the Gastown discussion, the episode pivots into a deep dive on semantic versioning, breaking changes, and the history of package management. Kris shares research showing most Go modules change far less code between major versions than people assume. They trace the history from CPAN and dpkg through NPM/Yarn to Go's GOPATH era, discuss supply chain security implications of MVS, and Kris teases an alternative Go toolchain project for 2026. Enjoying the aftershow? Let us know on social media! If you prefer to watch instead of just listen, head over to YouTube where you can watch this episode of Break! Thanks for tuning in and happy listening! Chapters: * Prologue (00:00:00) * Chapter 1: Reflecting on the Main Episode (00:00:17) * Chapter 2: Data Centers, Technology & the Butlerian Jihad (00:01:22) * Chapter 3: Semantic Versioning & Breaking Changes in Go (00:02:42) * Chapter 4: Breaking Changes Across Language Ecosystems (00:05:04) * Chapter 5: History of Package Managers (00:08:48) * Chapter 6: OS vs Language Package Managers (00:11:30) * Chapter 7: NPM, Yarn & Lock Files (00:13:08) * Chapter 8: Go's GOPATH Era & Dependency Freedom (00:14:43) * Chapter 9: Rethinking Dependency Management (00:16:37) * Chapter 10: Alternative Go Toolchain (00:19:53) * Epilogue (00:21:23) Hosts * Kris Brandow [https://break.show/people/kris-brandow] - Host * Steve Klabnik [https://break.show/people/steve-klabnik] - Guest Socials: * Website [https://break.show/] * Bluesky [https://bsky.app/profile/fallthrough.fm] * Threads [https://www.threads.net/@fallthroughfm] * X/Twitter [https://x.com/fallthroughfm] * LinkedIn [https://linkedin.com/company/fallthrough] * Instagram [https://www.instagram.com/fallthroughfm/]

31. Jan. 202622 min
Episode Context Is King Cover

Context Is King

Welcome back to Break, a Fallthrough aftershow! In this episode, Annie and Michael Hedgepeth stick around for Break. The panel kicks off with Michael's anxiety about his "distinguished engineer" rant, which shifts into a discussion about broken career ladders and why companies need to hire librarians. Michael adds wisdom on context management being the key to getting value from AI, while the group explores why staff engineers who only know code might be in trouble. Matthew shares how Oxide onboards new hires, Annie flips the script on what juniors bring to the table, and Kris questions whether software engineers know what engineering is. The episode wraps with unpopular opinions: Michael argues AI will create Michelin-star software instead of endless McDonald's apps, and Annie takes a firm stand on top sheet usage that sparks surprisingly passionate debate. Enjoying the aftershow? Let us know on social media! If you prefer to watch instead of just listen, head over to YouTube where you can watch this episode of Break! Thanks for tuning in and happy listening! Chapters: * Prologue (00:00:00) * Chapter 1: The "Distinguished Engineer" Problem (00:01:11) * Chapter 2: Career Tracks and Skill Mismatch (00:03:08) * Chapter 3: Why Companies Need Librarians (00:05:57) * Chapter 4: Context Management and AI Effectiveness (00:10:07) * Chapter 5: How LLMs Actually Work (00:14:21) * Chapter 6: The Revolution in What Makes Engineers Valuable (00:17:45) * Chapter 7: Why Staff Engineers Who Only Code Won't Make It (00:19:12) * Chapter 8: Onboarding New Hires at Oxide (00:24:26) * Chapter 9: The Multi-Dimensional Value of People (00:28:34) * Chapter 10: Is Software Engineering Really Engineering? (00:31:48) * Chapter 11: Unpopular Opinions - AI Creates Michelin, Not McDonald's (00:37:05) * Chapter 12: Unpopular Opinion - Top Sheet Supremacy (00:43:00) * Epilogue (00:47:46) Hosts * Kris Brandow [https://break.show/people/kris-brandow] - Host * Matthew Sanabria [https://break.show/people/matthew-sanabria] - Host * Annie Hedgpeth [https://break.show/people/annie-hedgpeth] - Guest * Michael Hedgpeth [https://break.show/people/michael-hedgpeth] - Guest Socials: * Website [https://break.show/] * Bluesky [https://bsky.app/profile/fallthrough.fm] * Threads [https://www.threads.net/@fallthroughfm] * X/Twitter [https://x.com/fallthroughfm] * LinkedIn [https://linkedin.com/company/fallthrough] * Instagram [https://www.instagram.com/fallthroughfm/]

24. Jan. 202648 min