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Software Developers Journey

303 episodes - English - Latest episode: 19 days ago - ★★★★★ - 19 ratings

Becoming a software developer is a journey. The Software Developers Journey show is an inspirational podcast for software developers. Every week, a successful software engineer shares their journey and tells us what they learned.

Technology Business Careers career development tech careers career growth career advice coding journey software engineer software developer programmer mentoring
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Episodes

#59 Julie Moronuki a linguist turned Haskell expert

July 23, 2019 01:00 - 49 minutes - 33.9 MB

Julie first told us how she met Christopher Allen, the co-author of her Book "Haskell programming from first principles", why learning in general is hard and why they wanted to approach learning Haskell from a different angle. We then drifted into Julie's own learning of Haskell and how she came into the programming world. We then digged further into the Haskell echosystem and the world of academia. And finally, we touched on TypeClass, Julie's own company, dedicated to teaching Haskell. Ju...

#58 Robby Russell succeeds being selfless

July 15, 2019 23:00 - 49 minutes - 34.3 MB

Robby first told us how the selfless scratching of his own itch lead to the success of his tool "Oh my Zsh". We then backtracked to his early years and how he got into development. Step by step, Robby took us through the creation and growth of his consultancy ; which is deeply intertwined with Ruby on Rails, scratching his own itch(es) again, and helping others along the way. Robby co-founded Planet Argon in 2002, which is a a software consultancy based out of Portland, Oregon USA. Planet A...

#57 Adam Barr roots for more humility

July 09, 2019 00:00 - 42 minutes - 29.2 MB

Adam took us through his journey at Microsoft. From the first (failed) interviews, to his long career writing code, helping teams and teaching developers. We spoke about the key learnings that encouraged him to write two of his books and finished by talking about the state of software development and where our industry could grow in the future. Adam Barr worked with and for Microsoft for more than two decades. There he worked on various versions of Windows, Powershell and Office as well as ...

#56 Magnus Stahre is not supposed to know it all, and neither are we!

July 02, 2019 00:00 - 35 minutes - 24.7 MB

Magnus started by telling us the story of his first steps, tinkering on a Commodore64 devising on what attracted him toward computers in the first place. Then we discussed his first apps using Borland TurboPascal and how this hobby evolved into a job. We talked polyglot-ism, craftsmanship, re-reading books, apprenticeship programs and code katas. Forged of iron and walrus blood, Magnus Staahre comes from an ancient line of nordic code smiths. His technology engineering heritage was primaril...

#55 Yehuda Katz on how framework design influences communities

June 25, 2019 00:00 - 57 minutes - 39.3 MB

After brushing over his "false starts" at being a developer, Yehuda slowly took us into a deep, deep dive. We talked about framework design, design philosophy, the importance of communities and being part of a core team. Yehuda is one of the creators of Ember.js, and a retired member of the Rust, Ruby on Rails and jQuery Core Teams. His 9-to-5 home is at the startup he founded, Tilde Inc.. There he works on Skylight, the smart profiler for Rails, and does Ember.js consulting. He's best know...

#54 Dave Rael was chosen by the .NET technology stack, not the other way around

June 18, 2019 00:00 - 45 minutes - 31.6 MB

Dave's first professional love was for teaching. He developed it while studying physics at university. But as the DotCom boom went by, he jumped on the coding bandwagon and was hooked. Dave took us through those first years, learning the ropes and climbing the ladder, going from one giant company to a small one where he could really have an impact. Finally, since Dave is the host of the "Developer on Fire" podcast, we discussed podcasting, why he got into it and what he learned from it along...

#53 Brian Pontarelli thinks like a customer

June 10, 2019 23:00 - 42 minutes - 19.3 MB

Brian first told us about his very first Apple E computer and his journey up to college when he learned electrical engineering before switching major to computer science. He spoke about his first startup and his learnings, being a software engineer during the "DotCom Era". Brian then told us about the job where he learned most about teamwork and then about scaling applications. And we completed this very logical buildup by talking about the companies he created. Brian studied computer engin...

#52 Charity Majors encourages us to strive, going back and forth between roles

June 03, 2019 23:00 - 38 minutes - 17.6 MB

Charity first took us through the pain of being a CEO and explained us why she chose to focus on tech again after a while. She then explained how she felt into code instrumentalisation during her time at Parse and how this became her idea for Honeycomb.io. We then went back to her early years, how she felt into IT, SysAdministration and ended up working in the Silicon Valley. We talked about mentorship, learning and sharing. We dwelved on the public speaking skills as a leadership skill befo...

#51 Ben Orenstein advises us not to worry too much

May 27, 2019 23:00 - 39 minutes - 18.3 MB

Ben Orenstein first talked about being able to create products. We spoke about Ben's early programs and his attempt at studying in college. We then spoke about his second attempt at entering the IT industry, through the backdoor this time. Ben told us about his discovery of Ruby and joining Thoughbot. He told us about why sharing knowledge is important to him. We then touched on public speaking and the two podcasts he hosted during his career. We finally switched gears and talked about produ...

#50 Saron Yitbarek, founder of CodeNewbie, celebrates the power of code and communities

May 21, 2019 11:00 - 39 minutes - 18.3 MB

Saron took us from the early years of career as a journalist, to her first coding steps. She explained us in details how her bootcamp and apprenticeship programs took her from a code newbie to a solid developer and avid learner. Saron explained us why she created the CodeNewbie community and how it slowly but surely evolved into her current business. We devised on the many faces of the CodeNewbie community, podcasts and conferences. Saron finally gave us the advice to focus and do things "on...

#49 Ali Spittel works at the crossroads of development, teaching and communities

May 13, 2019 23:00 - 44 minutes - 20.4 MB

Ali started by telling us how she got into software development, almost by accident, how she became an assistant professor and how she slowly but surely embraced this career. We talked about her time working for a startup and why her time there was invaluable. We talked at length about her move from develoment to teaching and what she learned along the way. We finally segwayed into her current role at the crossroads of development, teaching and community as a developer advocate. Ali is a so...

#48 Shawn Wildermuth encourages us to make decisions no matter what

May 06, 2019 23:00 - 41 minutes - 19 MB

Shawn took us through the early days of his career and quicky pivoted toward his first mentor "Ron". He told us how Ron managed to infect him with the willingness to write good code. We then brushed over learning and what it takes to become a lifelong learner. We touched on being a role model and how Chris Sells played a central role in his live. We finally discussed decision making strategies and the interviewing game. Shawn Wildermuuuth has been tinkering with computers and software since...

#47 Erik St. Martin is comfortable with the struggle

April 29, 2019 23:00 - 42 minutes - 19.5 MB

Together we talked about Erik's first hacking feats and how he got his first job in the IT world. We then brushed over his learnings at Disney and Comcast before joining Microsoft to help other developers. Erik then encouraged us to question our perception of ourself, and compare ourselves only against our former self. We then touched on the definition of seniority. We discussed Erik's experience getting to know the Go language and organize the first GopherCon conference. And we finally talk...

#46 Barry Dorrans is a curmudgeon telling us it is OK to be wrong

April 22, 2019 23:00 - 36 minutes - 16.7 MB

"Curmudgeon" (noun): a bad-tempered person, especially an old one. Barry first told us about his very first encounter with a computer... hooked to a TV back then. We then brushed over what attracted him toward computer sciences. We discussed security and all the things we expect... or hope people will do and setting them up for success. We rewinded back to how Barry furthered and then dropped out of his computer science studies and how he ended up working as a programmer anyway. Barry final...

#45 April Wensel encourages us to get in touch with our core values

April 08, 2019 23:00 - 37 minutes - 17.3 MB

April is the founder of Compassionate Coding, a conscious business that helps technical teams cultivate sustainable, human-­centered software development practices built on a foundation of emotional intelligence. She has spent the past decade as a software engineer and technical leader at various startups in Silicon Valley. As an advocate for a more socially responsible tech industry, she also mentors technologists around the world and volunteers with organizations to teach coding to people ...

#44 Jeremy Likness became a developer through the backdoor and loved it

March 26, 2019 00:00 - 43 minutes - 19.8 MB

Jeremy Likness is a Cloud Developer Advocate for Azure at Microsoft. Jeremy has spent two decades building enterprise software with a focus on line of business web applications. He is the author of several highly acclaimed technical books including Designing Silverlight Business Applications and Programming the Windows Runtime by Example. He has given hundreds of technical presentations during his career as a professional developer. In his free time Jeremy likes to run, hike, and maintain a ...

#43 Patrick Kua on being a consultant, a tech lead, a CTO and helping people grow

March 12, 2019 00:00 - 41 minutes - 18.9 MB

Patrick is the CTO of the mobile bank N26, where he is building the engineering group that will change modern retail banking for people like you and me. Formerly a Principal Technical Consultant at ThoughtWorks in London, he is also the author of three books, The Retrospective Handbook, Talking with Tech Leads and most recently, Building Evolutionary Architectures. Patrick is a frequent conference speaker, a blogger and is passionate about bringing a balanced focus between people, organisati...

#42 Charlie Gerard is learning by building (MANY) projects on the side

February 26, 2019 00:00 - 48 minutes - 22.4 MB

Charlie Gerard is a software developer at ThoughtWorks in Sydney. She is passionate about creative coding and building interactive prototypes mixing science, art and technology. She also spends time giving back to the community by mentoring new developers, contributing to open-source projects and speaking at events. We first talked about her early career in Marketing and as a Digital Producer and segwayed into the Bootcamp that started her programming career. We discussed formal education, ...

#41 Simon Harrer on strong opinions loosely held

February 12, 2019 00:00 - 48 minutes - 22.2 MB

Dr. Simon Harrer is a senior consultant at INNOQ. In his daily business, he fights for simple solutions with domain-driven design, fitting architectures such as microservices or monoliths, and clean code in Java, Ruby or even JavaScript. Most recently, he co-authored the book "Java by Comparison" that helps Java beginners to write cleaner code through before/after comparisons. We talked about his love for teaching and how he incorporated industry best-practices into the curriculum he build....

#40 Ignacio Anaya on discovering your valuable skills

January 29, 2019 00:00 - 43 minutes - 20.1 MB

Ignacio Anaya is a Full Stack Developer at the company BloqInc, a Tech Trainer and a Speaker from Argentina. He's Passionate about code, teaching and field hockey. He mostly works with JavaScript, Vue.js and Blockchain but likes to contribute to many dev communities and Open Source project. Ignacio is an Ambassador for Auth0 and the organizer of the Buenos Aires Vue JS Usergroup. Together we spoke about how his first steps as a developer, his trainee curiculum and how he came to work with J...

#39 Harry Roberts and his journey toward freelancing

January 15, 2019 00:00 - 47 minutes - 21.9 MB

Harry Roberts is an award-winning Consultant Performance Engineer from the UK. With a client list ranging from the United Nations to Google, the BBC to the Financial Times, he has helped some of the world’s largest organisations make their websites faster. He also holds positions as a Google Developer Expert, where he shares web performance research and findings, and as Performance Ambassador for SHIFT Commerce, where he aims to make ecommerce faster from the inside out. He writes about all ...

#38 Ryan Latta from one extreme to the next

January 01, 2019 05:00 - 48 minutes - 22.4 MB

Ryan Latta has been building software and teams for nearly 10 years now. He currently works as an agile coach and scrum master with a mission of creating teams that change the world. As a developer he maintains a belief that writing code is the least responsible thing he can do. When he isn't spending time with his family, he is mentoring new developers in starting their careers, playing games, and learning to play the fiddle. Ryan brushed over the dark passages of his career. From Game dev...

#37.5 Special Episode on what we learned in 2018

December 25, 2018 05:00 - 36 minutes - 16.5 MB

Listen to (almost) all the 2018 guests answer the same question: what is the most important thing you learned in 2018? In order of appearance: Emily Bache http://twitter.com/emilybache Darren Hoehna http://twitter.com/activefireball Markus Harrer http://twitter.com/feststelltaste Jessica Kerr http://twitter.com/jessitron Anne Cahalan http://twitter.com/northofnormal Mario Rogic http://twitter.com/realmario Richard Rodger http://twitter.com/rjrodger Steven Schwenke http://twitter.com...

#37 Darren Hoehna, "That Programming Guy", on getting experience no matter what!

December 18, 2018 05:00 - 41 minutes - 19 MB

Darren is a software developer, currently working for Microsoft, and the founder of the "That Programming Guy" company through which he does the two things that he loves most: helping people and tutoring in programming. When he's not working, he either plays video games, or does chores. Together we talked about the detours Darren took in order to become a developer, like working for U-Haul and not finishing his college degree. Then we talked about the interviews he lived through and how he ...

#36 Rob Allen on persuasion instead of authority

December 04, 2018 06:00 - 34 minutes - 15.8 MB

Rob Allen is a software consultant and developer with many years experience and writes code in PHP, Swift and other interesting languages. He leads Slim Framework's development team and contributes to Apache OpenWhisk and other open source projects. Rob is a published author and based in the UK where he runs Nineteen Feet Limited, focussing on API development, training and consultancy. In his spare time, Rob blogs at akrabat.com and can often be seen with a camera in his hand. Rob briefly t...

#35 Emily Bache on maximizing career for family, hobbies and making a difference in the world

November 20, 2018 05:00 - 37 minutes - 17.2 MB

Emily is a Technical Agile Coach and a very experienced one. In her career, she has embodied pretty much all the positions our industry has to offer and built a polyglott bagage that definitely makes me blush... from Python and Scala to Ruby and C++. Emily is the author of "the Coding Dojo Handbook", a few video classes on Pluralsight and she also regularly speaks at international conferences and panels with none other than "Robert C. Martin". Emily told us her story. How she discovered pro...

#34 Richard Rodger on software development as a resource allocation problem

November 04, 2018 23:00 - 48 minutes - 22.5 MB

Richard Rodger was co-founder and CEO of his previous company, nearForm, where he helped take the company from scratch to an annual turnover of €17 million. Previously, he was CTO of FeedHenry, a mobile application platform provider that was acquired by RedHat for €63.5m in 2014. For several years, Richard has been an active member and influencer of the open source software (OSS) community. He is the creator and maintainer of senecajs.org, a microservices framework for Node.js. Richard is al...

#33 Markus Harrer on being open for new things

October 21, 2018 22:00 - 34 minutes - 15.6 MB

Markus Harrer has developped an expertise in software analytics, "software restoration" and clean code. As a freelance trainer and consultant, he shows his clients how software products can be sustainably improved with the help of a datacentric and comprehensible analysis. Together we talked about the basics of data analytics, how Markus got into it and how and why you also should try it. We talked about the standard tools and mindset required to strive in this branch. Here are the links o...

#32 Katharine Jarmul on being driven & focused on what you can do

October 08, 2018 22:00 - 38 minutes - 17.7 MB

Katharine Jarmul is co-founder of KIProtect, a data security and privacy company for data science workflows in Berlin. She's been using Python since 2008 to solve and create problems. She helped form the first PyLadies chapter in Los Angeles in 2010, and co-authored an O'Reilly book along with several video courses on Python and data. She enjoys following the latest developments in machine learning, natural language processing, data privacy and ethics and workflow automation infrastructure. ...

#31 Mario Rogic on absorbing and communicating as much as you can

September 24, 2018 22:00 - 48 minutes - 22.4 MB

In this episode I talk to Mario Rogic. Mario is a technology aficionado with a particular love for the web. Among many other things, Mario believes technology should make life simple and joyful, and he enjoys being able to prove so. He lives in London, works as Head of Technology for locomote.com and he organises and runs the Elm London Meetups.  We first discussed about public speaking and how it helps us prepare content and communicate better in our everyday life. And of course, Mario des...

#30 Adrian Bolboaca on choosing the appropriate tool for the job at hand

September 09, 2018 22:00 - 51 minutes - 23.5 MB

In this episode I talk to Adrian Bolboaca. Adrian is a programmer, trainer and a coach. His passion is helping teams produce high quality software. Adrian is a supporter of Deliberate Practice, experiments, and experiental learning. In 2016 he published a book about hosting and facilitating a coderetreat, a one-day deliberate practice concept for programming. We touched on the topics of learning theory and university curriculum. We spoke about polyglot programing, about full stack developmen...

#29 Steven Schwenke on soft skills that one cannot "simply download"

August 26, 2018 22:00 - 43 minutes - 19.9 MB

In this episode, I talk with Steven Schwenke. Steven is a software craftsman, mentor and mentee aus Braunschweig in Germany. Together we discussed CS-degrees, mentoring, communication, hard- and soft-skills, motivation, purpose and much more. Here are the links of the show: http://www.stevenschwenke.de https://stevenschwenke.de/events http://twitter.com/stevenschwenke Credits Music Something Elated by Broke For Free (CC BY 3.0) Your host Software Developer‘s Journey is hosted and pr...

#28 Arnaud Porterie on putting the right people together in the right context to see the right things happen

August 12, 2018 22:00 - 36 minutes - 16.7 MB

In this episode I talked to Arnaud Porterie. Arnaud is VP of Engineering at Vente Privée, a french eCommerce Business. Previously, he managed the open-source group at Docker, which radically changed his views on managing software development at scale. Together, we spoke about the parallel between managing engineering teams and building communities. We touched on open source software and culture, and the ways to make engineering teams strive. Here are the links of the show: http://twitter....

#27 Jessica Kerr on public speaking, networking and the problems of mentoring

July 29, 2018 22:00 - 47 minutes - 21.9 MB

Jessica's adventures include public speaking, advocating for functional programming and systems thinking at software conferences around the world, but also keeping two children alive, and podcasting on "Greater Than Code." We touched on her introduction to public speaking. We talked about balancing family life and traveling for work. We transitioned into networking and the power of people and landed on mentoring/mentorship. Here are the links from the show: http://twitter.com/jessitron h...

#26 Anne Cahalan on moving out of Junior-Developerness

July 15, 2018 22:00 - 38 minutes - 17.9 MB

In this episode, I interviewed Anne Cahalan. Anne is an iOS developer at Detroit Labs, where she is constantly delighted by the niftiness of Swift. Anne told us her story. From the Bootcamp she went to and the apprenticeship program she followed, up to her "moving out" of "Junior-Developerness" and all its implications. We finally touched on the topic of mid-career development, which was the topic of her talk at the London SPA-Conference where we met. Here are the links of the show: http:/...

#25 Sia Ghassemi on segways that lead exactly where you needed to be

July 05, 2018 22:00 - 44 minutes - 20.6 MB

In this episode, I talk to Siavash "Sia" Ghassemi, software achitect and developer. He is a Microsoft Azure and Xamarin expert. We discussed how he discovered his passion for software development and how he came to becoming the well know speaker and prolific developer he now is. We touched on the career segways that he lived through and how it helped him later in his life. We finally touched attending conferences and speaking at them as a medium to grow for developers. Here are the links o...

#24 Daniel Marbach on failure, remoteness and mentoring

June 28, 2017 22:00 - 37 minutes - 17.4 MB

In this episode I talk with Daniel Marbach, software engineer, architect, evangelist, family man, father, public speaker and so much more. We touched on how his first failure shaped his career and made him much stronger. We discussed the remote-ness of his current company and how this makes them a very "particular" (pun intended) company. We talked about mentoring and how it helps Daniel become a bit better everyday. Finally we talked about hiring for culture, and how it is done at the compa...

#23 Laura Savino on languages and public speaking

June 13, 2017 22:00 - 53 minutes - 24.6 MB

The guest this week is Laura Savino. Laura is a freelance iOS developer whose non-tech passions include foreign languages and teaching. We started talking about languages, how we learn them, and how kids books could help us there. We diverged toward public speaking and how you structure a talk. We finally touched on being on stage, playing music and how this relates to public speaking. Note: Skype unfortunately had a couple hiccups during the call. I managed to edit most of them. Two moments...

#22 Rob Napier on interviewing and asking questions

May 14, 2017 22:00 - 44 minutes - 20.2 MB

In this episode I talk to Rob Napier. Rob has been a developer for a few decades and now earns his living developing for iOS. We touched on our respective interviewing processes, asking questions, being inclusive, reflecting on your own way of doing etc. We also discussed about being a "Conditional Breakpoint" and how a music band might approach including newcomers. We finally touched on Mentoring and just "listening". Enjoy! Here are the links of the show: http://twitter.com/cocoaphony h...

#21 David Tanzer on craftmanship and the need for coaching

April 30, 2017 22:00 - 31 minutes - 14.5 MB

In this episode I talk to David Tanzer. David is a Freelancer based in Linz, Austria. We talked about what David does for a living. We touched on the SOLID principles and the 4 rules of simple design. We continued talking about the SoCraTes conference and the need for technical coaching beside agile coaching. Here are the links of the show: http://twitter.com/dtanzer http://www.davidtanzer.net http://socrates-conference.at https://jax.de/speaker/david-tanzer http://www.davidtanzer.net/...

#20 Ivo Vutov on growing into Microsoft as a student partner

April 14, 2017 22:00 - 51 minutes - 23.6 MB

In this episode I talk to Ivo Vutov, Consultant Developer for Microsoft in Germany. Ivo shares with us how he started to code, then how he came to working with Microsoft through the Student Partner Program and how he evolved from there. We touched on the new offices of Microsoft in Munich and the effects this revamp had on the teamwork. We spoke about remote work, diversity and accessibility. We flew over selling yourself, applying for a job and much more...  Note: There were a couple drops...

#19 Manuela Rink on being an iOS developer evangelist at Microsoft

April 04, 2017 22:00 - 39 minutes - 18 MB

In this episode I talk to Manuela Rink about her career path. Manu has taken a few roles over her still short career and ended up mixing two worlds that I personally never thought could really match. Let's cut to the chase, Manu is an iOS freak (in a good way ;) ), who is also a developer evangelist at Microsoft. We go over her career, her place at Microsoft and the role of an evangelist. And we finally touched on her work as a female role-model, being on the stage in an - unfortunately - st...

#18 Kevin Keller on living the digital nomad way of life

January 22, 2017 23:00 - 34 minutes - 15.6 MB

In this episode I talk to Kevin Keller about his life as a Digital Nomad. Kevin has been living "on the run" sind 2014, spread between Tbilisi(Georgia), the Philippines, Mexico, Vietnam, Thailand, Morocco and France (to name only a few), all while working for his company Grumpy Goat Studio. He tells us all about this lifestyle, a couple tips and tricks to get started and devises on remote working as a whole. Here are the links of the show: http://twitter.com/flygeneticist http://nomadlau...

#16 Damien Beaufils on the test pyramide

June 06, 2016 22:00 - 41 minutes - 19 MB

In this episode, I talked to Damien Beaufils, a french software craftsman working in Paris. Damien shared the experience he made on his current project ; how he helped his team focus on quality to improve the whole software. We talked about the different kind of tests, the test pyramid and Damien even shared a very good recipe on how to improve test quality in a legacy or project lacking tests. Nota: We unfortunately had a couple hickups toward the middle of the recording, but what Damien wa...

#15 NCrafts Organizers Rui Carvalho, Maxime Sanglan & Peter Even on organizing a software conference

May 31, 2016 22:00 - 47 minutes - 21.5 MB

A special podcast with 3 guests, Rui Carvalho, Peter Even and Maxime Sanglan, the organizers of the NCrafts conference in Paris. In this episode, we doubled back on the origins of this craftsmanship conference, its birth in the .NET space and growth toward a language agnostic craftsmanship conference up to the third edition which happened this year. We diverged onto how to get people into craftsmanship, what the 3 organizers took out of this exercise that consumed so much of their time and w...

#13 JB Rainsberger on what it means to truly be agile

May 09, 2016 22:00 - 40 minutes - 18.6 MB

In this interview with J.B. Rainsberger, we drilled down into what it means to truly be agile. We devised on what it means to be agile for corporations, startups and teams alike and how to progress when you are stuck. We will definitely have to record another interview to focus more on the single individual side of it. We ended on a happy note about... happiness: don't forget that you're in there for yourself! Here are the links of the show: http://twitter.com/jbrains http://www.jbrains....

#12 Jens Schauder on open-source software development

May 02, 2016 22:00 - 45 minutes - 20.7 MB

In this episode, I talk to Jens Schauder about his experience working on Open Source Projects. Jens is (kind of) participating to the JUnit5 Development and has - among many others - one bigger OSS project called "Degraph". We talked about JUnit5, Degraph, OpenSource, Github, Architecture among many other things... I hope you'll love this interview! Here are the links of the show: http://twitter.com/jensschauder http://blog.schauderhaft.de http://schauder.github.io/degraph http://junit...

#11 Nicole Rauch on the coding tour to learn and grow

April 11, 2016 22:00 - 29 minutes - 13.7 MB

In this episode, I talk to Nicole Rauch, who among other things created the Socrates Conference. I wanted to ask her about the Journeyman-Tour she did a couple years ago. She shares her insights and the things she discovered while working with different developers for short periods of time. Here are the links of the show: https://twitter.com/nicolerauch  http://nicole-rauch.de https://www.socrates-conference.de https://www.softwerkskammer.org https://floobits.com http://www.saros-pro...

#10 Agata Bres & Adam Nowakowski on taking a break

March 21, 2016 23:00 - 31 minutes - 14.5 MB

In this episode, I talk to former colleagues of mine Agata Bres and Adam Nowakowski, who just came back from a 4 months backpacking trip to South-America. Beside goofing around, we discuss the impact such a break can have on our rat-raced lives and high-pace corporate environments. Here are the links of the show: http://twitter.com/breskapl http://twitter.com/adamaszczos Credits Music Something Elated by Broke For Free (CC BY 3.0) Your host Software Developer‘s Journey is hosted and ...

#8 Louise Elliott on dealing with people

February 26, 2016 23:00 - 20 minutes - 9.41 MB

A podcast talking to Louise Elliott about dealing with people, both as a team member and as a manager. Here are the links of the show: http://twitter.com/ivanaterrorbull https://ivanaterrorbull.wordpress.com Credits Music Something Elated by Broke For Free (CC BY 3.0) Your host Software Developer‘s Journey is hosted and produced by Timothée (Tim) Bourguignon, a crazy frenchman living in Germany who dedicated his life to helping others learn & grow. More about him at timbourguignon.fr....

Guests

Adi Polak
1 Episode
Aisha Blake
1 Episode
April Wensel
1 Episode
Ben Orenstein
1 Episode
Charity Majors
1 Episode
Emily Bache
1 Episode
Guilherme Rambo
1 Episode
Guillermo Rauch
1 Episode
Llewellyn Falco
1 Episode
Richard Campbell
1 Episode
Sara Vieira
1 Episode
Saron Yitbarek
1 Episode
Stephanie Hurlburt
1 Episode
Wes Bos
1 Episode

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