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[1211.70 --> 1213.04] something build it three
[1213.04 --> 1213.48] times.
[1214.34 --> 1216.06] Wow I love that advice.
[1216.26 --> 1217.94] Me too I heard once that
[1217.94 --> 1219.98] if you want to become a
[1219.98 --> 1222.46] great writer don't read a
[1222.46 --> 1224.28] hundred books just read one
[1224.28 --> 1226.58] book a hundred times and I
[1226.58 --> 1227.64] think this is kind of in the
[1227.64 --> 1229.30] same vein Dave in that this
[1229.30 --> 1230.38] kind of gives you the chance
[1230.38 --> 1231.42] to revisit a thing in
[1231.42 --> 1232.72] different stages which is
[1232.72 --> 1234.16] reality right in terms of
[1234.16 --> 1236.00] maintaining a software a
[1236.00 --> 1237.34] piece of software as it
[1237.34 --> 1239.42] ages as you age and an
[1239.42 --> 1240.60] increase in your skill set
[1240.60 --> 1242.48] etc etc so that's really
[1242.48 --> 1244.12] great I love that I'm going
[1244.12 --> 1244.72] to try that.
[1245.30 --> 1246.16] Just to add something to
[1246.16 --> 1247.28] that I know some people get
[1247.28 --> 1249.04] bored doing that or I should
[1249.04 --> 1249.94] say some people seem like
[1249.94 --> 1251.10] they do even if you don't
[1251.10 --> 1252.34] build the exact same thing I
[1252.34 --> 1253.68] think building similar things
[1253.68 --> 1255.48] is probably would go in line
[1255.48 --> 1256.58] with what Dave's saying
[1256.58 --> 1258.36] because I'll see people take
[1258.36 --> 1259.20] like a course and they'll
[1259.20 --> 1260.00] just build whatever's in the
[1260.00 --> 1260.82] course then they'll be done
[1260.82 --> 1262.58] and what I really like to
[1262.58 --> 1264.44] encourage is to like go back
[1264.44 --> 1265.34] through the course and build
[1265.34 --> 1266.50] something similar but not
[1266.50 --> 1267.68] quite the same so it forces
[1267.68 --> 1269.22] you to go out on your own and
[1269.22 --> 1270.40] sort of you know do what he's
[1270.40 --> 1271.42] saying to try different stuff
[1271.42 --> 1272.34] to do a little bit different
[1272.34 --> 1273.76] but you're still building you
[1273.76 --> 1274.88] know the same basic building
[1274.88 --> 1276.02] blocks you know like you're
[1276.02 --> 1277.06] building a web application or
[1277.06 --> 1278.72] you're building a CLI or
[1278.72 --> 1279.88] whatever but it might do
[1279.88 --> 1280.92] something slightly different
[1280.92 --> 1281.78] that forces you to really
[1281.78 --> 1282.74] think about what you're doing
[1282.74 --> 1283.60] and consider stuff.
[1284.10 --> 1285.22] Yes John and I think that
[1285.22 --> 1286.84] learning is repetition right
[1286.84 --> 1288.48] if you learn anything right
[1288.48 --> 1289.48] you're gonna you need to
[1289.48 --> 1291.10] repeat it in order to sort of
[1291.10 --> 1292.62] make it go to long-term
[1292.62 --> 1293.92] memory but I think that
[1293.92 --> 1295.20] that's also a great approach.
[1308.72 --> 1321.00] This episode is brought to you by
[1321.00 --> 1322.76] our friends at Fire Hydrant.
[1322.96 --> 1324.28] Fire Hydrant is the reliability
[1324.28 --> 1325.82] platform for every developer.
[1326.22 --> 1328.00] Incidents, they impact everyone
[1328.00 --> 1330.00] not just SREs.
[1330.16 --> 1331.50] They give teams the tools to
[1331.50 --> 1332.98] maintain service catalogs,
[1333.18 --> 1334.26] respond to incidents,
[1334.44 --> 1335.74] communicate through status pages,
[1335.74 --> 1337.90] and learn with retrospectives.
[1338.26 --> 1339.62] What would normally be manual
[1339.62 --> 1341.52] error prone tasks across the
[1341.52 --> 1343.08] entire spectrum are responding
[1343.08 --> 1343.66] to an incident.
[1343.96 --> 1345.50] They can all be automated in
[1345.50 --> 1347.16] every way with Fire Hydrant.
[1347.36 --> 1348.86] They have incident tooling to
[1348.86 --> 1350.72] manage incidents of any type with
[1350.72 --> 1352.50] any severity with consistency.
[1353.04 --> 1354.64] Declare and mitigate incidents
[1354.64 --> 1356.18] all from inside Slack.
[1356.58 --> 1357.74] Service catalogs allow service
[1357.74 --> 1359.12] owners to improve operational
[1359.12 --> 1361.28] maturity and document all your
[1361.28 --> 1362.90] deploys in your service catalog.
[1363.50 --> 1364.84] Incident analytics allow you to
[1364.84 --> 1366.10] extract meaningful insights
[1366.10 --> 1367.68] about your reliability over any
[1367.68 --> 1369.66] facet of your incident or the
[1369.66 --> 1370.86] people who respond to them.
[1371.24 --> 1372.06] And at the heart of it all
[1372.06 --> 1373.46] incident run books, they let you
[1373.46 --> 1375.16] create custom automation rules,
[1375.40 --> 1376.76] convert manual tasks into
[1376.76 --> 1378.80] automated, reliable, repeatable
[1378.80 --> 1380.64] sequences that run when you want.
[1381.00 --> 1381.98] You can create Slack channels,
[1382.12 --> 1383.30] Jira tickets, Zoom bridges