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• Open Telemetry (OTel) and its relationship with Honeycomb |
• Phillip Carter's role in shaping the future of OTel and integrating it with Honeycomb |
• Challenges in onboarding customers and their varying needs over time |
• Natural language querying in Honeycomb and its limitations |
• OpenTelemetry history and its founding as a consortium of engineers from various companies |
• Challenges with collecting and understanding data from multiple sources |
• The importance of being able to zoom out and understand the bigger picture of system performance |
• Building ML/AI infrastructure to help users navigate complex data and identify areas for improvement |
• Developing an eCommerce system that requires monitoring and debugging tools |
• Importance of tracking business-critical metrics such as latency and reliability errors |
• Use of Honeycomb tool for anomaly detection and visualization |
• Need for a high-level view of system performance with broad, yet opinionated, views to narrow down to specific issues |
• Using ML models to generate queries based on data shape and schema |
• Experimenting with GPT-3.5 for natural language querying and generating JSON objects that fit a particular schema |
• Building a natural language querying system for easier debugging and exploration of system performance |
• Using AI for debugging and troubleshooting instead of handicapping developers |
• The importance of teaching developers a process for problem-solving, not just relying on AI or Google |
• Making developers more efficient and effective in their work |
• Bridging the gap between speed and effectiveness in software development |
• The value of teaching developers to break down complex problems into manageable parts |
• Avoiding the "tech debt" cycle by investing in tools that deliver real value to engineers |
• The concept of inventing the wheel vs improving existing technology |
• The philosophy behind Honeycomb's AI features, which aim to help users in various ways, from providing suggestions to encouraging curiosity and creativity |
• The benefits of Honeycomb's AI for both users and the company's business model |
• Phillip Carter's background and experience working at Honeycomb (3.5 years) |
• A brief conversation about coffee roasting as a hobby that aligns with his interest in technology |
• Justin Garisson's computer crash and attempts to troubleshoot it |
• The discussion of Phillip Carter's presence on Blue Sky and his intention to post technical content there |
• DDoS attack on Justin Garrison's computer |
• Discussion of various online platforms and services (Honeycomb, OpenTel, Blue Sky) |
• Promotion of new podcast episodes and website/feeds for fafo.fm |
• Announcement of availability of podcast on multiple platforms (Blue Sky) |
**Justin Garisson:** Hello, and welcome to Ship It, the podcast all about everything after git push. I'm your host, Justin Garrison, and with me as always is Autumn Nash. How's it going, Autumn? |
**Autumn Nash:** I'm caffeinated this time. |
**Justin Garisson:** Caffeinated is a good call. And caffeinated for our last guest on our show. |
**Autumn Nash:** I know... It's like sad. |
**Justin Garisson:** It is sad. So for anyone that's listening, that we actually -- I heard people that just started listening to the show... Welcome. We're glad you're here. By the way, this show is not going to continue on past the end of 2024... So a bit of news is Changelog is switching some stuff up. They want to ... |
**Autumn Nash:** We couldn't give up being nerds and talking too much on the internet, so... Here we are. |
**Justin Garisson:** I mean, I love this community we've already built, the people that we've already met through the show, all the things I've learned through the show have been awesome... |
**Autumn Nash:** Dude, I've straight made besties from the show. Me and Hazel do hoodrat stuff like every weekend. |
**Justin Garisson:** I've been seeing you -- yeah, you're just like going to have dinner. This is awesome. |
**Autumn Nash:** I feel like we've come too far. We have to just do it. |
**Justin Garisson:** And the fact that we already had like 20 more awesome guests lined up for next year for Ship It... |
**Autumn Nash:** And I'm really excited to talk to you. |
**Justin Garisson:** Yeah. So we are going to continue the show. The new podcast -- and in the last episode we didn't have a title. So finally, we have a title and a domain for it, so we can tell people. It's called Fork Around and Find Out. |
**Autumn Nash:** I love it so much. I didn't love any of the other names \[unintelligible 00:04:51.03\] I was like "Ugh..." And that one, I was like "Let's do it!" |
**Justin Garisson:** Yeah. There was a lot of names, and a lot of them were either just like "That's okay...", or the domain was taken, or the social was taken, whatever... And fafo.fm. |
**Autumn Nash:** If we're going to spend this much money on it, it needs to be fire. |
**Justin Garisson:** Yeah. And that is also the other piece, is we do want to make this as sustainable as possible... And when I first emailed Jerod and Adam about taking over the Ship It podcast - I didn't want to take it over. I was just like "Can I help?" Because I liked the show, and I wanted to continue. I was lik... |
And so we do have people that we're paying to do stuff that we don't have time to do, stuff like editing, sponsor management, all that stuff. So we don't want to have a premium tier, I don't really expect to have the listeners pay for it... I'm terrible at doing the Plus Plus content that we have here on Changelog... I... |
**Autumn Nash:** We just talk too much at a time. |
**Justin Garisson:** Yeah. Like, all the good bits... I'm like "No, that has to stay in." |
**Autumn Nash:** I feel like it would just make the actual podcast... You know what I mean? Like, saving the good stuff just for people that are paying for it... |
**Justin Garisson:** I mean, some of it is the good stuff, some of it is just like the random asides... Like the great conversation we had with Austin about kids, and managing JIRA tasks with chores, and stuff like that... That's not necessarily -- that's good content to me, but it's kind of maybe... |
**Autumn Nash:** His website is so dope. |
**Justin Garisson:** Yeah. It's an aside. It's not something that needs to be in there. But we're just gonna leave everything in for the new show, and I hope that sponsors will pay for it. |
**Autumn Nash:** Or that time when there was a poem about tars... |
**Justin Garisson:** Oh, that was amazing. Yeah, that was Plus Plus. |
**Autumn Nash:** \[unintelligible 00:06:36.17\] |
**Justin Garisson:** Yes. If you have not listened to that episode... What number was that? It was so long ago now. But "Tars all the way down..." |
**Autumn Nash:** \[unintelligible 00:06:47.07\] |
**Justin Garisson:** Yeah. I was blown away by that. It was great. So anyway, the link will be in the show notes. By the time this episode comes out, the website should be available. I don't know that the RSS feed will be in all of the pod catchers, but it should be in most of them that aren't super-slow. So look in th... |
**Phillip Carter:** Thanks for having me. |
**Autumn Nash:** I feel like you're gonna have to come back on, though. You have to come back on the new podcast. |
**Justin Garisson:** Oh, it's gonna be great, because we just get to redo all of our amazing guests, and just like "Hey, this is new." |
**Autumn Nash:** So we have to be like extra ridiculous for this one, and then you have to come back. |
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