Daily Reading List – July 25, 2023 (#129)

Busy day of meetings, but had a chance to read a handful of good items. Check it out!

[blog] Analyzing Go Build Times. This is a terrific post that digs deep into optimizations for making your Go builds faster.

[blog] Event-Driven Architecture: What You Need to Know. Good piece, with a demonstration, that emphasizes the fundamentals and benefits of an event-driven architecture.

[blog] Best practices for implementing event-driven architectures in your organization. From the AWS blog, this has a focus on org structures.

[blog] Good code is like a love letter to the next developer who will maintain it. Well said! Are you always preparing your technical assets for those who will follow you?

[blog] 2023 Cloud Database Platforms with Real Time. This post calls out databases that are best suited to real-time experiences like chat, notifications, and live dashboards.

[blog] Blog Writing for Developers. Struggling to share your written thoughts? This post targets those writing for developers, but can apply to most anyone.

[blog] A Comprehensive Guide about Google Cloud Generative AI Studio. I’m becoming a big fan of this product. It offers a very easy-to-use sandbox for experimenting with, and using, generative AI models.

[blog] 5 Ways to Detect Breaking Changes In Your APIs. Ideally, you detect a breaking change early on in your development process. That’s not always the case. Here are other places you can run tests to see if you’ve broken someone’s experience.

##

Want to get this update sent to you every day? Subscribe to my RSS feed or subscribe via email below:

Author: Richard Seroter

Richard Seroter is currently the Chief Evangelist at Google Cloud and leads the Developer Relations program. He’s also an instructor at Pluralsight, a frequent public speaker, the author of multiple books on software design and development, and a former InfoQ.com editor plus former 12-time Microsoft MVP for cloud. As Chief Evangelist at Google Cloud, Richard leads the team of developer advocates, developer engineers, outbound product managers, and technical writers who ensure that people find, use, and enjoy Google Cloud. Richard maintains a regularly updated blog on topics of architecture and solution design and can be found on Twitter as @rseroter.

Leave a comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.