Episode Details
Back to Episodes
Beyond Efficiency by Dave Ackley
Description
Dave Ackley's paper Beyond Efficiency is three pages long. With just these three pages, he mounts a compelling argument against the conventional way we engineer software. Instead of inflexibly insisting upon correctness, maybe allow a lil slop? Instead of chasing peak performance with cache and clever tricks, maybe measure many times before you cut. So in this episode, we're putting every CEO in the guillotine… (oh, that stands for "correctness and efficiency only", don't put us on a list)… and considering when, where, and how to do the robust thing.
Links
$ patreon.com/futureofcoding — The most recent bonus episode is a discussion with Stefan Lesser about new "laws of physics" we can invent inside the computer.
Don't destroy the earth, then make sure your thing can't be destroyed, then don't destroy your data, and finally, do your damn job, AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA.
- A Software Epiphany, and the accompanying HN discussion — giga viral, so sick
- PartyKit? Nice!
- What started as a simple todo list turned into an ocean of tech boy milk and, ultimately, the AI apocalypse.
- Jepsen is a rough, rugged, deeply thoughtful and fantastically cool approach to distributed systems testing, by Kyle Kingsbury. Also, we didn't talk about it, but his reversing / hexing / typing / rewriting / unifying technical interview series is essential reading.
- Ivan's examples of robustness vs efficiency were RAID, the CAP theorem, Automerge, the engineering of FoundationDB, and Byzantine fault tolerance— all of which stake out interesting territory in the efficiency/robustness tradeoff spectrum, all of which are about distributed systems.
- Can programming be liberated from the von Neumann style?, a paper by John Backus.
- We Don't Really Know How to Compute!, a talk by Gerald Sussman.
- The Robust-First Computing Creed is rock solid.
- The Wikipedia article on von Neumann architecture did not come through with the goods.
- Ivan works with Alex Warth now, and thus may fairly speak in half-truths like "I've been working with constraints recently…"
- The Demon Hoard Sort