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Most organizations don't discover what they have until crisis strikes. Akhil Bhaskar makes the case for software catalogs, scaffolding templates, and the "undifferentiated heavy lifting" that enables teams to move fast without breaking things.
When a major security vulnerability hits, how quickly can you answer "How exposed are we?" For most organizations, it's a scramble. For Akhil Bhaskar's team, it took two hours to assess and four hours to fix—even though the Log4j vulnerability affected systems worldwide.
The secret? A well-maintained software catalog and a commitment to technical hygiene.
In this episode, Akhil shares lessons from his career spanning consulting, customer-side engineering leadership, and now AWS. We explore how tools like Backstage help organizations maintain visibility over their technology estates, why "undifferentiated heavy lifting" matters more than you think, and how the rise of agentic AI is changing what it means to be a software developer.
Key Topics Discussed:
Notable Quotes:
"Having had the rigor and the hygiene of maintaining what do we have, where do we have it, how do we have it, came in extremely handy for us."
"The entire point of generative AI is it's probabilistic, but businesses want predictability, confidence, and control."
"Storytelling and critical thinking—those two skills are fundamental. Storytelling is how you communicate intent, and critical thinking is how you verify the outcome."
About the Guest:
Akhil Bhaskar works at AWS and has extensive experience in consulting, engineering leadership, and digital transformation across the US, Australia, and Singapore. He specializes in building resilient, adaptable technology stacks and is currently working on applying software catalog concepts to agentic AI.
Connect with Us:
www.apiconnections.io
Subscribe & Review:
If you found this episode valuable, please subscribe and leave a review on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or YouTube. It helps other technology leaders discover these conversations.
Timestamps:
00:00 Introduction
00:30 Welcome and background
01:27 Akhil's background across consulting, customer, and vendor roles
03:00 The Log4j supply chain vulnerability story
03:46 How software catalogs saved the day
05:28 Undifferentiated heavy lifting and contractor efficiency
08:20 The importance of technical hygiene
09:54 AI, governance, and technology estate management
10:56 Generative vs. agentic AI: predictability matters
12:26 Boundaries and explainability in agentic systems
14:24 Intent-based development and documentation
16:50 Essential skills: storytelling and critical thinking
21:01 Closing thoughts
Tags: #SoftwareDevelopment #TechLeadership #SoftwareCatalog #Backstage #Log4j #SupplyChainSecurity #AI #AgenticAI #DigitalTransformation #AWS #TechnicalHygiene #DevOps
By Jon ScheeleMost organizations don't discover what they have until crisis strikes. Akhil Bhaskar makes the case for software catalogs, scaffolding templates, and the "undifferentiated heavy lifting" that enables teams to move fast without breaking things.
When a major security vulnerability hits, how quickly can you answer "How exposed are we?" For most organizations, it's a scramble. For Akhil Bhaskar's team, it took two hours to assess and four hours to fix—even though the Log4j vulnerability affected systems worldwide.
The secret? A well-maintained software catalog and a commitment to technical hygiene.
In this episode, Akhil shares lessons from his career spanning consulting, customer-side engineering leadership, and now AWS. We explore how tools like Backstage help organizations maintain visibility over their technology estates, why "undifferentiated heavy lifting" matters more than you think, and how the rise of agentic AI is changing what it means to be a software developer.
Key Topics Discussed:
Notable Quotes:
"Having had the rigor and the hygiene of maintaining what do we have, where do we have it, how do we have it, came in extremely handy for us."
"The entire point of generative AI is it's probabilistic, but businesses want predictability, confidence, and control."
"Storytelling and critical thinking—those two skills are fundamental. Storytelling is how you communicate intent, and critical thinking is how you verify the outcome."
About the Guest:
Akhil Bhaskar works at AWS and has extensive experience in consulting, engineering leadership, and digital transformation across the US, Australia, and Singapore. He specializes in building resilient, adaptable technology stacks and is currently working on applying software catalog concepts to agentic AI.
Connect with Us:
www.apiconnections.io
Subscribe & Review:
If you found this episode valuable, please subscribe and leave a review on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or YouTube. It helps other technology leaders discover these conversations.
Timestamps:
00:00 Introduction
00:30 Welcome and background
01:27 Akhil's background across consulting, customer, and vendor roles
03:00 The Log4j supply chain vulnerability story
03:46 How software catalogs saved the day
05:28 Undifferentiated heavy lifting and contractor efficiency
08:20 The importance of technical hygiene
09:54 AI, governance, and technology estate management
10:56 Generative vs. agentic AI: predictability matters
12:26 Boundaries and explainability in agentic systems
14:24 Intent-based development and documentation
16:50 Essential skills: storytelling and critical thinking
21:01 Closing thoughts
Tags: #SoftwareDevelopment #TechLeadership #SoftwareCatalog #Backstage #Log4j #SupplyChainSecurity #AI #AgenticAI #DigitalTransformation #AWS #TechnicalHygiene #DevOps