
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
This week on The Changelog we’re joined by Adam Wiggins, co-founder and former CTO of Heroku, for an exclusive trip down Heroku memory lane. Adam and Jerod are both tremendous fans of Heroku and believe (to this day) they represent the apex in developer experience for delivering code to production.
We talk through the beginnings of Heroku, the v1 most people have forgotten about, the era of web hosting back in 2008-2010, the serendipity of Silicon Vally in those days, pitching to Y Combinator, the makings of git push heroku, the Heroku style and name, the sale of Heroku to Salesforce, potential regrets — and we tee up part 2 coming next week with Adam going beyond Heroku and the story of Muse.
Join the discussion
Changelog++ members save 5 minutes on this episode because they made the ads disappear. Join today!
Sponsors:
Featuring:
Show Notes:
Something missing or broken? PRs welcome!
4.4
2929 ratings
This week on The Changelog we’re joined by Adam Wiggins, co-founder and former CTO of Heroku, for an exclusive trip down Heroku memory lane. Adam and Jerod are both tremendous fans of Heroku and believe (to this day) they represent the apex in developer experience for delivering code to production.
We talk through the beginnings of Heroku, the v1 most people have forgotten about, the era of web hosting back in 2008-2010, the serendipity of Silicon Vally in those days, pitching to Y Combinator, the makings of git push heroku, the Heroku style and name, the sale of Heroku to Salesforce, potential regrets — and we tee up part 2 coming next week with Adam going beyond Heroku and the story of Muse.
Join the discussion
Changelog++ members save 5 minutes on this episode because they made the ads disappear. Join today!
Sponsors:
Featuring:
Show Notes:
Something missing or broken? PRs welcome!
377 Listeners
272 Listeners
284 Listeners
40 Listeners
590 Listeners
621 Listeners
215 Listeners
987 Listeners
189 Listeners
181 Listeners
192 Listeners
62 Listeners
47 Listeners
75 Listeners
53 Listeners