The Swyx Mixtape

[Weekend Drop] Developer Experience & the Coding Career Handbook with Corey Quinn on Screaming in the Cloud


Listen Later

Listen to Screaming in the Cloud: https://www.lastweekinaws.com/podcast/screaming-in-the-cloud/learning-in-public-with-swyx/

Episode Summary

Today Corey sits down with swyx, head of developer experience at Airbyte, and so much more! They begin by chatting about swyx’s career history, professional motivation, and an industry taboo: following the money. Then Corey and swyx move into a discussion about the surprisingly challenging nature of developer experience and what it means to “learn in public.” swyx talks about expertise and how to quantify and demonstrate learning. Corey and swyx discuss swyx’s book “The Coding Career Handbook” and career coaching. swyx shares about his most recent foray into management in the era of zoom meetings, and conclude the conversation by talking about data integration and swyx’s latest job at Airbyte.

Links Referenced:

  • “Learning Gears” blog post: https://www.swyx.io/learning-gears
  • The Coding Career Handbook: https://learninpublic.org
  • Personal Website: https://swyx.io
  • Twitter: https://twitter.com/swyx


Transcript


Corey: Welcome to Screaming in the Cloud. I’m Corey Quinn. Some folks are really easy to introduce when I have them on the show because, “My name is, insert name here. I built thing X, and my job is Y at company Z.” Then we have people like today’s guest.

swyx is currently—and recently—the head of developer experience at Airbyte, but he’s also been so much more than that in so many different capacities that you’re very difficult to describe. First off, thank you for joining me. And secondly, what’s the deal with you?

swyx: [laugh]. I have professional ADD, just like you. Thanks for having me, Corey. I’m a—

Corey: It works out.

swyx: a big fan. Longtime listener, first time caller. Love saying that. [laugh].

Corey: You have done a lot of stuff. You have a business and finance background, which… okay, guilty; it’s probably why I feel some sense of affinity for a lot of your work. And then you went into some interesting directions. You were working on React and serverless YahvehScript—which is, of course, how I insist on pronouncing it—at Two Sigma, Netlify, AWS—a subject near and dear to my heart—and most recently temporal.io.

And now you’re at Airbyte. So, you’ve been focusing on a lot of, I won’t say the same things, but your area of emphasis has definitely consistently rhymed with itself. What is it that drives you?

swyx: So, I have been recently asking myself a lot of this question because I had to interview to get my new role. And when you have multiple offers—because the job market is very hot for DevRel managers—you have to really think about it. And so, what I like to say is: number one, working with great people; number two, working on great products; number three, making a lot of money.

Corey: There’s entire school of thought that, “Oh, that’s gauche. You shouldn’t mention trying to make money.” Like, “Why do you want to work here because I want to make money.” It’s always true—

swyx: [crosstalk 00:03:46]—

Corey: —and for some reason, we’re supposed to pretend otherwise. I have a lot of respect for people who can cut to the chase on that. It’s always been something that has driven me nuts about the advice that we give a new folks to the industry and peop—and even students figuring out their career path of, “Oh, do something you love and the money will follow.” Well, that’s not necessarily true. There are ways to pivot something you’d love into something lucrative and there are ways to wind up more or less borderline starving to death. And again, I’m not saying money is everything, but for a number of us, it’s hard to get to where we want to be without it.

swyx: Yeah, yeah. I think I’ve been cast with the kind of judgmental label of being very financially motivated—that’s what people have called me—for simply talking about it. And I’m like, “No. You know, it’s number three on my priority list.” Like, I will leave positions where I have a lot of money on the table because I don’t enjoy the people or the products, but having it up there and talking openly about it somehow makes you [laugh] makes you sort of greedy or something. And I don’t think that’s right. I tried to set an example for the people that I talk to or people who follow me.

Corey: One of the things I’ve always appreciated about, I guess, your online presence, which has remained remarkably consistent as you’ve been working through a bunch of different, I guess, stages of life and your career, is you have always talked in significant depth about an area of tech that I am relatively… well, relatively crap at, let’s be perfectly honest. And that is the wide world of most things front-end. Every time I see a take about someone saying, “Oh, front-end is junior or front-end is somehow less than,” I’d like to know what the hell it is they know because every time I try and work with it, I wind up more confused than I was when I started. And what I really appreciate is that you have always normalized the fact that this stuff is hard. As of the time that we’re recording this a day or so ago, you had a fantastic tweet thread about a friend of yours spun up a Create React App and imported the library to fetch from an endpoint and immediately got stuck. And then you pasted this ridiculous error message.

He’s a senior staff engineer, ex-Google, ex-Twitter; he can solve complex distributed systems problems and unable to fetch from a REST endpoint without JavaScript specialist help. And I talk about this a lot in other contexts, where the reason I care so much about developer experience is that a bad developer experience does not lead people to the conclusion of, “Oh, this is a bad interface.” It leads people to the conclusion, “Oh, I’m bad at this and I didn’t realize it.” No. I still fall into that trap myself.

I was under the impression that there was just this magic stuff that JS people know. And your tweet did so much to help normalize from my perspective, the fact that no, no, this is very challenging. I recently went on a Go exploration. Now, I’m starting to get into JavaScript slash TypeScript, which I think are the same thing but I’m not entirely certain of that. Like, oh, well, one of them is statically typed, or strongly typed. It’s like, “Well, I have a loud mechanical keyboard. Everything I do is typing strongly, so what’s your point?”

And even then we’re talking past each other in these things. I don’t understand a lot of the ecosystem that you live your career in, but I have always had a tremendous and abiding respect for your ability to make it accessible, understandable, and I guess for lack of a better term, to send the elevator back down.

swyx: Oh, I definitely think about that strongly, especially that last bit. I think it’s a form of personal growth. So, I think a lot of people, when they talk about this sending the elevator back down, they do it as a form of charity, like I’m giving back to the community. But honestly, you actually learn a lot by trying to explain it to others because that’s the only way that you truly know if you’ve learned something. And if you ever get anything wrong, you’ll—people will nev...

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