This episode marks the premier of John Papa as permanent co-host of Yet
Another Podcast (along with Jon Galloway as intermittent co-host)!
Joining John and me are Ted Neward. Ted is CTO of iTrellis Software, a Microsoft MVP and much-in-demand speaker. We talk about software architecture, AngularJS, and much else.
Listen | Yet Another Podcast



About Jesse Liberty
Jesse Liberty has three decades of experience writing and delivering software projects and is the author of 2 dozen books and a couple dozen online courses.
His latest book, Building APIs with .NET will be released early in 2025.
Liberty is a Senior SW Engineer for CNH and he was a Senior Technical Evangelist for Microsoft, a Distinguished Software Engineer for AT&T, a VP for Information Services for Citibank and a Software Architect for PBS. He is a Microsoft MVP.
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Please consider adding a more definite ending to your podcasts. I really enjoy the content, but it’s jarring to suddenly find myself listening to the next thing in my playlist. Thank you!
Hi Jessie & John, this is a superb episode and topic, the podcast has been fantastic recently (not only “great” as before). These are all important questions that architects often get from customers as well as team mates in the era of frameworks when “making it work” i.e. not crash is not a concern anymore (well, generally speaking…). I thought that Ted also somewhat struggled to give solid examples of what is really left for the architect, even on the server let alone on the client. Many developers I work with would balk at the suggestion that managing database connections correctly requires an architect (although it actually well might). Just use “XYZ dot jay es” is the contemporary practice of architecture. I have argued that in my experience the all new frameworks fail to provide better architectural guidance for managing business logic and would have loved Ted to discuss this more explicitly, I am sure he has an opinion. But perhaps in the era of four verbs (or one and a half, really) that is less of a concern and not even on the mind of Ted Neward. Again, a great episode, thanks.