Episode 20: The Wizard of AWS

Published: July 25, 2018, 6:58 a.m.

b"Today, we\\u2019re talking to Jeff Barr, vice president and chief evangelist at Amazon Web Services (AWS). He founded the AWS Blog in 2004 and has written more than 2,900 posts for it and another 1,100 for his personal blog. As chief evangelist, Jeff strives to explain the benefits of Cloud computing and Web services to anyone who will listen.\\nJeff is the voice of AWS. He does what he does best - exploits his superpower of explaining technology in ways that people can understand it. Jeff tries to be the same person all the time. He loves to meet people and go out of his way to say \\u201cHello.\\u201d So, if you see him at re:Invent, say \\u201cCheese\\u201d and take a selfie with him!\\nSome of the highlights of the show include:\\n\\nJeff uses AWS Workspaces for his blog; one of Jeff\\u2019s blogging principles is to not take anybody else's word for anything to the absolute best of his technical ability\\nZero Client: Jeff has no rotating hardware, disk drives, just a zero client; wherever he is, it's the same workspace\\nAWS has something for everyone; it build things in response to customers\\u2019 questions, requests, and feedback\\nNaming Services and Products: Is it helpful? Is it descriptive? Does it have any hidden meanings? \\nAmazonian DNA and Dog Friendly Workspace: Jeff went from super fearful to accepting, to now thinking of dogs as incredible creations because they add fun and excitement to the office\\nAs part of hiring, each interviewer is assigned Amazon leadership principles (LPs) to ask questions that measure a candidate against those LPs\\nWhat is the secret to getting hired at Amazon? Study the LPs to understand what they're about and be able to express your philosophies and history with LPs\\nre:Invent makes sure customers understand services - What is it? What does it do? How do they put it to work? What are the best use cases for it?\\nThings can never be too simple; you start from zero, put a lot of different things in there, and then you need the feedback to build in simplicity\\nAWS is following a more on-demand approach than traditional reserve instances; it opens the door to being used in a lot of ways\\nAWS does a lot of work before a launch to make sure it\\u2019s got infrastructure, scaling, monitoring, and capacity in place\\nIf you are a customer, talk to AWS and let them know what they're doing right or wrong; write a blog post, tweet about it, share it with them in some way\\nIs the breadth of product offerings from AWS too vast? Is it offering too many things?\\xa0\\nAWS was not explicit about where it was going with Cloud computing or do analyses or projections about it; it simply launched SQS and let it speak for itself\\nCustomer feedback shapes what Amazon works on; customers share and then AWS re-prioritizes to make sure it\\u2019s delivering the right thing at the right time\\nRemember: It's not just bits and bytes, it's about the organic life form\\n\\nLinks:\\nJeff Barr on Twitter\\nJeff Barr on LinkedIn\\nAWS\\nAWS Blog\\nJeff Barr\\u2019s Blog\\nAmazon Machine Images\\nZero Client\\nAWS Workspaces\\nAWS Lambda\\nAmazon Leadership principles\\nre:Invent\\nThe Robot Uprising Will Have Very Clean Floors\\nServerlessly Storing My Dad Jokes in a Dadabase\\nDays Until re:Invent"