- Mailing Lists
- in
- EP157: How to Learn Backend Development?
Archives
- By thread 4552
-
By date
- June 2021 10
- July 2021 6
- August 2021 20
- September 2021 21
- October 2021 48
- November 2021 40
- December 2021 23
- January 2022 46
- February 2022 80
- March 2022 109
- April 2022 100
- May 2022 97
- June 2022 105
- July 2022 82
- August 2022 95
- September 2022 103
- October 2022 117
- November 2022 115
- December 2022 102
- January 2023 88
- February 2023 90
- March 2023 116
- April 2023 97
- May 2023 159
- June 2023 145
- July 2023 120
- August 2023 90
- September 2023 102
- October 2023 106
- November 2023 100
- December 2023 74
- January 2024 75
- February 2024 75
- March 2024 78
- April 2024 74
- May 2024 108
- June 2024 98
- July 2024 116
- August 2024 134
- September 2024 130
- October 2024 141
- November 2024 171
- December 2024 115
- January 2025 216
- February 2025 140
- March 2025 220
- April 2025 126
EP157: How to Learn Backend Development?
EP157: How to Learn Backend Development?
WorkOS Radar: Smarter protection with device fingerprinting (Sponsored)WorkOS Radar leverages advanced device fingerprinting to protect your platform from fraudulent activity, including fake signups, throwaway emails, and brute-force attacks. With WorkOS Radar, you can:
Stay ahead of evolving threats and uphold privacy standards with WorkOS Radar’s cutting-edge security solution. This week’s system design refresher:
Why Everyone’s Talking About MCP?How to Learn Backend Development?Backend Development requires knowledge of multiple aspects. Here’s a mind map of what all things a developer should learn:
Over to you: What else will you add to the list for learning backend development? A Simplified Git WorkflowLearning Git is one of the fundamental skills for every developer out there. Here are the steps within a simple and basic Git workflow.
Over to you: Which other step do you follow in your Git workflow? Virtualization vs ContainerizationVirtualization creates multiple VMs on a single physical server, each with its operating system, using a hypervisor.
Over to you: Have you used VMs and Containers to deploy workloads? How Netflix Built a Distributed Counter?A Distributed Counter is a system where the responsibility of counting events is spread across multiple servers or nodes in a network. Netflix needs to track and measure multiple user interactions to make real-time decisions and optimize its infrastructure. For this reason, they built a Distributed Counter Abstraction. Netflix’s Distributed Counter Abstraction operates in four main layers, ensuring high performance, scalability, and eventual consistency.
Reference: Netflix’s Distributed Counter Abstraction SPONSOR USGet your product in front of more than 1,000,000 tech professionals. Our newsletter puts your products and services directly in front of an audience that matters - hundreds of thousands of engineering leaders and senior engineers - who have influence over significant tech decisions and big purchases. Space Fills Up Fast - Reserve Today Ad spots typically sell out about 4 weeks in advance. To ensure your ad reaches this influential audience, reserve your space now by emailing sponsorship@bytebytego.com. © 2025 ByteByteGo |
by "ByteByteGo" <bytebytego@substack.com> - 11:36 - 5 Apr 2025