Menu
Sign In Search Podcasts Charts People & Topics Add Podcast API Pricing

Dennis Pilarinos

👤 Person
32 total appearances

Appearances Over Time

Podcast Appearances

The Changelog: Software Development, Open Source
The Moneyball approach (Interview)

I think if you are a team that works with a lot of coworkers, if you have like 40, 50, 60, 100, 200, 500 coworkers, engineers, and you're working on a code base that's old and large, I think Unblocked is going to be a tool that you're going to love.

The Changelog: Software Development, Open Source
The Moneyball approach (Interview)

I think if you are a team that works with a lot of coworkers, if you have like 40, 50, 60, 100, 200, 500 coworkers, engineers, and you're working on a code base that's old and large, I think Unblocked is going to be a tool that you're going to love.

The Changelog: Software Development, Open Source
The Moneyball approach (Interview)

Typically, the way that works is you can try it with one of your side projects, but the best outcomes are when you get comfortable with the security requirements that we have. You connect your source code, you connect a form of documentation, be that Slack or Notion or Confluence. And when you get those two systems together, it will blow your mind.

The Changelog: Software Development, Open Source
The Moneyball approach (Interview)

Typically, the way that works is you can try it with one of your side projects, but the best outcomes are when you get comfortable with the security requirements that we have. You connect your source code, you connect a form of documentation, be that Slack or Notion or Confluence. And when you get those two systems together, it will blow your mind.

The Changelog: Software Development, Open Source
The Moneyball approach (Interview)

Actually, every single person that I've seen on board with the product does the same thing. They always ask a question that they're an expert in. They want to get a sense for how good is this thing? So I'm going to ask a question that I know the answer to and people are generally blown away by the caliber of the response.

The Changelog: Software Development, Open Source
The Moneyball approach (Interview)

Actually, every single person that I've seen on board with the product does the same thing. They always ask a question that they're an expert in. They want to get a sense for how good is this thing? So I'm going to ask a question that I know the answer to and people are generally blown away by the caliber of the response.

The Changelog: Software Development, Open Source
The Moneyball approach (Interview)

And that starts to build a relationship of trust where they're like, no, this thing actually can give me the answer that I'm looking for. And instead of interrupting a coworker or spending 30 minutes in a meeting, I can just ask a question, get the response in a few seconds and reclaim that time.

The Changelog: Software Development, Open Source
The Moneyball approach (Interview)

And that starts to build a relationship of trust where they're like, no, this thing actually can give me the answer that I'm looking for. And instead of interrupting a coworker or spending 30 minutes in a meeting, I can just ask a question, get the response in a few seconds and reclaim that time.

The Changelog: Software Development, Open Source
Developer (un)happiness (Friends)

Yeah, Unblocked helps large teams with old code bases understand why something has been done in the past. It helps them understand what happens if they make changes to it. Basically, all the questions that you would typically ask a co-worker, you no longer have to interrupt them. You don't have to wait for their response.

The Changelog: Software Development, Open Source
Developer (un)happiness (Friends)

Yeah, Unblocked helps large teams with old code bases understand why something has been done in the past. It helps them understand what happens if they make changes to it. Basically, all the questions that you would typically ask a co-worker, you no longer have to interrupt them. You don't have to wait for their response.

The Changelog: Software Development, Open Source
Developer (un)happiness (Friends)

If you're geographically distributed, you don't have to wait for that response. You don't have to wait for...

The Changelog: Software Development, Open Source
Developer (un)happiness (Friends)

If you're geographically distributed, you don't have to wait for that response. You don't have to wait for...

The Changelog: Software Development, Open Source
Developer (un)happiness (Friends)

you know you don't have to dig through documentation you don't have to try to find the answer in confluence and jira what we basically do is give you the answer by you just asking a question the way that we got to the problem was a consequence of our kind of lived experience we're actually going to call the company bother which is like you don't bother me i don't bother you right instead of like

The Changelog: Software Development, Open Source
Developer (un)happiness (Friends)

you know you don't have to dig through documentation you don't have to try to find the answer in confluence and jira what we basically do is give you the answer by you just asking a question the way that we got to the problem was a consequence of our kind of lived experience we're actually going to call the company bother which is like you don't bother me i don't bother you right instead of like

The Changelog: Software Development, Open Source
Developer (un)happiness (Friends)

being tapped on the shoulder or interruptive Slack messages. We could just use Bother and get the answers that we wanted.

The Changelog: Software Development, Open Source
Developer (un)happiness (Friends)

being tapped on the shoulder or interruptive Slack messages. We could just use Bother and get the answers that we wanted.

← Previous Page 1 of 2 Next →