Welcome to IoT Coffee Talk, where hype comes to die a terrible death. We have a fireside chat about all things #IoT over a cup of coffee or two with some of the industry's leading business minds, thought leaders and technologists in a totally unscripted, organic format.
This week Rob, Rick, Mark, Alistair, David, Bill, Anthony, Wienke, Oliver, Tom, Debbie, Pete, and Leonard jump on Web3 for a discussion about:
🎶 🎙️ BAD KARAOKE! 🎸 🥁 "Jessica", The Allman Brothers Band"
🐣 IoT Coffee Talk celebrates 300 episodes and 6 years of uninterrupted ridiculousness!!
🐣 What makes our show so amazing?
🐣 Will AI be around longer than other tech fads?
🐣 How much do we not care about our privacy? Is it a good thing or bad?
🐣 What happens when you realize that AI doesn't forget?
🐣 What is the risk of an AI hallucinating (lying or misrepresenting) YOU?
🐣 Is SaaS dead? Is the developer dead thanks to AI?
🐣 How do you leverage AI responsibly for coding and software development?
🐣 Who will be liable for crap vibe code?
🐣 If you don't catch the hallucination in your vibe code, should you get fired or Claude?
🐣 The new philosopher of our time, Mediocrates, The Lazy and Mindless.
🐣 Was Qualcomm's takeover of Arduino a good thing or bad? Why?
🐣 Europe may force everyone to be responsible with IoT and AI. Find out how.
It's a great episode. Grab an extraordinarily expensive latte at your local coffee shop and check out the whole thing. You will get all you need to survive another week in the world of IoT and greater tech!
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This has results for HammerDB tproc-c on a small server using MySQL and Postgres. I am new to HammerDB and still figuring out how to explain and present results so I will keep this simple and just share graphs without explaining the results.
tl;dr
(NOPM for some-version / NOPM for base-version)
I provide three charts below:
Results: MySQL 5.6 to 8.4
Legend:
Summary
Results: Postgres 12 to 18
Legend:
Summary
Results: MySQL vs Postgres
Legend:
Summary

We took the GeekWire Podcast on the road this week, but not very far — recording the show in Seattle’s Fremont neighborhood, the “Center of the Universe,” just a few blocks from our own offices, with a lively crowd, great beer, and plenty to talk about in Seattle tech and beyond.
The special event at Fremont Brewing was presented by the Fremont Chamber of Commerce.
Fresh off the Seahawks’ Super Bowl victory, we debate different tech and business moguls as candidates for owning the Seahawks or Sonics — including unlikely but interesting-to-consider possibilities ranging from Jeff Bezos and Lauren Sanchez to Costco’s Jim Sinegal. (Who wouldn’t want $1.50 hot dogs and sodas at Lumen Field?)

Then we dig into the debate over Seattle’s tech future, sparked by angel investor Charles Fitzgerald’s GeekWire column, “A warning to Seattle: Don’t become the next Cleveland,” which led to a response and ultimately a great conversation with Cleveland Mayor Justin Bibb.
Fremont Chamber Executive Director Pete Hanning joins us to talk about the neighborhood’s tech corridor, why Fremont is seeing some of the highest return-to-office rates on the West Coast, and how Fremont balances its quirky identity with serious business.

In the final segment, test your Seattle tech knowledge with our Fremont-themed tech trivia, plus audience Q&A, in which Todd comes clean about his relationship with Claude.
Subscribe to GeekWire in Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you listen.
Audio edited by Curt Milton.
Continuing the theme of this series on how to build effective AI agents which have some autonomy and operate on the instructions you give, we need to address another aspect of keeping an agent on rails - specifically, when agents take action. That might be updating an external system or database, sending an e-mail or other message, asking for human approval in a step, cross-referencing some organisational data, or any number of other things we may want an agent to do. The challenge is that steps like these often need to be very defined and exact - simply specifying what should happen in agent instructions is often never going to work. "Update our CRM with the new lead details" or "Raise an invoice for the order" are vague guidance with nowhere near enough context - even the most capable AI agent backed by the latest LLM will fail on those without help. If the agent could talk it would conceivably say "What CRM, where? How do I authenticate? How are leads stored, and how do I ensure the lead is associated with a client and I'm not creating a duplicate?"
In the last post we focused on writing good instructions for agents - but most agents need more than that. They need to call out to tools which are pre-defined and wrap up the complex details of taking actions on specific systems, integrating data, or performing precise steps in a process. Every agent framework has a 'tools' concept, and for Microsoft agents built with Copilot Studio, this is agent flows - ultimately Power Automate flows triggered from Copilot Studio agents which. This post covers how to make your agent more reliable in actions it performs by calling out to agent flows, including the specific help Microsoft give you to simplify this.
But first, here's a recap of the full series:
This is essentially 'tool calling' in the Copilot Studio agent world.
Technique 4 - Leveraging Power Platform and Microsoft 365 capabilities in your agents

I’m busy all the time with the Critter Stack tools, answering questions on Slack or Discord, and trying like hell to make JasperFx Software go. I’ve admittedly had my head in the sand a bit about the AI tools for coding, thinking that what I do being relatively novel for the most part and that I wasn’t missing out on anything yet because the AI stuff was probably mostly trained up and useful for repetitive feature work.
The unfortunate analogy I have to make for myself is harking back to my first job as a piping engineer helping design big petrochemical plants. I got to work straight out of college with a fantastic team of senior engineers who were happy to teach me and to bring me along instead of just being dead weight for them. This just happened to be right at the time the larger company was transitioning from old fashioned paper blueprint drafting to 3D CAD models for the piping systems. Our team got a single high powered computer with a then revolutionary Riva 128 (with a gigantic 8 whole megabytes of memory!) video card that was powerful enough to let you zoom around the 3D models of the piping systems we were designing. Within a couple weeks I was much faster doing some kinds of common work than my older peers just because I knew how to use the new workstation tools to zip around the model of our piping systems. It occurred to me a couple weeks ago that in regards to AI I was probably on the wrong side of that earlier experience with 3D CAD models and knew it was time to take the plunge and get up to speed.
Anyway, enough of that. I spent a week thinking about what I’d try to do first with AI coding agents and spent some time watching some YouTube videos on writing prompts. I signed up for a Claude Max subscription at the beginning of last week to just go jump into the deep end. My tally so far in two weeks for progress is:
And really to make this sound a bit more impressive, this was with me doing 8 hours of workshops for a client and probably about 10-12 other meetings with clients during these two weeks so it’s not as if I had unbroken blocks of time in which to crank away. I also don’t have a terribly good handle on “Vibe Programming” and I’m not sure at all what a “Ralph Loop” is, so all of that very real progress was without me being completely up to speed on how to best incorporate AI tools.
Moreover, it’s already changed my perspective on the Critter Stack roadmap for this year because some things I’ve long wanted to do that sounded like too much work and too much risk now seem actually quite feasible based on the past couple weeks.
With all of that said, here are my general takeaways:
Anyway, I’m both horrified, elated, excited, and worried about the AI coding agents after just two weeks and I’m absolutely concerned about how that plays out in our industry, my own career, and our society.