Sr. Content Developer at Microsoft, working remotely in PA, TechBash conference organizer, former Microsoft MVP, Husband, Dad and Geek.
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Why leprechauns are shoemakers. The March equinox versus the vernal equinox.

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1168. This week, we look at the word "leprechaun" and its surprisingly wild origin story involving shoemaking, ancient Rome, and wolf-men. Then we look at the word "equinox": its Chaucer connection, the newer word "equilux," and why the first point of Aries is actually in Pisces now (and headed for Aquarius).

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| HOST: Mignon Fogarty

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  • Audio Engineer: Castria Communications
  • Director of Podcast: Holly Hutchings
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| Theme music by Catherine Rannus.

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alvinashcraft
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Observability as a Product — Building Platforms Engineers Actually Use with Iris Dyrmishi

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In this episode, José Quaresma speaks with Iris Dyrmishi, Senior Observability Engineer at Miro, about building an observability platform that hundreds of engineers actually trust and use. Iris explains how her team treats observability as an internal product, walks through Miro's tracing migration from Jaeger and Zipkin to OpenTelemetry with zero disruption, and shares how teams now use traces proactively to find bottlenecks before they become outages. The conversation also covers the honest downsides — alert noise, dashboard sprawl, and the cost of observability — including a recent example using eBPF and Grafana Beyla to uncover hidden networking expenses that transformed Miro's cloud bill.

Episode page

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  • (00:00) - Intro
  • (00:59) - Building Observability as a Product at Miro
  • (04:08) - Migrating to OpenTelemetry
  • (09:21) - Industry Maturity and the Business Case
  • (12:02) - From Reactive to Proactive Observability
  • (14:34) - Logs vs. Tracing Explained
  • (18:04) - Team Ownership, AI, and Freedom
  • (24:38) - The Downsides and Costs of Observability
  • (29:58) - Rapid Fire and Close

Iris Dyrmishi is a Senior Observability Engineer at Miro, where she builds and maintains the company's observability platform. She started as a backend engineer before moving into SRE roles at Worten Portugal and Farfetch, where she developed her specialty in tracing and drove OpenTelemetry migrations across large engineering organisations without disrupting existing workflows. A CNCF Ambassador, co-organiser of Kubernetes Community Days Porto, and active voice in the observability community, she writes extensively about practical adoption challenges and has spoken at KubeCon EU and on the o11ycast podcast. Her guiding philosophy: observability is a team sport.

This podcast is hosted by José Quaresma, researched by Joseph Thwaites and produced by Perseu Mandillo. 

© Queue-it, 2026





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307 - Harness Engineering - the hard part of AI coding

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The hard part of AI coding isn't generating code — it's controlling quality, safety, and drift. Kaushik and Iury break down harness engineering: the five pillars for shaping an agent's environment and what it looks like when teams build custom harnesses from scratch.

Full shownotes at fragmentedpodcast.com.

Show Notes

Why it matters

  • Harness Engineering -
    OpenAI's post on building their Codex codebase (~1M lines of code, 1,500 PRs
    merged, zero manually written)

Shaping the harness

  1. Agent legibility
  2. Closed feedback loops
  3. Persistent memory
  4. Entropy control
  5. Blast radius controls

Building the harness

Other resources

Get in touch

We'd love to hear from you. Email is the
best way to reach us or you can check our contact page for other
ways.

We want to hear all the feedback: what's working, what's not, topics you'd like
to hear more on.

Co-hosts:

[!fyi] We transitioned from Android development to AI starting with
Ep. #300. Listen to that episode for the full story behind
our new direction.





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e242 – Is Your Content a Presentation or a Document?

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Show Notes – Episode #242 In the world of business communication, the line between a presentation and a document is often blurred—especially when PowerPoint is the authoring tool of choice. In episode 242, our three industry experts—Troy Chollar (TLC Creative Services), Sandy Johnson (Presentation Wiz), and Nolan Haims (Nolan Haims Creative) dive [...]



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The Evolving Role of Architects in an AI World

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From: Microsoft Developer
Duration: 13:41
Views: 156

This final Armchair Architects episode, closing out the season on agentic AI, tackles the pressing question of whether AI will replace architects. The discussion explores how the architect’s role is changing, the unique value humans bring to architectural decisions, and how AI can be leveraged as a powerful tool without threatening job security.

Three things you will learn about in this episode:
- AI cannot fully replace architects due to the need for human judgment, accountability, and understanding of organizational complexities.
- The architect’s role is evolving to focus more on managing boundaries, autonomy, and translating between business and technology, with AI serving as a valuable tool rather than a replacement.
- Embracing AI as a force multiplier can enhance productivity and artifact creation, but architects must remain accountable and avoid simply copying AI-generated outputs

Resources
- Technology Architects - IASA Global https://www.iasaglobal.org
- Agentic AI Foundation https://aaif.io/

Related Episodes
- Watch more episodes of Armchair Architects https://aka.ms/ArmchairArchitects
- Watch more episodes of the Azure Essentials Show https://aka.ms/AzureEssentialsShow

Connect
- David Blank-Edelman https://www.linkedin.com/in/dnblankedelman/
- Uli Homann https://www.linkedin.com/in/ulrichhomann/
- Eric Charran https://www.linkedin.com/in/ericcharran/

Chapters
00:00 Good news!
00:23 Is AI coming for my job?
01:07 Clarity in the face of uncertainty
01:55 Architects are accountable
02:38 The job is changing
03:24 Architect's role is multi-faceted
04:48 IASA can help refine your skills
05:48 Own your architecture
07:10 Articulating your role
09:52 Don't be shy when you use AI
10:30 Embellish and refine AI output
12:34 In summary…

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Lost Your SSH Key to an Azure VM? Don’t Panic. Here’s the Fix.

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Check it...all code referenced in this blog is for you to peruse here ! There is a moment that almost every cloud engineer eventually experiences. You sit down at a new computer, try to SSH into a VM you built months ago, and realize something uncomfortable. The SSH key you originally used to create that machine is nowhere to be found. Maybe it lived on a laptop that was replaced. Maybe it was tucked away in a .ssh folder that never got backed up. Maybe it was generated automatically by the...

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