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Signals and Threads

Technology Podcasts

Listen in on Jane Street’s Ron Minsky as he has conversations with engineers who are working on everything from clock synchronization to reliable multicast, build systems to reconfigurable hardware. Get a peek at how Jane Street approaches problems, and how those ideas relate to tech more broadly. You can find transcripts along with related links on our website at signalsandthreads.com.

Location:

United States

Description:

Listen in on Jane Street’s Ron Minsky as he has conversations with engineers who are working on everything from clock synchronization to reliable multicast, build systems to reconfigurable hardware. Get a peek at how Jane Street approaches problems, and how those ideas relate to tech more broadly. You can find transcripts along with related links on our website at signalsandthreads.com.

Twitter:

@janestreet

Language:

English

Contact:

9167090269


Episodes
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Performance Engineering on Hard Mode with Andrew Hunter

11/28/2023
Andrew Hunter makes code really, really fast. Before joining Jane Street, he worked for seven years at Google on multithreaded architecture, and was a tech lead for tcmalloc, Google’s world-class scalable malloc implementation. In this episode, Andrew and Ron discuss how, paradoxically, it can be easier to optimize systems at hyperscale because of the impact that even miniscule changes can have. Finding performance wins in trading systems—which operate at a smaller scale, but which have bursty, low-latency workloads—is often trickier. Andrew explains how he approaches the problem, including his favorite profiling techniques and tools for visualizing traces; the unique challenges of optimizing OCaml versus C++; and when you should and shouldn’t care about nanoseconds. They also touch on the joys of musical theater, and how to pass an interview when you’re sleep-deprived. You can find the transcript for this episode on our website. Some links to topics that came up in the discussion: “Profiling a warehouse-scale computer”Magic-traceOODA loop

Duration:00:55:34

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A Poet's Guide to Product Management with Peter Bogart-Johnson

8/15/2023
Peter Bogart-Johnson was one of Jane Street’s first program managers, and helped bring the art of PMing—where that “P” variously stands for “project,” “product,” or some blend of the two—to the company at large. He’s also a poet and the editor of a literary magazine. In this episode, Peter and Ron discuss the challenge of gaining trust as an outsider: how do you teach teams a new way of doing things while preserving what’s already working? The key, Peter says, is you listen; a good PM is an anthropologist. They also discuss how paying down technical debt isn’t something you do instead of serving customers; what Jane Street looks for in PM candidates; and how to help teams coordinate in times of great change. You can find the transcript for this episode on our website. Some links to topics that came up in the discussion: LIT MagazinehereHow to be a PM that engineers don’t hateHow to be an engineer that PMs don’t hate

Duration:01:02:17

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The Future of Programming with Richard Eisenberg

5/18/2023
Richard Eisenberg is one of the core maintainers of Haskell. He recently joined Jane Street’s Tools and Compilers team, where he hacks on the OCaml compiler. He and Ron discuss the powerful language feature that got him into PL design in the first place—dependent types—and its role in a world where AIs can (somewhat) competently write your code for you. They also discuss the differences between Haskell and OCaml; the perils of trying to make a language that works for everybody; and how best a company like Jane Street can collaborate with the open source community. You can find the transcript for this episode on our website. Some links to topics that came up in the discussion: Dependent typesGHCUnboxed types in OCamlLanguage extensions in Haskell

Duration:00:59:37

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Swapping the Engine Out of a Moving Race Car with Ella Ehrlich

9/12/2022
Ella Ehrlich has been a developer at Jane Street for close to a decade. During much of that time, she’s worked on Gord, one of Jane Street’s oldest and most critical systems, which is responsible for normalizing and distributing the firm’s trading data. Ella and Ron talk about how to grow and modernize a legacy system without compromising uptime, why game developers are the “musicians of software,” and some of the work Jane Street has done to try to hire a more diverse set of software engineers. You can find the transcript for this episode on our website. Some links to topics that came up in the discussion: EGApache KafkavarioussourcesofsymbologyPrograms and EventsINSIGHTIN FOCUS

Duration:01:00:24

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State Machine Replication, and Why You Should Care with Doug Patti

4/20/2022
Doug Patti is a developer in Jane Street’s Client-Facing Tech team, where he works on a system called Concord that undergirds Jane Street’s client offerings. In this episode, Doug and Ron discuss how Concord, which has state-machine replication as its core abstraction, helps Jane Street achieve the reliability, scalability, and speed that the client business demands. They’ll also discuss Doug’s involvement in building a successor system called Aria, which is designed to deliver those same benefits to a much wider audience. You can find the transcript for this episode on our website. Some links to topics that came up in the discussion: client-facing trading platformsmarket data and multicastFIX protocolUDP multicastReliable multicastKafka

Duration:01:12:01

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Memory Management with Stephen Dolan

1/5/2022
Stephen Dolan works on Jane Street’s Tools and Compilers team where he focuses on the OCaml compiler. In this episode, Stephen and Ron take a trip down memory lane, discussing how to manage computer memory efficiently and safely. They consider trade-offs between reference counting and garbage collection, the surprising gains achieved by prefetching, and how new language features like local allocation and unboxed types could give OCaml users more control over their memory. You can find the transcript for this episode on our website. Some links to topics that came up in the discussion: jq“Algebraic Subtyping”protoype implementation of mlsubpost from Stephen“Unboxed Types for OCaml”RFCKC Sivaramakrishnan“Bounding Data Races in Space and Time”paperHigher-ranked trait bounds

Duration:01:22:30

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What Is an Operating System? with Anil Madhavapeddy

11/3/2021
Anil Madhavapeddy is an academic, author, engineer, entrepreneur, and OCaml aficionado. In this episode, Anil and Ron consider the evolving role of operating systems, security on the internet, and the pending arrival (at last!) of OCaml 5.0. They also discuss using Raspberry Pis to fight climate change; the programming inspiration found in British pubs and on Moroccan beaches; and the time Anil went to a party, got drunk, and woke up with a job working on the Mars Polar Lander. You can find the transcript for this episode on our website. Some links to topics that came up in the discussion: “Real World OCaml”personal websiteGoogle Scholar pageMirageOSOCaml LabsMars Polar LanderXen ProjecthypervisorTezos proof-of-stake blockchainCoq Proof Assistant

Duration:00:59:01

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Building a UI Framework with Ty Overby

10/6/2021
Ty Overby is a programmer in Jane Street’s web platform group where he works on Bonsai, our OCaml library for building interactive browser-based UI. In this episode, Ty and Ron consider the functional approach to building user interfaces. They also discuss Ty’s programming roots in Neopets, what development features they crave on the web, the unfairly maligned CSS, and why Excel is “arguably the greatest programming language ever developed.” You can find the transcript for this episode on our website. Some links to topics that came up in the discussion: BonsaiOpenSCADlibfiveTry .NETIncr_domElm ArchitectureReactHoudiniSvelte

Duration:01:00:03

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Writing, Technically with James Somers

9/1/2021
James Somers is Jane Street’s writer-in-residence, splitting his time between English and OCaml, and helping to push forward all sorts of efforts around knowledge-sharing at Jane Street. In this episode, James and Ron talk about the role of technical writing in an organization like Jane Street, and how engineering software relates to editing prose. You can find the transcript for this episode on our website. Some links to topics that came up in the discussion: mdxthe 4 types of technical writingLiterate ProgrammingJohn McPhee’s use of KEDITCoders at WorkThe Machinery of LifeDefining the WindSome of James’s writing on our tech blog

Duration:01:00:57

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More Signals & Threads coming soon!

8/24/2021
Signals & Threads is back, and we have a fun season of topics lined up, including: Building better abstractions for design and user interfaces, the role of writing in a technical organization, the approach that different languages take to memory management...and more. We hope you’ll join us. The first episode drops September 1st.

Duration:00:00:36

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An inside look at Jane Street's tech internship with Jeanne Van Briesen, Matt Else, and Grace Zhang

11/6/2020
In this week's episode, the season 1 finale, Ron speaks with Jeanne, Matt, and Grace, three former tech interns at Jane Street who have returned as full-timers. They talk about the experience of being an intern at Jane Street, the types of projects that interns work on, and how they've found the transition to full-time work. You can find the transcript for this episode along with links to things we discussed on our website.

Duration:01:02:51

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Building a functional email server with Dominick LoBraico

10/28/2020
Despite a steady trickle of newcomers, email still reigns supreme as the chief communication mechanism for the Information Age. At Jane Street, it’s just as critical as anywhere, but there’s one difference: the system at the heart of our email infrastructure is homegrown. This week, Ron talks to Dominick LoBraico, an engineer working on Jane Street’s technology infrastructure, about how and why we built Mailcore, an email server written and configured in OCaml. They delve into questions around how best to represent the configuration of a complex system, when you should build your own and when you shouldn’t, and the benefits of bringing a code-focused approach to solving systems problems. You can find the transcript for this episode along with links to things we discussed on our website.

Duration:01:03:35

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Language design with Leo White

10/21/2020
Equal parts science and art, programming language design is very much an unsolved problem. This week, Ron speaks with Leo White, from Jane Street's Tools & Compilers team, about cutting-edge language features, future work happening on OCaml, and Jane Street's relationship with the broader open-source community. The conversation covers everything from the paradox of language popularity, to advanced type system features like modular implicits and dependent types. Listen in, no programming languages PhD required! You can find the transcript for this episode along with links to things we discussed on our website.

Duration:01:07:59

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Clock synchronization with Chris Perl

10/14/2020
Clock synchronization, keeping all of the clocks on your network set to the “correct” time, sounds straightforward: our smartphones sure don’t seem to have trouble with it. Next, keep them all accurate to within 100 microseconds, and prove that you did -- now things start to get tricky. In this episode, Ron talks with Chris Perl, a systems engineer at Jane Street about the fundamental difficulty of solving this problem at scale and how we solved it. You can find the transcript for this episode along with links to things we discussed on our website.

Duration:00:44:28

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Python, OCaml, and Machine Learning with Laurent Mazare

10/7/2020
A conversation with Laurent Mazare about how your choice of programming language interacts with the kind of work you do, and in particular about the tradeoffs between Python and OCaml when doing machine learning and data analysis. Ron and Laurent discuss the tradeoffs between working in a text editor and a Jupyter Notebook, the importance of visualization and interactivity, how tools and practices vary between language ecosystems, and how language features like borrow-checking in Rust and ref-counting in Swift and Python can make machine learning easier. You can find the transcript for this episode along with links to things we discussed on our website.

Duration:00:59:33

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Compiler optimization with Greta Yorsh

9/30/2020
It’s a software engineer’s dream: A compiler that can take idiomatic high-level code and output maximally efficient instructions. Ron’s guest this week is Greta Yorsh, who has worked on just that problem in a career spanning both industry and academia. Ron and Greta talk about some of the tricks that compilers use to make our software faster, ranging from feedback-directed optimization and super-optimization to formal analysis. You can find the transcript for this episode along with links to things we discussed on our website.

Duration:01:10:17

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Multicast and the markets with Brian Nigito

9/23/2020
Electronic exchanges like Nasdaq need to handle a staggering number of transactions every second. To keep up, they rely on two deceptively simple-sounding concepts: single-threaded programs and multicast networking. In this episode, Ron speaks with Brian Nigito, a 20-year industry veteran who helped build some of the earliest electronic exchanges, about the tradeoffs that led to the architecture we have today, and how modern exchanges use these straightforward building blocks to achieve blindingly fast performance at scale. You can find the transcript for this episode along with links to things we discussed on our website.

Duration:01:02:09

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Build systems with Andrey Mokhov

9/16/2020
Most software engineers only think about their build system when it breaks; and yet, this often unloved piece of software forms the backbone of every serious project. This week, Ron has a conversation with Andrey Mokhov about build systems, from the venerable Make to Bazel and beyond. Andrey has a lot of experience in this field, including significant contributions to the replacement for the Glasgow Haskell Compiler’s Make-based system and Build Systems à la carte, a paper that untangles the complex ecosystem of existing build systems. Ron and Andrey muse on questions like why every language community seems to have its own purpose-built system and, closer to home, where Andrey and the rest of the build systems team at Jane Street are focusing their efforts. You can find the transcript for this episode along with links to related work on our website.

Duration:00:57:46

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Programmable hardware with Andy Ray

9/9/2020
The ever-widening availability of FPGAs has opened the door to solving a broad set of performance-critical problems in hardware. In this episode, Ron speaks with Andy Ray, who leads Jane Street’s hardware design team. Andy has a long career prior to Jane Street shipping hardware designs for things like modems and video codecs. That work led him to create Hardcaml, a domain-specific language for expressing hardware designs. Ron and Andy talk about the current state-of-the-art in hardware tooling, the economics of FPGAs, and how the process of designing hardware can be improved by applying lessons from software engineering. You can find the transcript for this episode along with links to related work on our website.

Duration:00:59:17

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Introducing Signals & Threads

8/23/2020
Listen in on Jane Street’s Ron Minsky as he has conversations with engineers working on everything from clock synchronization to reliable multicast, build systems to reconfigurable hardware. Get a peek at how Jane Street approaches problems, and how those ideas relate to tech more broadly.

Duration:00:00:45