
#16: Moritz Lang
Moritz Lang is a software engineer based in Berlin who works across iOS and server-side Swift, with a strong focus on observability. After starting out in 2013 with typical full‑stack web development, he quickly gravitat

Hosted by SwiftToolkit.dev · 🇺🇸 US · EN · 16 episodes
Established thought leaders with verified media credentials.
Dev Conversations is a monthly series where Swift Toolkit features members of Swift work groups, content creators, and people who contribute to the Swift community, focused on tooling, developer experience and Server Side Swift. In these talks, we discuss open source projects, tips for professional growth, and many other valuable insights and perspectives from other developers.
SwiftToolkit.dev hosts Dev Conversations, a technology show with 16 episodes published.

Moritz Lang is a software engineer based in Berlin who works across iOS and server-side Swift, with a strong focus on observability. After starting out in 2013 with typical full‑stack web development, he quickly gravitat

Pierluigi Cifani has been doing iOS development for over a decade, starting back in 2013 with Objective-C. When he first saw a jailbroken iPhone running a terminal, he knew that’s what he wanted to do. He’s been writing

Antoine van Der Lee is the creator behind SwiftLee, one of the most popular Swift development blogs, and RocketSim, a powerful iOS development tool. With over 7 years at WeTransfer and now as an indie developer, Antoine

Tibor Bödecs shared his learnings on his iOS development on his blog for almost a decade, before transitioning to server side Swift. After having published a book on the topic, founded a software development and consulti

Bruno’s first moments with programming were with Flash and ActionScript, and a few years later, when deciding what to study, he didn’t choose Computer Science: he went instead for game design. After working on it for a w

Finn learned JavaScript as a fun way to build little websites. His programming journey, that started around the age of 12, evolved into programming Arduino projects, as he became fascinated by the idea of controlling phy

Shai Mishali first encountered computers at a young age, when he got an IBM XT as a gift. He started to play with HTML and PHP to build something new in that time: websites. Around 2011 in one of his early jobs, their co

Nick’s journey into programming started early, though he didn’t follow a traditional computer science path: he studied electronic engineering at university before transitioning into web development. In 2009, the company

Back in 2017, Pedro Piñera was working at SoundCloud in the iOS Platform team. Their codebase was a mix of Swift and Objective-C, and developers faced difficulties when dealing with linking, build phases, build settings,

Natalia’s journey into programming didn’t start with Swift - it was actually with Java. Later on, she worked on a codebase in Ruby, and in 2014 she joined the company that built Paw, the macOS HTTP client, where her time

Sourcery is one of the first tools in the Swift ecosystem, launched back in 2016. Its author, Krzysztof Zabłocki, got tired of writing boilerplate code, such as Hashable and Equatable conformances (before they were autom

Mikaela Caron learned how to code after studying mechanical and electrical engineering in college. When SwiftUI was first released, she preferred to learn UIKit as it was a more mature framework, and later returned to Sw

The adoption of strict concurrency in Swift is not an easy process in some projects. Implicit assumptions we usually make are often challenged by the compiler, and we don’t know how to solve them in many cases - leading

Adam Fowler and Joannis Orlandos are both active members of the Swift Server Workgroup. Adam is known for his contributions to Soto (a community supported Swift SDK for AWS), and to the VS Code Extension for Swift, among

Dave Verwer is well known in the iOS developer community, mostly for his iOSDevWeekly.com newsletter, which he’s been publishing for more than a decade. In the recent years, Dave and Sven A. Schmidt have been working on

The first time I spoke with Andrew was in the first half of 2024, while I was checking out his Swift runtime for Vercel Functions. What I didn’t know then, was the fact he is the developer behind Swift Cloud. It initiall
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Dev Conversations is hosted by SwiftToolkit.dev. The show is categorised under technology and has published 16 episodes.
Dev Conversations has published 16 episodes.
Dev Conversations regularly covers technology. It sits in the technology category.
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