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In this installment of the Cosmic JS Developer Spotlight Series, we sat down with Jason Lengstorf, a developer, architect, keynote speaker and occasional designer residing in Portland, Oregon. Having worked previously at IBM and Precision Nutrition, Jason now serves as Head of Developer Relations at Gatsby. Check out the video of the pair programming session he did demonstrating how to use Cosmic JS to power your Gatsby websites. Follow Jason on Twitter, GitHub and his blog and enjoy theĀ Q/A.
Cosmic JS: When did you first begin building software?Jason: As a teenager, I was in a band, and we needed things like concert posters, merch designs, and a custom MySpace page. I wrote my first few lines of CSS around then, and slowly started doing more and more: I built our first website, learned Flash so I could embed our music, learned PHP and built a crappy CMS so the rest of the band could post updates to the site, and just kept going deeper and deeper down that rabbit hole. Eventually it became obvious that I wasnāt rockstar material, so I stopped pretending to be a musician and focused exclusively on design/code.
What is your preferred development stack?Right now, I work mostly with React, GraphQL, andĀ Node.js.
What past projects are you most proud of and why?The first two that come to mind are GrAMPS and the Gatsby swagĀ store.
GrAMPS is a way to allow multiple independent teams to publish GraphQL schemas as npm packages that are then aggregated and stitched together. IBM Cloud, which I was working on when my team and I built it, uses a microservice architecture, which means that a different team owns each piece of the data. This meant that the API surface was hard to understand, largely undocumented, and extremely difficult to keep track of. By introducing GraphQL with GrAMPS, these teams got to keep control of their data sources, but gave us the ability to expose all of the data through a centralized GraphQL endpoint. This was a huge win for everyone inside the company, and it led to much better communication and standardization within theĀ team.
The Gatsby swag store is a Gatsby site where we sell our swag, but itās also a way for us to give back to the community. Anyone who contributes to Gatsbyāāāwhether thatās through code, giving a talk, writing an article, or something elseāāācan log in with their GitHub account and get a discount code for free swag. This is our way of saying āthank youā to the community for all the hard work they put in. Itās only a small part of what we try to do for the Gatsby community, but for me, itās a really fun way to give back and jokeĀ around.
What are your biggest challenges in building the community at Gatsby?Iām very fortunate at Gatsby, because the community is incredible. I often make the joke that working in developer relations really just means retweeting all the nice things people already say aboutĀ us.
The most challenging part has been making sure we donāt miss things. People have questions, and when they reach out to us and we lose the message, that sucks. Gatsby is a community-powered company, so we work extremely hard to make sure the community stays at the center of everything we do: how does Gatsby make peopleās lives easier? how do we make sure every decision we make is creating a better experience for the community? how do we ensure that our community is a safe and supportive place for everyone, regardless of experience level or background?
How do things change moving from a legacy company like IBM to a bleeding-edge startup like Gatsby?Both have their perks and problems. For example, at IBM I felt like I spent months asking permission to do a few weeksā worth of work, which was super frustrating. However, IBM can solve any problem because they have so many incredibly talented people working there, and their resources areā¦ significant.
At Gatsby, we can quickly move toward new ideas with minimal bureaucracy, but we also hit resource limits: I canāt necessarily hire all the people Iād like to for my team, or sponsor every event Iād like to, or spin up an exploratory team to tackle an interesting-but-unproven problem.
In general, the biggest difference for me has been the amount of chaos available to me. Iām the kind of person who loves to be buried in hard problems with fuzzy definitions. I like trying to make sense out of the mess, and identify pathways through tricky problem spaces. At IBM, there are occasional challenges like thisāāāthe GraphQL/GrAMPS project was one of themāāābut mostly things are relatively well established, so the level of chaos is fairly low. At Gatsby, it often feels like everything we do is being done for the first time, so thereās no shortage of chaos. My personality type tends to thrive in the Gatsby environment, IāveĀ found.
What are some technologies you are excited about or want to learn more about?Iām really excited about new developments in the GraphQL space, and Iāll always be learning more about the fundamentals: HTML, CSS, vanilla JavaScript. Iāve also been dipping my toes into āabstract syntax treesā, which are what tools like Babel use to change code from one format to another. It hurts my brain a little bit, but itās really fun once it works.Ā :)
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Developer Spotlight: Jason Lengstorf of Gatsby was originally published in Hacker Noon on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.
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