Is great customer support as important as a great product?Viola Marku is the Customer Success Manager at WunderGraph, where she partners closely with engineering-led teams to drive successful adoption of federated architecture across complex organisations. With nearly a decade of experience in technical startups, she brings both empathy and precision to every customer engagement, translating abstract challenges into clear, actionable paths forward.Viola's cross-functional work with engineering and sales has helped reduce time to value while elevating the role of customer success as a strategic growth function. She's focused on creating the conditions for customer ownership, embedding success into how modern platform teams actually work.Hosted by WunderGraph CEO Jens Neuse and COO Stefan Avram, they'll talk support excellence, feedback loops, and share advice they’ve learned along the way.Here’s what you’ll learn:Support is a Product* Great support isn't an afterthought. Viola and Stefan make the case that support is part of the product, and why investing early pays off.From Chaos to EOC and beyond* We trace the evolution of WunderGraph’s support process, from Stefan juggling sales and support alone, to the launch of the Engineer-On-Call (EOC) system in 2025, to how Viola reshaped workflows when she joined the team earlier this year.Turning Feedback into Features* How WunderGraph collects, prioritizes, and acts on customer feedback, and why this feedback loop is one of their biggest product advantages.Failures, Fixes, and Lessons* We talk about real mistakes: the support tickets that went sideways, the growing pains, and how even the worst moments became learning opportunities.Scaling a Support Culture* With a growing user base, how will WunderGraph maintain its customer-first values?From AI tooling to culture building, we explore how the team is preparing for what’s next.Whether you’re scaling a devtool, leading a support team, or just curious how real customer obsession shapes product growth, this episode is for you.Jump into the comments or live chat! We want to hear:* Is great customer support as important than the product itself?* What’s the biggest support fail you’ve learned from?* Can great support be your moat?Tune in every Friday at 9 AM on YouTube (WunderGraph - Stefan & Jens) for new Live episodes!Watch this episode here: Scaling Support Without Burning Out Engineers — Viola MarkuVisit us at wundergraph.com
APIs run the modern digital world, but what separates the good from the great?Daniel has been part of the codecentric team since October 2016. Since the beginning of 2022 he works as Principal API Consultant at the Dortmund branch. Starting as a consultant with a focus on application lifecycle management, his focus shifted more and more towards APIs. In addition to numerous customer projects and his involvement in the open source world around APIs. He is also a frequent speaker at conferences.In this episode of The Good Thing with Stefan & Jens, Daniel joins us for a deep dive into how modern teams should think about APIs: as products, as capabilities, and as core business enablers. From governance models to open source adoption to the future of API standards, this conversation explores what it really takes to make APIs work at scale.Here’s what you’ll learn:From APIs to CapabilitiesDaniel explains why thinking in terms of capabilities (“Ship Order”, “Process Payment”, “Approve Loan”) instead of technical endpoints can reshape API design. We discuss how this mindset shift ensures APIs align with business value and how product thinking drives long-term success.Governance vs. GatewaysAPIs don’t succeed without governance. Daniel shares why tools like API gateways are helpers, not leaders. Together, we explore strategies for balancing autonomy with control, defining ownership, and preventing API sprawl without killing innovation.Open Source as the API Backbonecodecentric deliberately builds on open-source technologies. Daniel, Jens, and Stefan discuss how communities like OpenAPI, AsyncAPI, and GraphQL accelerate progress, the trade-offs of open source in enterprise settings, and why standards are crucial for event-driven APIs.The Future of APIsWhat role will GraphQL, gRPC, and AsyncAPI play in shaping tomorrow’s API strategies? How might AI influence API design and usage? Daniel shares his perspective on when to use different approaches, where they converge, and why reliability still matters most.If you care about API strategy, developer experience, or building infrastructure that lasts, this conversation is for you.Join the live chat or comments and share:* Should APIs be designed as capabilities, not endpoints?* How much governance is too much?* What’s the role of open source in API strategy today?Tune in every Friday at 9 AM on YouTube (WunderGraph - Stefan & Jens) for new Live episodes!Watch this episode here: How Great Teams Build Great APIs — Daniel Kocot (API thought leader)Visit us at wundergraph.com
How do you ship major enterprise features at scale with confidence?In case you missed it: we just released Cosmo Connect, which we believe is the next generation of GraphQL federation. Cosmo Connect allows you to bring all your datasources onto the graph (REST, SOAP, gRPC, legacy services, etc.) without rewriting a single line of code.We also hosted our first webinar in a year. Watch the replay here (passcode 43eXjeR+): https://zoom.us/clips/share/mLepIFIaSfifvzkFle7zcgToday, Dustin Deus (CTO @ WunderGraph), Ludwig Bedacht (Senior Software Engineer @ WunderGraph), and Jesse Thompson (Software Engineer @ WunderGraph) joins Jens to dive deep on how Connect came to life, the tradeoffs involved in shipping major features to your flagship product, the reasoning behind Cosmo Connect’s technical architecture, and how AI/LLMs shape today’s roadmaps. We’ll cover how to ship major features without breaking trust, “reading the room” of your competitive landscape, and what this means for enterprises adopting GraphQL at scale.Here’s what you’ll learn:- How to ship big features without derailing product stability- The role of TABs & customer feedback in refining messaging and DX - Competitive landscape: spotting real “hair on fire” problems- Why plugins & services + gRPC for Connect’s architecture- How Connect supports LLM/AI workloads in engineering teams- What’s next for Cosmo & how Connect opens new doorsWho this is for: builders of developer tools, platform & infra leads, and anyone designing distributed systems who wants a pragmatic view of where API infrastructure is heading.Join the conversation (live chat/comments):- What’s your toughest Federation or infrastructure pain right now?- Federation or no federation: where do you land and why?- How are you (or aren’t you) using LLMs in your API layer?TRY COSMO CONNECT TODAY:- Try it out in 3 minutes- Explore the docs- Schedule a live 1-on-1 session (Write "Connect" in the Message field)Tune in every Friday at 9 AM on YouTube (WunderGraph - Stefan & Jens) for new Live episodes!Watch this episode here: Launching Major Features at Scale (ft. Dustin Deus, Ludwig Bedacht, Jesse Thompson)Visit us at wundergraph.com
What defines a truly great developer experience?Sam Lambert is the CEO at PlanetScale, building the next-generation cloud database. Previously Sam was Vice President of Engineering at GitHub, where he was responsible for scaling the company and culture to the world's largest platform for developers with over 100 million users. He was also responsible for creating GitHub Actions, the popular workflow automation tool. Prior to GitHub, Sam led the traffic and video infrastructure teams at Facebook. He is passionate about developer experience and delivering high quality software at scale.Sam joins us this week for an unfiltered conversation on what it takes to build tools developers trust. From scaling GitHub to reinventing how teams manage database workflows, Sam has been behind the scenes of some of the most developer-loved platforms of the last decade.Hosted by Stefan Avram and Jens Neuse, we talk DevEx, open source, monetization, collaboration, and where databases are headed next.Here’s what you’ll learn:Trust over Table StakesDark mode, a CLI, a working UI: these are baseline features, not innovation. Sam unpacks why trust is the foundation of any great developer experience, and how long-term thinking beats short-term applause.From Vitess to DevOps for DatabasesWhen Sam joined PlanetScale, the company was transitioning from simply offering the Vitess technology to delivering a MySQL database with a “compelling developer workflow”. We’ll explore how Sam helped articulate that product vision and build trust with users. Data Federation Meets API FederationPlanetScale unifies data across shards, regions, and database types. WunderGraph unifies APIs. Together, they offer a complementary model for modern teams. We explore how customers are using both types of tools, and what makes collaboration at scale actually work.AI, Agents, and the Next Database ParadigmWe couldn’t end without asking Sam how AI is shifting the way PlanetScale works, and how he sees the future. What does the rise of agents and new protocols (cough, MCP) mean for databases? And what trends is Sam betting on for the next five years?Why PlanetScale Metal is so fastSam breaks down the architectural decisions behind their high-performance Postgres and MySQL offerings. He explains how they run petabytes of state on bare metal inside Kubernetes and why most cloud databases leave performance on the table.Lessons from 55 people with 100% uptimeWith just 55 employees, PlanetScale runs one of the most trusted database platforms. Sam explains how a tiny infra team, a “no passengers” culture, and zero sysadmins help them outperform hyperscalers with 10 times the headcount.The Open Source AdvantageSam, Stefan & Jens explore how OSS enabled PlanetScale’s early growth, how they think about building on top of OSS today, and what Sam really thinks about the CNCF situation. Building for ScaleSam opens up about his obsession with scale. He talks about spinning up 500-node clusters at the press of a button and living vicariously through the success of their customers.If you're building developer tools, designing distributed systems, or just want a fresh perspective on where infrastructure is headed, this one’s for you.Jump into the comments or live chat! We want to hear:What does “developer experience” mean to you?Are databases finally part of DevOps?Is open source still the best way to start something big?Tune in every Friday at 9 AM on YouTube (WunderGraph - Stefan & Jens) for new Live episodes!Watch this episode here: Sam Lambert (CEO @ PlanetScale) on building tools developers actually trustVisit us at wundergraph.com
What’s the future of API’s in an AI-powered world?Kevin Swiber is an API strategy advisor with 15+ years of experience in standards and startups. They have a history of working in leading roles through software engineering, infrastructure operations, and enterprise architecture. In addition to their experience working at API companies like Apigee and Postman, Kevin is a member of the OpenAPI Initiative. Kevin is the CEO of Layered System, where they consult on the intersection of AI and APIs.Kevin joins Stefan Avram and Jens Neuse to talk APIs, MCP, Federation, collaboration, and what’s coming next.Spoiler: it’s APIs all the way down.Here’s what you’ll learn:It’s APIs All The Way Down:APIs quietly power everything. Kevin, Stefan, and Jens unpack how APIs became the connective tissue of modern software, why this era feels different, and what it means for the future of digital products.MCP: API Consumer, Not API Killer:There have been claims that MCP (model context protocol) will replace APIs. But, as Kevin puts it, “MCP is built to consume APIs, not replace them. The host (an AI assistant like Claude) communicates with clients, which in turn communicate with servers that access various resources.” We discuss what this new layer means, how OpenAI and Anthropic are building around it, and why Sam Altman calls this "the protocol era."Open Standards and Planning Your Escape Routes:Kevin, Stefan & Jens talk big-bad vendor lock-in. They reflect on the history of API description formats and what led to the “OpenAPI advantage,” while sharing perspectives on the current API ecosystem and why they encourage companies to “plan their escape routes.”API Design, Conway’s Law, and the Federation Fix:Bad APIs often reflect bad org charts. Kevin, Stefan & Jens share lessons on designing APIs that scale with your team. We explore (GraphQL) Federation as a strategy to break down silos and avoid the pitfalls of Conway’s Law on system architecture.What’s Next: Protocol Era, AI Agents, and the Future of APIs:Are companies heading toward a new existential race to build internal API + AI layers?Our hosts and Kevin share what to watch for, how to prepare, and what may be the real moat of the future.If you care about APIs, AI, or building systems that scale, this episode is for you. Join us in the chat or the comments below!HUGE thank you to Kevin Swiber for joining us today. Check out their blog here: https://www.layered.dev/Tune in every Friday at 9 AM on YouTube (WunderGraph - Stefan & Jens) for new Live episodes!Watch this episode here: 15+ Years of APIs (with Kevin Swiber, API Strategy Advisor)Visit us at wundergraph.com
AI tools were supposed to 10x developer productivity. But what if they’re actually slowing us down?A new study from METR found that AI coding tools like Cursor and Copilot slowed experienced developers down by 19 percent on average. A vindicating followup to a key insight from last episode: “every line of code is a liability”. However, this study has some SERIOUS red flags, and it seems more clickbait than substance.Meanwhile, Swedish darling Lovable just raised a $200M Series A only 8 months after launch. They’re already pushing $20M+ ARR with just 45 employees, putting them near a $2B valuation. This phenomena of small AI startups bagging HUGE influxes of cash from VCs is not surprising nowadays, but still begs the question: bubble or not?And then there’s Meta. In 2023, they doubled down on their stance that the future of AI is open-source. Now? They’re reportedly considering pulling the plug on Behemoth, their most powerful open-source model. After Chinese researchers at DeepSeek forked it and created a stronger, more efficient model, Meta might be regretting their open strategy (even if that was the point all along).Plus, we talk (of course) about Federation, and why we’re bullish on gRPC as the next generation. Jens also shares key insights from his latest two blog posts on the topic.This, and more, in this week’s episode of The Good Thing with Stefan & Jens.An overview of what we’ll cover:AI PRODUCTIVITY CRISIS?- The METR study that says AI tools are slowing developers down- A follow-up to our “every line of code is a liability” discussion- Why “code generation” isn’t the same as productivity- Can it be trusted? (probably not)LOVABLE RAISES $200M SERIES A- $20M+ ARR in just 8 months- Is this sustainable or just another startup bubble moment?META BACKS AWAY FROM OPEN SOURCE- Behemoth might get shelved- Did DeepSeek’s success spook them?- Was Meta ever truly committed to open AI?THE NEXT GENERATION OF GRAPHQL FEDERATION SPEAKS gRPC- Why we’re bullish on gRPC as the next generation- Insights from Jens’ latest blog posts- What gRPC brings to Federation that GraphQL alone can’tIf you’re a dev who relies on these tools, this episode is for you. We’d love to hear:- Have AI tools actually slowed you down?- Should open-source AI stay open if it can be cloned and outpaced?- Do you agree with our take on gRPC?Tune in every Friday at 9 AM on YouTube (WunderGraph - Stefan & Jens) for new Live episodes!Watch this episode here: AI Productivity "Crash", Lovable’s $2B Surge, and Why Federation Needs gRPC | TGT #24Visit us at wundergraph.com
Happy Friday, and Welcome Back!Cursor's recent pricing change sparked a developer exodus. But it really wasn’t about the price.2025’s darling AI-code-editor Cursor shook its community this week with surprise pricing and usage changes that blindsided many. But It wasn’t just about the money, it was about the lack of transparency.They apologized, but only for how they announced it, not for the changes themselves. The fallout? Heated debates across Cursor's social channels and numerous articles (including one from TechCrunch) dissecting their “non-apology” apology.On the topic of Cursor… Claude Code just dropped its own VSCode extension. Many think this could eat substantially into Cursor’s userbase. Could this, coupled with the harsh reaction from the developer community to Cursor’s business model changes, signal the beginning of the end for Cursor already?Plus, the other big story of the week: Planetscale now supports Postgres, which could have HUGE impacts on the infrastructure of digital products going forward.This, and more, in this week’s episode of The Good Thing with Stefan & Jens. An overview of what we’ll cover:CURSOR CONTROVERSY: - Will its unicorn reign come to a screeching halt?PLANETSCALE FINALLY EMBRACES POSTGRES:- Postgres is the number two database tech after MySQL, which used to be Planetscale’s only focus. By adding Postgres, they just unlocked another 20 percent of the market.LEE ROB MOVES ON FROM VERCEL- The legendary Lee Robinson (@leerob) has officially moved on from Vercel. We thank him for his service to Next.JS and beyond.DIGGING A MOAT WITH AN AI PRODUCT- ..is pretty much impossible, unless you have hardware. Or is it? (yes it is, but let's talk about it).If you’re a dev who relies on these tools, this episode is for you. We’d love to hear:- Did Cursor handle this as badly as everyone says?- Will you switch to Claude Code?- Do you agree with our take on where gRPC fits in the GraphQL Federation picture?- How do you think Planetscale x PostgresQL will change system design?Drop your thoughts in the live chat or the comments below.Tune in every Friday at 9 AM on YouTube (WunderGraph - Stefan & Jens) for new Live episodes!Watch this episode here: Did we just get Rug Pulled by Cursor?Visit us at wundergraph.com
In this episode of The Good Thing with Stefan & Jens, our CEO Jens takes us through his latest LinkedIn post calling out a growing anti-pattern: generating GraphQL schemas from OpenAPI specs: deep dive into how we should (and shouldn’t) be building APIs.Topics this episode:Apollo GraphQL’s new “Connectors” feature… which somehow breaks their own Principled GraphQL guidelines. We unpack where things went sideways and what demand-driven schema design is really about."The first problem I see is that a GraphQL Schema should always be demand driven. A demand driven schema should abstract away the implementation details and solely focuses on the requirements of the app developers that use the API. These are by the way not my words but Apollo write this themselves in principled GraphQL." - JensThe tech industry’s promise of “learn to code” is hitting a harsh reality: Comp Sci grads are facing the highest unemployment rate among all majors. We discuss what this means for hiring, the state of tech education, and how companies should respond.And finally, we talk LLMs: Are they supercharging creativity, or dulling it? A post from Ahmet Soormally got us thinking: are engineers outsourcing too much of their thinking to AI tools?Here’s a breakdown of the episode:OpenAPI → GraphQL?Apollo’s “do as I say, not as I do” momentThe job market crunch for Comp Sci graduatesKeeping your creative edge in an AI-assisted worldTune in every Friday at 9 AM on YouTube (WunderGraph - Stefan & Jens) for new Live episodes!Watch this episode here: Demand-Driven Schemas, AI Overreach, and the Dev Job CrisisVisit us at wundergraph.com
DISCLAIMER: This episode is much more fun in video-form. Check the link below for the link to the video version on YouTube. Everyone's building an AI startup in 2025. But how many will make it to 2026?VC funding is flowing, landing pages are sleek, and the term “AI-native” is slapped on everything from search tools to to-do apps. It’s a great time to start an AI company — but a brutal one to survive in.In this episode of The Good Thing with Stefan & Jens, we decided to cut through the noise. Inspired by the energy of tech Twitter and the glut of product launches on Hacker News & Product Hunt, we created a 2025 AI Startup Tier List.We picked 10 real AI startups and ranked them from S to F:S Tier – Unicorn potentialA Tier – Will probably survive and find a marketB Tier – Decent shot, some good signsC Tier – 50/50 territory, hard to callD Tier – We’re worried, but not fully outF Tier – RIP. Defunct imminentWhat makes a startup S-tier vs. F-tier? We used 3 guiding criteria:1. Impact – Are they solving a real, meaningful problem?2. Differentiation – Are they unique or already being outplayed?3. Gut feeling – Does it "feel" like it’s going to work out?Disclaimer: these rankings are OUR OPINIONS. We never wish ill-will on any company. Stefan & Jens have considerable industry experience & have seen a thing or two, so these stamps of approval (or lack thereof) are backed up with years of trial & error scar tissue. If your organization doesn’t meet the mark on our list, we'd love to see you prove us wrong.If you’re building, investing in, or just lurking in the AI space — this episode is a must-watch reality check.Which startups would you put in F Tier right now? Or better yet — who’s your dark horse S Tier? Let us know in the comments.Tune in every Friday at 9 AM on YouTube (WunderGraph - Stefan & Jens) for new Live episodes!Watch this episode here: 2025 AI STARTUP TIER LISTVisit us at wundergraph.com
When you're building in public, you don’t just ship code—you ship opinions. And sometimes, those opinions light the internet on fire.In this week’s episode of The Good Thing, Jens and Stefan unpack three of the most talked-about stories in tech—from language wars to AI ethics to the future of foundational infrastructure.We cover:Go vs. Rust – why Jens’s viral post stirred up so much emotion, and what’s actually at stake for dev teams choosing between themClaude and the blackmail buzz – TechCrunch’s report on Anthropic’s AI refusing shutdown… science fiction or a signal we shouldn’t ignore?The Stargate Project – OpenAI's new collaboration with Oracle and SoftBank, with support of the United States Government, to invest $500 billion into AI infrastructure in the U.S.OpenAI’s IPO potential – how going public could shift incentives, influence pricing, and impact every startup building on their APIsIf you care about developer experience, responsible AI, or the systems your tools depend on, this episode hits the sweet spot between spicy takes and serious insight.We’d love to hear your thoughts:Is Rust hype or hard truth? Should we be worried about agent autonomy? And how would a public OpenAI reshape the industry?Tune in every Friday at 9 AM on YouTube (WunderGraph - Stefan & Jens) for new Live episodes!Watch this episode here: Go vs. Rust, AI Blackmail, and OpenAI’s IPO—UnpackedVisit us at wundergraph.com
When you’re scaling systems, moving fast is only half the battle. You also need clarity around architecture, real-world feedback, and a deep understanding of how tools like GraphQL and AI actually fit into your pipeline. That’s where experience counts—and this week, we brought in one of the best.On this episode of The Good Thing, Jens and Stefan are joined by Robert Farr, Principal Software Architect at Procore. With 22+ years in engineering and a track record across distributed systems, big data, and cloud architecture, Robert brings hard-earned perspective to the kinds of problems you don’t read about in tutorials.We cover:Where delivery pipelines break down at scale—and how to fix themThe realities of GraphQL Federation—what holds up, and what doesn’tHow AI is actually being used in engineering orgs todayLessons from building resilient systems under real-world pressureIf you're navigating GraphQL, scaling platforms, or figuring out how AI fits into your workflows—this one’s packed with hard-won insight.We’d love to hear your thoughts:What’s the biggest challenge in your delivery pipeline right now?Tune in every Friday at 9 AM on YouTube (WunderGraph - Stefan & Jens) for new Live episodes!Watch this episode here: Lessons from 22 Years of Building at Scale – Robert Farr (Principal Architect, Procore)Visit us at wundergraph.com
TECHNICAL ADVISORY BOARDS: When you're building a platform for developers, shipping fast is not enough. You need feedback loops that grow with your product. You need insights from the people who hit the edge cases first. That is what a strong TAB enables.In this week’s episode of The Good Thing, Jens and Stefan take you inside WunderGraph’s own Technical Advisory Board — what it is, how it works, and why it has become a critical part of how we build.We cover:Who belongs in a great TAB and why perspective diversity improves product outcomesHow structured feedback helped us improve delivery speed and reliabilityUsing a TAB to validate assumptions and make smarter roadmap decisionsWhat happens when you build based on real needs instead of internal guessesIf you are building developer platforms, scaling APIs, or just tired of guessing what your users want, this episode offers a clear path to more informed decisions.We’d love to hear your thoughts:Do you have a TAB or similar sounding board?How has it shaped your roadmap?Tune in every Friday at 9 AM on YouTube (WunderGraph - Stefan & Jens) for new Live episodes!Watch this episode here: Is a TAB Your Shortcut to Building the Right Product?Visit us at wundergraph.com
APIs are shaped by teams. But what happens when teams are shaped by AI?Conway’s Law famously says that software mirrors the communication structures of the teams that build it. But in a world of generative AI, autonomous agents, and increasingly API-first systems—how does that law hold up?What we cover:AI-Augmented Architectures – how generative tools influence team structures and API designSystem Boundaries – when Conway’s Law helps… and when it hurtsOrg Design for AI Era – how to align communication, ownership, and automationAPIs as Interfaces for AI – what happens when your consumers are not humansEmergent Behavior & Complexity – the risks and rewards of AI-driven development patternsWe’re not just talking theory—we’re asking how engineering culture must evolve when your code isn’t only written by developers anymore.If you’re building APIs, platform infrastructure, or just rethinking how your teams work in the age of AI, don’t miss this conversation.We’d love to hear your thoughts:How has AI changed the way your team communicates and builds?Tune in every Friday at 9 AM on YouTube (WunderGraph - Stefan & Jens) for new Live episodes!Watch this episode here: What Happens to Conway’s Law When AI Joins the Dev Team?Visit us at wundergraph.com
Reuse is at the heart of open source, but what happens when reuse turns into rebranding?When a third party matches your project feature-for-feature, slaps on a new logo, and sells it without contributing a cent or a single PR… what do you do?What we cover:License Levers – weighing Apache 2.0, SSPL, and Fair Code tradeoffsDual-Licensing & Open Core – can “pay-for-extras” models protect innovation?Trademark & Branding – using reputation as your defensive moatCommunity vs. Commercial – how do you balance contributor trust with sustainable growth?Each strategy solves a different piece of the open-source sustainability puzzle. Together, they form the backbone of a resilient, value-aligned OSS model.If you're building or relying on OSS, the real question isn't "How do we stop the copycats?".It’s “What value are we trying to protect, and for whom?”We'd love to hear your perspective: How would you react if your flagship OSS got resold without attribution?Tune in every Friday at 9 AM on YouTube (WunderGraph - Stefan & Jens) for new Live episodes!Watch this episode here: The Other Side of OSS Rug Pulls: Can They Steal Your Business?Visit us at wundergraph.com
DISCLAIMER: This episode is much more fun in video-form. Check out the link below for the link to the video episode on YouTube.What makes a landing page actually work for developers? And why do so many fall short?In this week’s episode of The Good Thing Podcast, Stefan and Jens dive into the design, messaging, and overall strategy behind the landing pages of some of today’s top developer platforms. From standout CTAs to common pitfalls, they break down what works, what doesn’t—and how we’re applying those insights at WunderGraph.In the episode, they cover:First impressions: what developer-focused brands are getting rightCommon issues: where landing pages fail to convert or communicatePractical takeaways: tips you can apply to improve your own product pagesA candid review of what makes a technical landing page both clear and compellingWhether you’re a founder, marketer, or devtool builder, this episode is packed with value on how to position your product for the people who matter most: developers.Tune in every Friday at 9 AM on YouTube (WunderGraph - Stefan & Jens) for new Live episodes!Watch this episode here: Love/Hate with Landing PagesVisit us at wundergraph.com
The Future of API Development: Building Internal Apps Faster Than EverCreating internal tools used to be a tedious process—connecting data sources, configuring UI, and deploying systems manually. But what if you could generate fully functional internal apps with a single prompt?In this episode, we showcase a powerful new feature built on WunderGraph’s Supergraph and MCP Gateway that lets teams create employee dashboards and internal apps in minutes—not days.From changing availability statuses in real time to auto-generating complete admin panels, we’re witnessing a shift in how internal software is being built.And it’s not just fast—it’s intelligent.Join us as we discuss:How To Build An Entire Internal App from a Prompt⟶ A walkthrough of how WunderGraph’s latest tool auto-generates internal tools based on your Supergraph—no manual configuration needed.The End of Manual Data Source Connections⟶ Why older tools like Retool required complex setups—and how this new approach removes that barrier with native integration and automation.The New Mental Model for Internal Tooling⟶ What happens when your API is not just a backend, but an engine for building software experiences? We unpack the philosophy behind this next-gen tooling shift.The Good Thing?Internal app development just got 100x easier—and smarter. No more spreadsheets, no more glue code. Just describe what you want, and let the system do the rest.We're not just simplifying dev work—we're reimagining it.Tune in every Friday at 9 AM on YouTube (WunderGraph - Stefan & Jens) for new Live episodes!Watch this episode here: The Future of API Development: Building Internal Apps Faster Than EverVisit us at wundergraph.com
The Tobi AI Memo: Shopify's Bezos Moment? | TGT #13In this episode, we're gonna discuss the leaked internal memo from Shopify CEO Tobi Lütke that outlines a bold new direction for AI integration within the organization.Let's unpack the 10 key insights from the internal message—an emerging "AI mandate" that echoes the impact of Jeff Bezos’ famous 2002 API directive at Amazon. As the tech world moves toward AI-native workflows, Shopify’s internal alignment around AI could signal a broader shift in how modern product and engineering teams operate.We'll also discuss:AI-Native Workflows at ScaleA closer look at how AI is being adopted as core infrastructure across large organizations, accelerating prototyping, decision-making, and cross-functional collaboration.Security in the Stack: “The S in MCP Stands for Security”A closer look to the trending Hacker News thread that challenges assumptions about secure systems, with a focus of the foundational importance of security in modern infrastructure.AI is no longer optional—it’s becoming infrastructure. From how we code to how we collaborate, this shift is redefining team dynamics, tooling choices, and developer productivity across the board.Join us as we break down these game-changing trends and discuss what it all means for the future of software engineering.Tune in every Friday at 9 AM on YouTube (WunderGraph - Stefan & Jens) for new Live episodes!Watch this episode here: The Tobi AI Memo: Shopify's Bezos Moment?Visit us at wundergraph.com
Want to join us on the podcast? Reach out to jacob@wundergraph.com!Beyond GraphQL: How Federation is Redefining Scalable API ArchitectureAs organization scale, API management becomes increasingly complex, GraphQL Federation offers a transformative approach, enabling teams to build modular, scalable, and efficient API architectures.In this episode, we delve into the evolution of GraphQL Federation—how it addresses the limitations of monolithic GraphQL APIs, enhances team collaboration, and streamlines API development at scale.What to Expect in This EpisodeThe Evolution of GraphQL Federation⟶ A look at how GraphQL Federation emerged as a response to the challenges of scaling GraphQL, and why it is shaping the future of API architecture.Understanding Federation—How It Works⟶ A deep dive into the core principles of federation, including subgraphs, schema composition, and distributed API management.Overcoming Challenges in Federated Architectures⟶ Insights into the common pitfalls teams face when implementing GraphQL Federation and best practices for success.Real-World Applications and Industry Adoption⟶ Case studies of engineering teams leveraging federation to improve API performance, optimize data access, and accelerate development.The Future of GraphQL Federation⟶ Emerging trends, innovations, and what’s next in the evolution of federated GraphQL APIs.The advancements in GraphQL Federation would not be possible without the contributions of the developer community, whose insights and real-world implementations continue to drive innovation in API architecture.The Good Thing Is…The future of API development is being redefined, and GraphQL Federation is leading the way. As teams seek more scalable and efficient solutions, we are committed to exploring the next generation of API collaboration.Join us as we break down the latest developments, share actionable insights, and discuss how engineering teams can leverage GraphQL Federation to build the future of API management.Tune in every Friday at 9 AM on YouTube (WunderGraph - Stefan & Jens) for new Live episodes!Watch this episode here: How Federation is Redefining Scalable APIVisit us at wundergraph.com
Big announcement: We’ve secured $7.5M to revolutionize API collaboration!In this special episode, we break down our Series A funding —what it means for WunderGraph, how it shapes our future, and the journey that got us here. Led by Karma Ventures, with participation from eBay Ventures and Aspenwood Ventures, this investment is a huge step forward in making WunderGraph Cosmo the go-to solution for API management at scale.What's inside this episode?The Story Behind Our $7.5M Series A Funding⟶ A behind-the-scenes look at how we secured funding, the challenges we faced, and what this milestone means for the future of WunderGraph.How Customer Feedback Helped Shape WunderGraph Cosmo⟶ The crucial role our community and early adopters played in refining WunderGraph Cosmo—how your insights directly influenced its development.Our Vision for the Future—Performance, Reliability & Scalability⟶ How we're using this funding to push the boundaries of API collaboration, ensuring a faster, more reliable, and scalable experience.New Features That Will Power Seamless API Collaboration⟶ A sneak peek at upcoming innovations designed to enhance cross-team workflows, streamline development, and improve enterprise-scale collaboration.What's Next—And How You Can Be Part of It⟶ Our roadmap for the future and the opportunities to get involved—whether as a user, contributor, or team member.None of this would be possible without you—our customers, community, and early supporters. Your trust, insights, and real-world use cases have been the driving force behind WunderGraph, shaping it into the game-changing platform it is today.The Good Thing is...We are just getting started!With this new chapter, we're not just celebrating a funding milestone— we're doubling down on innovation, pushing limits of what's possible in API collaboration. We're committed to making API management more intuitive, scalable, and developer-friendly than ever before.Join us as we shape the future of API development, turning ambitious ideas into powerful, real-world solutions for developers, teams and enterprises.Tune in every Friday at 9 AM on YouTube (WunderGraph - Stefan & Jens) for new Live episodes!Watch this episode here: $7.5M Series A – Building the Future of API CollaborationVisit us at wundergraph.com
The Good Thing Podcast Episode 10 | Building WunderGraph: The Highs, Lows & Lessons LearnedFor our 10th episode, we're making it extra special—an in-person conversation featuring all four WunderGraph founders: Björn, Jens, Dustin, and Stefan.This offers an inside look at the journey of building WunderGraph—from the early decisions that shaped its success to the challenges and missteps along the way. We’ll discuss what we love about the platform, what we would have done differently, and the realities of running a remote-first company in today’s tech era.Join us as we discuss:The Strategic Decisions That Shaped WunderGraph⟶ a reflection on the best choices we've made and how they've contributed to the company's growth.Lessons Learned from Challenges and Missteps⟶ the mistakes, trade-offs, and unexpected obstacles we encountered while scaling WunderGraphThe Reality of Running a Remote Company⟶ insights into the opportunities and difficulties of managing a distributed team.What We Love (and Hate) About WunderGraph⟶ a candid discussion on the technical and business aspects of the platform. What excites us and what frustrates us.The Future of WunderGraph⟶ our evolving vision and what's next for the company.The Good Thing?Building a company is a journey of constant learning, iteration, and adaptation. Join us as we share our experiences, providing valuable insights for developers, startup founders, and anyone navigating the complexities of building a tech company.Tune in every Friday at 9 AM on YouTube (WunderGraph - Stefan & Jens) for new Live episodes!Watch this episode here: Building WunderGraph: The Highs, Lows, & Lessons LearnedVisit us at wundergraph.com