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Building the Amazon Website in the Late 90s | Alex Edelman
Manage episode 292944344 series 2904019
Today, in the Invent Like An Owner Podcast, Dave speaks with Alex Edelman. They talk about how an English Major from the University of Pennsylvania joined Amazon as the company’s first dedicated “HTML Wizard”, why the V3 project (in 1997) was mainly about obsession over customer experience, the thrilling yet exhausting experience during Launch Nights, and how a boating accident led to shared ownership through pager rotation.
Alex Edelman is an internet veteran. He was Amazon.com's first web developer, and has decades of experience building and scaling innovative web sites, mobile apps, and web service APIs. Lately, his focus is on serving his family's community, often leading in school fundraising and event planning.
Episode Resources:
- Alex Edelman’s LinkedIn
- Worldreader
- Rainier Scholars
- Subscribe to our Newsletter
- Find Dave on LinkedIn and Twitter
What to Listen For:
- 00:00 Intro
- 02:16 How did you get to Amazon?
- 06:07 Amazon set its eyes on the growing internet presence
- 07:04 Hired under the site development and editorial team
- 08:10 First major project after joining Amazon
- 13:11 Reason why relational databases weren't an option before
- 14:20 Pushing for the customer recommendations feature
- 15:19 The difficulties of developing Amazon V3
- 17:12 Engineers built basic templating system for editorial team to use
- 19:33 Launch Nites of big projects
- 24:32 It’s a collective mission to serve the customers
- 25:47 Product images and developing an image server
- 29:29 The Pager Story
- 33:01 From books to launching new products
- 37:18 Macro templates and expansion of UI features
- 39:53 What is brutal triage?
- 41:52 Young technologies don’t have great tooling
- 43:26 Winning the Just Do It award (3 times)
- 46:43 Interface programming has come a long way
15 эпизодов
Manage episode 292944344 series 2904019
Today, in the Invent Like An Owner Podcast, Dave speaks with Alex Edelman. They talk about how an English Major from the University of Pennsylvania joined Amazon as the company’s first dedicated “HTML Wizard”, why the V3 project (in 1997) was mainly about obsession over customer experience, the thrilling yet exhausting experience during Launch Nights, and how a boating accident led to shared ownership through pager rotation.
Alex Edelman is an internet veteran. He was Amazon.com's first web developer, and has decades of experience building and scaling innovative web sites, mobile apps, and web service APIs. Lately, his focus is on serving his family's community, often leading in school fundraising and event planning.
Episode Resources:
- Alex Edelman’s LinkedIn
- Worldreader
- Rainier Scholars
- Subscribe to our Newsletter
- Find Dave on LinkedIn and Twitter
What to Listen For:
- 00:00 Intro
- 02:16 How did you get to Amazon?
- 06:07 Amazon set its eyes on the growing internet presence
- 07:04 Hired under the site development and editorial team
- 08:10 First major project after joining Amazon
- 13:11 Reason why relational databases weren't an option before
- 14:20 Pushing for the customer recommendations feature
- 15:19 The difficulties of developing Amazon V3
- 17:12 Engineers built basic templating system for editorial team to use
- 19:33 Launch Nites of big projects
- 24:32 It’s a collective mission to serve the customers
- 25:47 Product images and developing an image server
- 29:29 The Pager Story
- 33:01 From books to launching new products
- 37:18 Macro templates and expansion of UI features
- 39:53 What is brutal triage?
- 41:52 Young technologies don’t have great tooling
- 43:26 Winning the Just Do It award (3 times)
- 46:43 Interface programming has come a long way
15 эпизодов
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