Updates
S1 E2 - Building Stuff on AWS in my Basement - API Gateway, AWS Lambda, and Amazon Bedrock
This week, we will go over deploying our generative service to AWS, adding the ability to pass unique identifiers as parameters.
I'm gonna learn Go!
Updates
This week, we will go over deploying our generative service to AWS, adding the ability to pass unique identifiers as parameters.
Updates
For my next show, coming up this Friday at 3pm ET, you can expect to hang out with me as I wind my way through building a simple generative service using Go and AWS Lambda.
Updates
I'm gonna be doing a live-stream this Friday on Twitch. It will be just myself, sitting at the desk you see in the photo above, talking about building stuff on AWS for about 90 minutes. I've been thinking of doing something like this for a while.
TIL
Wow, that title is a mouthful. Here's what it means: * You can use AWS SAM to easily construct at Serverless Application on AWS where the AWS Lambda code is written in Go * You can deploy your app to AWS from the CLI with sam deploy which is nice
TIL
A while back I created a repo on GitHub that was simply the output of doing sam init and choosing the AWS Quick Start Template for a Hello World Example. From there, I simplified the SAM template.yml file a little, restructured the folder where all my Go code lives,
TIL
While working on my chat-cli program, I realized that waiting for a response from Amazon Bedrock could take some time, depending on the nature of your prompt. To offer a better user experience, I looked into the InvokeModelWithResponseStream API method, which allows you to receive the response from Bedrock in
TIL
In yesterday's post I talked about building an Amazon Bedrock powered CLI that allowed for an interactive chat. Below is more or less the code I started with to create the command line chat. As you can see, there is an infinite loop nested within another infinite loop.
Updates
chat-cli is a project I've been working on for the past couple months. It started out as a way to kick the tires on the now publicly available Amazon Bedrock service, and also as a way for me to learn a bit more about Go, and the AWS
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AWS App Runner was launched in 2021, and offers developers an incredibly easy way to deploy web applications.
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I think Go has taken a really smart approach to package and dependency management by simplifying things, removing the need for a complex package manager, and creating a global namespace.
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I've been getting going with Go for about a week now and I've already learned so much! I realized last weekend that I had two primary interests I want to focus on throughout my journey. The first is that I really want to learn the language
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Even though I've got some experience with Go, I'm gonna set out on this journey as if I'd just learned of Go today.