Épisodes

  • Better API docs, customer support lessons, and cannoli
    Jul 2 2026

    Jake shares lessons from rebuilding a permissions system around flexible roles, temporary permission leases, and delegated user management. He also discusses adding Apple Pay and Google Pay, plus designing automated text-message payment flows that use numbered choices instead of complicated keywords.


    Michael talks about building lender integrations, the importance of adding real context to API documentation, and using Claude to turn JSON specifications into PHP DTOs and enums. He also reflects on his team’s new helpdesk rotation, where direct exposure to users has uncovered long-standing bugs, inefficient manual processes, and opportunities for developers to better understand the people using their software.


    They finish with the challenges of parenting teenagers, preparations for Laracon US in Boston, including a search for coffee, donuts, bagels, and cannoli.

    • (00:00) - Club World Cup surprises and sports talk
    • (03:12) - UFC, LeBron and basketball moves
    • (06:33) - Rebuilding roles and permissions
    • (08:39) - Permission leases and delegated management
    • (10:02) - Apple Pay, Google Pay and text-based payments
    • (11:50) - Lender integrations and better API documentation
    • (14:08) - A new developer and the helpdesk rotation
    • (17:13) - Automated tickets and failed queue jobs
    • (18:54) - The address autocomplete bug
    • (19:58) - When tiny code changes create hidden failures
    • (23:02) - Why support requests need a real ticket
    • (25:17) - Developers learning directly from customers
    • (27:53) - Cross-department training and business context
    • (30:51) - Building trust beyond Slack
    • (32:02) - Weekly stress, workload and personal check-ins
    • (35:18) - Parenting teenagers and setting curfews
    • (37:10) - Planning for Laracon US in Boston
    • (40:00) - Australian and American school calendars
    • (42:51) - Vacations, PTO and wrapping up
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    45 min
  • Ten years of the show, conference ticketing, and database access
    Jun 18 2026

    In this milestone 10-year anniversary episode of North Meets South, Michael and Jake reflect on a decade of podcasting, from their first awkward recordings and early Laravel community connections to the friendships, conferences, and recurring topics that have shaped the show over nearly 200 episodes.


    A large part of the episode focuses on Michael's work-in-progress event ticketing platform inspired by the challenges of running Laracon AU. He explains the limitations of existing conference ticketing systems, the difficulties of collecting attendee information for multiple conference-adjacent events, and his vision for a more attendee-centric system that manages profiles, dietary requirements, event registrations, and conference networks across multiple Laravel events.


    To wrap up, Michael and Jake discuss giving developers direct database access, the security implications of SSH access, database permissions, and Laravel filesystem configuration, including why enabling exception throwing for filesystem operations can help avoid silent failures.

    Show links

    • Laracon AU
    • Laracon US
    • TicketTailor
    • Transistor
    • Laravel News Podcast
    • No Plans to Merge
    • Notes on Work
    • Talking Businessly
    • Larabelles
    • LaraProm
    • WalletWallet
    • Laravel filesystem throw on fail
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    57 min
  • Fast Laravel with Jason McCreary
    Jun 4 2026

    Michael and Jake are joined by Jason "JMac" McCreary to talk the impact of AI on Laravel Shift and modern upgrade workflows, and his latest Fast Laravel course focused on edge caching and application performance.

    Jason shares how Laravel Shift has evolved alongside AI-assisted development, why recent Laravel releases have changed the upgrade landscape, and why he still believes there's value in keeping applications aligned with the latest framework conventions rather than simply running composer update. The conversation explores how AI tools are influencing developer workflows, the future of upgrade automation, and new ways Shift is integrating with agentic coding tools.

    The second half of the episode dives deep into Fast Laravel, Jason's course on making Laravel applications dramatically faster using Cloudflare edge caching. Drawing on decades of web development experience, he explains why page caching remains one of the most effective performance techniques available, how Laravel's default stateful behaviour can prevent effective caching, and the practical steps required to achieve cache rates approaching 99% on real-world applications.

    Show Links

    • Laravel Shift
    • Shift AI Skills
    • Fast Laravel
    • Separate `static` middleware
    • Managed queues on Laravel Cloud
    • Laravel Cloud

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    56 min
  • Laracon AU CFP, developer storytelling, and audience engagement
    May 21 2026

    Michael shares a behind-the-scenes look at organising Laracon AU 2026, including the new committee-based CFP review process, the tooling built to manage the talk submissions, and how AI-assisted workflows helped shape the final conference schedule. The conversation dives into balancing technical depth with audience engagement, designing conference cadence to avoid cognitive overload, and why advanced technical talks are so difficult to execute well.

    Jake and Michael also discuss the realities of crafting technical presentations, from simplifying code examples and avoiding "proof of expertise" syndrome, to using AI tools as collaborative thought partners when preparing talks. Along the way, they explore how conference organisers think about audience fit, production experience, practical takeaways, and keeping attendees engaged during deeply technical sessions.

    Show links

    • Laracon AU
    • Model Context Protocol (MCP)
    • Riff & Refine: Trust the Process
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    47 min
  • Unused APIs, Passport testing traps, and local AI bottlenecks
    May 7 2026

    In this episode, Michael shares details from a major internal platform shift at work, including the decision to completely remove an underused public JSON API and rebuild integrations around real customer needs instead of hypothetical use cases. The conversation dives deep into Laravel Passport, Sanctum, OAuth flows, request authorisation, and some tricky edge cases around testing authenticated APIs.

    Jake then broadens the conversation into AI infrastructure, local model hosting, security implications of autonomous AI systems, NVIDIA hardware demand, and the future potential of photonic processors as a solution to the growing power and cooling bottlenecks facing AI workloads.

    Show links

    • Laravel Passport
    • Laravel Sanctum
    • Laravel Passport actingAs testing helpers
    • PHP enums
    • PHPStan
    • Larastan
    • Zapier
    • Claude
    • NVIDIA DGX systems
    • Photonic processors
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    36 min
  • Gents on Gent with David Hemphill
    Apr 23 2026

    Michael and Jake are joined by David Hemphill to discuss David's macOS app Gent, a task runner built on the "Ralph loop" pattern for AI-powered coding workflows.

    The conversation covers how Gent takes a project requirements document (PRD), breaks it into small tasks that fit within a single context window, and runs them sequentially or in parallel using copy-on-write clones and Git worktrees.

    We discuss our own evolving workflows with Claude Code, including plan mode, the "Grill Me" skill for stress-testing plans, managing context windows, and the /rewind command.

    Show Links

    • David Hemphill
    • Gent
    • Ralph loop
    • Conductor
    • Polyscope
    • Chief
    • "Grill Me" skill
    • Matt Pocock / AI Hero
    • Solo
    • The Eternal Promise: A History of Attempts to Eliminate Programmers
    • Laracon
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    1 h et 1 min
  • Flight booking mistakes, Laracon AU, and dead letters
    Apr 9 2026

    In this episode, Michael and Jake catch up ahead of Laracon and share a wild travel story involving flight changes, third-party booking headaches, and expensive rebooking.

    Jake then shares a fun personal highlight: attending the NCAA Men's Basketball Championship and watching Michigan win.

    The conversation shifts into development work, where Jake dives into building a centralised system for managing failed Laravel jobs across multiple applications. He explains the challenges of aggregating failed jobs without Horizon, how they built a custom package to expose APIs for inspecting and retrying jobs, and the nuances of Laravel's queue system.

    They also explore ideas for turning this work into a Laracon talk, emphasising practical, experience-driven content over purely technical deep dives.

    Show Links

    • Laracon AU
    • Laravel Horizon
    • Sentry
    • Dead Letter Queue
    • (00:00) - Introduction and road to episode 200
    • (01:00) - Laracon plans and travel setup
    • (02:00) - Flight booking disaster and schedule change
    • (06:00) - Rebooking flights and unexpected costs
    • (09:00) - Lessons learned with third-party bookings
    • (10:00) - Michigan wins NCAA championship
    • (12:30) - Midwest geography and personal background
    • (12:45) - Building a centralized failed jobs system
    • (15:30) - Challenges with retries and tracking failures
    • (16:40) - The "Dead Letter" package and API approach
    • (23:20) - Turning real-world problems into Laracon talks
    • (48:20) - Wrapping up and outro
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    49 min
  • OIDC, bastion hosts, and production safety
    Mar 19 2026

    In this episode, Jake and Michael dive into modern infrastructure security practices, sparked by an annual audit and the painful process of rotating AWS IAM tokens. That experience leads into a broader discussion on why long-lived credentials in GitHub Actions are risky, and how OIDC (OpenID Connect) enables a more secure, short-lived, role-based alternative.

    Show links

    • Scout Suite
    • OpenID Connect (OIDC)
    • Laravel Forge
    • Laravel Horizon
    • Scramble
    • Claude
    • LoRA (Low-Rank Adaptation)
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    38 min