A Habitat Thinking Guide by Russ Miles
The question is not "should we have a platform?" The question is "is the platform we already have any good?"
Every organisation that builds software already has a platform — a sprawl of tools, processes, tribal knowledge, and shadow systems that shape how developers turn ideas into running software. Most platform engineering books tell you what to build. This one teaches you how to see.
The Platform Steward introduces a five-level literacy framework that progresses from awareness to stewardship:
- Act I: Awakening — See the platform you already have. Understand the amplifier principle: platforms magnify whatever practices exist, good or dysfunctional. Learn to map the territory before designing solutions.
- Act II: Designing — Master the ten platform patterns. Design for cognitive flow, not just functionality. Ship incrementally, measure what matters, build adoption through influence.
- Act III: Cultivating — The platform as a learning system. Distributed cognition. Teaching and multiplying. The shift from building to stewarding.
Between the chapters: Le Bon Mot interludes set in a café-library slightly outside time, where a platform engineer named Mara, a sharp practitioner called Case, a French Bulldog named Sophie, and a mysterious presence called the Djinn wrestle with the ideas that resist bullet points.
Drawing on Kathy Sierra, Christopher Alexander, Nora Bateson, Edwin Hutchins, Margaret-Anne Storey, and Epictetus, this book gives you a way of thinking about platforms that will outlast every tool in your current stack.
Part of the Habitat Thinking series.