PeeringDB’s Product Roadmap for 2023

By on 7 Feb 2023

Category: Community

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PeeringDB wants to build more agility into the Product Management process in 2023. This blog post describes what we have planned for the start of the year. It also describes how we want to work throughout the year, and how you can help us make good choices.

We are starting the year with features that open new paths to us. Your input will help us choose how we move down them.

Our roundup of 2022 noted that we have some big things planned for the start of 2023, the biggest of which are two new objects. The new carrier object is a way for providers of high-capacity links to show which interconnection facilities they are in. We deployed the carrier object in our January release with the minimal possible structure. We want users to tell us what additional features they cannot do without.

The next big new addition is a campus object, which interconnection facilities can use to show that inter-building cross-connects have the ease of use as those within a building. This will help buyers understand when they don’t need to be in the same building as something they want to connect to.

We can expand either or both of these objects. We need your feedback to help us decide what would make them more valuable.

Respondents to our annual surveys have consistently told us that network configuration data is what they value most. They are also quite divided about the website design. Some people love its simplicity and others want something more modern.

We knew that we didn’t have enough information to make good decisions about how to improve things for the people who want change without disappointing those who like it the way it is. We have deployed Google Analytics for beta.peeringdb.com and would like to deploy it to www.peeringdb.com and docs.peeringdb.com. This will give us important information about how people use our site. We’ll use this information to understand the problems people experience and develop ways to solve them.

We also have several users who rely on our API or a local cache of PeeringDB data. So, we want to make it easier for users to identify the deltas between what they have in PeeringDB and their local configuration management. This is the focus of the projects we’re taking to the NANOG 87 Hackathon.

We want to work with tool developers and anyone who relies on PeeringDB as a source of network configuration data. Ultimately, we’d like to offer a way for users to automatically identify deltas, the changes that could be made, and ways to make or approve those changes.

Throughout the year, we’d like to focus on one theme at a time and deliver a set of significant improvements, before moving on to the next relevant theme.

Please let us know how we can make PeeringDB more valuable for your organization. As always, you can submit an issue, or comment on existing issues in GitHub. But you can also send an email or chat with us at various community events.

Leo Vegoda is developing PeeringDB’s product roadmap.

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The views expressed by the authors of this blog are their own and do not necessarily reflect the views of APNIC. Please note a Code of Conduct applies to this blog.

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