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Dwayne Johnson’s movies are actually really educational (Backstage #6)

Come hang with Adam and Jerod at OSCON's expo hall. Normally here is where we list off the topics of the conversation, but we'll shoot it straight with you. We didn't have any topics. We talk about blockchain and serverless, but not insightfully. This is just us hanging out, being nerds, and making each other laugh. If you're in to that, you'll be in to this.

Jul 25, 201927 min

Go is eating the world of software (Changelog Interviews #354)

We're joined by Ron Evans at OSCON on the expo hall floor talking about Go and how it's eating the world of software. Specifically we're talking about TinyGo and what they're doing to bring the Go programming language to micro-controllers and modern web browsers. According to Ron Evans, "embedded systems and Go are the most exciting things happening right now."

Jul 25, 201954 min

Go is eating the world of software (Go Time)

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It's The Changelog in the Go Time feed! Adam Stacoviak and Jerod Santo met up with Ron Evans at OSCON on the expo hall floor to talk about Go and how it's eating the world of software. Specifically they talked about TinyGo and what they're doing to bring the Go programming language to micro-controllers and modern web browsers. According to Ron Evans, "embedded systems and Go are the most exciting things happening right now."

Jul 23, 201954 min

AI code that facilitates good science (Practical AI #51)

We're talking with Joel Grus, author of _Data Science from Scratch, 2nd Edition_, senior research engineer at the Allen Institute for AI (AI2), and maintainer of AllenNLP. We discussed Joel's book, which has become a personal favorite of the hosts, and why he decided to approach data science and AI "from scratch." Joel also gives us a glimpse into AI2, an introduction to AllenNLP, and some tips for writing good research code. This episode is packed full of reproducible AI goodness!

Jul 19, 201953 min

The war for the soul of open source (Changelog Interviews #353)

Adam Jacob (co-founder and board member of Chef) joins the show to talk about the keynote he’s giving at OSCON this week. The keynote is titled "The war for the soul of open source." We talked about what made open source great in the first place, what went wrong, the pitfalls of open core models, licensing, and more. By the way, we’re at OSCON this week so if you make your way to the expo hall, make sure you come by our booth and say hi.

Jul 16, 20191h 30m

Learning the BASICs (Changelog Interviews)

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We partnered with Red Hat to promote Season 3 of Command Line Heroes — an original podcast from Red Hat, hosted by Saron Yitbarek, about the people who transform technology from the command line up. It's an awesome show and we’re huge fans of Saron and the team behind the podcast, so we wanted to share it with you. Learn more and subscribe at redhat.com/commandlineheroes.

Jul 16, 201926 min

Web development in Go (Go Time #92)

Mat Ryer, Mark Bates, Johnny Boursiquot, and Aaron Schlesinger discuss web development in Go. Go is great at writing server technology, but how good is it for web development? We'll talk about HTTP, templating, the front-end, Wasm, and we even discuss Buffalo with its creator, Mark Bates.

Jul 16, 20191h 6m

React + WebAssembly = ❤️ (JS Party #84)

KBall catches up with Florian Rival about bring a C++ based game engine to the web by compiling to WebAssembly and creating a React-based frontend.

Jul 15, 201945 min

The Pragmatic Programmers (Changelog Interviews #352)

Dave Thomas and Andy Hunt, best known as the authors of The Pragmatic Programmer and founders of The Pragmatic Bookshelf, joined the show today to talk about the 20th anniversary edition of The Pragmatic Programmer. This is a beloved book to software developers all over the world, so we wanted to catch up with Andy and Dave to talk about how this book came to be, some of the wisdom shared in its contents, as well as the impact it's had on the world of software. Also, the beta book is now "fully content complete" and is going to production. If you decide to pick up the ebook, you'll get a coupon for 50% off the hardcover when it comes out this fall.

Jul 11, 20191h 18m

if err != nil (Go Time #91)

Mat and Carmen along with guest panelists Dave Cheney, Peter Bourgon, and Marcel van Lohuizen discuss errors in Go, including the new try proposal. Many questions get answered...What do we think about how errors work in Go? How is it different from other languages/approaches? What do/don't we like? What don’t we like? How do we handle errors these days? What's going on with the try proposal?

Jul 11, 20191h 13m

An honest conversation about burnout (JS Party #83)

Suz, Feross, and Emma have an honest conversation about burnout. They ask questions like — How do developers deal with burnout? What is burnout? What are examples of burnout in open source? Plus they close the show by sharing tips for avoiding burnout and also how to manage burnout if/when it happens.

Jul 9, 20191h 2m

Mastering the art of quitting (Founders Talk #67)

Lynne Tye is the founder of Key Values, a platform where developers find engineering teams that share their values. To be more precise, Lynne is a solo-founder. She’s also a team of one. Lynne's path to becoming a founder was anything but typical. She had plans to follow in her parent's and sister’s footsteps to go into academia, and got two years into pursuing her PhD in Neuroscience before she made one of the best choices in her life — she quit. Lynne has mastered the art of quitting, at the right time of course, and she’s used that art as her secret weapon in her quest to become a founder.

Jul 5, 20191h 38m

Go tooling (Go Time #90)

We're talking about the tools we use every day help us to be productive! This show will be a great introduction for those new to Go tooling, with some discussion around what we think of them after using some of them for many years.

Jul 3, 20191h 6m

Celebrating episode 50 and the neural net! (Practical AI #50)

Woo hoo! As we celebrate reaching episode 50, we come full circle to discuss the basics of neural networks. If you are just jumping into AI, then this is a great primer discussion with which to take that leap. Our commitment to making artificial intelligence practical, productive, and accessible to everyone has never been stronger, so we invite you to join us for the next 50 episodes!

Jul 3, 201950 min

Python's Tale (Changelog Interviews)

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We partnered with Red Hat to promote Season 3 of Command Line Heroes — an original podcast from Red Hat, hosted by Saron Yitbarek, about the people who transform technology from the command line up. It's an awesome show and we’re huge fans of Saron and the team behind the podcast, so we wanted to share it with you. Learn more and subscribe at redhat.com/commandlineheroes.

Jul 2, 201928 min

LIVE from NodeConf Colombia (JS Party #82)

KBall MC’d a live show at NodeConf Colombia with a panel of 4 experts from the Node community — Kat Marchán, Anna Henningsen, Ruben Bridgewater, and James Snell. It was a great discussion about the future of Node.js and the Node.js ecosystem.

Jul 1, 201935 min

Maintainer spotlight! Ned Batchelder (Changelog Interviews #351)

In this episode we’re shinning our maintainer spotlight on Ned Batchelder. Ned is one of the lucky ones out there that gets to double-dip — his day job is working on open source at edX, working on the Open edX community team. Ned is also a “single maintainer” of coverage.py - a tool for measuring code coverage of Python programs. This episode with Ned kicks off the first of many in our maintainer spotlight series where we dig deep into the life of an open source software maintainer. We’re producing this series in partnership with Tidelift. Huge thanks to Tidelift for making this series possible.

Jun 28, 201950 min

Exposing the deception of DeepFakes (Practical AI #49)

This week we bend reality to expose the deceptions of deepfake videos. We talk about what they are, why they are so dangerous, and what you can do to detect and resist their insidious influence. In a political environment rife with distrust, disinformation, and conspiracy theories, deepfakes are being weaponized and proliferated as the latest form of state-sponsored information warfare. Join us for an episode scarier than your favorite horror movie, because this AI bogeyman is real!

Jun 25, 201955 min

The story of Konami-JS (JS Party #81)

Jerod and Divya are joined by George Mandis to learn all about his "frivolous" JavaScript library that's helped countless websites implement the beloved cheat code. Ten years later and still actively maintained, Konami-JS has stood the test of time and produced some epic stories along the way (you'll love hearing how George broke Marvel.com).

Jun 21, 201954 min

Boldly going where no data tools have gone before (Changelog Interviews #350)

Computer Scientist Yaw Anokwa joins the show to tell us how Open Data Kit is enabling data collection efforts around the world. From monitoring rainforests to observing elections to tracking outbreaks, ODK has done it all. We hear its origin story, ruminate on why it's been so successful, learn how the software works, and even answer the question, "are people really using it in space?!" All that and more...

Jun 19, 20191h 14m

Model inspection and interpretation at Seldon (Practical AI #48)

Interpreting complicated models is a hot topic. How can we trust and manage AI models that we can't explain? In this episode, Janis Klaise, a data scientist with Seldon, joins us to talk about model interpretation and Seldon's new open source project called Alibi. Janis also gives some of his thoughts on production ML/AI and how Seldon addresses related problems.

Jun 17, 201943 min

JavaScript is the CO2 of the web (JS Party #80)

KBall, Divya, and Nick get together with Chris Ferdinandi to talk about vanilla JavaScript, best resources for learning, and our favorite vanilla JavaScript tips, tricks and APIs.

Jun 14, 20191h 4m

The state of CSS in 2019 (Changelog Interviews #349)

We’re talking with Sacha Greif to discuss the State of CSS survey and results. CSS is evolving faster than ever. And, coming off the heels of their annual State of JavaScript survey, they've decided to take on the world of styles and selectors to help identify the latests patterns and trends in CSS. We talk through the history and motivations of this survey, the methodology of their data collection, the tooling involved to build and run the survey, and of course we dig deep into the survey results and talk through the insights we found most interesting.

Jun 14, 20191h 16m

Failing to build a billion-dollar company (Founders Talk #66)

Sahil Lavingia is the founder and CEO of Gumroad, a platform for creators to sell the things they make. Since 2011 Gumroad has sent over $200 million dollars to creators. That’s a big number. Sahil’s ambitions lead him to believe that Gumroad would become a billion-dollar company, have hundreds of employees, and eventually IPO. That didn’t happen. We talk through Sahil’s journey with Gumroad, why it failed to meet his goals, the path he's on today and the things he now values…but to understand why Gumroad didn’t live up to his expectations, we really have to understand the backstory of Gumroad.

Jun 14, 20191h 12m

The art of execution (Go Time #89)

Panelists Mat Ryer, Johnny Boursiquot, Jon Calhoun, and guest panelist Egon Elbre discuss what they build, why, and how they do it. Everybody has their own unique process for getting things done, so today we're going to learn about them. Too often processes get in the way and slow things down. How do we look for signs of those slow downs? How do we create a space where people are free to discuss their thoughts and struggles?

Jun 12, 20191h 21m

GANs, RL, and transfer learning oh my! (Practical AI #47)

Daniel and Chris explore three potentially confusing topics - generative adversarial networks (GANs), deep reinforcement learning (DRL), and transfer learning. Are these types of neural network architectures? Are they something different? How are they used? Well, If you have ever wondered how AI can be creative, wished you understood how robots get their smarts, or were impressed at how some AI practitioners conquer big challenges quickly, then this is your episode!

Jun 11, 201951 min

Spicy fonts and static sites 🌶️ (JS Party #79)

Zach Leatherman joins the party with Divya and Nick to talk about fonts and static site generators! Zach shares his knowledge about font loading, what can go wrong, and how we can avoid issues. Then we discuss Zach's newest project, Eleventy, a simple static site generator, and the panelists share things they are excited about.

Jun 10, 20191h 6m

Go 💚 open source (Go Time #88)

Panelists Mark Bates, Johnny Boursiquot, and Carmen Andoh discuss Go and open source — what is it, the value in contributing, what it means to be a maintainer, best practices, and the recent blog post from Chris Siebenmann titled "Go is Google's language, not ours."

Jun 7, 20191h 5m

Python's new governance and core team (Changelog Interviews #348)

We’re talking with Brett Cannon for a behind the scenes look at Guido stepping down as Python’s BDFL (Benevolent dictator for life) and the process they had to go through to establish a new governance model, the various proposed PEPs to establish this new direction, the winning PEP, and what the future holds for Python.

Jun 6, 20191h 11m

The Pro Stand costs more than my first car (Backstage #5)

Jerod, Adam, and Nick get together mere minutes after Apple's 2019 WWDC keynote to talk about all the news and announcements. Will we be buying the new Mac Pro? What about that drool-worthy 6k retina display? Will iOS's dark mode deliver where Mojave's hasn't? Expect all that and at least 2 bad puns in this episode of Backstage.

Jun 4, 20191h 29m

Visualizing and understanding RNNs (Practical AI #46)

Andreas Madsen, a freelance ML/AI engineer and Distill.pub author, joins us to discuss his work visualizing neural networks and recurrent neural units. Andreas discusses various neural unites, RNNs in general, and the "why" of neural network visualization. He also gives us his perspective on ML/AI freelancing and moving from web development to AI research.

Jun 4, 201946 min

Developer strengths and weaknesses 🏋️‍♂️ (JS Party #78)

Jerod, Suz, Divya, and Kball share their thoughts, opinions, and advice on developer strengths and weaknesses — compromise, communication, tool mastery, deep dives into dev history, and mentorship/sponsorship. .

May 31, 201957 min

What are you optimizing for? (Founders Talk #65)

Saron Yitbarek is the founder and CEO of CodeNewbie — one of the most supportive community of programmers and people learning to code. Saron hosts the CodeNewbie podcast, Command Line Heroes from Red Hat, and she’s also the creator of Codeland Conference taking place on July 22 this year in New York City. We talk through getting started, lessons learned, mental health, developing and running a conference…but our conversation begins with a pivotal question asked of Saron..."What are you optimizing for?"

May 31, 20191h 13m

Functional programming? (Go Time #87)

Panelists Mat Ryer and Johnny Boursiquot are joined by guest panelist Aaron Schlesinger to ask/answer questions like; What is functional programming? Can you do functional programming in Go? Can we apply any learnings from functional programming languages as we write Go code today?

May 29, 20191h 13m

How to get plugged into the AI community (Practical AI #45)

Chris and Daniel take you on a tour of local and global AI events, and discuss how to get the most out of your experiences. From access to experts to developing new industry relationships, learn how to get your foot in the door and make connections that help you grow as an AI practitioner. Then drawing from their own wealth of experience as speakers, they dive into what it takes to give a memorable world-class talk that your audience will love. They break down how to select the topic, write the abstract, put the presentation together, and deliver the narrative with impact!

May 28, 20191h 2m

It’s just JavaScript®️ (JS Party #77)

Jerod, Kball, Divya, and Nick share their initial impressions of GitHub's recently announced package registry, what JS skills are trending in job listings, and shout outs!

May 24, 20191h 17m

Creating and selling multiplayer online games (Changelog Interviews #347)

We’re talking with Victor Zhou about the explosion of the .io game genre. We talked through all the details around building and running one of these games, the details behind Victor’s super popular game called Generals — which he eventually sold, and we also covered the economics behind creating and selling one of these games.

May 24, 20191h 18m

Building a hardware/software product company (Founders Talk #64)

Colin Billings is the founder and CEO of Orro where they've built the first truly intelligent home lighting system. It knows when you're in the room, and adjusts the lights automatically for you. But Colin’s path to starting this company wasn’t a straight line. Like most innovative products, Orro has an interesting beginning — after-all, they're going up against the giants.

May 23, 20191h 6m

Go modules and the Athens project (Go Time #86)

Panelists Mat Ryer and Carmen Andoh are joined by guest panelists Marwan Sulaiman and Aaron Schlesinger to discuss Go modules and the Athens project.

May 22, 20191h 16m

AI adoption in the enterprise (Practical AI #44)

At the recent O'Reilly AI Conference in New York City, Chris met up with O'Reilly Chief Data Scientist Ben Lorica, the Program Chair for Strata Data, the AI Conference, and TensorFlow World. O’Reilly’s 'AI Adoption in the Enterprise' report had just been released, so naturally Ben and Chris wanted to do a deep dive into enterprise AI adoption to discuss strategy, execution, and implications.

May 21, 201957 min

Off the grid social networking with Manyverse (Changelog Interviews #346)

We’re talking with Andre Staltz, creator of Manyverse — a social network off the grid. It’s open source and free in every sense of the word. We talked through the backstory, how a user’s network gets formed, how data is stored and shared, why off-grid is so important to Andre, and what type of user uses an “off-the-grid” social network.

May 18, 20191h 19m

You don’t have to dress up (JS Party #76)

KBall, Emma, and Chris explain some things to each other like we're five, bring stories of the week, and share some sweet pro tips.

May 18, 201953 min

Go for beginners (Go Time #85)

How do beginners learn Go? This episode is meant to engage both non-Go users that listen to sister podcasts here on Changelog, or any Go-curious programmers out there, as well as encourage those that have started to learn Go and want to level up beyond the basics. On this episode we're aiming to answer questions about how to learn Go, identify resources that are available, and where you can go to continue your learning journey.

May 15, 20191h 7m

When AI meets quantum mechanics (Practical AI #43)

Can AI help quantum physicists? Can quantum physicists help the AI community? The answers are yes and yes! Dr. Shohini Ghose from Wilfrid Laurier University and Marcus Edwards from the University of Waterloo join us to discuss ML/AI's impact on physics and quantum computing potential for ML/AI.

May 14, 20191h 2m

LIVE at ReactJS Girls (JS Party #75)

Emma Wedekind MC’d a live show at ReactJS Girls with a panel of 3 amazing women — Eve Porcello, Marcy Sutton, and Kate Beard. It was a great discussion covering the biggest challenges they've faced, how no matter who you are imposter syndrome occurs and never really goes away, ways to support and encourage under-represented groups and people to get into tech, and how to choose a topic when writing a talk.

May 14, 201933 min

Quirk and Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) (Changelog Interviews #345)

We're talking with Evan Conrad — for most of Evan's life he has suffered from severe panic attacks, often twice per week. Eventually he stumbled upon a therapy method called Cognitive Behavioral Therapy, or CBT for short, and saw positive results. This led him to create Quirk, an open source iOS app which allows its users to practice one of the most common formats of CBT. On the show we mentioned a new podcast we're launching called Brain Science — it's hosted by Adam Stacoviak and Mireille Reece, a Doctor of Clinical Psychology. Brain Science is a podcast for the curious that explores the inner-workings of the human brain to understand behavior change, habit formation, mental health, and the human condition. It's Brain Science applied — not just how does the brain work, but how do we apply what we know about the brain to better our lives. Stay tuned after the show for a special preview of Brain Science. If you haven't yet, right now would be a great time to subscribe to Master at changelog.com/master. It's one feed to rule them all, plus some extras that only hit the master feed.

May 10, 20191h 11m

Developers want to develop things (Backstage #4)

Nick Janetakis joins Jerod backstage to talk shop. We discuss how Nick is using the Changelog.com source code as a guide to build his video course platform, coding practices we've developed over the years, how to balance between shipping features and creating content, newsletters as the new social network, how Nick makes his videos, and a whole lot more.

May 10, 20191h 2m

Hardware hacking with TinyGo and Gopherbot (Go Time #84)

Mat Ryer hosts our first one-on-one interview-style episode with special guest Ron Evans. Mat asks Ron to teach us about Go in IoT, hardware hacking at Gophercon, TinyGo, and Gopherbot.

May 8, 20191h 26m

When in doubt, log an issue (JS Party #74)

Nick and Mikeal catch up with Henry Zhu, the maintainer of Babel and host of the Maintainers Anonymous and Hope in Source podcasts. We discuss his path to open source maintainer-ship. We also chat about best practices for interacting with maintainers, while remembering that people are behind open source, and we talk self-care and avoiding burnout, culminating in a self-care repo being created to gather and discuss tips to care for yourself.

May 7, 201959 min

TensorFlow Dev Summit 2019 (Practical AI #42)

This week Daniel and Chris discuss the announcements made recently at TensorFlow Dev Summit 2019. They kick it off with the alpha release of TensorFlow 2.0, which features eager execution and an improved user experience through Keras, which has been integrated into TensorFlow itself. They round out the list with TensorFlow Datasets, TensorFlow Addons, TensorFlow Extended (TFX), and the upcoming inaugural O'Reilly TensorFlow World conference.

May 7, 201959 min