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Changelog Media
Your one-stop shop for all Changelog podcasts. Weekly shows about software development, developer culture, open source, building startups, artificial intelligence, shipping code to production, and the people involved. Yes, we focus on the people. Everything else is an implementation detail.
Episodes
Mentioned books

Apr 11, 2024 • 55min
Off to see the Wiz (JS Party #318)
Google teams merge Angular and Wiz frameworks, discussing the benefit of combining ideas. Focus on Wiz's history, deferrable views, and efficient code loading. Clerk's polished UIs and user management platform revolutionize authentication experience. Explore React-style programming model in Wiz and Angular's migration path for high performance development.

4 snips
Apr 10, 2024 • 48min
RAG continues to rise (Practical AI #264)
Daniel & Chris chat with 'the funniest guy in AI', Demetrios Brinkmann, discussing results of the MLOps Community survey and the upcoming AI Quality Conference. Topics include RAG models, generative AI workloads, transformer architecture, and neuromorphic computing.

Apr 9, 2024 • 44min
Ship software, not code (Go Time #311)
Brazil-based software developer Carlos Becker discusses the joy sparked by GOOS and GOARCH, transitioning to Go, multi-platform deployment with TinyGo, efficiency and challenges in Go programming, comparing Go to other languages for infrastructure as code, and exploring Go for MLOps.

Apr 8, 2024 • 9min
HashiCorp strikes back (Changelog News #89)
HashiCorp clashes with OpenTofu over code infringement, Polar offers a Patreon-like platform for software creators, HuggingFace releases Common Corpus of LLM data, and Loki aids in fact verification. Plus, insights on NATS.io simplifying microservices

Apr 7, 2024 • 1h 14min
Deploying projects vs products (Ship It! #98)
Verónica López, Kubernetes SIG Release tech lead & distributed systems engineer, discusses deploying services at scale with topics like blue-green, red-black, canary deployments, feature flagging, A/B testing. They also touch on release engineering, software maintenance challenges, Kubernetes deployment obstacles, and software deployment strategies like blue-green, red-black, canary deployments.

Apr 5, 2024 • 1h 23min
Kaizen! There goes my PgHero (Changelog & Friends #38)
The podcast discusses testing CDNs, next steps with Postgres on Neon, and the challenges of deploying reliable distributed services. They also explore response times across different continents, performance metrics, and analyzing caching ratios. Additionally, they talk about optimizing databases with PG hero, streamlining team communication with FireHydrant's Signals, and remote engine testing with NATS for scalable application development.

Apr 4, 2024 • 1h 35min
Getting to Resend (Changelog Interviews #585)
Zeno Rocha, creator of the Dracula theme and co-founder of Resend, discusses work-life balance, parenthood's impact, immigration experiences, Y Combinator interview prep, challenges of email sending, and the future of Resend including a possible Series A round.

Apr 3, 2024 • 49min
The magic of a trace (Go Time #310)
Felix Geisendörfer & Michael Knyszek discuss the magic of Go execution traces, covering their usefulness for debugging slow requests and enhancing performance. They delve into the evolution of tracing in backend development, highlighting challenges and improvements. The podcast also explores the future of debugging latency using flight recording and tracing in Go, along with their unpopular opinions on technology choices and music listening preferences.

8 snips
Apr 2, 2024 • 39min
Should kids still learn to code? (Practical AI #263)
Discussions on teaching kids to code, challenges in AI adoption by non-technical individuals, and the balance between generative AI interfaces and search engines. Plus insights on AI communities, skill evolution, and the impact of AI on productivity.

Apr 1, 2024 • 10min
Who in the world is Jia Tan? (Changelog News #88)
The podcast explores the discovery of a backdoor in liblzma, a critical dependency of OpenSSH. It delves into supply chain cyber attacks, the involvement of maintainer Lassie Colin, and GitHub user Gia Tan. The narrative discusses trust-building in open-source projects and challenges faced by unpaid maintainers.


