

Software Engineering Radio - the podcast for professional software developers
team@se-radio.net (SE-Radio Team)
Software Engineering Radio is a podcast targeted at the professional software developer. The goal is to be a lasting educational resource, not a newscast. SE Radio covers all topics software engineering. Episodes are either tutorials on a specific topic, or an interview with a well-known character from the software engineering world. All SE Radio episodes are original content — we do not record conferences or talks given in other venues. SE Radio is brought to you by the IEEE Computer Society and IEEE Software magazine.
Episodes
Mentioned books

Sep 17, 2014 • 55min
Episode 210: Stefan Tilkov on Architecture and Micro Services
Micro services is an emerging trend in software architecture that focuses on small, lightweight applications as a means to avoid large, unmaintainable, monolithic systems. This approach allows for individual technology stacks for each component and more resilient systems. Micro services uses well-known communication schemes such as REST but also require new technologies for the implementation. […]

Sep 5, 2014 • 1h 8min
Episode 209: Josiah Carlson on Redis
Josiah Carlson discusses Redis, an in-memory single-threaded data structure server. A Redis mailing list contributor and author, Josiah talks with Robert about the differences between Redis and a key-value store, client-side versus server-side data structures, consistency models, embedding Lua scripts within the server, what you can do with Redis from an application standpoint, native locking […]

8 snips
Aug 26, 2014 • 1h 6min
Episode 208: Randy Shoup on Hiring in the Software Industry
Randy Shoup, former CTO at KIXEYE and director of engineering at Google, shares invaluable insights on hiring in the software industry. He discusses the critical role of company culture and effective recruitment strategies, emphasizing the importance of personal branding and networking. The conversation dives into the balance between technical skills and cultural fit in interviews, highlighting how team dynamics can shape hiring practices. Randy also reflects on the evolution of hiring strategies, showcasing his commitment to finding top talent.

Jul 28, 2014 • 48min
Episode 207: Mitchell Hashimoto on the Vagrant Project
Charles Anderson talks to Mitchell Hashimoto about the Vagrant open source project, which can be used to create and configure lightweight, reproducible, and portable development environments. Vagrant aims to make new developers on a project productive within minutes of joining the project instead of spending hours or days setting up the developer’s workstation. The outline […]

Jul 18, 2014 • 1h 3min
Episode 206: Ken Collier on Agile Analytics
Johannes Thönes talks to Dr. Ken Collier, Director of Agile Analytics at ThoughtWorks about Agile Analytics. The outline includes: descriptive analytics, predictive analytic and prescriptive analytics; artificial intelligence, machine learning, data mining and statistics; collaborative filtering; data science and data scientists; data warehousing and business intelligence; online analytical processing (OLAP), extract transform load (ETL), feature […]

Jun 27, 2014 • 54min
Episode 205: Martin Lippert on Eclipse Flux
Eberhard Wolff talks with Martin Lippert of Pivotal about the Eclipse Flux project. This projects is in its early stages — and has a very interesting goal: It aims to put software development tools into the cloud. It is a lot more than just an IDE (integrated development environment) in a browser. Instead the IDE […]

May 30, 2014 • 1h 5min
Episode 204: Anil Madhavapeddy on the Mirage Cloud Operating System and the OCaml Language
Robert talks to Dr. Anil Madhavapeddy of the Cambridge University (UK) Systems research group about the OCaml language and the Mirage cloud operating system, a microkernel written entirely in OCaml. The outline includes: history of the evolution from dedicated servers running a monolithic operating system to virutalized servers based on the Xen hypervisor to micro-kernels; […]

Apr 29, 2014 • 49min
Episode 203: Leslie Lamport on Distributed Systems
Leslie Lamport won a Turing Award in 2013 for his work in distributed and concurrent systems. He also designed the document preparation tool LaTex. Leslie is employed by Microsoft Research, and has recently been working with TLA+, a language that is useful for specifying concurrent systems from a high level. The interview begins with a […]

Mar 14, 2014 • 42min
Episode 202: Andrew Gerrand on Go
Andrew Gerrand works on the Go programming language at Google. His conversation with Jeff begins with a history of the language, including the details behind how Go was conceived and how the open source community contributes to it. Andrew explains how Go intends to simplify problems which have been motifs as Google has scaled. The […]

Feb 19, 2014 • 53min
Episode 201: Martin Thompson on Mechanical Sympathy
Martin Thompson, proprietor of the blog Mechanical Sympathy, founder of the LMAX disruptor open source project, and a consultant and frequent speaker on high performance computing talks with Robert about computer program performance. Martin explains the meaning of the term "mechanical sympathy," derived from auto racing, and its relevance to program performance: the importance of […]


