Testing the Test | Coder Radio 398
The guys can't help but laugh when they hear the test tests one well-known online giant is testing. You might say they get a bit testy.
The guys can't help but laugh when they hear the test tests one well-known online giant is testing. You might say they get a bit testy.
Is performance the ultimate requirement? What amount of compromise are we comfortable with?
Mike and Chris discuss the recent JetBrains FUD and ponder the impact of recent AWS policy enforcement.
Their lives change forever when they meet a handsome, tormented, laptop.
Services and subscriptions get a bad wrap, so we flip the script and talk about the ones we're grateful to pay for.
Mike details his favorite python tools and his tricks for performance concerns.
Mike recalls how he accidentally converted his development shop into a Python house, and Chris experiments with his Minimum Viable Robe.
Time to talk business, and Chris reveals his biggest mistake since going independent.
After we geek out about keyboards, we answer some feedback and take a dip in the Rust lust.
Mike buys a laptop live on air while Chris worries about the turkey.
The guys deploy their sage wisdom to answer your age-old questions and solve why the latest macOS is less appealing than ever to developers.
Our first reactions to Apple's ARM event, how these new systems will impact developers, and if we're buying one.
Chris attempts a Lizard intervention and gets sucked into Mike's Green tinted data center paradise.
Microsoft is making aggressive moves to court more and more developers. We put on our analyst hats and lay out the hard cold truth.
It's confession hour on the podcast, and your hosts surprise each other with several twists and turns.
We have a different take on the Oracle v. Google case that may usher in an API copyright doom! Or so they say...
We examine the deeper problems in Open Source development the recent Hacktoberfest drama has exposed.
We provoked quite a response and cover the feedback that puts us in our place. Then we dive into the wild era of text editor of yore and solve an age-old question.
We get nerdy about Blueprints, and then wary about the future of software distribution.
Is it a Post-Open Source world now that the mega-clouds are here? We share our thoughts on this renewed idea.
A special friend of the show joins us to discuss C++ in 2020 and the growing adoption of Rust.
GitHub just made a major behind-the-scenes upgrade, and we chew on some of the impressive details.
We reboot the show to capture Mike's love of coupons and update you on what we have been up to recently since the show's fake demise.
We say goodbye to the show by taking a look back at a few of our favorite moments and reflect on how much has changed in the past seven years.
As Python 2's demise draws near we reflect on Python's popularity, the growing adoption of static typing, and why the Python 3 transition took so long.
We debate the best way to package scripting language apps then explore interactive development and the importance of a good shell.
We're back and going crazy about Crystal, a statically typed language that's as fast as C and as slick as ruby.
It’s a Coder Radio special all about abstraction. What it is, why we need it, and what to do when it leaks.
Things get heated when it’s time for Wes to check-in on Mike’s functional favorite, F#, and share his journey exploring modern .NET on Linux.
Chris finally gets excited about Docker just as Wes tells him it’s time to learn something new.