There is No Moat | Coder Radio 516
Why open source might be the real AI winner long-term, and Mike gets the ultimate "I told you so."
Why open source might be the real AI winner long-term, and Mike gets the ultimate "I told you so."
We have a laugh at Elon's alt account, why the knives are out for GitHub Co-pilot, and our thoughts on Apple's "major victory" this week.
Elon launches another AI company, leaks suggest Apple might enable sideloading, and why we should let Chaos-GPT run free.
Forces beyond Apple's control just reined in their rise, and we ponder the coming sunset.
Our thoughts on the recent AI hysteria and why it betrays the massive egos involved, our issues with the RESTRICT Act, and we do some Monday morning code review.
Mike's spent 90+ days with GitHub Co-Pilot, and shares the surprising conclusion.
Microsoft's moonshot is turning into a crapshoot.
We're told companies are abandoning the cloud to save money. But is the trend our friend?
Our spicy take on the Silicon Valley Bank bailout, how it will impact everyday developers, and how badly this screws over small businesses.
Mike's got a new rig, and Ford wants to recall yours automatically! Plus, we get a bit spicy about money.
It's been one week, and Microsoft's new bot's already gone full Tay.
The pitchforks are out for Google's CEO, and hoopla is leaking! Plus, our thoughts on baking telemetry into Go, the big Web3 crackdown, and more.
We get spicy about the state of hybrid app development and then dig into the App store gatekeeper busting by the White House.
The shiny userbase flocking to WebAssembly, our thoughts on the "openAI scam", and why they just keep cramming stuff into Docker containers.
How the world without "big tech" might look like, the EU promises to go after Elon and a much-needed head adjustment.
Microsoft gives Google an OpenAI gut punch, why Apple's new hardware fails to impress, and our reaction to the undignified death of Twitter's third-party client API.
After sacrificing our pound of flesh for episode 500, we get into some spicy Big Tech dynamics and the performance mess of WebAssembly runtimes.
We share our spicy C++ take, major Apple frustrations, and 2023 spoilers.
Our take on why several tech companies just teamed up to take on Google Maps, and then we react to the global analyst who says we won't have any new iPhones until 2028. We don't talk about Elon; if we did, it would be chaptered. But we defiantly did not.
Mike and Chris spend a little time chatting about one of their loves in life, great games. It's a test pilot episode for a possible new show, and we'd like your feedback. Consider it a holiday treat for the Coder fans out there.
Mike's skeptical of the rumors Apple is preparing to allow third-party app stores, and in a total flip of roles, Chris comes to the defense of Microsoft.
We debate a few more drunk or 4D chess moves, the mad lad taking on Apple, and why Dart 3 has people talking. Plus, what a recent criticism of Scrum got wrong.
Amazon used the stage of AWS re:Invent to toss shade on .Net and reveal its broader ambitions.
We reflect on the recent musings of Python's creator, from the functional to the philosophical.
We will discuss the practical implementations of AI embedded in future products, then take a look at FTX's books and have a few highlights to share.
Microsoft lets its geek flag fly, our observations on .NET 7, and the recent upset caused by the Troll Wizard, but we can't understand who will pay the toll.
Mike just came up for air after a Swift deep dive, and he has a fresh new take. Plus, the wheels of history are spinning faster; we take a snapshot in time and then round it all out with spicy Apple bacon.
We slip into full boss mode after digging into some long-term tech trends impacting developers.
One of the most challenging aspects of being an independent developer, and our thoughts on Microsoft's recent bad news.
We debate if GitHub's Copilot enables automated code laundering after a developer makes a startling discovery. Then we dispense some seriously old-school wisdom.