A Very Tidy Excuse | Coder Radio 546
The messy details and tidy excuses we noticed in all this OpenAI upset, and some fundamental problems that have been plaguing desktop Linux for years.
The messy details and tidy excuses we noticed in all this OpenAI upset, and some fundamental problems that have been plaguing desktop Linux for years.
OpenAI's weekend coup, plus our thoughts on Microsoft's gambit and their looming risk.
Yet another thing Microsoft was early to, and still somehow missed the boat.
New AI "regulation" from on high this week, a few signs you might be pissing in your own pond, and the game dev team that's been together for 40 years.
We've all made mistakes and tried to play dumb, but this week history is being made.
Rumors of internal panic at Apple, and concerns about the future of RISC-V. Plus, the software update of the century.
We're about to see a wave of big tech AI features "inspired" by third-party developers at a scale that makes the Sherlocking on Apple's platform seem like chump change. Plus, how Dropbox turned around their dev retention rates, and more.
Mike checks in from the grind and shares some challenges in recent cross-platform testing; then, we get into the avalanche of negative AI press coverage this week and the one massive story they're not touching.
How does your first major programming language/technology still shape your work and career? Then grab some popcorn and let's watch the next epic tech titan battle unfold.
Our unique take on the Unity outrage, thoughts on RustRover, and Mike shares a very annoying mistake.
The painful side of making video games, Grinder's big problems, and Google's sneakiest trojan horse.
Did Apple's event live up to our expectations? And our thoughts on what new goodies for developers might be in the new hardware and software.
Azure suffers a big outage, and Microsoft blames faulty automation; why we think there might be early signs of weak demand for Apple's Vision Pro and more.
U.S. officials are warning open-source software could be a cyber security threat. Their solution? Money. But do we want them picking the winners and losers of open source?
Mike hits the limits of ChatGPT's knowledge, a chat about editors and what we'd do for a living if it had to be outside of tech.
Java developers are getting the Oracle shakedown, openAI is running out of money, and more.
Did we get this one wrong? It seems consumer AI is eating the lunch of some web's biggest names.
Microsoft's dirty old API games, the new, even more restrictive rules Apple developers will now have to follow, and why Google's "Web Integrity API" seems gross.
Elon Musk trying to build the "everything app" is ridiculous, and the quiet little promise openAI just made with the White House.
Shopify has a mind-blowingly obvious solution to too many meetings, a recent failure Chris is struggling with, and more.
openAI's window to build their moat is closing, but they have a powerful friend stepping up to help seal the deal. Plus, our reaction to Oracle's very spicy response to Red Hat.
Mike updates us on his development adventures in Unreal 5, signs the Vision Pro might be a flop, and answer questions about abandoning Red Hat's platform.
We got our eyes on the Vision Pro SDK and share our new insights. And why the claims of stalled Mastodon adoption might ring a bit true.
We open the robe and spend a little time chatting about the software development business.
We chew on the ridiculous situation Reddit has created for itself and the weak position of app developers.
We argue over what sucked the most at WWDC this year and then surprise each other with two things that thrill us.
We chew on the best bits from this year's Microsoft Build and the bright red flag coming from the Rust community.
OpenAI's CEO Sam Altman has gone straight for the open-source kill move.
We laugh at Google's scramble, check in on the Twitter collapse, and how one developer's little mistake screwed millions.
A scathing takedown of Serverless... By Amazon? We react to this strange revelation and more.