Optimizing Your Life
Dwight emails us asking when you should upgrade your tech stack. We talk about iOS focus modes, burnout / mental health, managing your calendar, taking control of bookmarks, and creating a second brain in Obsidian.
Dwight emails us asking when you should upgrade your tech stack. We talk about iOS focus modes, burnout / mental health, managing your calendar, taking control of bookmarks, and creating a second brain in Obsidian.
This week we talk with Benjamin Cabe about building an artificial nose. What I learned from software engineering at Google. And lots of cool GitHub annoucements.
No Code - why it matters Find my Cat application Location Tracking using No Code platforms
This week we talk with Don High about Rancher, Kubernetes, and AKS. Compiling 1 billion lines of code on 64 cores. 20,000 bees took over an office. Petabyte tape cartridges.
This week we talk with Bill Lamie about Azure RTOS. How Linux was ported to the Apple M1. Firefox and Google crack down on Supercookies. And rendering a million webpages to find out what makes the web slow.
This week we talk with Rick Rainey about utilizing Linux for a development environment. Wireguard VPN. Wikipedia turns 20. Are 80 columns enough for code? And writing Hello World in zero lines of code.
This week we talk about the new Apple M1 chip, TEALs, and volunteering in education.
This week we talk with Jon Sequeira and Kathleen Dollard about System.CommandLine.
This week we talk with Christos Matskas and John Patrick Dandison about the Microsoft identity platform.
Welcome to the MS Dev Show, episode #243. This week we talk about the huge release of .NET 5.
Welcome to the MS Dev Show, episode #242. This week we talk with Michael Levan about Octopus Deploy. How to build an invisible PC inside of a desk. A super cool debug visualizer for VS Code. And what's actually in a digital pregnancy test?
This week we talk about standing desks and office setups. A major security concern with mailto links. Microsoft Flight Simulator with some funny quirks.
This week we talk with David Crook about hacking the stock market with data and machine learning. How to spend nearly a billion dollars in Azure with a single click . And Folding@Home performs more than twice as fast as the fastest supercomputer.
This week we talk with Lee Warrick about COVID-19. Trying to use the web without a user agent. Apple killing the PWA. And why is it called a log?
This week we talk with Harini Kannan and Paul Gusmorino about React Native. CLI's vs GUI's. And how copying code from Stack Overflow made it so that Docker and Razor software wouldn't run at the same time.
Welcome to the MS Dev Show, episode #237. This week we talk with Clint Rutkas about Microsoft PowerToys. Google and Bing appear to only display ads now. Java support in VS Code. And LastPass figures out how to implement unbreakable security.
Welcome to the MS Dev Show, episode #236. This week we talk about some of the changes in software development over the last decade, and it's sure to trigger some nostalgia. The year of Linux on the business card. Is Microsoft Edge worth using? And watch out quicksort, crab sort is better for a certain class of aquatic scenarios.
Welcome to the MS Dev Show, episode #235. This week we talk with Brent Stineman about some of the best announcements from Ignite 2019. We also try out Visual Studio online, and it's smart than us.
Hello everybody and welcome to the MS Dev Show, episode number 234! We are live at a giant internal hack event here at Microsoft. We talk to 4 teams about the projects their working on. We have everything from GRPC to headless robots, so don't miss it.
This week we talk with Mark Fussell about Dapr, a cool new way to build scalable applications. And a way to push through production that won't get through airport security.
Welcome to the MS Dev Show, episode #232. This week Carl and I talk about the latest Windows 10 update, more on Remote development, .NET Core 3, Azure Data Box. We also cover all the latest Microsoft hardware announcements, and what's it like to develop with 800 other people all in one room.
This week Carl and I talk about how awesome the VS Code remote features really are. I got my XPS 13 laptop and provide my first thoughts. We cover some of the rumors about the Microsoft event. And start updating your websites to support dark mode.
We talk with Sharad Agrawal about load balancing options in Azure, and we deep dive into Azure Front Door. Dark all the things. The war over e-books. And find out if Carl and I are getting the new iPhone.
This week Carl and Jason talk about PC building and laptop choices. Is web scraping legal? Throwing away microservices. And what happens if your license plate is NULL? News Electron 6.0.0 Web Scraping and Crawling Are Perfectly Legal, Right? How to estimate programming time 3 Kinds of Good Tech Debt What happens when you launch Google Chrome for the first time on a Windows 10 machine? npm install funding Why our team cancelled our move to microservices Null license plate backfires on owner Wisoc...
We deep-dive into the open sourcing of the Windows calculator app. We announce the winner of the Raygun contest. Azure gets smarter about reliability. And a critical flaw in the Raspberry Pi 4, but it's still faster than other computers we discuss.
We talk with Nikola Metulev about Graph Toolkit. What it takes to join the boring technology club. Bitcoin mining on the Apollo guidance computer - is it a good idea? No. No it is not. … And the technology I can't think of is GaN - thank you future me for ignoring the temporal prime directive and travelling back in time to remind me.
We talk with Matt Hidinger about how flexible adaptive cards have become. The 5 laws of software estimates. A thin, repairable device from HP. And Google's robots.txt parser is now open source.
We talk with Kenny Kerr about C++ WinRT and interop between all the things. Spray your way to GitHub success. Write your HTML in an innovative new language known as HTML. And how satellites are watching it all.
We talk with Ed Charbeneau about what it's really like to use Blazor. Learning how CPU's work by writing one in code. Finally, a good way to support your favorite open source projects. And writing a chat system with only CSS and no JavaScript - you monster.