Programming Throwdown

Programming Throwdown educates Computer Scientists and Software Engineers on a cavalcade of programming and tech topics. Every show will cover a new programming language, so listeners will be able to speak intelligently about any programming language.

https://www.programmingthrowdown.com/

Eine durchschnittliche Folge dieses Podcasts dauert 1h14m. Bisher sind 174 Folge(n) erschienen. Alle 4 Wochen erscheint eine Folge dieses Podcasts.

Gesamtlänge aller Episoden: 9 days 5 hours 4 minutes

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episode 134: 134: Ephemeral Environments with Benjie De Groot


How do you test changes to your web backend or database? Many people have a "production" and one "development" database, but the development database can easily become broken by one engineer and thus unusable for the rest of the team. Also, how would tw


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 May 24, 2022  1h7m
 
 

episode 133: 133: Solving for the Marketplace Problem with Andrew Yates


As anyone who listens to the show regularly knows, I've always been fascinated by marketplaces. How do we figure out what to charge for something, and how do we match buyers and sellers? How does a company like Uber match drivers to riders so quickly?


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 May 9, 2022  56m
 
 

episode 132: 132: Funding Open-Source Projects


Hey everyone! Today we have a guest co-host for a special duo episode! We are joined by Adam from the CoRecursive Podcast to talk about how open-source projects can survive (and even thrive) financially.


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 April 26, 2022  1h24m
 
 

episode 131: 131: Supporting your Favorite Creators with Brave with Jimmy Secretan


I've been a big fan of Brave Browser ever since attending a presentation from Brandon Eich back in 2017. Brave was one of the first browsers to aggressively block the ability for websites to share information on your computer without your consent (i.e. t


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 April 11, 2022  1h14m
 
 

episode 130: 130: Ethical Hacking with Ted Harrington


"Hacking" is a word that evokes awe from the public, laughter from developers, and pure fear from technology leaders. But what really is hacking? What does trust really mean and how do we acquire and keep trust on the Internet? It turns out that, while


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 March 28, 2022  1h25m
 
 

episode 129: Episode 129 - Web3.0: Breaking free from the Client Server Model with Michelle Lee


What is Web 3.0? Guest speaker Michelle Lee, Product Lead of Protocol Labs, shares how web 3.0 will revolutionize the Internet and bring trust back into the web.


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 March 15, 2022  1h5m
 
 

episode 128: 128: WebAssembly with Kevin Hoffman


What is WebAssembly? Guest speaker Kevin Hoffman, CTO of Cosmonic shares what WebAssembly is, why it exists, and what kind of things you can do with it.


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 February 28, 2022  1h13m
 
 

episode 127: 127: AI for Code with Eran Yahav


Programming is difficult as it is, but imagine how difficult it was without all the current tools, compilers, synthesizers, etc. that we have today. Eran Yahav, Chief Technology Officer at Tabnine shares how AI is currently helping with code writing and h


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 February 14, 2022  1h8m
 
 

episode 126: 126 - Serverless Computing with Erez Berkner


Erez Berkner, CEO of Lumigo, talks about his company, going serverless, and why you should too. He shares his experience and tips regarding serverless computing and its ever-growing opportunities in modern computing.


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 January 24, 2022  1h11m
 
 

episode 125: 125 - Object Caching Systems


Many people have heard the names "redis" or "memcached" but fewer people know what these tools are good for or why we need them so badly. In this show, Patrick and I explain why caching is so important and how these systems work under the hood.


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 January 21, 2022  1h14m