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Developer Voices

Kris Jenkins

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Deep-dive discussions with the smartest developers we know, explaining what they're working on, how they're trying to move the industry forward, and what we can learn from them. You might find the solution to your next architectural headache, pick up a new programming language, or just hear some good war stories from the frontline of technology. Join your host Kris Jenkins as we try to figure out what tomorrow's computing will look like the best way we know how - by listening directly to the ...
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Tapes Unwound

Tomas Kontrimas

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Ежемесячно
 
Tracing the steps of True Crime cases, and analyzing them through a magnifying glass. While at the same time, attempting to unearth the factors that lead the perpetrators to act out in such evil ways.
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The IMMERSION Sessions

Tomas Canoti

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The New Home of The IMMERSION Sessions. Brought to you by Tomas Canoti The IMMERSION Sessions has been ranked among the top 20 Trance Podcasts in the World. Follow / Subscribe today to Hear how IMMERSION will move you to new Depths
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Unscripted Success

Braxton Wood

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The Unscripted Success podcast is a long form conversation all about taking the road less-traveled and finding success on your own terms. Hosted by executive coach Braxton Wood, he is joined by friends and guests that include entrepreneurs, authors, recruiters, and thought-leaders that inspire others in their professional lives.
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Una Opinión

Naye Vivar

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Una Opinión es un podcast que creé para compartir un punto de vista diferente, con la finalidad de generar un nuevo aprendizaje , cuestionar una idea, ampliar nuestra percepción , reestructurar una creencia o pensamiento, Todos compartimos un punto de vista diferente y eso mismo hace que al compartir nuestra opinión podamos enriquecernos con diferentes puntos de vista sobre un tema. Así que toma lo que te sirva, estructúralo a lo que tu eres y tus creencias , moldéalo o ignóralo, según sea t ...
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Butternut Box

Butternut Box

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Butternut Box is the UK's first home-cooked dog food delivery service, and in our new podcast hosts Lauren and Harry talk about all things dog. Expect exciting guests, silly games and an insight into start-up life.
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Anthropology on Air

Department of Social Anthropology, University of Bergen

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Anthropology on Air is a podcast brought to you by the Social Anthropology department at the University of Bergen in Norway. Each season, we bring you conversations with inspiring thinkers from the anthropology world and beyond. The music in the podcast is made by Victor Lange, and the episodes are produced by Sadie Hale and Sidsel Marie Henriksen. You can follow us on Facebook. Visit uib.no/antro, where you can find more information on the ongoing work and upcoming events at the department.
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RadVibes

B Rad

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Remarkable characters with even more remarkable minds that drive the future of skateboarding. What does skateboarding look like 5-10 years from now... 20... 50 years. Our goal is to comb the world over in search of world class thought leaders and change makers that will influence skateboarding’s future from a wide variety of fields including filmmaking, architecture, science, urban design, music, fashion,software engineering, footwear design, augmented reality, artificial intelligence, trans ...
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Online Course Masters

Phil Ebiner

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Online Course Masters is a podcast that gets inside the minds of online course creators successfully creating and selling courses on marketplaces like Udemy and Skillshare, as well as self-hosting courses on their on sites with tools like Teachable, Thinkific, and others.
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RingScoops® Media

RingScoops® Media

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RingScoops® Media provides podcasts about a plethora of topics. We mainly discuss pro wrestling in the form of interviews, reviews and news. You'll also hear other topics such as travel, gaming, food, television, movies, music, and more! RingScoops stands for RING = CIRCLE OF FRIENDSHIP; SCOOPS = INFORMATION/DISCOURSE! Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/ringscoops/support
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show series
 
PostgreSQL is an incredible general-purpose database, but it can’t do everything. Every design decision is a tradeoff, and inevitably some of those tradeoffs get fundamentally baked into the way it’s built. Take storage for instance - Postgres tables are row-oriented; great for row-by-row access, but when it comes to analytics, it can’t compete wit…
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The actor model is a popular approach to building scalable software systems. And isn’t hard to understand when you’re just reading about the beginner’s examples. But how do you architect a complex design using the actor model? Which patterns work well? How do you think through it? Joining me to take us through it is Hugh McKee. Hugh’s a total actor…
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Our adventurers have made it to Pellak and meet the mysterious Raven. This episode is roleplay heavy. Enjoy. Meet the team over at: https://www.drunkardsanddragons.com/ The Mystic Syndicate Twitch is at: https://www.twitch.tv/tmsyndicate Brian = Dungeon Master (@rbander238) Ed = Toby Wildseed (Kender Monk) Mike G. = Kelex Zelenen (Human Paladin of …
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The fall of Toby Wildseed. Tragedy befalls our beloved Toby as the power of the crystal scepter takes hold. Meet the team over at: https://www.drunkardsanddragons.com/ The Mystic Syndicate Twitch is at: https://www.twitch.tv/tmsyndicate Brian = Dungeon Master (@rbander238) Ed = Toby Wildseed (Kender Monk) Mike G. = Kelex Zelenen (Human Paladin of H…
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Our adventurers make their way from the city of Truelight only to find themselves heading up a rescue mission. Even though I say in the podcast that this is episode 3, it's a lie. It's totally episode 4. Meet the team over at: https://www.drunkardsanddragons.com/ The Mystic Syndicate Twitch is at: https://www.twitch.tv/tmsyndicate Brian = Dungeon M…
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Session 3 finds our adventurers exploring the strange building on the prairie, and arriving in the city of Truelight. I left my VoiceMod app on the entire stream, so it sounds strange, but only me. So listen at your own risk. LOL! I will be releasing episode 4, 5, and 6 right after 3. This is to make up for the horrible Voicemod mayhem you had to s…
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Bytewax is a curious stream processing tool that blends a Python surface with a Rust core to produce something that’s in a similar vein to Kafka Streams or Apache Flink, but with a fundamentally different implementation. This week we’re going to take a look at what it does, how it works in theory, and how the marriage of Python and Rust works in pr…
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In this episode of Anthropology on Air, we speak with Penny Harvey, Professor of Social Anthropology at the University of Manchester in the UK. Penny is a Fellow of the British Academy, of the Norwegian Academy of Science and Letters, and the Academia Europaea. Penny is a highly influential thinker on the topic of infrastructures. She is well known…
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Welcome to a new Dungeons & Dragon campaign podcast. Join Brian Anderson (Dungeon Master), as he weaves an adventure for our new players. Brian = Dungeon Master (X/Twitter @RBAnder238) Ed = Toby Wildseed (Kender Monk) Mike G. = Kelex Zelenen (Human Paladin of Heironious) Mike = Kiffi Blackhammer (Dwarf Cleric of Fortubo) Melinda = Grenna Babbleboot…
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Mojo is the latest language from the creator of Swift and LLVM. It’s an attempt to take some of the best techniques from CPU/GPU-level programming and package them up in a Python-compatible syntax. In this episode we explore why Mojo was created, and what it offers to Python programmers and non-Python programmers alike. How is it built for performa…
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In this unscripted success special, Braxton Wood is joined by Joshua Maramba where they delve into the intricacies of business, leadership, and personal growth. Throughout the episode, they provide invaluable insights on a wide range of topics, from the challenges and realities of entrepreneurship to the importance of clear communication in leaders…
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Every database has to juggle the need to process new data and to query old data. That task falls to any system that “does stuff and remembers stuff”. But it’s quite hard to really optimise one system for both use cases. There are different constraints on new and old data, and as a system gets larger and larger, those differences multiply to breakin…
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In this special episode, we speak with Tomas Salem, a PhD fellow in our own department of Social Anthropology at the University of Bergen. We do a deep dive on some of the themes covered in Tomas’s first book, Policing the Favelas in Rio de Janeiro: Cosmologies of War and the Far-Right (Palgrave Macmillian, 2024), which is released this week. Based…
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Rust changed the discussion around memory management - this week's guest hopes to push that discussion even further. This week we're joined by Evan Ovadia, creator of the Vale programming language and collector of memory management techniques from far and wide. He takes us through his most important ones, including linear types, generation referenc…
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To kick off season three of Anthropology on Air, we speak with Andrea Muehlebach. Andrea is Professor of Maritime Anthropology and Cultures of Water at the University of Bremen in Germany, where she also leads the Bremen NatureCultureLab. She was visiting Bergen to deliver a talk entitled, “Do Waves Have Rights?” The Rights of Nature movement insis…
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Join Webmaster Wade on The RingScoops Podcast as we dive into the anticipation and excitement surrounding WrestleMania 40! In this episode, we discuss the electrifying matchups set to take place at Lincoln Financial Field in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. From title defenses to intense rivalries, we cover it all and provide insightful predictions for …
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The “big data infrastructure” world is dominated by Java, but the data-analysis world is dominated by Python. So if you need to analyse and process huge amounts of data, chances are you’re in for a less-than-ideal time. The impedance mismatch will probably make your life hard somehow. So there are a lot of projects and companies trying to solve tha…
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Erlang wears three hats - it’s a language, it’s a platform, and it’s an approach to making software run reliably once it’s in production. Those last two are so interesting I sometimes wonder why those ideas haven’t been ported to every language going. How much work would it be? This week we’re going to dig right down into that question with Leandro…
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The likes of LinkedIn and Uber use Pinot to power some astonishingly high-scale queries against realtime data. The numbers alone would make an impressive case-study. But behind the headline lies a fascinating set of architectural decisions and constraints to get there. So how does Pinot work? How does it process queries? How are the various roles s…
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TJ DeVries is a core contributor to Neovim and several of its most interesting sub-projects, and he joins us this week to go in depth into how Neovim got started, how it’s structured, and what a truly programmable editor has to offer programmers who want the perfect environment. Along the way we look at what we can learn from Neovim’s successful fo…
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Done right, a Hackathon can be a fantastic place to be a programmer - you get time and space to build and learn, in a room full of like-minded people, with swag and prizes to sweeten the deal. It’s a great way to pick up new ideas and run with them. But done wrong it can be a waste of time. What’s the difference between a good hackathon and a bad o…
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One of the most promising techniques for software reliability is property testing. The idea that, instead of writing unit tests we describe some property of our code that ought to always be true, then have the computer figure out thousands of unit tests that try to break that rule. For example, you might say, “No matter which page you visit on my w…
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If you ever feel overwhelmed by the number of different programming languages, this week’s episode might just offer you some solace, as we talk about an attempt to reunify many of the most popular languages by focussing on the bread & butter things that every language supports. I’m joined by Martin Johansen, who’s been working on a new tool called …
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A lot of programming is split into the mechanical work of writing what you know, and the creative work of figuring out what you don’t know. Wouldn’t it be nice to automate the mechanical stuff away? Well the good news is we’re already automating a lot of it. Every time you run a refactoring tool or a pretty-printer, you’re handing boring work off t…
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SQLite could do with a little competition, so when I invited the co-creator of DuckDB in to talk, I thought we'd be discussing the perils of trying to build a new in-process database engine. I quickly realised things went much deeper than just a tech refresh. Hannes Mühleisen joins me this week to blend his academic credentials as a database resear…
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This week we talk to Simon Peyton Jones, a veteran language designer and researcher, and key figure in the development of Haskell. Haskell. Simon has made countless contributions to advancement of functional programming, and computer programming in general, and is currently working at Epic Games, working on the foundations of their new programming …
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🔥🚨 Experience the excitement of "RingScoops Live with Webmaster Wade" as the latest episode unfolds with Royal Rumble 2024 predictions, Cody Rhodes vs. CM Punk face-off, Tony Khan, Jinder Mahal, and more. Bonus: Dive into the chaos of a campus fire drill at CSUSB delaying the return podcast's kickoff. Tune in for wrestling insights and unexpected m…
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Benthos wants to be part of your Data Engineering toolkit - it’s there as a quick and easy way to set up data pipelines and start streaming data out of A and into B. In contrast to a lot of the tools we’ve talked about on Developer Voices, Benthos seems focussed on cutting development time down to a minimum, so you can quickly configure a new pipel…
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The world of game programming might seem a million miles away from 'regular' programming. But they still have to deal with the same kinds of data, scale and concurrency problems that we’re all familiar with in the software world. And that makes the gaming world an interesting place for new ideas - under the hood they’re solving those same problems …
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Odin’s creator, Bill Hall, makes some bold claims about the language, including that it’s “programming done right”. Before that starts a war on the internet, we’d best ask him to explain what that means, and how Odin tries to achieve it. And while we get deep into the details, overall his answer seems to be, “By gathering masses of feedback and the…
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This week’s guest describes Event Sourcing as, “all I’m going to use for the rest of my career.” But what is Event Sourcing? How should we think about it, and how does it encourage us to think about writing software? In this episode we take a close look at systems designed around the idea of Events, with guest Bobby Calderwood. Bobby’s been designi…
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One of our oldest languages meets one of our newest sciences in this episode, as we talk with Professor Christian Schafmeister, an award-winning nanotech researcher who's been developing a language and a design suite to help research the future molecular machines. In this episode Christian gives us a quick chemistry lesson to explain what his resea…
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Sometimes, what a programming language makes harder is just as important as what it makes easier. For a simple example, think of GOTO. We’ve been wisely avoiding it for decades because it makes confusing control flow desperately easy. Types and tests are other examples - they’re as much about specifying what shouldn’t work as what should. And persp…
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Lane Gregory is a no-nonsense speaker who has overcome personal challenges to succeed in life. Growing up with a paraplegic father and a grandfather who spent his early years in a hospital, Lane knows the value of hard work and perseverance. He is passionate about motivating others to overcome their own obstacles and not make excuses. Lane's family…
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Tanya Luhrmann is Albert Ray Lang Professor of Anthropology at Stanford University, with a courtesy appointment in Psychology, and an elected member of the American Philosophical Society. Her work focuses on the edge of experience: on voices, visions, the world of the supernatural and the world of psychosis. She has conducted ethnographic work amon…
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One of the recurring themes in the big data & data streaming worlds at the moment is developer experience. It seems like every major tool is trying to answer this question: how do we make large-scale data processing feel trivial? In some places the answer is any library you like as long as it’s Python. In other realms, a mixture of Java and SQL sho…
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This week we're back on systems programming with Hare. A C-like language for the ages. We talk to its creator, Drew DeVault, about what he thinks we can learn from the past 50 years of programming, and how we can build that hindsight into a new language that will last for the next 100. In among all that long-term ambition we talk cover everything f…
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As more dead victims are discovered, the investigators are challenged by the possibility that there may be a serial killer prowling the city's streets. Music Credits: Hangin' with the Worms - Doug Maxwell/Media Right Productions Lurking Shadows - Myuu Lights Out - MyuuTomas Kontrimas
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A few months ago, Michael Drogalis quit his job and decided launch 4 viable startup business ideas in 4 months, publically documenting every step of the journey. Over here at Developer Voices it seemed fun, inspired, and just crazy enough to work. We had him on the podcast a few months back just as that journey was beginning, and since he launched …
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In this episode, you will meet professor at the University of Oxford, Harvey Whitehouse. Harvey is the director of the Centre for the Study of Social Cohesion, he is Statutory Chair of Social Anthropology at the University of Oxford, and a Professorial Fellow of Magdalen College. Harvey has worked extensively with rituals since his first long-term …
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Integration is probably the last, hardest, and least well thought-out part of any large software project. So anything that makes the data-streaming job easier is worth knowing about. So this week we turn our attention to Apache Flink, a flexible system for grabbing, transforming and shipping data between systems using Java, Python or good ol’ SQL. …
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Zig is a programming language that’s attempting to become “the new C” - the language of choice for low-level systems programming and embedded hardware. Going into that space not only puts it in competition with C and C++, but also other newcomers like Rust and Go. So what makes Zig special? Joining us to discuss it is Loris Cro from the Zig Foundat…
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In this episode you will meet Jennifer Hays, who is professor in social anthropology at the University of Tromsø (UiT) – the Arctic University of Norway. Jennifer has been working with hunter-gatherer San Populations in southern Africa for 25 years, as a researcher, and as a consultant for governmental bodies and local and international NGOs. She i…
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Would you ever take on a rewrite of one of the largest and most popular Apache projects? And if so, what would you keep the same and what would you change? This week we’re talking to Christina Lin, who’s part of Redpanda, a company that’s rewriting parts of the Apache Kafka ecosystem in C++, with the aim of getting performance gains that aren’t fea…
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Krissy Wolfe joins Braxton on this episode and it's one of our greatest yet! Krissy started a business with her husband and acts as the COO of CFOAF, a fractional CFO firm driving financial growth for small businesses. 🔥 Together, Krissy and Braxton tackle the following questions sent in from our listeners: - Can I be the face of my company and bra…
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This week we’re looking at Debezium - an open source project that taps into a huge number of databases and lets you stream data to other systems in real time. It’s a huge project that covers a wide range of uses: Some people use it to replicate from Oracle to MySQL, others to do smart cache invalidation, and others to build a bridge from an existin…
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Ever read a bad README? We all have, and most of the time, we’ve just moved right along. A programmer that can’t communicate their ideas will find no-one uses their software. And that’s true even outside of the open-source world. The best software doesn’t win - the best software _that people can understand_ wins. So how do we get better at communic…
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🎙️ On this episode of Unscripted Success, Braxton Wood is joined by Scott Rammage, founder of Step It Up Academy. 🔥 Together, Scott and Braxton enjoy a discussion on the following questions sent in from our listeners: - My boss is actually asking me to slow down my work output. How should I take this? - My co-workers are telling me I'm difficult to…
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This episode is the second of two podcasts focusing on the longstanding partnership between Bergen and Khartoum. In the episode you will meet, Abdullahi Ahmed An-Na’im, who visited Bergen in October 2023 to give the keynote lecture at a 3-day symposium that marked the 60-year anniversary of this collaboration. An-Na’im is Charles Howard Candler Pro…
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This episode is the first of two podcasts focusing on the longstanding partnership between Bergen and Khartoum. The first episode provides a historical view into some of the main characteristics and effects of the academic collaborations between these two cities. The second episode features an interview with Sudanese professor of law, Abdullahi Ahm…
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