Exploring what inspired folks to start coding
Users have been sharing the spark that started them on their journey as computer programmers. From IRC to Minecraft, users found a passion that became a career.
Users have been sharing the spark that started them on their journey as computer programmers. From IRC to Minecraft, users found a passion that became a career.
We chat with Andrew Boyagi, Atlassian's Senior Developer Evangelist, about bringing great developer experience to teams and platforms with thousands of engineers. When the software sprawl gets so big you spend more time looking for answers than solving problems, it might be time to try something new.
Kian Katanforoosh is the CEO and cofounder of Workera and co-created the Stanford Deep Learning class (CS230) with Prof. Andrew Ng. In this episode he talks about how companies can better measure the skill sets of their employees and how AI will change the half-life of useful skills.
Ben and Ryan check in about complex images (an maybe even interactive games) encoded in living cells, the latest trends in prompt engineering, and the benefits of gaming to your education.
On today's episode, Ben and Ryan review the highlights of 2023, explore what made the biggest impact on developers, and chat about what they look forward to in the world of software and technology in 2024.
Developers love automating solutions to their problems, and with the rise of generative AI, this concept is likely to be applied to both the creation, maintenance, and the improvement of code at an entirely new level.
For our final episode of the year we chat with Netlify CEO Matt Biilmann about the way AI is reshaping software development and the trends he's excited about for 2024.
In the United States, R&D expenses and software development suddenly got a lot more expensive, leading to surprise layoffs. Plus, what defines shovelware, game developers look towards unionization, and the right way to kill your process.
We chat with IBM about how their watsonx platform makes generative AI more than just a fun toy.
We chat with Lee Robinson, VP of Product at Vercel, about v0: a generative AI Vercel built that produces code for web components based on a user's text description of a UI or interface.
Highlighting one of the interesting discussions going on in our Collectives.
From Angular JS to Raspberry Pi, from React to Prompt Engineering, our community has been asking questions and sharing knowledge that helps the entire world build better.
A series of amazing breakthroughs are allowing paralyzed people to speak and emote. With each passing month, we get closer to a brain-computer interface that might unlock some of the deepest mysteries of our grey matter.
Ben and friend of the show Kyle Mitofsky sit down with Reid Robinson, lead product manager for AI at Zapier, for a conversation about AI and automation. Plus: NFTs and the dog behind the doge.
We're updating things to highlight community contributions, make it easier to keep tabs on our latest releases, and connect your Stack Overflow account to the discussion happening on the blog.
To evolve our company, we had to change the way we work.
We sit down with Sascha Heyer, Senior ML specialist at DoIT, to learn how organizations can leverage the power of GenAI while avoiding the downsides.
Thousands of the company’s engineers, data scientists, designers, and developers have asked and answered questions about how things work inside their organization.
We sit down with the PM behind Google Duet to discuss how it was made and how it aims to help, but not replace, developers.
Paige Bailey, lead product manager for generative models at Google, breaks down where the company's AI is heading.
Look out, world! The worst coder is back and ready to create code he doesn't understand.
We chat with Dean Tribble about his journey from Xerox PARC to blockchain CEO.
The server in your basement suddenly has a global social media to support. What's your next move?
The things we expect to succeed aren't always the things we're hoping to see more of.