#17: Python on bare metal with MicroPython

#17: Python on bare metal with MicroPython

How many layers of abstraction and indirection are between your python code and machine instructions? What if that number could be 1 and Python itself was the operating system? That would be so amazing, right?

Episoder(523)

#66: Faster Python Programs: Measure, Don't Guess

#66: Faster Python Programs: Measure, Don't Guess

Python is a wonderful programming language that is often underestimated because it's so clear and simple. Oftentimes people mistake this simplicity for being too simple for real-programs. After all, you didn't even struggle to get your program to link against an incompatible static library or battle a DLL version mismatch in your Python app today did you?

7 Jul 20161h 4min

#65: Jump on the real-time web with RethinkDB

#65: Jump on the real-time web with RethinkDB

Long gone are the days of the web acting as just linked documents and glorified brochures. Web apps of today are just that, rich interactive applications. But unlike desktop apps of old, these are apps with 100,000's or even millions of concurrent users.

29 Jun 201659min

#64: Inside the Python Package Index

#64: Inside the Python Package Index

What is the most powerful part of the Python ecosystem? Well, the ability to say "pip install magic_library" has to be right near the top. But do you what powers the Python Package Index and the people behind it? Did you know it does over 300 TB traffic each month these days?

24 Jun 201659min

#63: Validating Python tests with mutation testing

#63: Validating Python tests with mutation testing

Do you think it's a good idea to test your software? Do you write unit tests or other automated verification for code? I think most of us do these days. A key question is how do you know whether your tests sufficiently verify your code? The standard answer is code coverage.

16 Jun 201659min

#62: San Diego Technology Immersion Group Learns Python

#62: San Diego Technology Immersion Group Learns Python

What's it like to learn Python? Yes, some of you may have just picked up the language while others have lived and breathed it for years. Either way, you may have some hindsight bias towards the experience. What was hard? What were your expectations? What delighted you?

7 Jun 20161h 9min

#61: Free software, free people

#61: Free software, free people

How often do you read some news headline about free speech denied and human rights being suppressed and think that sucks but there is nothing I can do about it from my distant perspective. I guess you could vote slightly differently in the next election and maybe, just maybe, it will have a small impact in 4 years time.

30 Mai 201654min

#60: Scaling Python to 1000's of cores with Ufora

#60: Scaling Python to 1000's of cores with Ufora

You've heard me talk previously about scaling Python and Python performance on this show. But on this episode I'm bringing you a very interesting project pushing the upper bound of Python performance for a certain class of applications.

24 Mai 20161h 7min

#59: SageMath - Open source is ready to compete in the classroom

#59: SageMath - Open source is ready to compete in the classroom

What do you do when you are a high caliber mathematician or scientist and you want share your algorithms and code? This sounds like a job for github, but the problem is often this work is done on proprietary platforms such as Magma, Matlab, Mathematica or others.

18 Mai 201659min

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