Programming Throwdown

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.

Episoder(186)

138: Fixing the Internet with John Day

138: Fixing the Internet with John Day

00:00:24 Introductions00:00:49 IP v600:04:50 OSI00:12:53 The IP v7 debate00:20:18 The definition of an address’s scope00:21:38 Why John feels DNS was a mistake00:26:40 How IP mobility works00:32:13 Bluetooth 00:41:41 Where will Internet architecture go from here00:49:49 Understanding the problem space00:59:04 The angels in the details01:00:53 Scientific thinking vs engineering thinking01:04:01 Victorian architecture01:06:11 John’s career advice01:11:18 Garbage Can Model01:14:38 How to make the most out of college today01:27:05 FarewellsResources mentioned in this episode: Professor John D. Day:Wikipedia: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Day_(computer_scientist)Website: https://www.bu.edu/met/profile/john-day/Book: https://www.oreilly.com/library/view/patterns-in-network/9780132252423/Terminologies:CIDR: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Classless_Inter-Domain_RoutingOSI: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OSI_modelConnectionless Network Protocol: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Connectionless-mode_Network_ServiceSIP (Session Initiation Protocol): https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Session_Initiation_ProtocolGarbage can model: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Garbage_can_modelIf you’ve enjoyed this episode, you can listen to more on Programming Throwdown’s website: https://www.programmingthrowdown.com/ Reach out to us via email: programmingthrowdown@gmail.com You can also follow Programming Throwdown on Facebook | Apple Podcasts | Spotify | Player.FM  Join the discussion on our DiscordHelp support Programming Throwdown through our Patreon ★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★

12 Jul 20221h 28min

137: The Origins of the Internet with John Day

137: The Origins of the Internet with John Day

00:01:01 Introduction00:01:28 COVID and the challenge of teaching00:04:11 John’s academic and career path00:08:14 LSI technology00:12:13 Collaborative software development in the day00:15:24 ARPANET’s early use00:20:08 Atom bomb and weather simulations00:26:55 The message-switching network 00:34:57 Pouzin00:38:00 Every register had a purpose00:45:15 The Air Force in 197200:52:10 Low memory00:59:14 Early problems with TCP01:11:51 The separation of mechanism and policy01:23:25 FarewellsResources mentioned in this episode:Professor John D. Day:Wikipedia: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Day_(computer_scientist)Website: https://www.bu.edu/met/profile/john-day/Book: https://www.oreilly.com/library/view/patterns-in-network/9780132252423/ Pouzin Society: Website: https://pouzinsociety.org/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/pouzinsocietyIf you’ve enjoyed this episode, you can listen to more on Programming Throwdown’s website: https://www.programmingthrowdown.com/ Reach out to us via email: programmingthrowdown@gmail.com You can also follow Programming Throwdown on Facebook | Apple Podcasts | Spotify | Player.FM  Join the discussion on our DiscordHelp support Programming Throwdown through our Patreon ★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★

27 Jun 20221h 24min

136: Metaverse with Daniel Liebeskind

136: Metaverse with Daniel Liebeskind

136: Metaverse with Daniel LiebeskindDecentralizing the future can often lead to missing out on genuine human communication. Daniel Liebeskind, Cofounder and CEO of Topia, talks about how they’re working to avoid that pitfall while building the foundation of a better online experience. Whether its his lessons from Burning Man, keeping the human spirit alive in today’s technological frontier, or how Topia fits in the future, Daniel has something for listeners.00:01:34 Introduction00:02:15 Daniel and early programming experience00:07:51 How coding felt like sorcery00:09:35 Skill trees00:16:10 Second Life00:19:56 Enhancing versus replacing real life experiences00:26:28 A decentralized Metaverse00:29:54 Web 2 versus Web 3 00:34:15 /r/place00:44:16 Why boom cycles are important for tech00:46:03 Topia for consumers00:52:47 Topia as a company00:55:50 Opportunities at Topia00:58:00 Topia.io01:03:50 FarewellsResources mentioned in this episode:Daniel Liebeskind, Cofounder and CEO of Topia:LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/dliebeskind/Website: https://medium.com/@dliebeskindTwitter: https://twitter.com/dliebeskindTopia:Website: https://topia.io/topia/careersLinkedIn:  https://www.linkedin.com/company/topia-io/If you’ve enjoyed this episode, you can listen to more on Programming Throwdown’s website: https://www.programmingthrowdown.com/Reach out to us via email: programmingthrowdown@gmail.comYou can also follow Programming Throwdown on Facebook | Apple Podcasts | Spotify | Player.FM Join the discussion on our DiscordHelp support Programming Throwdown through our Patreon ★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★

14 Jun 20221h 4min

135: Kubernetes with Aran Khanna

135: Kubernetes with Aran Khanna

00:00:15 Introduction00:01:03 Aran Khanna and his background00:05:12 The Marauder’s Map that Facebook hated(Chrome Extension)00:20:11 Why Google made Kubernetes00:31:14 Horizontal and Vertical Auto-Scaling00:35:54 Zencastr00:39:53 How machines talk to each other00:46:32 Sidecars00:48:25 Resources to learn Kubernetes00:52:59 Archera00:59:31 Opportunities at Archera01:01:08 Archera for End Users01:02:30 Archera as a Company01:05:46 Farewells   Resources mentioned in this episode:Aran Khanna, Cofounder of Archera:LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/aran-khanna/Website: http://arankhanna.com/menu.htmlTwitter: https://twitter.com/arankhannaArchera:Website: https://archera.ai/LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/archera-ai/Twitter: https://twitter.com/archeraaiKubernetes:Website: https://kubernetes.io/Documentary: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BE77h7dmoQUIf you’ve enjoyed this episode, you can listen to more on Programming Throwdown’s website: https://www.programmingthrowdown.com/ Reach out to us via email: programmingthrowdown@gmail.com You can also follow Programming Throwdown on Facebook | Apple Podcasts | Spotify | Player.FM  Join the discussion on our DiscordHelp support Programming Throwdown through our Patreon  ★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★

6 Jun 20221h 7min

134: Ephemeral Environments with Benjie De Groot

134: Ephemeral Environments with Benjie De Groot

134: Ephemeral Environments with Benjie De GrootDownloadHow 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 two engineers make changes in parallel to the development environment?  What if you could spin up hundreds or thousands of development databases as you need them? Today we have Benjie De Groot, Co-Founder and CEO of Shipyard to explain ephemeral environments and how virtual machines and containers have made massive improvements in devops! 00:00:15 Introduction00:00:24 Introducing Benjie De Groot00:01:26 Benjie’s Programming Background00:06:34 How Shipyard started00:09:17 Working in Startups vs. Tech Giants00:19:28 The difference between Virtual Machines and Containers00:26:17 Local Development Environment00:40:27 What is a DevOps engineer and what does it entail?00:45:42 Zencastr00:50:12 Shipyard as a company00:55:29 How Shipyard gets clients01:06:48 Farewells     Resources mentioned in this episode: Benjie De Groot, Co-Founder & CEO at Shipyard:LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/bueller/Podcast: https://www.heavybit.com/library/podcasts/the-kubelist-podcast/Shipyard:Website: https://shipyard.build/Careers: https://shipyard.build/careers/LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/shipyardbuild/Twitter: https://twitter.com/shipyardbuildCommunity Website: https://ephemeralenvironments.io/GitHub: https://github.com/shipyardHeavybit:Website: https://www.heavybit.com/LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/heavybit/Twitter: https://twitter.com/heavybit                 If you’ve enjoyed this episode, you can listen to more on Programming Throwdown’s website: https://www.programmingthrowdown.com/ Reach out to us via email: programmingthrowdown@gmail.com You can also follow Programming Throwdown on Facebook | Apple Podcasts | Spotify | Player.FM  Join the discussion on our DiscordHelp support Programming Throwdown through our Patreon ★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★

24 Mai 20221h 7min

133: Solving for the Marketplace Problem with Andrew Yates

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?  Today we have Andrew Yates, Co-Founder & CEO at Promoted.ai, to talk about marketplaces and how to optimize for this two-sided problem. 00:00:15 Introduction00:00:27 Introducing Andrew Yates00:00:50 Andrew’s Programming Background00:04:19 Andrew at Promoted.AI00:08:17 What is a Marketplace?00:17:45 Marketplace Rankings00:22:50 Short-term vs Long-term Experience00:24:43 Machine Learning and the Marketplace00:34:57 Measurements00:37:09 Promoted.AI Integration00:38:31 How Promoted.AI Measures Success00:41:14 Auction Theory00:46:08 Experience with YCombinator00:50:34 Promoted.AI as a Company00:55:47 Farewells   Resources mentioned in this episode: Andrew Yates, Co-Founder & CEO at Promoted.ai:LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/andrew-yates-0217a985/Twitter: https://mobile.twitter.com/ayates_promoted Promoted.ai:Website: https://www.promoted.ai/LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/promoted-ai/If you’ve enjoyed this episode, you can listen to more on Programming Throwdown’s website: https://www.programmingthrowdown.com/ Reach out to us via email: programmingthrowdown@gmail.com You can also follow Programming Throwdown on Facebook | Apple Podcasts | Spotify | Player.FM  Join the discussion on our DiscordHelp support Programming Throwdown through our Patreon  ★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★

9 Mai 202256min

132: Funding Open-Source Projects

132: Funding Open-Source Projects

00:00:15 Introduction00:01:24 Gaming setups00:12:25 News00:12:27 I was wrong, CRDTs are the future00:17:18 How we lost 54k Github stars00:21:10 DALL-E 00:25:45 Inside the Longest Atlassian Outage of All Time00:35:11: Sponsor00:36:22 Book of the Show00:36:38 Indie Boardgame Designers Podcast00:37:24 The Laundry Files00:40:35 Tool of the Show00:40:39 Zapier00:42:21 Earthly00:46:46 Funding open-source projects01:19:44 How to get funding for open-source projects01:22:47 Farewells  Resources mentioned in this episode:Media:The King of Kong: A Fistful of Quarters (2017)Class Action Park (2020)Indie Boardgame Designers Podcast: https://indieboardgamedesigners.com/GitHub Stars Won’t Pay Your Rent: https://medium.com/@kitze/github-stars-wont-pay-your-rent-8b348e12baedNews:I Was Wrong, CRDTs Are The Future: https://josephg.com/blog/crdts-are-the-future/How We Lost 54k GitHub Stars: https://httpie.io/blog/stardustDALL-E: https://openai.com/blog/dall-e/Inside the Longest Atlassian Outage of All Time: https://newsletter.pragmaticengineer.com/p/scoop-atlassian?s=rBooks:Indie Board Game Designers PodcastThe Laundry Files: https://amzn.to/3kdWWQgTools:Zapier: https://zapier.com/N8n: https://n8n.io/Earthly: https://earthly.dev/Adam Gordon Bell:Twitter: https://twitter.com/adamgordonbellWebsite: https://adamgordonbell.com/LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/adamgordonbell/CoRecursive: https://corecursive.com/  If you’ve enjoyed this episode, you can listen to more on Programming Throwdown’s website: https://www.programmingthrowdown.com/ Reach out to us via email: programmingthrowdown@gmail.com You can also follow Programming Throwdown on Facebook | Apple Podcasts | Spotify | Player.FM  Join the discussion on our DiscordHelp support Programming Throwdown through our Patreon ★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★

25 Apr 20221h 24min

131: Supporting your Favorite Creators with Brave with Jimmy Secretan

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. third party cookies).  I'm so excited to sit down with Jimmy Secretan, VP of Ads and Premium Services of Brave, and talk about all things Brave, from the Browser to the other products to the way Brave takes privacy on the internet to a whole new level, while also empowering content creators and advertisers who depend on ads for income and to promote their businesses.00:00:15 Introduction00:00:44 Introducing Jimmy Secretan00:01:10 How Brave started00:09:33 Brave and internet advertising00:21:13 Local machine learning00:32:07 What is BAT (Brave Attention Tokens) 00:42:59 Cross-platform data synchronization 00:44:28 Chromium00:50:22 Public and Private key encryption and authentication00:54:27 Brave for Content Creators00:59:03 Where is Brave now and what is its trajectory01:05:40 Opportunities in Brave01:13:10 FarewellsResources mentioned in this episode:Jimmy Secretan, VP of Ads and Premium Services:Twitter: https://twitter.com/jsecretanLinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jimmysecretan/ Brave:Website: https://brave.com/Brave Careers: https://brave.com/careers/Twitter: https://twitter.com/braveLinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/brave-software/If you’ve enjoyed this episode, you can listen to more on Programming Throwdown’s website: https://www.programmingthrowdown.com/ Reach out to us via email: programmingthrowdown@gmail.com You can also follow Programming Throwdown on Facebook | Apple Podcasts | Spotify | Player.FM  Join the discussion on our DiscordHelp support Programming Throwdown through our Patreon ★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★

11 Apr 20221h 14min

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