![#426: What's New in PyScript [August 2023]](https://cdn.podme.com/podcast-images/03CE2DCE320886B78FFCBA49DDA2347C_small.jpg)
#426: What's New in PyScript [August 2023]
One of the most exciting initiatives in the Python space these days is pyscript which enables Python running natively in your browser. With consistent support from the folks at Anaconda, this project has been making solid strides since its initial release. On this episode we catch up with Fabio Pliger and Nicholas Tollervey to see where they are with the pyscript project.
9 Aug 20231h 5min

#425: Memray: The endgame Python memory profiler
Understanding how your Python application is using memory can be tough. First, Python has it's own layer of reused memory (arenas, pools, and blocks) to help it be more efficient. And many important Python packages are built in natively compiled languages like C and Rust often times making that section of your memory opaque. But with Memray, you can way deeper insight into your memory usage. We have Pablo Galindo Salgado and Matt Wozniski back on the show to dive into Memray, the sister project to their pystack one we recently covered.
4 Aug 20231h 10min

#424: Shiny for Python
If you want to share your data science results as interactive web apps, you could learn Flask or Django and a bunch of other web technologies. Or, you could pick up one of the powerful frameworks for deploying data science specifically. And if you're searching through that space, you've likely hear of Shiny -- but that's just for the R side of data science, right? Not any longer. Joe Cheng is here to introduce us to the recently released Shiny for Python. And it looks like a very solid new framework on the block.
27 Juli 20231h 4min

#423: Solving 10 different simulation problems with Python
Python is used for a wide variety of software projects. One area it's really gained a huge amount of momentum is in the computational space (including data science). On this episode we welcome back Allen Downey to dive into a particular slice of this space: simulation problems and Python in Physics and Engineering in general.
24 Juli 20231h 6min

#422: How data scientists use Python
Regardless of which side of Python, software developer or data scientist, you sit on, you surely know that data scientists and software devs seem to have different styles and priorities. But why? And what are the benefits as well as the pitfalls of this separation. That's the topic of conversation with our guest, Dr. Jodie Burchell, data science developer advocate at JetBrains.
7 Juli 20231h 2min

#421: Python at Netflix
When you think of Netflix (as a technology company), you probably imagine them as cloud innovators. They were one of the first companies to go all-in on a massive scale for cloud computing as well as throwing that pesky chaos monkey into the servers. But they have become a hive of amazing Python activity. From their CDN, demand predictions and failover, security, machine learning, executable notebooks and lots more, the Python at play is super interesting. On this episode, we have Zoran Simic and Amjith Ramanujam on the show to give us this rare inside look.
2 Juli 20231h 4min

#420: Database Consistency & Isolation for Python Devs
When you use a SQL database like Postgres, you have to understand the subtleties of isolation levels from "read committed" to "serializable." And distributed databases like MongoDB offer a range of consistency levels, from "eventually consistent" to "linearizable" and many options in between. Plus, it's easy enough to confuse "isolation" with "consistency!" We have A. Jesse Jiryu Davis from MongoDB back on the podcast to break it all down for us.
26 Juni 202356min

#419: Debugging Python in Production with PyStack
Here's the situation. You have a Python app that is locked or even has completely crashed and all you're left with is a core dump on the server. Now what? It's time for PyStack! You can capture a view of your app as if you've set a breakpoint and even view the callstack and locals across language calls (for example from Python to C++ and back). We have the maintainers, Pablo Galindo Salgado and Matt Wozniski, here to dive into PyStack. You'll definitely want to have this tool in your toolbox.
14 Juni 20231h 12min