#524: 38 things Python developers should learn in 2025

#524: 38 things Python developers should learn in 2025

Python in 2025 is different. Threads really are about to run in parallel, installs finish before your coffee cools, and containers are the default. In this episode, we count down 38 things to learn this year: free-threaded CPython, uv for packaging, Docker and Compose, Kubernetes with Tilt, DuckDB and Arrow, PyScript at the edge, plus MCP for sane AI workflows. Expect practical wins and migration paths. No buzzword bingo, just what pays off in real apps. Join me along with Peter Wang and Calvin Hendrix-Parker for a fun, fast-moving conversation.

Avsnitt(525)

#326: Building Desktop Apps with wxPython

#326: Building Desktop Apps with wxPython

Did you know I'm a fan of GUIs. You know, they are kind of like web pages, but they run on your computer, they have their own windows, and you can even use them offline! On this episode, we'll dive into wxPython with Mike Driscoll. He's back on the podcast to share his hard-won experience on building and distributing Python Window-based applications.

23 Juli 202153min

#325: MicroPython + CircuitPython

#325: MicroPython + CircuitPython

When you think about embedded programming, does it bring low-level languages and tools to mind? Maybe Embedded C or even Assembly language? Thanks to the groundbreaking work by Damien George back in 2014 to create MicroPython, Python is one of the very solid choices for building tiny programmable devices.

15 Juli 20211h 8min

#324: Gatorade-powered Python APIs

#324: Gatorade-powered Python APIs

Python is used to solve a large and varied set of problems. One of its core pillars is web APIs. Another one is ML and data science. Those two important pieces were brought together in an unexpected yet magically-futuristic way by Rod Senra's team working with the Gatorade Sports Science Institute.

9 Juli 20211h 12min

#323: Best practices for Docker in production

#323: Best practices for Docker in production

You've got your Python API or app running in a Docker container. Great! Are you ready to ship it to that hosted cluster service and head off to production? Not so fast. Have you considered how you'll manage evolving dependencies and addressing security updates over time? Not just for the base OS but for installed packages? How about your pip installed dependencies? Are you running as root? If you don't know, the answer is yes.

3 Juli 20211h 10min

#322: A path into data science

#322: A path into data science

Are you interested in getting ahead in data science? On this episode, you'll meet Sanyam Bhutani who studied computer science but found his education didn't prepare him for getting a data science-focused job. That's where he started his own path of self-education and advancement. Now he's working at an AI startup and ranking high on Kaggle.

25 Juni 202159min

#321: HTMX - Clean, Dynamic HTML Pages

#321: HTMX - Clean, Dynamic HTML Pages

Have you wanted to add more interactivity and liveness to your web application? If you built it using Flask, Django, or some other Python web framework, that thought probably didn't fill you with joy. Because it might mean that you need to change a bunch of code and rewrite a significant bit of your app using a full-on front-end framework like Vue.js or React.js.

19 Juni 20211h 12min

#320: Python in the Electrical Energy Sector

#320: Python in the Electrical Energy Sector

In this episode, we cover how Python is being used to understand the electrical markets and grid in Australia. Our guest, Jack Simpson, has used Python to uncover a bunch of interesting developments as the country has adopted more and more solar energy. We round out the episode looking at some best practices for high-performance, large-data processing in Pandas and beyond.

12 Juni 20211h 8min

#319: Typosquatting and Supply Chains Vulnerabilities

#319: Typosquatting and Supply Chains Vulnerabilities

One of the true superpowers of Python is the libraries over at the Python Package Index. They are all just a "pip install" away. Yet, like all code that you run on your system, it is done with some degree of trust. How do we know that all of those useful packages are trustworthy? That's the topic of this episode. Bentz Tozer and John Speed Meyers are here to share their research into typosquatting on PyPI and other sneaky deeds. But we also discuss some potential solutions and fixes.

6 Juni 202159min

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