This podcast features interviews with Computer Science researchers. Hosted by Dr. Jack Waudby researchers are interviewed, highlighting the problem(s) they tackled, solutions they developed, and how their findings can be applied in practice. This podcast is for industry practitioners, researchers, and students, aims to further narrow the gap between research and practice, and to generally make awesome Computer Science research more accessible. We have 2 types of episode: (i) Cutting Edge (red/blue logo) where we talk to researchers about their latest work, and (ii) High Impact (gold/silver logo) where we talk to researchers about their influential work.
You can support the show through Buy Me a Coffee. A donation of $3 will help us keep making you awesome Computer Science research podcasts.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
This podcast features interviews with Computer Science researchers. Hosted by Dr. Jack Waudby researchers are interviewed, highlighting the problem(s) they tackled, solutions they developed, and how their findings can be applied in practice. This podcast is for industry practitioners, researchers, and students, aims to further narrow the gap between research and practice, and to generally make awesome Computer Science research more accessible. We have 2 types of episode: (i) Cutting Edge (red/blue logo) where we talk to researchers about their latest work, and (ii) High Impact (gold/silver logo) where we talk to researchers about their influential work.
You can support the show through Buy Me a Coffee. A donation of $3 will help us keep making you awesome Computer Science research podcasts.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

In this episode of the DuckDB in Research series, host Jack Waudby talks with Abigale Kim, PhD student at the University of Wisconsin–Madison and author of VLDB 2025 paper: “Anarchy in the Database: A Survey and Evaluation of DBMS Extensibility”. They explore how database extensibility is reshaping modern data systems — and why DuckDB is emerging as the gold standard for safe, flexible, and high-performance extensions. Abigale shares the inside story of her research, the surprises uncovered when testing Postgres and DuckDB extensions, and what’s next for extensibility and composable database design.
This episode is perfect for researchers, practitioners, and students interested in databases, systems design, and the interplay between academia and industry innovation.
Highlights:
Links:
You can find Abigale at:
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.