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Hackers Archives - Software Engineering Daily
Hackers Archives - Software Engineering Daily
103 episodes
9 months ago
Technical interviews about software topics.
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Technology
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Technical interviews about software topics.
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Technology
Episodes (20/103)
Hackers Archives - Software Engineering Daily
Making React 70% faster with Aiden Bai of Million.js
React is an immensely popular JavaScript library that is used to build website user interfaces. A key feature of React is that it uses a virtual Document Object Model, or DOM, to selectively update the desired regions of the web page, which provides major performance advantages. Million.js is an open source project that provides an
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2 years ago
45 minutes 10 seconds

Hackers Archives - Software Engineering Daily
Cross-functional Incident Management with Ashley Sawatsky and Niall Murphy
Incident management is the process of managing and resolving unexpected disruptions or issues in software systems, especially those that are customer-facing or critical to business operations. Implementing a robust incident management system is often a key challenge in technical environments. Rootly is a platform to handle incident management directly from Slack, and is used by
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2 years ago
50 minutes 38 seconds

Hackers Archives - Software Engineering Daily
SDKs for your API with Sagar Batchu
APIs are ubiquitous and critical to building modern software, and developers must frequently develop custom APIs to streamline user access to their services. However, making an API that provides a great developer experience can be a time-consuming endeavor. As a result, API teams often leave the final mile of integration up to their users. Speakeasy
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2 years ago
37 minutes 54 seconds

Hackers Archives - Software Engineering Daily
Shipping Features with Ben Rometsch
Feature flags also known as feature toggles, release toggles or feature flippers are a way to enable or disable a particular feature from your app without making any changes to the source code. You can turn on or off a particular functionality without deploying new code. Feature flags can also be used to serve different
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2 years ago
1 hour 9 minutes 28 seconds

Hackers Archives - Software Engineering Daily
Modern Robotics Platform with Eliot Horowitz
Programming robotics software has traditionally been a specialized field. The software industry has seen rapid progress, the operating system that provides the foundation for our software applications is taken care of by companies like Google, Microsoft, and other players like Canonical, Amazon, etc. The robotics industry still needs that OS layer that handles the complexities
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2 years ago
40 minutes 48 seconds

Hackers Archives - Software Engineering Daily
Bug Reporting is Broken and how Jam is Fixing that with Dani Grant & Mohd Irtefa
Bug reporting hasn’t changed since the 1990’s. Despite all the technological advancements we’ve made in the rest of software development, the way we handle bugs has stayed the same. It is common practice for non technical teams to provide bug reports that are missing vital information for developers to identify and quickly fix code, such
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2 years ago
34 minutes 39 seconds

Hackers Archives - Software Engineering Daily
Meme.com with Johan Unger
Whether you love them or hate them, share them or ignore them, you encounter memes all over the internet.  Those that are popular can often take off and spawn a long history of remixes, variants, derivatives, and inspired works. In this episode, we interview Johan Unger, the founder of meme.com.  They’re creating a platform for
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4 years ago
39 minutes 44 seconds

Hackers Archives - Software Engineering Daily
Roblox Engineering with Claus Moberg
Roblox is a gaming platform with a large ecosystem of players, creators, game designers, and entrepreneurs. The world of Roblox is a three-dimensional environment where characters and objects interact through a physics engine. Roblox is multiplayer, and users can interact with each other over the Internet. Roblox is not one single game—it is a system
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5 years ago
53 minutes 41 seconds

Hackers Archives - Software Engineering Daily
Indie Hackers with Courtland Allen Holiday Repeat
Originally published November 4, 2016 Indie Hackers is a website that profiles independent developers who have made profitable software projects, usually without raising any money. These projects make anywhere from a few hundred dollars a month to more than $100,000 as in the case with park.io, one of the services profiled by Indie Hackers. Courtland
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5 years ago
1 hour 4 minutes 7 seconds

Hackers Archives - Software Engineering Daily
Indie Hack or Venture Back with Lynne Tye
Key Values is a platform where companies are profiled with descriptions of their company values. These profiles describe features such as work-life balance, company culture, daily routines, and strategy. Lynne Tye created Key Values with the goal of building a small business that would make money through connecting job seekers to companies with a culture
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5 years ago
58 minutes 23 seconds

Hackers Archives - Software Engineering Daily
FindCollabs Hackathon Winners: Kitspace and Rivaly
FindCollabs is a platform for finding collaborators and building projects. Three months ago we had our first hackathon, with lots of projects being created and collaborated on. In an earlier episode, we showcased the first place winner ARhythm.  Today’s show features two more interviews with winners from the first FindCollabs hackathon. Kitspace is an open
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6 years ago
1 hour 53 seconds

Hackers Archives - Software Engineering Daily
Gaming with Eli Brown
Gaming is becoming mainstream. Popular multiplayer games such as Fortnite and Minecraft present players with a massive virtual world to explore, build, and compete within. Turn-based games such as Hearthstone and Magic are breeding a new generation of board game and card game aficionados. Social media networks like Twitch and YouTube have turned gaming into
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6 years ago
49 minutes 33 seconds

Hackers Archives - Software Engineering Daily
Emerging Markets: Kenya with Nelly Cheboi
Africa is rapidly adopting the same software and hardware technologies that have transformed the western world over the last few decades. But access to computers and technology education is still uneven. Where there is access to computers, smartphone adoption often comes before access to laptops or desktop computers. Nelly Cheboi is the founder of TechLit
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6 years ago
57 minutes 7 seconds

Hackers Archives - Software Engineering Daily
SPIFFE: Zero Trust Workload Identification with Evan Gilman
Modern software consists of sprawling international networks of servers. Users contact these servers to access applications. Microservices talk to each other to fulfill complicated requests. Databases and machine learning frameworks crunch terabytes of information to provide complicated answers. Across this infrastructure, there is a lot of different activities–and a lot of vulnerabilities. Without a reliable
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6 years ago
52 minutes 34 seconds

Hackers Archives - Software Engineering Daily
Jailbreaking Apple Watch with Max Bazaliy
Apple operating systems are closed source. This closed source nature gives Apple an extremely successful business model–and a very different software developer ecosystem than Linux-based systems. Since Linux is open source, the information on how to manipulate the system at a low level is very public. The lack of information about low-level programming in Apple
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7 years ago
48 minutes 29 seconds

Hackers Archives - Software Engineering Daily
Counting People with Andrew Farah
If you operate a restaurant, you want to know how many people are inside your restaurant at any given time. You also want to be able to know your occupancy if you operate a movie theater, coffee shop, or apparel store. Knowing how many people are in your building can answer several business-related questions. Do
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7 years ago
44 minutes 41 seconds

Hackers Archives - Software Engineering Daily
Kademlia: P2P Distributed Hash Table with Petar Maymounkov
Napster, Kazaa, and Bittorrent are peer-to-peer file sharing systems. In these P2P systems, nodes need to find each other. Users need to be able to search for files that exist across the system. P2P systems are decentralized, so these routing problems must be solved without a centralized service in the middle. Without a centralized service
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7 years ago
51 minutes 31 seconds

Hackers Archives - Software Engineering Daily
Browser Building with Osine Ikhianosime
Crocodile Browser is a fast browser built by Osine and Anesi Ikhianosime, a pair of brothers from Nigeria. I interviewed them 3 years ago, and in this episode I caught up with Osine to learn what he and his brother have been working on since then. Osine and Anesi have become friends of mine since
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7 years ago
29 minutes 18 seconds

Hackers Archives - Software Engineering Daily
Necto: Build an ISP with Adam Montgomery
In the tech industry, we have all grown to fear “lock-in.” Lock-in is a situation in which you have no choice but to pay a certain provider for some aspect of your computer services. Since computers are so fundamental to our lives, we sometimes have no choice but to pay the provider of that lock-in
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7 years ago
58 minutes 4 seconds

Hackers Archives - Software Engineering Daily
Pi Hole: Ad Blocker Hardware with Jacob Salmela
Ad blockers in the browser protect us from the most annoying marketing messages that the Internet tries to serve to us. But we still pay a price for these ads. We pay the bandwidth costs of requesting these pages. Our browsers are slowed down by these extra requests. Pi Hole is a hardware based ad
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7 years ago
46 minutes 53 seconds

Hackers Archives - Software Engineering Daily
Technical interviews about software topics.