Podcasts Strictly Professional

Informações:

Sinopsis

Podcasting about programming, the business of software, and otherwise making fools of ourselves.

Episodios

  • Strictly Professional #005: “If it was hard to write, it should be hard to read!”

    04/02/2010

    Recorded on January 28th, 2010, this episode features Doug Martin, Gerard Gualberto, Brian Johnson, Joe Brandt, and Chas Emerick. We offer our reactions to the iPad announcement in the beginning, and then move on to lots of other topics: the upshot of the Sun/Oracle merger, what happened to postgres, some FSF-bashing, whether encrypting content is ethical/reasonable, and tons of other miscellany.

  • Podcast #004: The one where Chas discovers the rimshot effect

    12/01/2010

    Recorded on December 17th, 2009, this episode features Doug Martin, Gerard Gualberto, Michael McIntosh, Michael Klatsky, Joe Brandt, and Chas Emerick, chattering on about Cocoa and iPhone development, tech social news sites, python, macports, and Chrome, the python moratorium, the Clojure sponsorship drive for 2010, and the joys of Lisp-in-pascal.

  • Podcast #004: The one where Chas discovers the rimshot effect

    12/01/2010

    Recorded on December 17th, 2009, this episode features Doug Martin, Gerard Gualberto, Michael McIntosh, Michael Klatsky, Joe Brandt, and Chas Emerick, chattering on about Cocoa and iPhone development, tech social news sites, python, macports, and Chrome, the python moratorium, the Clojure sponsorship drive for 2010, and the joys of Lisp-in-pascal.

  • Podcast #002: We don’t need no steenking editing!

    23/11/2009

    Recorded on 11/19/2009, this episode features myself, Chris Miles, Joe Brandt, Michael McIntosh, and Michael Klatsky (see links to people's sites, etc. in the sidebar). We talked about a smattering of things related to "the cloud", IT management, Amazon AWS, Rackspace, CouchDB, Redis, and other bits.

  • Podcast #001

    13/11/2009

    In this inaugural podcast, we talk about bug trackers, network businesses, software refunds, to be rich or to be king, why are we software developers, and how Brainfuck is philosophically anarchist existentialism.