Around IT in 256 seconds
A podcast by Tomasz Nurkiewicz
98 Episodio
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#97: Ruby: help every programmer to be productive and to be happy
Pubblicato: 13/02/2023 -
#96: Border Gateway Protocol: the duct tape that makes the Internet work
Pubblicato: 06/02/2023 -
#95: SQLite: the most ubiquitus database on the planet. And beyond!
Pubblicato: 23/01/2023 -
#94: Scala: language with academic background and huge industry adoption
Pubblicato: 16/01/2023 -
#93: K-means clustering: machine learning algorithm to easily split observations into multiple buckets
Pubblicato: 11/01/2023 -
#92: Clojure: a languages that will change the way you think about programming
Pubblicato: 28/11/2022 -
#91: Asynchronous communication: loose coupling in distributed systems
Pubblicato: 21/11/2022 -
#90: Mastodon: next-generation, open source social network
Pubblicato: 15/11/2022 -
#89: RabbitMQ: A proven message broker for asynchronous communication
Pubblicato: 12/10/2022 -
#88: SLI, SLO and SLA: a number, a threshold and a legal document respectively
Pubblicato: 03/10/2022 -
#87: Artificial neural networks: imitating human brain to solve problems like humans
Pubblicato: 27/09/2022 -
#86: Proof of stake: how to cut global energy usage by 0.2%
Pubblicato: 19/09/2022 -
#85: Genetic algorithm: natural selection helps to solve coding problems
Pubblicato: 13/09/2022 -
#84: Non-fungible token (NFT): digital, decentralized art market
Pubblicato: 29/08/2022 -
#83: Real-time bidding: how online tracking helps serving ads
Pubblicato: 23/08/2022 -
#82: MongoDB: the most popular NoSQL database
Pubblicato: 16/08/2022 -
#81: Quarkus: supersonic, subatomic Java (guest: Holly Cummins)
Pubblicato: 05/08/2022 -
#80: Ethereum: a distributed virtual machine for exchanging money and bored apes
Pubblicato: 04/07/2022 -
#79: QUIC: what makes HTTP/3 faster
Pubblicato: 30/06/2022 -
#78: Stuxnet: computer virus that you can admire
Pubblicato: 20/06/2022
Podcast for developers, testers, SREs... and their managers. I explain complex and convoluted technologies in a clear way, avoiding buzzwords and hype. Never longer than 4 minutes and 16 seconds. Because software development does not require hours of lectures, dev advocates' slide decks and hand waving. For those of you, who want to combat FOMO, while brushing your teeth. 256 seconds is plenty of time. If I can't explain something within this time frame, it's either too complex, or I don't understand it myself. By Tomasz Nurkiewicz. Java Champion, CTO, trainer, O'Reilly author, blogger