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Developer Voices
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Hearted Youtube comments on Developer Voices (@DeveloperVoices) channel.
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Really love the new detailed chapter markers. π
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Having used this engine over the last six months, this video felt very meaningful to me and i was very excited to have learned it was about Bevy. Ty for doing this! And as always you both nailed this interview π
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I love these episodes (and the range of nail varnish), and this one, as a Common Lisp fan, was no exception. Thanks so much for these conversations Kirs. In the spirit of conversation, I would love to hear you talk with Ginger Bill, the creator of the Odin programming language.
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Great show, thank you for helping to give non mainstream languages like Ocaml the exposure they deserve
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I think Zig Vs Odin is a much better comparison. Hope Loris could make a comparison(even as a reply in the comments section) as to why would I choose Zig over Odin besides the crosscompilation functionality.
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Great interview with a compiler legend. Thanks!
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great episode. in my opinion when it comes to guest choice. i cant remember a miss since i started watching regularly. keep it up
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Amazing interview! Very informative. Great questions asked and very thorough and clear to understand answers.
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Oh boy, my company is going to use the hell out of this, even if they donβt know it yet
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I've heard a few podcast episodes about Tigerbeetle. This was by far the best one, because of its structure and the questions. Well done.
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What amazing conversation!! long life to Elixir and Developer Voices ππ
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The cats in the background!!!!!!!!
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Thanks Orhun for your hard work, also crossterm is a pain but still awesome π
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Everyone is too busy with building a nice cozy caravan while these guys are going straight for the Ferrari
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I just finished listening to the Sam Aaron episode about Sonic Pi, so this is a great follow up!
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"I'm writing code in slime" - really taking the enzyme theme seriously
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Barely two minutes in and I'm loving this already.
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Do. more. Demos. :)
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Thank you Youtube Algortithm for suggesting this video to me only 2 hours after the Upload.
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The prophecy has been fulfilled. When the people most needed him, he returned.
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Very cool. Zig seems to keep expanding and doing more and more fundamental things. Who knows what it might do some day?
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it was nice to hear a bit more about the history of Odin and how it came to be in the gaming sphere. thanks!
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I write quite a bit of Prolog π‘
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Omg! Yes! Chris is my hero.
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"Spawn a number of actors" 50:49 that's what Stellan Skarsgard did
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Another fantastic video!! Love the idea of having a simple FP language to use in whatever domain I want. Especially if platforms end up being straight-forward to make.
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Simon is brilliant and he really loves what he does, he is truly admirable! I discovered your channel recently and I'm so glad I did, I've always missed in-depth programming content on YouTube.
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Kris, you are hands down, the best interviewer Iβve seen for programming related topics. Your questions and genuinely thoughtful and I love how much room you give the interviewee to answer the questions while you take it in. Wonderful stuff
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Freakin love this channel! β€
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Thanks for having me Kris!
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Second video I watch and the interviews are so interesting and the conversations go on so pleasantly. That's an amazing skill to have.
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Cool, thanks. Always wanted to see Alice live!
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Some more options for 2:00 (just for the algorithm π) - does services define services? - does teams define teams? - does services define architects? - does teams defines architects? - does architects define teams?
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Will we be getting a python + zig interop episode next?
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Operator overloading is f'ing stupid, good choice.
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He nailed it with the kitchen knife vs chainsaw analogy, with postgres+extensions fitting nicely in between. I think a lot of start-ups and b2b businesses would really benefit from the simplicity of 'just use postgres', and I think their work is going to bring that simplicity to more and more companies. The really big products don't need this, but I bet even really big companies have smaller, perhaps internal projects that should start with 'just use postgres'.
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I have to give a sub, your work is phenomenal! Engaging questions, love the tone you set. I hope you really grow this channel!
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Another great episode. Really love these interviews with language designers, compiler constructors and real developers in general
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The largest scale of data I ever deal with is kilobytes of json π , but this was still great to learn about!
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Fantastic interview and zig is a fantastic project. APPROVED!
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My first Rust project was using PYO3 and I was amazed by how quickly you can learn by doing. Great job David and all the others working on PYO3!
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this is the most educative interview i have seen on internet. i would really want to learn more about systems programming from lori.
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In my opinion, the opening monologue/intro to this episode is a gold-standard for programming podcasts. The questions raised by the topic, especially the technical ones, as well as the delivery of said questions was superb. Very compelling, and really got me excited about the episode, because I knew from the intro that all my burning questions were going to be addressed. Awesome job, Kris. This podcast is fantastic.
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Definitely need to know which papers to read, to learn how to make a programming language
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Interview request, the author of Raylib. Thanks for the great interviews.
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Shout out to the one snoop at GCHQ who likes to hack around with experimental languages.
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I was blown away by the first episode I watched a few months ago. The depth of discussion and knowledge in this is just amazing. I wish there were more channels like this!
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Great interview as always! Itβs funny, Iβve been picking up R again and ran into duckDB through dbplyr just a few days ago. The experience was seamless. I was really impressed by how easily it worked with all the dplyr verbs.
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After listening to the first 10 minutes, it sounds to me that these tests are written the way I would write an implementation in Prolog, which I really like as long as it stays simple. Great channel/interviews, I enjoy it a lot.
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I really enjoyed Bobby Calderwood in this episode, I'm currently building a event sourcing system and it gave me a lot to think through. I remember reading about the decider pattern but I didn't really internalize it but Bobby's way of explaining made a lot of things click for me.
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