How terrifying is giving a conference talk? (Ep. 589)

Connell, a UK-based .NET developer and senior software engineer at Stack Overflow, tells the home team about his path to software development via text-based RPGs, his work on Stack Overflow’s Community Enablement team, why Agile gets so much hate, and what he’s learned giving conference talks to developers.

The post How terrifying is giving a conference talk? (Ep. 589)

Jamstack is evolving toward a composable web (Ep. 588)

Dana Lawson, Senior VP of Engineering at Netlify, joins Ben and Ryan to talk about her path from the military to tech, how three years at GitHub continues to shape her perspective, and how composable architecture is turning web development into something resembling LEGOsⓇ (in a good way).

The post Jamstack is evolving toward a composable web (Ep. 588) appeared first o

From Sims to supercycle? (Ep. 587)

VerseProp founder and CEO Joel Coren and founding partner and COO William Polisano join Ben to talk about digital real estate’s gaming roots, where the value of virtual properties comes from, and why they think digital real estate is on the cusp of a supercycle.

The post From Sims to supercycle? (Ep. 587) appeared first on Stack Overflow

Do large language models know what they are talking about?

Large language models seem to possess the ability to reason intelligently, but does that mean they actually know things?

The post Do large language models know what they are talking about? appeared first on Stack Overflow Blog.

https://stackoverflow.blog/2023/07/03/do-large-language-models-know-what-th

Developers use AI tools, they just don’t trust them (Ep. 586)

The home team shares what our Developer Survey respondents said about AI, spicy opinions about recent Apple unveilings, and an update on crypto regulation.

The post Developers use AI tools, they just don’t trust them (Ep. 586) appeared first on Stack Overflow Blog.

https://stackoverflow.blog/2023/07/04/

Making computer science more humane at Carnegie Mellon (ep. 585)

On this episode of the podcast, Ben and Ryan chat with Martial Hebert, dean of the School of Computer Science at Ryan’s alma mater, Carnegie Mellon University.

The post Making computer science more humane at Carnegie Mellon (ep. 585) appeared first on Stack Overflow Blog.

https://stackoverflow.blog


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