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carterdmorgan

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1 points·by carterdmorgan·anno scorso·0 comments

Martin Fowler Reflects on Refactoring [video]

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22 points·by carterdmorgan·2 anni fa·3 comments

Stephen Wolfram Reflects on What Is ChatGPT Doing and Why Does It Work? [video]

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5 points·by carterdmorgan·2 anni fa·0 comments

Robert "Uncle Bob" Martin Reflects on "Clean Coder" [video]

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4 points·by carterdmorgan·2 anni fa·0 comments

Brian Kernighan reflects on his book The Practice of Programming

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1 points·by carterdmorgan·2 anni fa·0 comments

comments

carterdmorgan
·2 anni fa·discuss
That's something we've been considering! Right now I'm wrapping up my masters degree and will finish in April (fingers crossed). Once I have more free time, we're going to look at other ways to expand the podcast, including audience participation. We've gotten that request from a few people.
carterdmorgan
·2 anni fa·discuss
I'm one of the creators of the podcast. We do what we can, but this is very much a side project for us. We're both full-time SDEs with day jobs.
carterdmorgan
·2 anni fa·discuss
I’m one of the creators of the podcast. Thanks for linking to the site!

If you’re not familiar with the podcast, we read and discuss a new software engineering book each week. When we can, we interview the authors, like we just did with Brian.
carterdmorgan
·2 anni fa·discuss
It's definitely a bit of a melancholy read. Some of the people who invented Unix are long gone, and we probably don't have a lot of time left with the people who are still with us. I'm glad Brian was able to tell the full story while there's still time left. We take Unix for granted, but its the basis of most of the modern operating system world.
carterdmorgan
·2 anni fa·discuss
Funny you would post this today! I actually just conducted an interview with John on A Philosophy of Software Design. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k0kTux_YNHw
carterdmorgan
·2 anni fa·discuss
You can argue that Shakespeare is comprehensible to a modern English speaker, but I don't think you can argue that it's modern English. The different "you" forms alone are enough to make it difficult to understand for most modern speakers.
carterdmorgan
·2 anni fa·discuss
Great idea here. I wonder if there's potentially more demand for new programming languages now purely as benchmarks for LLMs, like you said?
carterdmorgan
·2 anni fa·discuss
Love it! It's not really Jeopardy without the buzzers, is it?
carterdmorgan
·2 anni fa·discuss
Super interested in this! I left a main comment in the thread about a potential promotional opportunity for you all, so let me know if you're interested!
carterdmorgan
·2 anni fa·discuss
I love it! One of my big hesitations in using LLMs in any projects is the inherent instability of it, so I'm excited to see some concrete strategies on how to mitigate that.

Actually, I host a podcast called Book Overflow ([YouTube link here](https://www.youtube.com/@BookOverflowPod), but we're on all major platforms). Each week we read and discuss a new software engineering book. We also love to interview the authors when possible. Our [interview with Brian Kernighan](https://youtu.be/_QQ7k5sn2-o?si=bi3omgmNW7bs50NQ) actually went viral here on HN last week, peaking at #3.

If you're willing to provide us with an advance copy and one/some of the authors are willing to sit down for a digital interview, we'd love to devote a discussion episode and bonus interview episode to the book. We could even time the release to line up with the release of the book.

Let me know if you're interested. We can work out the details either here in the thread or you can reach us at contact at bookoverflow.io.
carterdmorgan
·2 anni fa·discuss
Agreed. Reading books is great if it's replacing Twitter and Reddit time. It's not great if it's replacing coding time.
carterdmorgan
·2 anni fa·discuss
One of the great things about The Practice of Programming is how much it references other non-coding works. You can tell Kernighan draws his knowledge from many sources, not just technical ones.
carterdmorgan
·2 anni fa·discuss
Thanks for the heads up on "The Unix Programming Environment!" I've been searching for a book with a concise explanation on how to write a compiler, and you can't go wrong with one from Kernighan!
carterdmorgan
·2 anni fa·discuss
Added to the backlog! As our audience grows, we've debated doing live backlog grooming on YouTube so that listeners have a chance to chime in and voice their opinions on what we should read.
carterdmorgan
·2 anni fa·discuss
Certainly successful intelligent people often excel in personalities. Hard to get places without playing nice with others to a degree.
carterdmorgan
·2 anni fa·discuss
They mention at one point that Java doesn't have a way to pass a function as a parameter to another function. That was added in Java 8 with lambdas. That's just one off the top of my head.
carterdmorgan
·2 anni fa·discuss
Good idea. Now that I think of it, I've seen other creators do something similar.
carterdmorgan
·2 anni fa·discuss
Yeah, someone on YouTube pointed out the same thing. D'oh. I wish Brian would have corrected us!

We'd love to get Rob Pike on too! Currently working on it, although he's a little harder to get a hold of.
carterdmorgan
·2 anni fa·discuss
That's been my experience so far, especially because the focus of the podcast is explicitly on the book. It's not, "Hey, come on my podcast to discuss the latest AI development and then maybe plug your book at the end," it's "Hey, come on my podcast solely dedicated to discussing the book you've written." Authors seem pretty eager to participate in that.
carterdmorgan
·2 anni fa·discuss
It's a rare combination to find someone both as intelligent and humble as he is. Truly a blessing to our industry.