InfoQ Homepage JavaScript Content on InfoQ
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If LLMs Do the Easy Programming Tasks - How are Junior Developers Trained? What Have We Done?
In this podcast Michael Stiefel spoke to Anthony Alford and Roland Meertens about the future of software development and the training of new developers, in a world where Large Language Models heavily contribute to software development.
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Joe Duffy on Infrastructure as Code, Pulumi, and Multi-Cloud
In this podcast, Daniel Bryant sat down with Joe Duffy, founder and CEO at Pulumi, and discussed several infrastructure-themed topics: the evolution of infrastructure as code (IaC), the way in which the open source Pulumi framework allows engineers to write IaC using general purpose programming languages such as JavaScript and Go, and the future of multi-cloud environments.
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Dylan Schiemann on the Evolution of Dojo, Web Components and Emerging Trends in Web Development
In this podcast Charles Humble spoke to Dylan Schiemann, co-creator of Dojo and InfoQ’s JavaScript and Web Development lead editor, about the history and current state of Dojo, and key emerging trends in the JavaScript landscape today. Key topics include Dojo’s adoption of Typescript, web components, and client-side libraries such as Svelte and Stencil.
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Victor Dibia on TensorFlow.js and Building Machine Learning Models with JavaScript
Victor Dibia is a research engineer with Cloudera’s Fast Forward Labs. On today’s podcast, Wes Reisz and Victor Dibia talk about the realities of building machine learning in the browser. The two discuss the capabilities, limitations, process, and realities around using TensorFlow.js.
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Colin Eberhardt on What WebAssembly Is, and Plans for Version 2.0
In this podcast Wes talks to Colin Eberhardt, the technology director at Scott Logic, about what WebAssembly (WASM) is, a bit of the history of JavaScript, and plans for WebAssembly 2.0 including the threading model and GC.
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GitHub’s Phil Haack on Moving from Engineering to Management
In this podcast, Wes Reisz, chair of the QCon conferences in San Francisco, London and New York talks to Phil Haack, an Engineering Director at GitHub focused on software pushed mostly to the desktop. He’s shipping software like GitHub Desktop, GitHub Extensions for Visual Studio, and the Atom text editor. Phil joined GitHub in 2011 and is a prominent member of the .Net community.