Business And Philosophy

  • Author: Vários
  • Narrator: Vários
  • Publisher: Podcast
  • Duration: 261:26:00
  • More information

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Synopsis

Business, philosophy, and culture episodes of SE Daily

Episodes

  • Tech in the Middle East with Chris Schroeder

    11/05/2017 Duration: 59min

    Many countries in the developing world are undergoing a technological revolution which is shaping how they tackle problems around infrastructure, health, education and finance. Young people are at the forefront of developing solutions to the problems in the developing world. These young people creating technology and businesses to foster innovation and growth. Countries in the The post Tech in the Middle East with Chris Schroeder appeared first on Software Engineering Daily.

  • Software Consulting with Rachel Laycock

    09/05/2017 Duration: 54min

    Software consultancies solve problems involving management and software engineering. A large company might hire a software consulting company to give an external opinion on software architecture, or on an organizational structure. Sometimes a consultancy is brought in to help integrate a new technology, or do a major refactoring. Scaling a software consultancy to meet the The post Software Consulting with Rachel Laycock appeared first on Software Engineering Daily.

  • Automation with Haseeb Qureshi and Quincy Larson

    08/05/2017 Duration: 01h03min

    Suddenly, automation is changing our world faster than anyone anticipated. For technologists, the world is becoming convenient and high-leverage. For non-technologists, the job market is evaporating. Haseeb Qureshi and Quincy Larson join me for a roundtable discussion on automation, jobs, and artificial intelligence. Haseeb and I have had numerous discussions about this topic before, and The post Automation with Haseeb Qureshi and Quincy Larson appeared first on Software Engineering Daily.

  • CRISPR with Geoff Ralston

    05/05/2017 Duration: 59min

    CRISPR is a technique for altering the human genome. It might be the most powerful tool for biological modification that we have ever discovered. In this episode, we explore CRISPR: how it works, why it exists in the natural world, and the implications for being able to modify DNA so easily. Geoff Ralston is a The post CRISPR with Geoff Ralston appeared first on Software Engineering Daily.

  • Washington Post Engineering with Jarrod Dicker

    04/05/2017 Duration: 55min

    The Washington Post was acquired by Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos in 2013. Since then, the newspaper has started thinking more like a software company, opting to build new software rather than buy off-the-shelf third party solutions. Arc Publishing is a CMS built by The Washington Post to produce and display content. When you visit washingtonpost.com, The post Washington Post Engineering with Jarrod Dicker appeared first on Software Engineering Daily.

  • Topic Roundtable with Courtland Allen and Caleb Meredith

    24/04/2017 Duration: 54min

    Software Engineering Daily examines the world through the lens of software engineering. In most episodes, an expert in a particular topic joins the show as a guest, and we go into deep technical detail. Occasionally we like to do episodes where we survey a collection of topics. In today’s topic roundtable, Caleb Meredith and Courtland The post Topic Roundtable with Courtland Allen and Caleb Meredith appeared first on Software Engineering Daily.

  • Kenya Mobile Payments with George Gachui

    18/04/2017 Duration: 55min

    Most people in Africa never had a desktop computer. The first computer they owned was a smart phone. This is why Africa is referred to as a “leap frog” place with regard to computers–Africa leapfrogged the desktop to the smart phone. The banking system in Africa also followed a trajectory that is different than the The post Kenya Mobile Payments with George Gachui appeared first on Software Engineering Daily.

  • Political Bots with Samuel Woolley

    17/04/2017 Duration: 01h02min

    Bots on the internet can be malicious, helpful, and everything in between. A bot that responds to all of your tweets might call you a socialist–that is malicious. Google crawls the web to index Google search. That is helpful. Social media marketing bots schedule 200 Twitter posts to go out throughout the day. That is The post Political Bots with Samuel Woolley appeared first on Software Engineering Daily.

  • Complacency with Tyler Cowen

    07/04/2017 Duration: 55min

    Engineers in Silicon Valley see a world of constant progress. Our work is creative and intellectually challenging. We are building the future and getting compensated quite well for it. But what if we are actually achieving far less than what is possible? What if, after so many years of high margins, gourmet lunch, and self-flattery, The post Complacency with Tyler Cowen appeared first on Software Engineering Daily.

  • Listener Q&A

    04/04/2017 Duration: 01h07min

    In this episode, I gathered questions from listeners in our Slack channel and Twitter feed. The questions I answered include: How and when do you see yourself leaving SE Daily? What is your personal opinion on Facebook’s Internet.org initiative? How does the defense industry affect software engineering? How can a programmer learn to deeply understand The post Listener Q&A appeared first on Software Engineering Daily.

  • Amazon and Uber with Brad Stone

    30/03/2017 Duration: 53min

    Big technology companies have so much going on at any given time that a journalist can tell any type of story they want to about it. Depending on what angle you observe the company from, you can write a story depicting that company as good, evil, growing, or about to crash. The truth only becomes The post Amazon and Uber with Brad Stone appeared first on Software Engineering Daily.

  • Product Development with Cullen Zandstra

    27/03/2017 Duration: 48min

    Developing a product requires careful balance between engineering, sales, design, and customer service. The founding CTO of a company often needs to take on each of these responsibilities, because when the company only has a few people there is nobody to delegate these different tasks to. Cullen Zandstra is the CTO at FloQast, a SaaS The post Product Development with Cullen Zandstra appeared first on Software Engineering Daily.

  • Net Neutrality with Quincy Larson

    24/03/2017 Duration: 44min

    Net neutrality is the principle that internet service providers and governments regulating the internet should treat all data on the internet the same. Debates around Net Neutrality can be as contentious as subjects like global warming, or tabs vs. spaces. To a hardcore free market economist, Net Neutrality sounds suspicious. Why would it be good The post Net Neutrality with Quincy Larson appeared first on Software Engineering Daily.

  • Wearables with Asta Roseway

    22/03/2017 Duration: 35min

    Wearables have become more accessible to the public. Snap’s spectacles, Google Glass, FitBit, and Apple Watch suggest a future in which many people will be wearing a smart device. In this episode Asta Roseway, Research Designer at Microsoft Research, gives insights into other categories of wearables like tattoos, scarves, and cosmetics. Asta talked about her The post Wearables with Asta Roseway appeared first on Software Engineering Daily.

  • Cloud Native Investing with Lenny Pruss

    13/03/2017 Duration: 55min

    Making the right engineering choices in today’s wide landscape of cloud technologies is hard. Predicting the future in order to invest in companies in this space has the same level of complexity. The cost of cloud computing is going down but the volume of total required space and processing power is going up. The open The post Cloud Native Investing with Lenny Pruss appeared first on Software Engineering Daily.

  • Prototype Manufacturing with Jeff McAlvay

    03/03/2017 Duration: 01h02min

    Manufacturing electronics is not a simple task and because of its complexity it is also quite expensive. Companies like Apple are able to pull their costs down through economies of scale. Since Apple is always placing huge bulk orders on chips, sensors, and other components, the company can get lower prices for those components than The post Prototype Manufacturing with Jeff McAlvay appeared first on Software Engineering Daily.

  • Equity Compensation with Joshua Levy and Joe Wallin

    02/03/2017 Duration: 51min

    When an engineer has offered a job a tech company, their compensation is often partly in cash and partly in equity–shares of the company. How should an engineer evaluate that offer? How should they negotiate? In the world of equity compensation, costly and avoidable mistakes are routine, and this hurts both companies and employees. Josh The post Equity Compensation with Joshua Levy and Joe Wallin appeared first on Software Engineering Daily.

  • Convergence with Haseeb Qureshi

    24/02/2017 Duration: 37min

    At the first Software Engineering Daily Meetup, the speakers explored a range of topics. A few weeks ago, we published Courtland Allen’s talk about how to build a small software business. In today’s episode, we are publishing Haseeb Qureshi’s talk, called “Everything That Rises Must Converge: Why Engineers Disagree About Everything (And Why Fraudsters Do The post Convergence with Haseeb Qureshi appeared first on Software Engineering Daily.

  • Technically Sentient with Rob May

    20/02/2017 Duration: 48min

    The impact of artificial intelligence on our everyday lives will be so profound that our modern institutions will change completely. Employment, government, romance, social norms–all of these things will be upended. To see the signs of this coming, you no longer have to read science fiction. Every week, there are blog posts, news stories, and The post Technically Sentient with Rob May appeared first on Software Engineering Daily.

  • Where Machines Go to Learn with Auren Hoffman

    17/02/2017 Duration: 51min

    If you wanted to build a machine learning model to understand human health, where would you get the data? A hospital database would be useful, but privacy laws make it difficult to disclose that patient data to the public. In order to publicize the data safely, you would have to anonymize it, so that a The post Where Machines Go to Learn with Auren Hoffman appeared first on Software Engineering Daily.

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