Jason Snell and Dan Moren's imaginary tech podcast.
Tashkant / Rainer
There are no people in Tashkant’s collective.
Huffduffed (9)
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Clockwise Podcast 0
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Extroverted Developer 18 – Gayle Laakmann McDowell
This week Ben and I talk with Author, Entrepreneur and owner of careercup.com, former Google hiring committee member Gayle Laakmann McDowell about her two books: Cracking the Coding Interview and The Google Resume about how to get a job at the big tech companies
SHOW NOTES Interview preparation for Software Engineers looking to get into Google, Microsoft, Apple, etc. How do technical interviews work at the large tech companies? Resume tips for the professional programmer! On MBAs The Seattle Anti-Freeze
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How This Hacker Sees Public Policy
This is a feature cast, an episode of The Command Line Podcast.
I will not be headed to OSCon in July after all but will be keeping my other event and travel commitments for the rest of this month, and June.
The hacker word of the week this week is fork.
The feature this week is another monologue trying to bring to the surface my hackish assumptions, this time on how I see public policy, especially my own experiences in cultivating a second career recently in this space.
View the detailed show notes online. You can grab the flac encoded audio from the Internet Archive.
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Mr. Jobs and the Great Glass Elevator
Andy Ihnatko guest-hosted this week’s MacBreak Weekly, and John Gruber was lucky enough to be one of the panelists, alongside Jason Snell, Chris Breen, and Rich Siegel. Great show, I thought.
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Lindsey on Weekday
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Lindsey on Weekday
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Webstock 2012: Adam Lisagor interviewed by Merlin Mann
In the second of our interviews with a Webstock ’12 speaker, we’re both honored and delighted to present Adam Lisagor in conversation with Merlin Mann. They cover such topics as Webstock, the New Zealand accent, what it is Adam does, how he works and much, much more.
Tagged with adam lisagor merlin mann webstock lonelysandwich
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Steve Jobs: ‘Computer Science Is A Liberal Art’ : NPR
Everyone should be able to harness technology, Jobs told Fresh Air's Terry Gross in 1996. In memory of Apple's co-founder and former CEO, we listen back to excerpts of their conversation. "Our goal was to bring a liberal arts perspective … to what had traditionally been a very geeky technology," he said.
http://www.npr.org/2011/10/06/141115121/steve-jobs-computer-science-is-a-liberal-art