
A podcast about computers and computer programs and why.
| Publishes | Twice monthly | Episodes | 4 | Founded | 12 years ago |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Category | Technology | ||||

Chris Patuzzo tells the story of creating the Sentient programming language, with diversions into NAND to Tetris, self-enumerating pangrams, the boolean satisfiability problem, and The Witness.
Sandi Metz and Katrina Owen reflect upon the process of writing a book together, the secrets of building good software, and the logistics of the self-publishing business.
James Edward Gray II doubles down on Twitter arguments about static type systems, modern software tooling, the mind-expanding effects of being a polyglot programmer, and the design possibilities of massively concurrent systems.
James Coglan talks about the lengthy process of creating Terminus and Faye, thinking through coding, software as argument, maintaining open source projects, JavaScript in web apps, and his upcoming JavaScript testing book.
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A fascinating podcast about the deep realities of making computers work. And play.









Listeners, social reach, demographics and more for this podcast.
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Why Are Computers launched 12 years ago and published 4 episodes to date. You can find more information about this podcast including rankings, audience demographics and engagement in our podcast database.
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