Skip to content

CR 503: Ruby in the WebAssembly

  • Air Date: 2023-02-01
  • Duration: 45 mins 58 secs

About this episode

The shiny userbase flocking to WebAssembly, our thoughts on the "openAI scam", and why they just keep cramming stuff into Docker containers.

Your hosts

  • pop-os core: WIP immutable base — POP working on an immutable base? We're interested.
  • The Blocksize War — This book covers Bitcoin’s blocksize war, which was waged from August 2015 to November 2017.
  • Jupiter Broadcasting Jobs Matrix Room — Hiring? Looking for work? Make a connection in our Jobs chat room.
  • What's New in Ruby 3.2 — The highlights this year are the performance gains from YJIT, WebAssembly support, faster regular expressions, and a new way to define immutable value objects.
  • Rails on Docker — Rails 7.1 is getting an official Dockerfile, which should make it easier to deploy Rails applications to production environments that support Docker. Think of it as a pre-configured Linux box that will work for most Rails applications.
  • The Fed - Meeting calendars and information — The FOMC holds eight regularly scheduled meetings during the year and other meetings as needed.
  • unusual_whales on Twitter — “If Powell keeps hiking rates, he risks the entire financial stability of the [global economic] system,” per Barry Sternlicht.
  • Alby — Lightning for your Browser! — Alby brings Boosts to the web.
  • Coder Radio on the Podcastindex.org — You can boost the show from your web browser, top-up Alby, then head over to our listing on the Podcast Index.
  • Google announces ChatGPT rival Bard — Google is working on a competitor to OpenAI’s chatbot ChatGPT. The ‘experimental conversational AI service’ is called Bard and is only being tested by a limited group.

Tags

25bps hike, aggregating data in rust, better error messages, coder radio, david thinks openai scam, development podcast, finding a way to be creative, new data class, official dockerfile, openai lawsuit, pop immutable base, rails 7.1, robes, ruby 3.2, soft landin, system76, the blocksize war, ui in typescript, web assembly support, yjit

Back to top