Emery Berger, Professor of Information and Computer Sciences at the University of Massachusetts at Amherst, joins Ben for a conversation about the impact of AI on academia. As a young sci-fi fan, he was fascinated by computers that could spit out solutions (a fascination that survived exposure to BASIC and COBOL). Now his CS students are using Copilot to do the same thing. How can educators (and students) adapt?
Episode notes:
Professor Emery Berger is a systems builder who studies “programming languages, runtime systems, and operating systems, with a particular focus on systems that transparently improve reliability, security, and performance.”
AI giveth and AI taketh away: an incredible tool for developers is creating new challenges for CS educators and students. Read Emery’s 2022 essay “Coping with Copilot.”
You can also find Emery on GitHub or Twitter.
Today’s Lifeboat badge winner is mbcrump for their answer to How do I generate a random integer in C#?.
Can software startups that need $$$ avoid venture captial?
An open-source development paradigm
Would you board a plane safety-tested by GenAI?
How to train your dream machine
OverflowAI and the holy grail of search
Spreading the gospel of Python
Between hyper-focus and burnout: Developing with ADHD
Reshaping the future of API platforms
The reverse mullett model of software engineering
Net neutrality is in; TikTok and noncompetes are out
Supporting the world’s most-used database engine through 2050
Is GenAI the next dot-com bubble?
Why configuration is so complicated
If everyone is building AI, why aren't more projects in production?
How do you evaluate an LLM? Try an LLM.
Diverting more backdoor disasters
Climbing the GenAI decision tree
Want to be a great software engineer? Don’t be a jerk.
What a year building AI has taught Stack Overflow
Are long context windows the end of RAG?
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
Insight Story: Tech Trends Unpacked
Zero-Shot
Fast Forward by Tomorrow Unlocked: Tech past, tech future
The Unbelivable Truth - Series 1 - 26 including specials and pilot
Lex Fridman Podcast