Matt takes us back to the origins of his open source days and the spark that inspired his love for engineering — including the point at which he discovered Linux.
He shares how he began learning from the code itself, which was ultimately a different style of learning than what was available to him at university. Then, it was to the stacks, but not Stack Overflow. Think Barnes and Noble, not YouTube videos.
Imagine trying to navigate getting your first engineering job during the dot-com crash of the late 90s and early 2000s.
We reflect on Matt's experience building projects with his daughter, including an AI-powered doorbell he built himself.
Speaking of insatiable curiousity, we’d like to give a big high five to Wonton, who received the Inquisitive Badge. Thanks for coming on 30 separate days to maintain a positive question track record.
Follow Matt, Ben, and Cassidy.
How to prevent your new chatbot from giving away company secrets
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
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