talk-data.com talk-data.com

Filter by Source

Select conferences and events

People (4 results)

See all 4 →
Showing 2 results

Activities & events

Title & Speakers Event
Event The Pragmatic Engineer 2025-11-05
Chris Lattner – guest , Gergely Orosz – host

Brought to You By: •⁠ Statsig ⁠ — ⁠ The unified platform for flags, analytics, experiments, and more. Companies like Graphite, Notion, and Brex rely on Statsig to measure the impact of the pace they ship. Get a 30-day enterprise trial here. •⁠ Linear – The system for modern product development. Linear is a heavy user of Swift: they just redesigned their native iOS app using their own take on Apple’s Liquid Glass design language. The new app is about speed and performance – just like Linear is. Check it out. — Chris Lattner is one of the most influential engineers of the past two decades. He created the LLVM compiler infrastructure and the Swift programming language – and Swift opened iOS development to a broader group of engineers. With Mojo, he’s now aiming to do the same for AI, by lowering the barrier to programming AI applications. I sat down with Chris in San Francisco, to talk language design, lessons on designing Swift and Mojo, and – of course! – compilers. It’s hard to find someone who is as enthusiastic and knowledgeable about compilers as Chris is! We also discussed why experts often resist change even when current tools slow them down, what he learned about AI and hardware from his time across both large and small engineering teams, and why compiler engineering remains one of the best ways to understand how software really works. — Timestamps (00:00) Intro (02:35) Compilers in the early 2000s (04:48) Why Chris built LLVM (08:24) GCC vs. LLVM (09:47) LLVM at Apple  (19:25) How Chris got support to go open source at Apple (20:28) The story of Swift  (24:32) The process for designing a language  (31:00) Learnings from launching Swift  (35:48) Swift Playgrounds: making coding accessible (40:23) What Swift solved and the technical debt it created (47:28) AI learnings from Google and Tesla  (51:23) SiFive: learning about hardware engineering (52:24) Mojo’s origin story (57:15) Modular’s bet on a two-level stack (1:01:49) Compiler shortcomings (1:09:11) Getting started with Mojo  (1:15:44) How big is Modular, as a company? (1:19:00) AI coding tools the Modular team uses  (1:22:59) What kind of software engineers Modular hires  (1:25:22) A programming language for LLMs? No thanks (1:29:06) Why you should study and understand compilers — The Pragmatic Engineer deepdives relevant for this episode: •⁠ AI Engineering in the real world • The AI Engineering stack • Uber's crazy YOLO app rewrite, from the front seat • Python, Go, Rust, TypeScript and AI with Armin Ronacher • Microsoft’s developer tools roots — Production and marketing by ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://penname.co/⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠. For inquiries about sponsoring the podcast, email [email protected].

Get full access to The Pragmatic Engineer at newsletter.pragmaticengineer.com/subscribe

AI/ML Analytics LLM Marketing Microsoft Python Rust TypeScript
Gergely Orosz – host , Armin Ronacher – Creator of Flask; former Sentry engineer; startup co-founder

Brought to You By: •⁠ Statsig ⁠ — ⁠ The unified platform for flags, analytics, experiments, and more. Most teams end up in this situation: ship a feature to 10% of users, wait a week, check three different tools, try to correlate the data, and you’re still unsure if it worked. The problem is that each tool has its own user identification and segmentation logic. Statsig solved this problem by building everything within a unified platform. Check out Statsig. •⁠ Linear – The system for modern product development. In the episode, Armin talks about how he uses an army of “AI interns” at his startup. With Linear, you can easily do the same: Linear’s Cursor integration lets you add Cursor as an agent to your workspace. This agent then works alongside you and your team to make code changes or answer questions. You’ve got to try it out: give Linear a spin and see how it integrates with Cursor. — Armin Ronacher is the creator of the Flask framework for Python, was one of the first engineers hired at Sentry, and now the co-founder of a new startup. He has spent his career thinking deeply about how tools shape the way we build software. In this episode of The Pragmatic Engineer Podcast, he joins me to talk about how programming languages compare, why Rust may not be ideal for early-stage startups, and how AI tools are transforming the way engineers work. Armin shares his view on what continues to make certain languages worth learning, and how agentic coding is driving people to work more, sometimes to their own detriment.  We also discuss:  • Why the Python 2 to 3 migration was more challenging than expected • How Python, Go, Rust, and TypeScript stack up for different kinds of work  • How AI tools are changing the need for unified codebases • What Armin learned about error handling from his time at Sentry • And much more  Jump to interesting parts: • (06:53) How Python, Go, and Rust stack up and when to use each one • (30:08) Why Armin has changed his mind about AI tools • (50:32) How important are language choices from an error-handling perspective? — Timestamps (00:00) Intro (01:34) Why the Python 2 to 3 migration created so many challenges (06:53) How Python, Go, and Rust stack up and when to use each one (08:35) The friction points that make Rust a bad fit for startups (12:28) How Armin thinks about choosing a language for building a startup (22:33) How AI is impacting the need for unified code bases (24:19) The use cases where AI coding tools excel  (30:08) Why Armin has changed his mind about AI tools (38:04) Why different programming languages still matter but may not in an AI-driven future (42:13) Why agentic coding is driving people to work more and why that’s not always good (47:41) Armin’s error-handling takeaways from working at Sentry  (50:32) How important is language choice from an error-handling perspective (56:02) Why the current SDLC still doesn’t prioritize error handling  (1:04:18) The challenges language designers face  (1:05:40) What Armin learned from working in startups and who thrives in that environment (1:11:39) Rapid fire round — The Pragmatic Engineer deepdives relevant for this episode:

— Production and marketing by ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://penname.co/⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠. For inquiries about sponsoring the podcast, email [email protected].

Get full access to The Pragmatic Engineer at newsletter.pragmaticengineer.com/subscribe

AI/ML Analytics Marketing Python Rust TypeScript
Showing 2 results