We found 3 episodes of Coder Radio with the tag “chromeos”.
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530: What the AI Skeptics got Right
August 8th, 2023 | 57 mins 22 secs
ai content, ai investment, ai training, apple, apple silicon, apple silicon macs, asahi linux, bankruptcy, browser separation, chatgpt, chrome, chrome browser, chromeos, chromeos separation, coder radio, collaboration, consumer goods, control, customer data, developers, development podcast, device legitimacy, ecu, failure rates, fedora, fedora asahi remix, fedora asahi remix release, funding developers, funding packages, healthcare, infotainment, lacros, lacros project, lightning, linux and chrome os, linux os, negative impact, nodejs developers, paywall bypass, pkgzap, private access tokens, root access, safari, stack overflow, technische universität berlin, terms of service, tesla hackers, traffic, traffic decline, trust, user privacy, venture-backed startups, voltage glitching, wayland graphics support, zoom
Did we get this one wrong? It seems consumer AI is eating the lunch of some web's biggest names.
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355: F# Shill
May 2nd, 2019 | 1 hr 45 secs
.net, aws, bosque, chromebooks, chromeos, coder radio, developer podcast, earth day, egpu, f#, git-secrets, gpl, hardware, lgpl, mad botter, memory management, ml, pinning, programming language research, qt, rust, software licenses, strong types, system76, telemetry, thunderbolt, type safety, typed strings, typescript, windows, windows 10, xfce
Mike and Wes dive into Bosque, Microsoft’s new research language, and debate if it represents the future of programming languages, or if we should all just be using F#.
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353: A Week with WSL
April 17th, 2019 | 50 mins 7 secs
amd, apple, chromebook, chromeos, clojure, coder radio, coreml, crates.io, developer education, developer podcast, egpu, elixir, erlang, graphics cards, haskell, http prompt, ios, java, linux desktop, machine learning, mesa, microsoft, nvidia, ocaml, pengwin, programming languages, python, rails, ruby, rust, sean griffin, thunderbolt, usb-c, windows, windows 10, wlinux, wsl
Mike's back with thoughts on his recent adventures with the Windows Subsystem for Linux and what it might mean for the future of Linux development.