Open Source is Wild – The craziest things The Changelog has seen in 15 years [Podcast #148]
On this week's section of the podcast, freeCodeCamp laminitis Quincy Larson interviews Adam Stachoviac and Jerod Santo co-hosts of The Changelog – the longest-running package podcast successful world. They question and reply devs astir Open Source projects, and they besides person a play news section that I ever perceive to. 5 years ago, I interviewed them for their 10th day episode, and now I'm backmost catching up connected what they've been doing for the past 5 years. We talk about: - How unfastened root is changing - Open information and unfastened LLM models - Self-reliance and self-hosted infrastructure - The business of moving a developer community Can you conjecture what opus I'm playing successful the intro? Also, I want to convey the 10,993 benignant group who support our kindness each month, and who make this podcast possible. You tin subordinate them and support our ngo at: https://www.freecodecamp.org/donate Links we talk astir during our conversation: - Honeypot section Adam mentions: https://changelog.com/podcast/557 - Steve Yegge episodes Quincy mentions: https://changelog.com/podcast/549 - Open Source Civilization section Jerod mentions: https://changelog.com/podcast/428 0:00:00 Introduction to the Change Log Podcast 0:03:42 The Evolution of Open Source Software 0:06:48 The Tension Between Givers and Takers 0:09:32 Security Vulnerabilities successful Open Source 0:12:43 The Impact of State Actors connected Open Source 0:15:34 The Dilemma of Technology Dependency 0:18:47 The Future of Open Source and Its Challenges 0:24:25 Navigating the Open Source Landscape 0:44:17 The Evolution of Collaboration successful Software Development 0:50:26 Incorporating Tools and Change Logs 0:53:18 Listener-Centric Content Creation 0:57:50 Listener Requests and Favorite Episodes 1:00:44 Exploring Open Source and Future Directions 1:11:28 Cyclical Nature of Excitement successful Software Development 1:13:27 Perception of Growth and Learning 1:17:42 Listener Engagement and Unique Requests 1:19:51 Open Source and Individualism 1:21:40 Self-Hosting and Data Ownership 1:24:21 Community and Podcasting Dynamics 1:36:48 Closing Thoughts and Future Directions