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Submit ReviewThis week we’re joined by Zach Latta, the Founder of Hack Club. At 16, Zach tested out of high school and moved to SF to join Yo as their first engineer. After playing a key role at Yo, he founded Hack Club to help teen hackers start coding clubs around the world. Today, teen hackers can meet IRL, online, at a hackathon, or leverage Hack Club Bank a fiscal sponsor to create their own organization. Hack Club is the program Zach wished he had in high school.
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Thanks to the “How Do You Do, Fellow Kids?” meme for this title’s inspiration.
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Timestamps:
(00:00) - This week on The Changelog(01:28) - Sponsor: DevCycle(04:04) - Start the show!(07:49) - Thanks Quinn and Tom(10:06) - Hack Club in our transcripts(11:40) - Let's get into Zach's story(14:07) - I started Bro'ing people(15:45) - $25K started it all(19:37) - Sponsor: Postman(23:15) - Yo! Bro!(24:39) - I donated $5k to my cousin's Bro app(27:48) - Silicon Valley is too real(28:44) - The future of tech for young people(32:53) - The future of AI and openess(38:44) - The Hack Club structure(44:26) - Hack Club afterschool(46:59) - How do you reach schools and teens?(49:20) - Can older folks get involved?(54:02) - It's best to not be a school program(58:16) - Sponsor: Rocky Linux(1:00:43) - Getting started(1:05:29) - Slack vs Discord for Hack Club(1:09:42) - Remote Hack Clubs(1:14:16) - Running a 25,000+ online community(1:20:49) - What's next?(1:23:04) - Is there incubation in Hack Club?(1:27:54) - Wrapping up(1:31:23) - Outro
Kara Deloss announces GitHub Accelerator’s 2023 cohort, Databricks releases the first open source, instruction-following LLM, fine-tuned on a human-generated instruction dataset licensed for research and commercial use, Mihai Parparita writes how he improved Tailscale thanks to Apple’s open source & Neal Fennimore asks and answers the question: Passkeys: what the heck and why?!
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(00:00) - Intro(00:32) - GitHub's first Accelerator(01:29) - Databricks frees Dolly!(03:11) - Improving Tailscale via OSS(04:20) - Sponsor: Postman(05:56) - What the heck are passkeys?(07:28) - Outro
This week we’re talking with Cory Doctorow (this episode contains explicit language) about his newest book Chokepoint Capitalism, which he co-autored with Rebecca Giblin. Chokepoint Capitalism is about how big tech and big content have captured creative labor markets and the ways we can win them back. We talk about chokepoints creating chickenized reverse-centaurs, paying for your robot boss (think Uber, Doordash, Amazon Drivers), the chickenization that’s climbing the priviledge gradient from the most blue collar workers to the middle-class. There are chokepoints in open source, AI generative art, interoperability, music, film, and media. To quote Cory, “We’re all fighting the same fight.”
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(00:00) - This week on The Changelog(01:35) - Sponsor: DevCycle(04:11) - Start the show!(05:42) - How Cory is able to write so much(13:58) - Blogging is researching a future book(16:44) - Constantly spitting out words(18:20) - Chickenized Reverse-Centaurs(20:22) - Google made ONE successful product (search)(20:59) - Three poultry packers control Chicken farmers in America(23:03) - Chickenization of gig work(23:56) - Chickenization is climbing the priviledge gradient(24:19) - What's a Centaur?(25:21) - Paying for your robot boss(27:46) - Sponsor: Postman(31:24) - Let's talk "Chokepoint Capitalism"(37:43) - Chokepoints in Open Source(39:15) - Chokepoint in AI generative art(51:07) - It's bleak but we can change stuff (together)(53:13) - Systems are intrinsically interoperable(59:58) - Sponsor: Square(1:00:50) - Federated media circumvents the chokepoint(1:03:47) - High switching costs(1:06:35) - Is there a perfect world?(1:11:04) - Always have a backup(1:11:51) - Regulation and competition(1:15:14) - Why did we stop enforcing anti-trust law?(1:17:45) - We're all fighting the same fight(1:19:33) - There's only one fight(1:21:09) - Chokepoint status on Podcasting(1:25:44) - Up next on The Changelog
Ken Thompson’s 75-year-project is a jukebox for the ages, Tabby is a self-hosted AI coding assistant, Codeberg is a collaboration platform and Git hosting for open source software, content and projects, TheSequence explains The LLama Effect & Paul Orlando writes about Ghosts, Guilds and Generative AI.
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Links for all episodes of Changelog News are in the companion newsletter.
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(00:00) - Intro(02:23) - Ken Thompson(03:53) - Tabby(04:47) - Codeberg(05:15) - The LLama Effect(06:13) - Facing the inevitable(07:23) - Outro
This week we’re talking about LLMs with Simon Willison. We can not avoid this topic. Last time it was Stable Diffusion breaking the internet. This time it’s LLMs breaking the internet. Large Language Models, ChatGPT, Bard, Claude, Bing, GitHub Copilot X, Cody…we cover it all.
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For our Changelog++ subs…
For the fiscal year 2021, Alphabet (Google’s parent company) reported revenues of $182.5 billion, and the revenue breakdown was as follows:
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Timestamps:
(00:00) - This week on The Changelog(01:38) - Sponsor: DevCycle(04:14) - Start the show!(11:18) - What is it that you do Simon?(15:01) - ChatGPT plugins speculation(19:43) - All-in on AI(34:37) - Sponsor: Postman(38:15) - LLM silos via plugins(44:20) - Where should someone start with this?(59:40) - What about GitHub Copilot X, Cody, et al(1:05:23) - Can this do personality injection?(1:14:46) - Google's fate?(1:16:17) - ChatGPT has 100M users? Or...?(1:24:27) - How large can LLMs get?(1:27:52) - Apple's secret co-processor(1:30:27) - Apple's answer to AI?(1:39:37) - Final words? More predictions?(1:40:56) - Outro
Twitter publishes (some of) its recommendation algorithm, Toran Bruce Richards puts GPT-4 on autopilot, Simon Willison shares a good way for us to think about LLMs, Eric Elliot creates a powerful pseudocode programming language for LLMs & I define and demystify the term “stochastic parrot”.
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(00:00) - Intro(00:16) - Twitter algorithm(02:29) - Yo LLM so fat(03:14) - Auto-GPT(03:45) - LLMs are "calculators for words"(04:33) - SudoLang(05:16) - Stochastic parrots(07:13) - Outro
After years of working for Google on the Go Team, Filippo Valsorda quit last year to experiment with more sustainable paths for open source maintainers. Good news, it worked! Filippo is now a full-time open source maintainer and he joins Jerod on this episode to tell everyone exactly how he’s making the equivalent to his total compensation package at Google in open source.
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(00:00) - This week on The Changelog(00:52) - Sponsor: Postman(03:41) - Welcoming Filippo to the show(06:45) - Filippo's open source projects(16:30) - Corporate sponsorship doesn't scale(19:36) - Experimenting with a new model(23:28) - Benefiting both parties(33:30) - Detailing the agreement terms(37:23) - A success path that grows(40:19) - Refining the sales pitch(44:18) - Sponsor: Sentry(46:24) - The most common objection(53:16) - Proving the model over time(54:49) - A place for punditry perhaps?(57:29) - The best way to connect with Filippo(59:33) - Name it to tame it(1:01:37) - Wrapping up(1:02:11) - Outro (join Changelog++!)
GitHub announces Copilot X, Mckay Wrigley created an open source ChatGPT UI buit with Next.js, TypeScripe & Tailwind CSS, OpenAI is also launching a ChatGPT plugin initiative, Brad Woods writes about juice in software development, Logto is an open source alternative to Auth0, Basaran is an open source alternative to the OpenAI text completion API & llama-cli is a straightforward Go CLI interface for llama.cpp.
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(00:00) - Intro(00:14) - Brain Science(00:56) - GitHub Copilot X(01:36) - Chatbot UI(02:55) - ChatGPT Plugins(03:38) - Juice in software(05:16) - Lightning Round!(05:30) - Logto(05:41) - Basaran(06:00) - llama-cli(06:15) - Outro
This week we’re talking with Georgi Gerganov about his work on Whisper.cpp and llama.cpp. Georgi first crossed our radar with whisper.cpp, his port of OpenAI’s Whisper model in C and C++. Whisper is a speech recognition model enabling audio transcription and translation. Something we’re paying close attention to here at Changelog, for obvious reasons. Between the invite and the show’s recording, he had a new hit project on his hands: llama.cpp. This is a port of Facebook’s LLaMA model in C and C++. Whisper.cpp made a splash, but llama.cpp is growing in GitHub stars faster than Stable Diffusion did, which was a rocket ship itself.
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(00:00) - This week on The Changelog(01:20) - Sponsor: Postman(04:09) - Start the show!(12:03) - Why is Whisper interesting to us?(17:04) - What's involved in making a port?(22:55) - Sponsor: Sentry(24:51) - One layer deeper(27:57) - Examples of Whisper.cpp(31:49) - Whisper.cpp and speaker detection(39:25) - What did you learn about Apple Silicon?(42:26) - Apple's secret M1 coprocessor(44:56) - GPU support on the roadmap(47:06) - Cultivating contributions(48:49) - Ludacris Llama Llama Red Pajama(52:57) - What is Llama.cpp so interesting?(57:01) - What are you going from here?(58:22) - How can this be extended?(1:01:22) - How did you learn this stuff?(1:08:48) - Wrapping up(1:10:09) - Outro
Michal Warda on self-hosting in 2023, Martin Heinz will never use Alpine Linux again, Oliver Rice at Supabase creates type constraints in Postgres with just 65 lines of SQL, Aaron Patterson converted a BMW shifter into a Bluetooth keyboard that can control Vim, Piet Terheyden has been curating beautiful & functional websites daily since 2013, Ryan Lucas put together a history of Visual Basic, turns out it’s easy for an open source project to buy fake GitHub stars & Mastodon hit 10 million accounts.
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(00:00) - Intro(00:28) - Self-hosting in 2023(00:49) - No more Alpine Linux(01:12) - Types in 65 lines of SQL(02:01) - Initial V(02:21) - Minimal Gallery(02:38) - The history of Visual Basic(03:02) - Tracking fake GitHub stars(03:34) - Mastodon hits 10M accounts(03:51) - Outro
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