526
votes

Yes, Podcasts, those nice little Audiobooks I can listen to on the way to work. With the current amount of Podcasts, it's like searching a needle in a haystack, except that the haystack happens to be the Internet and is filled with too many of these "Hot new Gadgets" stuff :(

Now, even though I am mainly a .NET developer nowadays, maybe anyone knows some good Podcasts from people regarding the whole software lifecycle? Unit Testing, Continous Integration, Documentation, Deployment...

So - what are you guys and gals listening to?


Please note that the categorizations are somewhat subjective and may not be 100% accurate as many podcasts cover several areas. Categorization is made against what is considered the "main" area.

General Software Engineering / Productivity

.NET / Visual Studio / Microsoft

jQuery

Java / Groovy

Ruby / Rails

Web Design / JavaScript / Ajax

Unix / Linux / Mac / iPhone

System Administration, Security or Infrastructure

General Tech / Business

Other / Misc. / Podcast Networks

11
  • 5
    I suggest that everybody writes exactly one podcast per answer (post several answers if needed), such that the voting tells how the other people think about this one podcast. And how about a one sentence description? Oct 2, 2008 at 15:19
  • 4
    Has SO been reduced to building collections of links? This looks my univeristy webpage in 1993. And like my 1993 webpage, it's out of date the moment it's written.
    – skaffman
    Jul 15, 2009 at 14:13
  • 40
    Except unlike a web site this is a wiki - you can fix changed links, remove dead site,s and vote up/down new and old entries. It's more like the music charts! Jul 15, 2009 at 14:27
  • 3
    @Martin Except that 1. People aren't going to browse 4 pages of results and to vote 2. Especially now that the results are consolidated in the question 3. This question doesn't get as much traction today as when it was created (so votes don't reflect anything). Sep 15, 2010 at 8:58
  • 6
    While I appreciate this podcast list, I think skaffman makes a valid point. Such lists may be more appropriate on a site such as Delicious whose purpose is to collect links. Even Wikipedia may be more appropriate since each page does not have a list of answers. As Pascal points out, answer votes don't matter much as the list changes or becomes out of date. Sep 15, 2010 at 16:51

97 Answers 97

91
votes

I like

General Software

Dot Net

Productivity

3
  • What's the url to 43 folders feed? His site sucks a lot or it's me, but I can't find it.
    – Mikle
    Dec 13, 2008 at 14:05
  • What happened to the Alt.NET Podcast? I haven't seen a new show in a couple of months. Is it 'over'? Dec 23, 2008 at 19:29
  • All from General Software are great! And I can see, that 43 Folders are broadcastin again! Mar 13, 2009 at 10:44
62
votes

This one's not specifically about development, but Security Now from Steve Gibson and Leo Laporte is an excellent discussion of security issues. I think it's a must-listen for just about any computer user who's concerned about security, and especially for web developers who are responsible both for the security of their site and at least partially responsible for their users' security.

4
  • Yeah, it's great. And the best episode was the one about PDP-8 (Episode 177) snipurl.com/sn177 Mar 13, 2009 at 10:47
  • +1 for Mr. Gibson. It's great that the podcast is so regular, too.
    – TrueWill
    Sep 24, 2009 at 22:02
  • @RCIX My comment is from Mar 13 '09, the Vitamin D podcast was aired 13 Aug 2009 so at that time PDP-8 was the best show ever. I agree that Vitamin D is also great, it seems "out of theme" episodes are the best! Jun 30, 2010 at 14:56
  • The Portable Dog Killer episode was great (and hysterical) as well: twit.tv/sn248. Jul 14, 2010 at 14:50
48
votes

I love FLOSS Weekly. Another Twit Podcast where Leo and Randal Schwartz interview open source geeks. My favorite was their interview with Dan Ingalls (Smalltalk/Squeak fame). I also enjoyed their interview of Richard Hipp (SQLite).

5
  • And more recently Linus Torvalds.
    – Sam Becker
    Oct 5, 2009 at 19:00
  • Yeah I caught that. God, he came across as an arrogant prig. Oct 6, 2009 at 11:48
  • Randal and Leo hyped him up before and after though calling him a "god" (I think that was the word) and what not.
    – Sam Becker
    Oct 6, 2009 at 15:02
  • Yeah they did. He's smart.. and had good timing.. But god.. nahhh. But I just listened to their interview with Kent Beck. That was great! Oct 7, 2009 at 3:55
  • I think the show has taken a bit of a hit since Leo stopped hosting it. Nothing against Randal Schwartz (he is doing a great job), but a really tech-heavy show like this one seems to need a less-techy host to ask the guest(s) the basic, obvious questions that are sometimes overlooked. Jul 14, 2010 at 14:53
35
votes

Am I going to be downmodded for suggesting that the Stack Overflow podcast is hilariously bad as a podcast? Anywho, you can find it, and a number of not-bad podcasts at itconversations.com.

As this question asked for a "good" rather than "exhaustive" list, then this is obviously just my opinion. My opinion bounces between .NET and Java and just geek. And obvious omissions would reflect my opinion on "good". (Ahem, DNR.)

The rest of these are easily found by doing a podcast search in iTunes, or just googling (I'll do some repeating here to condense the list):

  • Buzz Out Loud (General Consumer Tech, Daily)
  • This Week in Tech (aka TWiT. Weekly Consumer Tech.)
  • The Java Posse (Weekly.)
  • Google Developer Podcast (which went long fallow, but seems to be coming back, possible renamed as the Google Code Review. Schedule uncertain, technologies vary.)
  • Hanselminutes (Usually, but not always, .NET-related)
  • MacBreak Weekly (The Mac version of TWiT)
  • Polymorphic Podcast (All .NET, usually ASP.NET)
  • Pixel8ed (All .NET, focused on UI. Same guy who does Polymorphic Podcast)
  • tech5 (Consumer Tech. Mostly a fun waste of 5 minutes because Dvorak is so... Spolsky.)
4
  • Apparently you haven't been downmodded ;) Sep 28, 2008 at 19:00
  • I second This Week in Tech. Leo Laporte (sp?) is an excellent host and some of the guests are top notch. Oct 17, 2008 at 9:43
  • Upvote, Buzz Army/Brigade/Militia/WTF? :) Seriously, BOL is great. Jul 15, 2009 at 23:26
  • I also applaud Scott Hanselman for completely mocking his name. (Not in the software development sense of the word "mocking"). It's also great - especially the fact that he doesn't just cover MS stuff - they had a Mono guy from Novell on a couple of shows ago. Jul 15, 2009 at 23:28
29
votes

In the Stack Overflow podcast SE-radio was mentioned. It's pretty in depth.

Also if you are an aspiring JavaScript developer, the Douglas Crockford "The JavaScript Programming Language" and "Advanced JavaScript" talks on YUI Developer Theatre are excellent. There are a few other gems on the podcast too.

26
votes

I listen to the javaposse regularly, they cover mostly Java, but not solely.

24
votes
  • JavaPosse If you want to hear all that you (n)ever wanted to know about closures (7/2010 - This is actually a good podcast, but now it's all you (n)ever wanted to know about apple & android)
  • .NET Rocks For when you want to hear the billionth interview about databinding controls in the trenches during the transition from VB6 to VB.NET
  • Stack Overflow You really do want to hear a guy who doesn't know C debate a guy who pretends to have invented it, or something, or maybe just listen for spoilers to wallee
  • Security Now! You want to listen to someone who thinks he's the most ingenious security architect in the world, because he writes EVERYTHING IN ASSEMBLER (no, I'm not kidding), while overlooking the obvious solutions to problems that have existed for years. Please don't listen to this thinking it's good
  • Yahoo! Dev Network - I haven't seen a lot of good stuff here, but Crockford's talks on advanced JavaScript are wonderful
3
  • -1: I doubt that anyone on this thread knows as much about low-level protocols as Steve Gibson of Security Now! While he has his idiosyncrasies, he recognizes other experts in different security areas. If you listen to his podcasts and don't learn anything valuable, you're not really listening.
    – TrueWill
    Oct 3, 2009 at 23:58
  • @TrueWill - Did you catch the one where he overengineered a solution to the "duplicate order" problem and then spent weeks figuring out that the main problem was that people double-click buttons (and his initial solution didn't help)? Then acted like both solutions were something he invented (not even close)? Maybe that was just a particularly bad episode, but it didn't leave me impressed.
    – jsight
    Oct 5, 2009 at 3:57
  • 1
    Yeah, my only objection to Steve Gibson is that he doesn't seem to be very "plugged in" to the mainstream developer/security research community, so when he arrives at some concept or solution on his own (because he is a sharp guy), he sort of naturally assumes that he came up with something revolutionary. I also think he could cut the "security news" segment of the show way back. Seriously, not every single tiny security patch to Firefox (for example) is "news". Jul 14, 2010 at 15:00
20
votes

Suggestion: If you post each of your recommended podcasts as a separate answer then people can vote for your "answer".

BTW, Joel discussed this on the Stack Overflow Podcast (can't find the reference in the transcript Wiki) and suggested something like: - Post your suggested "favorite" (tech podcast, in this case) as a question: "Do you like < > podcast and tag it with "technology podcast".

The beauty of this is that we get a simple poll. Yes, it would be nice to actually have a poll but that's not yet a Stack Overflow feature.

0
19
votes

The Google Developer Podcast is good.

15
votes

The way I understand the question, you are asking for developer centric podcast. My personal number one is Late Night Cocoa from the Mac Developer Network followed by Mac Developer Roundtable. Although I agree that every developer should probably listen to Steve Gibson's Security Now! (with Leo Laporte's TWiT network).

For general tech stuff, check out other TWiT podcasts: This week in Tech, MacBreak Weekly, MacBreack Tech (with PixelCorps), Windows Weekly and FLOSS Weekly

On a side note: relevant to some developers who think about becoming a Micro-ISV in the Apple Universe: MacSB - Mac Software Business

1
  • Great recommendations. You should have posted them as individual answers and I would have voted up each one. Dec 4, 2008 at 20:49
15
votes

Brad's list is pretty good. I also listen to:

14
votes

I found this on a similar discussion, I think it was at Reddit: UC Berkeley Webcast I found it most useful, since it podcasts entire classes from Berkley courses such as Operating Systems and System Programming, The Structure and Interpretation of Computer Programs, Data Structures and Programming Methodology, among others.

1
12
votes

Almost all of my favorite podcasts have already been mentioned but not the No 1. Do yourself a favor and listen to the best podcast ever, Linux radio show - LugRadio.

10
votes

If you are into web design and website creation then I recommend Boagworld and also The Rissington podcast even if you are not.

9
votes

Also make sure you don't miss the dnrTV webcast show that Carl Franklin (the man behind .NET rocks) publishes. Even if it's a not a podcast and requires a more attention while watching it it's really informative and if you're into .NET and Microsoft related techniques you'll learn a lot.

9
votes

I can second Jon Galloway's mention of Herding Code, and since I have absolutely nothing to do with the podcast, with nothing to gain, my opinion may be more valuable than his :-).

There are only a few there as it's relatively new, but they are jam packed with good stuff that is very relevant to today's programming paradigms and strategies.

I also love the smooth format they've got going since 4 guys all giving input on a topic can make for a very jerky conversation with all (most?) of them dialed in, but whether it's the post editing or just a good format, either way it comes across as a very comfortable listening experience to the end user. Keep it up guys!

Hope that helps, Rob G

8
votes

It does not seem like this one was mentioned yet.

http://thecommandline.net/ -- "Exploring the rough edges where technology, society and public policy meet."

He does a weekly News show and a weekly topics show.

From the website, Endorsement: "Thoughtful, informative, and deep, a real plunge into the geeky end of the news-pool. There's great analysis and rumination, as well as detailed explanations of important security issues with common OSes and so on." -- Cory Doctorow

8
votes

Not hardcore technology but I really enjoy Drunk and Retired. It's like you're talking to your programmer buddy mixed in with life stuff.

1
  • That's actually a pretty cool Podcast. I like those "chaotic" ad-hoc ones. Sep 9, 2008 at 22:47
8
votes

Besides Stack Overflow of course, here are mine.

I can't believe the size of some of these lists. With podcasts, I like to keep the list short and the quality high. As such, I tend to skip the aggregates like ITConversations et. al.

1
  • I'm a former IT person who recently transitioned to development. I LOVE RunAs Radio. Richard Campbell is one of those guys that gives me hope that I can bridge the gap between the two disciplines. It lets me keep my hands in IT and applies a lot of IT knowledge with a developer bent. Nov 21, 2008 at 15:49
7
votes

Extending on what Mike Powell has to say, I am actually a big fan of almost all of the podcasts at http://www.twit.tv. Most of the content is watered down a bit, but some of the speakers are top notch thinkers - especially on "This Week in Tech", the flagship program.

Oh - and Car Talk on NPR but those guys hardly EVER get into the SDLC!

7
votes

If you started out on an 8 bit machine, don't forget your roots:
The Retrobits Podcast

7
votes

A good weekly update to the Ruby on Rails world: Rails Envy.

The thestacktrace is good general programming podcast, which covers every thing from git to Scala.

1
  • I love that podcast! I ain't got no rspec, and I don't do ruby or rails but I love listening to Jason and Greggggg.
    – Hafthor
    Oct 13, 2008 at 22:08
6
votes

If you're interested in Linux, Linux Action Show is a wonderful podcast !

It's about Linux news, distributions and softwares releases and also Linux based hardware testing (like drobo, Amazon Kindle and so on). It's very good quality and the hosts, Brian and Chris, sounds amazing.

It's my number one podcast !

Also, I've just discovered that IBM offers some developer podcasts which seems very interesting, some are from Erich Gamma by the way. Of course, it's a little bit more Java and Eclipse oriented (It's IBM).

2
  • It's too bit the Linux Action Show has changed its format and added a lot of irrelevant other shows to their list. Dec 19, 2008 at 13:50
  • Yes, I've preferred too the long form of the Linux Action Show podcast, but I understand their willing to go to a video format.
    – paulgreg
    Mar 19, 2009 at 14:28
4
votes

Plus one for the following:

4
votes

Linux Outlaws are pretty good. They discuss GNU/Linux distros, software and IT news.

4
votes

My favorite is Manager Tools. Technically it is a business podcast, but very valuable for programmers or other individual contributors working in corporate environments. Been listening for 3 years, new to StackOverflow

-- Mike

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