Meta Tech Podcast
A podcast by Meta
78 Episoade
-  73: Mobile GraphQL at Meta in 2025Publicat: 28.03.2025
-  72: Multimodal AI for Ray-Ban Meta glassesPublicat: 28.02.2025
-  71: Translating Java to Kotlin at ScalePublicat: 31.01.2025
-  70: Jetpack Compose at MetaPublicat: 24.12.2024
-  69: To type or not to type — measuring productivity impact with DATPublicat: 29.11.2024
-  68: How to Build a Mixed Reality HeadsetPublicat: 30.10.2024
-  67: Measuring Developer Productivity with Diff Authoring TimePublicat: 30.09.2024
-  66: Inside Bento - Serverless Jupyter Notebooks at MetaPublicat: 30.08.2024
-  65: Getting Ready for Post-Quantum CryptographyPublicat: 29.07.2024
-  64: Caddy - Building the next generation of CAD software for Mixed RealityPublicat: 04.07.2024
-  63: The key to a happy Rust/C++ relationshipPublicat: 30.05.2024
-  62: Building Threads for WebPublicat: 26.04.2024
-  61: Image Quality Improvements at ScalePublicat: 11.03.2024
-  60: Simplified Executable Deployment with DotSlashPublicat: 16.02.2024
-  59: Meta ❤️ Python 3.12Publicat: 31.01.2024
-  58: Advancing GenAI at MetaPublicat: 21.12.2023
-  ARCHIVE: From Facebook Home to Instagram StoriesPublicat: 30.11.2023
-  57: Writing and linting Python at scalePublicat: 30.10.2023
-  56: How Threads was built in 5 monthsPublicat: 29.09.2023
-  55: What it's like to ship code at MetaPublicat: 30.08.2023
Brought to you by Meta. In addition to remaining active in the open source community and conference circuit, this podcast offers another channel that allows us to highlight the technical work of our engineers who will discuss everything from low-level frameworks to end-user features. Throughout the podcast, Meta engineer Pascal Hartig (@passy) will interview developers in the company.
