POPULARITY
Agentes do Ibama, da Funai e da Força Nacional, apoiados pelas Forças Armadas, começaram a operação de retirada de mais de 20 mil garimpeiros que invadiram o território Yanomami durante o governo Bolsonaro. O Foro de Teresina explica como o garimpo movimenta a economia da Roraima e as dificuldades para rastrear o ouro ilegal no Brasil. O programa discute, além disso, quem ganha e quem perde no confronto entre Lula e o presidente do Banco Central, Roberto Campos Neto, sobre a política de juros do governo. Por fim, os apresentadores recebem Luciano Ramalho, especialista em tecnologia da informação, para explicar o que é o ChatGPT e como essa inteligência artificial pode afetar o nosso dia a dia. Escalada: 00:00 1º bloco: 05:22 2º bloco: 22:03 3º bloco: 38:20 Kinder Ovo: 56:04 Correio Elegante: 57:50 Créditos: 1:01:36 Bloco 1: Garimpeiros em fuga A saída dos garimpeiros da Terra Indígena Yanomami se tornou um problema em si mesmo. Muitos deles relatam falta de acesso a comida e transporte, e há suspeita de que alguns tenham atacado indígenas para roubar mantimentos. Bloco 2: Guerra dos juros Há pelo menos três semanas, Lula vem criticando o Banco Central por manter a taxa Selic nas alturas. O presidente do banco, Roberto Campos Neto, rebateu as críticas dizendo que a autarquia é independente do governo. Nessa disputa, Lula conseguiu dominar o debate público e espera colher algum benefício político. Bloco 3: Inteligência artificial O ChatGPT, criado por uma startup do bilionário Elon Musk, é uma inteligência artificial que responde a perguntas, elabora textos complexos e até poemas em questão de segundos. Luciano Ramalho, um dos responsáveis pela implementação dos grandes portais de jornalismo no Brasil, tenta dimensionar o impacto dessa tecnologia no mundo daqui em diante. Para acessar reportagens citadas nesse episódio: https://piaui.co/foro239 Assista aos bastidores da gravação: https://piaui.co/ftprivilegiado Aqui, uma playlist com todos os episódios do Foro: https://piaui.co/playlistforo O Foro de Teresina é o podcast de política da revista piauí, que vai ao ar todas as sextas-feiras, a partir das 11h. O programa é uma produção da Rádio Novelo para a revista piauí. Ouça também os outros podcasts da piauí: o Maria vai com as outras, sobre mulheres e mercado de trabalho (https://piaui.co/playlistmaria), e A Terra é redonda, sobre ciência e meio ambiente (https://piaui.co/playlistaterra). Ficha técnica: Apresentação: José Roberto de Toledo, Thais Bilenky e Ana Clara Costa Convidado: Luciano Ramalho Coordenação geral: Évelin Argenta Direção: Mari Faria Edição: Évelin Argenta e Tiago Picado Produção: Marcos Amorozo Apoio de produção: Natália Silva Produção musical, finalização e mixagem: João Jabace Música tema: Wânya Sales e Beto Boreno Identidade visual: João Brizzi Ilustração: Fernando Carvall Teaser (Foro Privilegiado): Mari Faria Distribuição: Marcos Amorozo Coordenação digital: FêCris Vasconcellos e Bia Ribeiro Checagem: João Felipe Carvalho Para falar com a equipe: forodeteresina@revistapiaui.com.br
Agentes do Ibama, da Funai e da Força Nacional, apoiados pelas Forças Armadas, começaram a operação de retirada de mais de 20 mil garimpeiros que invadiram o território Yanomami durante o governo Bolsonaro. O Foro de Teresina explica como o garimpo movimenta a economia da Roraima e as dificuldades para rastrear o ouro ilegal no Brasil. O programa discute, além disso, quem ganha e quem perde no confronto entre Lula e o presidente do Banco Central, Roberto Campos Neto, sobre a política de juros do governo. Por fim, os apresentadores recebem Luciano Ramalho, especialista em tecnologia da informação, para explicar o que é o ChatGPT e como essa inteligência artificial pode afetar o nosso dia a dia. Acesse os links citados neste episódio: https://piaui.co/foro239 Envie sua mensagem para o Correio Elegante no nosso e-mail: forodeteresina@revistapiaui.com.br
Luciano Ramalho é autor do livro Fluent Python, publicado em 9 idiomas. Ajudou a criar o Garoa Hacker Clube e trabalha na Thoughtworks, consultoria de engenharia de software.
Finally Bruce gets a whole episode about Python with our friend Luciano Ramalho, author of Fluent Python. In the words of Luciano: "Thanks James and Bruce for the most enjoyable podcast panel I ever had!" Discuss this episode: https://discord.gg/nPa76qF
Ahead of the release of the second edition of his landmark book, Fluent Python, our team catch up with author Luciano Ramalho to hear about what's happening in the world of Python — and why it's popularity continues to endure.
There seem to be three kinds of Python developers: those unaware of type hints or have no opinion, ones that embrace them, and others who have an allergic reaction at the mention of them. Python is famously a dynamically typed language, but there are advantages to adding type hints to your code. This week on the show, we have Luciano Ramalho to discuss his recent talk titled, "Type hints, protocols, and good sense."
Al Sweigart (@AlSweigart) spoke with us about getting better at Python programming. Al’s book site is InventWithPython.com. You can find his books there as well as No Starch Press and Amazon. Automate the Boring Stuff with Python Beyond the Basic Stuff with Python Cracking Codes with Python Invent Your Own Computer Games with Python Al’s personal site (alsweigart.com) has talks, videos, and a lot of code to look at. Or check out his github repo including the small text based games: https://github.com/asweigart/pythonstdiogames Al’s YouTube Channel, including his Calm Programming series. We also talked about: scratch.mit.edu - a fun way to learn to program where you are almost never wrong Fluent Python: Clear, Concise, and Effective Programming by Luciano Ramalho. PyCon and their talk videos Online origami simulator (origamisimulator.org)
On its surface Python is a simple language which is what has contributed to its rise in popularity. As you move to intermediate and advanced usage you will find a number of interesting and elegant design elements that will let you build scalable and maintainable systems and design friendly interfaces. Luciano Ramalho is best known as the author of Fluent Python which has quickly become a leading resource for Python developers to increase their facility with the language. In this episode he shares his journey with Python and his perspective on how the recent changes to the interpreter and ecosystem are influencing who is adopting it and how it is being used. Luciano has an interesting perspective on how the feedback loop between the community and the language is driving the curent and future priorities of the features that are added.
With ElixirConf 2020 just around the corner, today’s episode is a sneak peek where we talk with six of this year’s speakers. Each speaker gives listeners an elevator pitch of their talk while throwing in extra details about who their talk is aimed at, what they learned through the process, and which talks they’re excited about attending. Our first guest is Quinn Wilton, a developer at Tinfoil Security, whose talk is titled ‘Type-Safe LiveView with Gleam’. Quinn explains how she’s created a symbiosis between Elixir and Gleam that helps her create more consistent code while offsetting the disadvantages of dynamic typing. We then chat with Dan Lindeman whose talk, ‘Short Circuit IoT Development Time with Nerves,’ is an overview of building custom hardware using Nerves and Elixir. After Dan’s plug on how you can start programming Nerves on your laptop, we welcome Jeffrey Utter to the show. His talk is a deep dive into ‘Debugging Live Systems on the Beam.’ Teasing out the topic, we discuss inefficiencies in the debugging process and how many developers adopt a ‘whack-a-mole’ approach to dealing with bugs. From debugging to UintSet, Luciano Ramalho, our next speaker, gives us a taste of his presentation, ‘UIntSet: enumerable, streamable, understandable.’ Luciano shares how the Go language inspired him to experiment with leveraging protocols and streams to build new idiomatic Elixir data structures from scratch. He also touches on the importance of being humble when learning new languages and gearing Elixir to a non-engineer user base. After Luciano, we’re joined by Melvin Cedeno, a fellow Elixir Wizard from the SmartLogic family. Melvin brings his teaching experience to bear on the topic of ‘Teaching Functional Programming with Elixir.’ This is a key talk in growing our community, especially when considering the point that being an Elixir genius doesn’t necessarily mean that you’re well-suited to teach it. Last but certainly not least, we speak with Japa Swadia from Podium about her talk, ‘Domain-Driven Design with Elixir’ — a subject that’s been a huge focus on the podcast. We chat about what domain-driven design means and why it’s an important foundational concept for beginners to learn. Tune in for this tip-of-the-iceberg preview. It’s just a glimpse into the varied and wonderfully informative talks you can expect at ElixirConf 2020. Key Points From This Episode: Introducing Quinn Wilton who is using Gleam to interact with Elixir. How being acquired by Synopsys has given Tinfoil Security access to greater resources. Balancing the advantages of Elixir with its drawbacks when it comes to dynamic analysis. What Gleam is and how it makes static typing more approachable. Teasing Quinn’s ElixirConf talk — ‘Talk Type-Safe LiveView with Gleam’ What Quinn has learned from the process of creating his presentation. Building a dissembler and the talk that Quinn is most looking forward to attending. Dan Lindeman’s work at Very making solar micro-grids. The benefits of Elixir and Nerves when building custom hardware. Who Dan’s talk is aimed at and why it’s appropriate for any experience level. Working with smart minds and laboring through hardware docs that often lie. How scary it can be to work with hardware and the value of having your talk appeal to entry-level Elixir users. Jeffrey Utter unpacks his talk — ‘Debugging Live Systems on the Beam.’ How most people play ‘whack-a-mole’ when dealing with live system bugs. Using match specs to hone in on your debugging process. Why most Elixir coders should learn about Jeffrey’s debugging system. Why is Recon Library is such an excellent tool and its potential uses in distributed systems. Hear which talks Jeffrey is looking forward to attending. How Go inspired Luciano Ramalho to explore applying different data structures to Elixir. What skill-level Luciano’s talk is aimed at and why. Developing a sense of how Elixir is idiomatic, despite being such a new language. Being humble when learning new languages and the importance of protocols in understanding idiomatic data structures. How Elixir is geared towards engineers which can create barriers of entry. Mark Cedeno gives an elevator pitch for his talk — ‘Teaching Functional Programming with Elixir.’ Why knowing Elixir very well doesn’t mean that you can teach it. The benefits of remote learning; it can make your teaching more organized and to-the-point. Hear about the talks that Mark is excited about attending. Japa gives us a crash-course on domain-driven design. Creating a solid foundation for your app by considering the contexts in which it’s used. Why beginners or those wanting to switch to domain-orientated coding should attend Japa’s talk. Using schema to point to the same table in different contexts. Which talks Japa is attending and how she got selected for ElixirConf 2020. Links Mentioned in Today’s Episode: Elixir Wizards Listener Survey — https://smr.tl/podcastsurvey SmartLogic — https://smartlogic.io/ ElixirConf 2020 — https://2020.elixirconf.com/ Quinn Wilton — https://github.com/QuinnWilton/gleam-chip8 Quinn Wilton Twitter — https://twitter.com/wiltonquinn ‘Type-Safe LiveView with Gleam’ — https://2020.elixirconf.com/speakers/128/talk Tinfoil Security — https://www.tinfoilsecurity.com/ Synopsys — https://www.synopsys.com/ Gleam — https://gleam.run/ Louis Pilfold GitHub — https://github.com/lpil Phoenix LiveView — https://github.com/phoenixframework/phoenixliveview CHIP-8 — https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CHIP-8 Stephen Bussey — https://github.com/sb8244 ‘The Joy of an Elixir Monolith’ — https://2020.elixirconf.com/speakers/121/talk Code BEAM / Code Sync — https://codesync.global/ Dan Lindeman — https://github.com/DanLindeman Dan Lindeman Twitter — https://twitter.com/lindemda ‘Short Circuit IoT Development Time with Nerves’ — https://2020.elixirconf.com/speakers/117/talk Nerves Platform — https://www.nerves-project.org/ Very — https://www.verypossible.com/ Justin Schneck — https://www.linkedin.com/in/justinschneck/ Daniel Stoppard — https://www.linkedin.com/in/daniel-spofford-2307a655/ Jenn Gamble — https://2020.elixirconf.com/speakers/115/bio Juliana Helena — https://2020.elixirconf.com/speakers/129/bio ‘How Elixir made me a better Java programmer’ — https://2020.elixirconf.com/speakers/129/talk Nerves Hub — https://www.nerves-hub.org/ Jeffrey Utter — https://github.com/jeffutter Bleacher Report — https://bleacherreport.com/ ‘Debugging Live Systems on the Beam’ — https://2020.elixirconf.com/speakers/114/talk Datadog — https://www.datadoghq.com/ Erlang Sys Trace 2 — https://erlang.org/doc/man/sys.html#trace-2 Recon Library — https://ferd.github.io/recon/ Erlang Debugger — http://erlang.org/doc/apps/debugger/debuggerchapter.html Catalina Astengo — https://github.com/castengo gRPC + Elixir Microservices = A Love Story? — https://2020.elixirconf.com/speakers/116/talk KC Elixir — https://www.kcelixir.com/ Luciano Ramalho — https://github.com/ramalho/ Luciano Ramalho Twitter — https://twitter.com/ramalhoorg ‘UintSet: enumerable, streamable, understandable’ — https://2020.elixirconf.com/speakers/125/talk ThoughtWorks — https://www.thoughtworks.com/ Go — https://golang.org/ The Go Programming Language — https://www.gopl.io/ Brian W. Kernighan — https://www.cs.princeton.edu/people/profile/bwk Fluent Python — https://www.oreilly.com/library/view/fluent-python/9781491946237/ Simon de Haan — https://github.com/smn ‘Using Elixir and WhatsApp to launch WHO’s global COVID-19 response’ — https://2020.elixirconf.com/speakers/124/talk Yutaka Kikuchi — https://github.com/kikuyuta ‘Applying Elixir for driving small hydropower plants with Nerves’ — https://2020.elixirconf.com/speakers/123/talk Processing — https://processing.org/ Melvin Cedeno — https://github.com/thecraftedgem ‘Teaching Functional Programming With Elixir’ — https://2020.elixirconf.com/speakers/99/talk Turing — https://turing.io/ Nicholas Henry — https://github.com/nicholasjhenry ‘The Upside Dimension of Elixir - An Introduction to Metaprogramming’ — https://2020.elixirconf.com/speakers/120/talk Brian Marick — https://github.com/marick/ ‘Tricks and tools for writing Elixir tests’ — https://2020.elixirconf.com/speakers/109/talk German Velasco — http://www.germanvelasco.com/ ‘Testing LiveView’ — https://2020.elixirconf.com/speakers/119/talk Lonestar Elixir — https://lonestarelixir.com/ Japa Swadia — https://github.com/japa-swadia Podium — https://www.podium.com ‘Domain-Driven Design with Elixir’ — https://2020.elixirconf.com/speakers/105/talk Design Patterns — https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Design_Patterns Justus Eapen Social Handle — @JustusEapen Eric Oestrich Social Handle — @EricOestrich Sundi Myint Social Handle — @SundiKhin Special Guests: Dan Lindeman, Japa Swadia, Jeffrey Utter, Luciano Ramalho, Melvin Cedeno, and Quinn Wilton.
The increased emphasis on machine learning in the enterprise also seen resurgent interest in Python. What makes Python different from other languages? What are the main features that make it unique? And where will Python go from here? In this episode, our podcasts chat to Luciano Ramalho, from ThoughtWorks Brazil — a renowned author of books on Python — about dunder methods, fast fails and what’s new in the upcoming second edition of Fluent Python.
Nayara, Vinicius e Adolfo conversaram com Letícia Silva, Head de Ciência de Dados na 2MI e graduanda em Ciência da Computação. Ela já foi podcaster, é desenvolvedora no Colaboradados e tem mais de 7000 seguidores em seu perfil no Twitter "Aumentativo de Helena". Links: https://twitter.com/dii_lua https://www.instagram.com/dii_lua/ https://leticiadasilva.github.io/ Esta entrevista foi dividida duas partes. Escute a primeira parte em https://anchor.fm/emilias-podcast/episodes/Letcia-Silva-Head-de-Cincia-de-Dados-na-2MI-parte-1-ed4i23. Os links citados durante a entrevista estão abaixo: Interpretabilidade, justiça e representatividade - Carla Vieira https://youtu.be/vIlVVzmpzik Millions of black people affected by racial bias in health-care algorithms https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-019-03228- ITA STEM2D http://www.ita.br/iex/stem2dii Women Techmakers https://www.womentechmakers.com/ Faça Acontecer https://www.companhiadasletras.com.br/detalhe.php?codigo=13469 Clube da Luta Feminista https://www.martinsfontespaulista.com.br/clube-da-luta-feminista-572487.aspx/p Brené Brown https://brenebrown.com/ Brené Brown: O Poder da Coragem https://www.imdb.com/title/tt10050766/ Python Fluente, Luciano Ramalho https://novatec.com.br/livros/pythonfluente/ Pense em Python https://penseallen.github.io/PensePython2e/ Peixe Babel https://www.youtube.com/user/CanalPeixeBabel/about Quarentena Dados https://www.alura.com.br/quarentenadados Pizza de Dados https://pizzadedados.com/ Colaboradados http://colaboradados.com.br/ Podcast Coluna7 https://colaboradados.com.br/podcast.html O Brasil em dados libertos https://brasil.io/ e ESPECIAL COVID-19 - Dados por Município https://brasil.io/covid19/ Operação Serenata de Amor https://serenata.ai/ Rosie https://twitter.com/rosiedaserenata? Dandara Sousa: Mestranda em Ciência da Computação pela UFCG https://anchor.fm/emilias-podcast/episodes/Dandara-Sousa-Mestranda-em-Cincia-da-Computao-pela-UFCG-ec8k0e Dados de Julieta https://t.me/dadosdejulieta Weapons of Math Destruction, Cathy O'Neill https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/28186015-weapons-of-math-destruction Doing Data Science https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/17346997-doing-data-science Programação Concorrente, Luciano Ramalho https://youtu.be/FYKNHk3Ze8A Sigam o Emílias no Twitter, no YouTube, no Instagram e no Facebook para saber as novidades. Escutem o podcast no Anchor e nos demais agregadores de podcast (Spotify, Sticther, PocketCasts e outros) procurando por "Emílias Podcast". Este é um projeto de extensão da Universidade Tecnológica Federal do Paraná (UTFPR) - Campus Curitiba. Acesse nossa página https://linktr.ee/Emilias.
Hoje vamos bater um papo com o Luciano Ramalho, autor do livro "Python Fluente", sobre…Python! Falamos sobre as novidades, melhores práticas, vantagens e desvantagens em relação a outras linguagens e muitos, muitos conjuntos. Participantes: Paulo Silveira, o host que ainda finge programar às vezesLuciano Ramalho, Principal Engineer na ThoughtWorksGuilherme Silveira, o cara do Data Science da Caelum e AluraMaurício "Balboa" Linhares, o co-host que não é pythonzeiro mas dá seus pulos Links: Formação PythonLivro "Python Fluente" do Luciano RamalhoDesconto na Alura para ouvintes do Hipsters Ponto Tech!Python – Hipsters #122 Produção e conteúdo: Alura Cursos de Tecnologia - https://www.alura.com.br === Caelum Ensino e Inovação - https://www.caelum.com.br/ Edição e sonorização: Radiofobia Podcast e Multimídia
Hoje vamos bater um papo com o Luciano Ramalho, autor do livro "Python Fluente", sobre…Python! Falamos sobre as novidades, melhores práticas, vantagens e desvantagens em relação a outras linguagens e muitos, muitos conjuntos. Participantes: Paulo Silveira, o host que ainda finge programar às vezesLuciano Ramalho, Principal Engineer na ThoughtWorksGuilherme Silveira, o cara do Data Science da Caelum e AluraMaurício "Balboa" Linhares, o co-host que não é pythonzeiro mas dá seus pulos Links: Formação PythonLivro "Python Fluente" do Luciano RamalhoDesconto na Alura para ouvintes do Hipsters Ponto Tech!Python – Hipsters #122 Produção e conteúdo: Alura Cursos de Tecnologia - https://www.alura.com.br === Caelum Ensino e Inovação - https://www.caelum.com.br/ Edição e sonorização: Radiofobia Podcast e Multimídia
There are always intense debates to be had when programmers try to decide what the best language will be to accomplish any given task. In this episode, our co-hosts Alexey Vilas Boas and Rebecca Parsons are joined by Luciano Ramalho, renowned author and Principal Consultant at ThoughtWorks Brazil to explore programming language features and the benefits of thinking about languages in terms of labels — fundamental language features — rather than paradigms, such as object-oriented or functional languages. Does thinking in terms of labels help you adopt different programming styles? Can focusing on labels make language syntax less daunting? Can you have too many labels? Listen in to hear the team in exploring new ways of thinking about language choices. Learn more at thoughtworks.com/podcasts
The O’Reilly Programming Podcast: A look at some of Python’s valuable, but often overlooked, features.In this episode of the O’Reilly Programming Podcast, I talk about Python with Luciano Ramalho, technical principal at ThoughtWorks, author of the O’Reilly book Fluent Python, and presenter of the Oriole Fluent Python: The Power of Special Methods.Discussion points: The value of some often-overlooked features of Python, including generators, iterators, and the range() function. How Python’s Asyncio module “brought a definition of what the interface should be for an event loop into the core standard library,” says Ramalho. Why Ramalho calls pytest his “go-to library for unit testing, and other kinds of testing.” Striving to avoid surprises and trying to follow the conventions of the language are two characteristics of what Ramalho describes as a “good Pythonic API.” The work of the Python Software Foundation to increase diversity in the Python community. Other links: Ramalho’s presentation Fluent Python: Implementing Intuitive and Productive APIs at OSCON 2016 IEEE Spectrum article on the top programming languages of 2017 The Zope web application server written in Python
The O’Reilly Programming Podcast: A look at some of Python’s valuable, but often overlooked, features.In this episode of the O’Reilly Programming Podcast, I talk about Python with Luciano Ramalho, technical principal at ThoughtWorks, author of the O’Reilly book Fluent Python, and presenter of the Oriole Fluent Python: The Power of Special Methods.Discussion points: The value of some often-overlooked features of Python, including generators, iterators, and the range() function. How Python’s Asyncio module “brought a definition of what the interface should be for an event loop into the core standard library,” says Ramalho. Why Ramalho calls pytest his “go-to library for unit testing, and other kinds of testing.” Striving to avoid surprises and trying to follow the conventions of the language are two characteristics of what Ramalho describes as a “good Pythonic API.” The work of the Python Software Foundation to increase diversity in the Python community. Other links: Ramalho’s presentation Fluent Python: Implementing Intuitive and Productive APIs at OSCON 2016 IEEE Spectrum article on the top programming languages of 2017 The Zope web application server written in Python
Gregório e Marco conversam com Luciano Ramalho sobre Python e Internet das coisas | http://tecnologicamentearretado.com.br/2015/10/15/luciano-ramalho/
Um dias destes eu estava procurando documentação sobre umas coisas da linguagem python quando me deparei com uma apresentação do Luciano Ramalho, o entrevistado deste episódio deste episódio. O que me chamou atenção não foi nem tanto a qualidade do material ou a didática do mesmo, mas sim o fato do autor ser brasileiro E por ter feito tudo em inglês. Claro que, se você vive no Brasil e trabalha ou convive com quem trabalha com python, o nome do Luciano não lhe deve ser estranho. Mas para mim, que moro há 21 anos no exterior, foi uma descoberta super maneira! Quanto mais eu pesquisei sobre ele, mais animado eu ficava em conhecer "a pessoa por trás dos slides" das apresentações Python - Encapsulation with Descriptors e Iterators & generators: the Python Way. Mais gostoso ainda foi descobrir que estas apresentações são inéditas no público brasileiro e serão apresentadas na PyCon americana este ano! Durante nosso bate-papo, o Luciano me contou como que foi a criação da Associação Python Brasil, quais foram seus primeiros objetivos e como foi o seu primeiro mandato como presidente da mesma. Também discutimos sobre os vários frameworks que existem para quem quer ser programador web com python, alguns fatos interessantes sobre o Zope, Plone, Flask, e Web2Py, e quais delas ele recomenda para quem está iniciando no mundo de programação.
Um dias destes eu estava procurando documentação sobre umas coisas da linguagem python quando me deparei com uma apresentação do Luciano Ramalho, o entrevistado deste episódio deste episódio. O que me chamou atenção não foi nem tanto a qualidade do material ou a didática do mesmo, mas sim o fato …
Node.js: vale a pena usar no servidor? - JavaScriptCast episódio 2 Por Manuel Lemos e Luciano Ramalho O Node.js é uma nova forma de rodar JavaScript que vem crescendo muito no desenvolvimento de aplicações Web no lado do servidor. Mas será que vale a pena deixar linguagens estabelecidas, como PHP, Python, Java e C#, para abraçar a programação assíncrona em JavaScript no servidor Web com Node.js?Este e outros tópicos de interesse sobre JavaScript foram debatidos entre Manuel Lemos e Luciano Ramalho neste segundo episódio do JavaScriptCast. Entraram em pauta o projeto Duino, que visa controlar dispositivos de hardware da plataforma Arduino a partir do Node.js; comentaram as tendências do mundo JavaScript baseadas na iniciativa JavaScript Zeitgeist, deram dicas de como atrair membros para grupos regionais de JavaScript através do diretório mundial de grupos de usuários de JavaScript, da lista unificada para discussão JavaScript em português e por fim, falaram das mais interessantes classes JavaScript publicadas no site JSClasses.