Natural born SaaS killers
We discuss the buzz around Clawdbot / MoltBot / OpenClaw, how app subscriptions are turning into weekend hacking projects, why SaaS stocks are crashing on Wall Street, and what it all means.
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We discuss the buzz around Clawdbot / MoltBot / OpenClaw, how app subscriptions are turning into weekend hacking projects, why SaaS stocks are crashing on Wall Street, and what it all means.
Techno Tim joins Adam to dive deep into the state of homelabâing in 2026. Hardware is scarce and expensive due to the AI gold rush, but software has never been better. From unleashing Claude on your UDM Pro to building custom Proxmox CLIs, they explores how AI is transforming whatâs possible in the homelab. Tim declares 2026 the âYear of Self-Hosted Softwareâ while Adam reveals his homelabâs secret weapons: DNSHole (a Pi-hole replacement written in Rust) and PXM (a Proxmox automation CLI).
Gerhard is back for Kaizen 22! Weâre diving deep into those pesky out-of-memory errors, analyzing our new Pipedream instance status checker, and trying to figure out why someone in Asia downloads a single episode so much.
Mat Ryer is back and he brought his impromptu musical abilities with him! We discuss Rob Pike vs thankful AI, Microsoftâs GitHub monopoly (and what it means for open source), and Tom Tunguzâ 12 predictions for 2026: agent-first design, the rise of vector databases, and are we about to pay more for AI than people?!
Our 8th annual year-end wrap-up is here! Weâre featuring 8 listener voicemails, dope Breakmaster Cylinder remixes & our favorite episodes of the year. Thanks for listening! đ
Alex Kretzschmar joins Adam for a trip down the Linux rabbit hole â Docker vs Podman, building a Kubernetes cluster, ZFS backups with zfs.rent, bootc, favorite Linux distros, new homelab tools built with AI, self-hosting Immich, content creation, Plex and Jellyfin, the future of piracy and more.
Nick Nisi joins us to dig into the latest trends from this year and how theyâre impacting his day-to-day coding and Vision Pro wearing. Anthropicâs acquisition of Bun, the evolving JavaScript and AI landscape, GitHubâs challenges and the Amp/Sourcegraph split. We dive into AI development practices, context management, voice assistants, Home Assistant OS and home automation, the state of the AI browser war, and we close with a prediction from Nick.
Our old friend Lars Wikman returns to the show to discuss Linux distro hopping, Elixir, Nerves, embedded systems, home automation with Home Assistant, karate, and more.
Practical AI co-host, Chris Benson, joins us to discuss the latest advancements in AI, drones, home automation, and robotic swarming tech. Chris defines âswarmâ with detail/precision and it turns out that what most people are calling a swarm today is NOT a swarm!
Do you like directorâs commentaries and extended cuts? This episode is like that, but for this weekâs News. We go deep on the alive internet theory, Meshtastic mesh networks, Zstandard compression, the FDE job explosion, Reactâs seemingly perpetual dominance, and more.
On this seventh iteration of our award-worthy game show filled with obscure jargon, fake definitions, and expert tomfoolery: past winners battle to determine the champion of champions. (Also, Adam.)
Itâs a FRIGHTâŠwhen your record a podcast with dead projects all around. Tech debt, poor choices, timing, market shift, and optimizing for the wrong things are all lurking around waiting to pop out at you! Just donât forget to push record.
Itâs our first Kaizen after the big Pipely launch in Denver and we have some serious mopping to do. Along the way, we brainstorm the next get-together, check out our new cache hit/miss ratio, give Pipely a deep speed test, discuss open video standards, and more!
Mike McQuaid and Justin Searls join Jerod in the wake of the RubyGems debacle to discuss what happened, what it says about money in open source, what sustainability really means for our community, making a career out of open source (or not), and more. Bleep!
Elixir creator, JosĂ© Valim, is throwing his hat into the coding agent ring with Tidewave âa coding agent for full-stack web development. Tidewave runs in the browser alongside your app, but itâs also deeply integrated into Rails and Phoenix. On this episode, JosĂ© tells us all about it. Also: his agent flow, YOLO mode, an MCP hot take, and more.
Over the past two months, weâve seen some of the most serious supply chain attacks in npm history: phishing campaigns, maintainer account takeovers, and malware published to packages with billions of weekly downloads. What is going on?! What can we do about it? Our old friend, Feross Aboukhadijeh, joins us to help make sense of it all.
Bryan Cantrill and Steve Tuck, the co-founders of Oxide, are on the pod live (to tape) from the stage at OxCon. Jerod and I were invited to Oxideâs annual internal conference to meet the people and to hear the stories of what makes Oxide a truly special place to work right now. The best part was this on-stage discussion with Bryan and Steve. Enjoy!
Carl George joins the show to talk about Texas Linux Fest, Omarchy, Linux desktop environments, configuring Linux, and more. Use the code CHL15 for 15% off your ticket to Texas Linux Fest.
Arun Gupta, now a âfree agentâ after his surprise exit from Intel, joins us to discuss how heâs dealing with his first job hunt since the 1990s. Along the way, we talk about agentic coding strategies, what GPT-5âs release implies about the future, and more. (US buys 10% of Intel)++
Our Changelog & Friends proof-of-concept with Mat Ryer has been remastered! Now with full-length video on YouTube. Originally recorded: 2023-02-08
Mat joins us for some good conversation about some Git tooling thatâs been on our radar. We speculate, we discuss, we laugh, and Mat even breaks into song a few times. Itâs good fun.
Bryan Cantrill returns in the wake of Oxide Computer Companyâs $100M Series B. Bryan tells us how heâs avoiding an appearance on Silicon Valley (ding), why their uniform compensation is working, where Oxide fits in the AI datacenter, what scaling to 50+ rack orders looks like, and more. (GitHub has no CEO and saving Intel)++
Gerhard calls Kaizen 20, âThe One Where We Meetâ. Rightfully so. Itâs also the one where we eat, hike, chat, and launch Pipely live on stage with friends.
Adam & Jerod (plus zero other randos) dig into Stack Overflowâs 2025 developer survey results. We discuss SOâs decline, the desire for younger devs to have real chats with real people, the rise of uv and more Python winning, why people are frustrated with AI, and more.
Welcome back to #define, our game of obscure jargon, fake definitions, and expert tomfoolery. This time weâre joined by three Changelog++ members, to see who has the best vocabulary and who can trick everyone else into thinking that they do.
Nick Nisi joins us to discuss all the Windsurf drama, his new agentic lifestyle, whether or not heâs actually more productive, the new paper that says he maybe isnât more productive, the reckoning he sees coming, and why we might be the last generation of code monkeys.
Abi Noda from DX is back to share some cold, hard data on just how productive AI coding tools are actually making developers. Teaser: the productivity increase isnât as high as we expected. We also discuss Jevons paradox, AI agents as extensions of humans, which tools are winning in the enterprise, how development budgets are changing, and more.
Jeff Cayley joins Adam to talk about selling mountain bikes all over the planet and making some of the best outdoor and mountain bike gear, parts, and accessories you can buy. They have a killer YouTube channel as well.
Our old friend Chris McCord, creator of Elixirâs Phoenix framework, tells us all about his new remote AI runtime for building Phoenix apps. Along the way, we vibe code one of my silly app ideas, calculate all the money weâre going to spend on these tools, and get existential about what it all means.
Jerod tells Adam about how bad he hates the taste of Gin, sips on some Generative A Rye (on the rocks), they open the comments section for a bit, and then land the plane talking about being alone, naked, and afraid.
Justin Searls joins Jerod in Appleâs WWDC wake for hot takes about frosty UIs. We go (almost) point-by-point through the keynote, dissecting and reacting along the way. Concentricity!