[{"data":1,"prerenderedAt":127},["ShallowReactive",2],{"podcast-meta":3,"podcast-theme-colors":32,"episode-ai-killed-the-tech-interview-now-what-news":92},{"title":4,"author":5,"description":6,"artwork":7,"categories":8,"feedUrl":10,"type":11,"explicit":12,"link":13,"language":14,"copyright":15,"podcast2":16,"hasPeople":31},"The Changelog: Software Development, Open Source","Changelog Media","Software's best weekly news brief, deep technical interviews & talk show.","https://cdn.changelog.com/static/images/podcasts/podcast-original-f16d0363067166f241d080ee2e2d4a28.png",[9],"Technology","https://changelog.com/podcast/feed","episodic",false,"https://changelog.com/podcast","en-us","All rights reserved",{"persons":17,"funding":27},[18,23],{"name":19,"role":20,"img":21,"href":22},"Adam Stacoviak","host","https://cdn.changelog.com/uploads/avatars/people/Qo/avatar_large.jpg?v=63760280419","https://changelog.com/person/adamstac",{"name":24,"role":20,"img":25,"href":26},"Jerod Santo","https://cdn.changelog.com/uploads/avatars/people/z4/avatar_large.jpeg?v=63760071650","https://changelog.com/person/jerodsanto",[28],{"url":29,"text":30},"https://changelog.com/++","Support our work by joining Changelog++",true,{"palette":33,"sourceColor":54,"extractedColors":55},{"light":34,"dark":43},{"primary":35,"primary-foreground":36,"secondary":37,"secondary-foreground":35,"accent":38,"muted":39,"muted-foreground":40,"ring":35,"podcast-vibrant":41,"podcast-muted":42},"#00182f","#ffffff","#eff2f6","#e7ecf0","#f0f2f4","#6f7275","#0375c4","#e2e5e8",{"primary":44,"primary-foreground":45,"secondary":46,"secondary-foreground":47,"accent":48,"muted":49,"muted-foreground":50,"ring":51,"podcast-vibrant":52,"podcast-muted":53},"#5580a9","#09090b","#191b1d","#dcdee0","#1d2022","#1a1b1c","#8d8f91","#c1c4c8","#3694e6","#151618","#a1978d",[56,63,71,79,84],{"hex":54,"red":57,"green":58,"blue":59,"area":60,"saturation":61,"lightness":62},161,151,141,0.13136455555555557,0.09615384615384609,0.592156862745098,{"hex":64,"red":65,"green":66,"blue":67,"area":68,"saturation":69,"lightness":70},"#d2d1d4",210,209,212,0.000134,0.03370786516853954,0.8254901960784313,{"hex":72,"red":73,"green":74,"blue":75,"area":76,"saturation":77,"lightness":78},"#525153",82,81,83,0.003252888888888889,0.012195121951219556,0.32156862745098036,{"hex":36,"red":80,"green":80,"blue":80,"area":81,"saturation":82,"lightness":83},255,0.03285188888888889,0,1,{"hex":85,"red":86,"green":87,"blue":88,"area":89,"saturation":90,"lightness":91},"#101820",16,24,32,0.8323966666666667,0.3333333333333333,0.09411764705882353,{"meta":93,"episode":101,"transcript":124},{"title":4,"author":5,"description":6,"artwork":7,"categories":94,"feedUrl":10,"type":11,"explicit":12,"link":13,"language":14,"copyright":15,"podcast2":95,"hasPeople":31},[9],{"persons":96,"funding":99},[97,98],{"name":19,"role":20,"img":21,"href":22},{"name":24,"role":20,"img":25,"href":26},[100],{"url":29,"text":30},{"guid":102,"title":103,"slug":104,"description":105,"htmlContent":106,"audioUrl":107,"audioType":108,"audioLength":109,"pubDate":110,"duration":111,"artwork":112,"episodeType":113,"explicit":12,"link":114,"podcast2":115},"changelog.com/16/2671","AI killed the tech interview. Now what? (News)","ai-killed-the-tech-interview-now-what-news","Kane Narraway thinks through the radical change AI tools have brought to the technical interview process, Rhys Kentish built an app that makes him touch grass, Microsoft announced their progress on quantum computing, Chris Horsley learns about software estimations by yak shaving a washing machine install & Andreas Gohr built StumbleUpon for the IndieWeb.","\u003Cp>Kane Narraway thinks through the radical change AI tools have brought to the technical interview process, Rhys Kentish built an app that makes him touch grass, Microsoft announced their progress on quantum computing, Chris Horsley learns about software estimations by yak shaving a washing machine install &amp; Andreas Gohr built StumbleUpon for the IndieWeb.\u003C/p>\n\u003Cp>\u003Ca href=\"https://changelog.com/news/133/email\">View the newsletter\u003C/a>\u003C/p>\u003Cp>\u003Ca href=\"https://changelog.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/455469-news\">Join the discussion\u003C/a>\u003C/p>\u003Cp>\u003Ca href=\"https://changelog.com/++\" rel=\"payment\">Changelog++\u003C/a> members support our work, get closer to the metal, and make the ads disappear. Join today!\u003C/p>\u003Cp>Sponsors:\u003C/p>\u003Cp>\u003Cul>\u003Cli>\u003Ca href=\"https://retool.com/changelog\">Retool\u003C/a> – \u003Cstrong>The low-code platform for developers to build internal tools\u003C/strong> — Some of the best teams out there trust Retool…Brex, Coinbase, Plaid, Doordash, LegalGenius, Amazon, Allbirds, Peloton, and so many more – the developers at these teams trust Retool as the platform to build their internal tools. Try it free at \u003Ca href=\"https://retool.com/changelog\">retool.com/changelog\u003C/a>\n\u003C/li>\n\u003C/ul>\u003C/p>\u003Cp>Featuring:\u003C/p>\u003Cul>\u003Cli>Jerod Santo &ndash; \u003Ca href=\"https://jerodsanto.net\" rel=\"external ugc\">Website\u003C/a>, \u003Ca href=\"https://github.com/jerodsanto\" rel=\"external ugc\">GitHub\u003C/a>, \u003Ca href=\"https://www.linkedin.com/in/jerodsanto\" rel=\"external ugc\">LinkedIn\u003C/a>, \u003Ca href=\"https://changelog.social/@jerod\" rel=\"external ugc\">Mastodon\u003C/a>, \u003Ca href=\"https://x.com/jerodsanto\" rel=\"external ugc\">X\u003C/a>\u003C/li>\u003C/ul>\u003C/p>","https://op3.dev/e/https://pscrb.fm/rss/p/https://cdn.changelog.com/uploads/news/133/changelog-news-133.mp3","audio/mpeg",6361064,"Mon, 24 Feb 2025 22:20:00 +0000",383,"https://cdn.changelog.com/uploads/covers/changelog-news-original.png?v=63848365621","full","https://changelog.com/news/133",{"transcript":116,"chapters":119,"persons":122},{"url":117,"type":118},"https://changelog.com/news/133/transcript","text/html",{"url":120,"type":121},"https://changelog.com/news/133/chapters","application/json+chapters",[123],{"name":24,"role":20,"img":25,"href":26},{"content":125,"type":126,"url":117},"\u003C!DOCTYPE html>\n\u003Chtml>\n\u003Chead>\n  \u003Cmeta charset=\"utf-8\">\n  \u003Cmeta name=\"viewport\" content=\"width=device-width, initial-scale=1\">\n  \u003Cmeta name=\"robots\" content=\"noindex\">\n  \u003Clink rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https://changelog.com/news/133\"/>\n  \u003Ctitle>Transcript for Changelog News #133\u003C/title>\n\u003C/head>\n\u003Cbody>\n\n\n\n    \u003Ccite>Jerod Santo:\u003C/cite>\n    \u003Cp>What up, nerds? I&#39;m Jerod and this is Changelog News for the week of Monday, February 24th, 2025.\n\nMy fellow Severance fans must know that Apple TV has [published](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JRnDYB28bL8) eight hours of music for us to refine to. They call the ODESZA set, &quot;perfect for your innie’s workday.&quot; So good. So gold.\n\nOk, let&#39;s get into the news.\u003C/p>\n\n\n    \u003Ccite>Break:\u003C/cite>\n    \u003Cp>\u003C/p>\n\n\n    \u003Ccite>Jerod Santo:\u003C/cite>\n    \u003Cp>[AI killed the tech interview. Now what?](https://kanenarraway.com/posts/ai-killed-the-tech-interview-now-what/)\n\nKane Narraway thinks through the radical change AI tools have brought to the (already-fraught) technical interview process. He says [Hackerrank](https://www.hackerrank.com/) is pretty much broken, comp sci fundamentals and coding interviews are also out, but architectural interviews still work, at least for now:\n\n&gt; From talking to people who have run these, it’s evident that someone is using AI. They often stop with long pauses, do not quite explain things succinctly, and do not understand the questions well enough to prompt the correct answer. As AI gets better (and faster), this will likely follow the same fate as the rest but I would give it some years yet.\n\nKane suggests five options of how we can adapt, some which are better than others:\n\n1. Stop remote tech interviews\n2. Require some Pearson Vue-type spyware\n3. Bury our heads in the sand\n4. Change our interviews to allow AI\n5. Hybrid Approach\n\nSomething&#39;s gotta give. In the meantime, Kane thinks we&#39;ll see more people passing their interviews then being let go during their probation period. That sucks for everybody involved. What are you doing/seeing in this space? Hit reply, I&#39;d love to hear about it.\u003C/p>\n\n\n    \u003Ccite>Break:\u003C/cite>\n    \u003Cp>\u003C/p>\n\n\n    \u003Ccite>Jerod Santo:\u003C/cite>\n    \u003Cp>[An app to lock your apps until you touch grass](https://touchgrass.now)\n\nRhys Kentish wanted to change the habit of reaching for his phone in the morning and doomscrolling away an hour, so he built an app to help him do just that. It&#39;s built in [SwiftUI](https://developer.apple.com/xcode/swiftui/) and uses the Screen Time APIs provided by Apple plus Google Vision to recognize grass or not. Cool idea, but tough to manage for anybody living in deserts or tundras. Should he add an in-app purchase to change touch &quot;grass&quot; to touch &quot;snow&quot;, &quot;dirt&quot;, or &quot;sand&quot;? 😆\u003C/p>\n\n\n    \u003Ccite>Break:\u003C/cite>\n    \u003Cp>\u003C/p>\n\n\n    \u003Ccite>Jerod Santo:\u003C/cite>\n    \u003Cp>It&#39;s now time for Sponsored News!\n\n[Play with Retool&#39;s guided tour](https://login.retool.com/guided-tour)\n\nNow you can play with Retool, no account required—and you get a guided tour.\n\nRetool recently launched a guided tour so you can see how easy it is to build internal tools based on data in their managed PostgreSQL database service (called Retool Database). The tour walks you through building an orders UI and connecting that interface to a real database with real data, complete with realtime search. You&#39;ll get to see how simple they&#39;ve made it to build tooling without any frontenders needed—allowing them focus on customer facing things.\n\nIf you haven&#39;t yet, now&#39;s a good time to play with [Retool&#39;s guided tour](https://login.retool.com/guided-tour) to see how simple it is to build apps on top of their managed PostgreSQL database or your own database.\n\nCheck the link in the newsletter, or head to Retool.com to learn more.\u003C/p>\n\n\n    \u003Ccite>Break:\u003C/cite>\n    \u003Cp>\u003C/p>\n\n\n    \u003Ccite>Jerod Santo:\u003C/cite>\n    \u003Cp>[Microsoft’s Majorana 1 chip](https://news.microsoft.com/azure-quantum/)\n\nMicrosoft tried really hard to make a big splash last week announcing their quantum computing efforts.\n\n&gt; Quantum computers promise to transform science and society—but only after they achieve the scale that once seemed distant and elusive, and their reliability is ensured by quantum error correction. Today, we’re announcing rapid advancements on the path to useful quantum computing\n\nAre you excited yet? No?! Well, then just read this copy!\n\n&gt; Built with a breakthrough class of materials called a topoconductor, Majorana 1 marks a transformative leap toward practical quantum computing.\n\nTheir hype-inducing efforts kinda worked? People are excited about the progress despite the fact that quantum computing isn&#39;t useful in any real way yet. But hopefully someday! Even if not, you have to admit the Majorana 1 *looks* really cool...\u003C/p>\n\n\n    \u003Ccite>Break:\u003C/cite>\n    \u003Cp>\u003C/p>\n\n\n    \u003Ccite>Jerod Santo:\u003C/cite>\n    \u003Cp>[On washing machines &amp; estimations](https://www.cosive.com/blog/my-washing-machine-refreshed-my-thinking-on-software-effort-estimation)\n\nChris Horsley recently had a saga installing a new washing machine that he thought would take 10 minutes. It ended up taking him four whole hours. Sound like anything we know? In this excellent, analogical post, Chris tells the tale of the *six* yaks he had to shave during his install process and what he learned from the whole ordeal.\n\n&gt; What we fail to factor in is that while 90% of the project will be the same, there&#39;s going to be one critical difference between the last 5 projects and this project that seemed trivial at the time of estimation but will throw off our whole schedule.\u003C/p>\n\n\n    \u003Ccite>Break:\u003C/cite>\n    \u003Cp>\u003C/p>\n\n\n    \u003Ccite>Jerod Santo:\u003C/cite>\n    \u003Cp>[Discover the IndieWeb, one blog post at a time](https://indieblog.page)\n\nAndreas Gohr built something cool! It&#39;s like [StumbleUpon](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/StumbleUpon) (before capitalism got it) but for the IndieWeb. Why did Andreas build it?\n\n&gt; I love reading text written by real people. Texts that don&#39;t want to sell something. But how can you discover texts you can&#39;t search for because you don&#39;t know they exist?\n&gt;\n&gt; That&#39;s where this page comes in. Click a button, be surprised and maybe discover your new favorite thing.\n\nYou can [suggest](https://indieblog.page/suggest) your own or a friend&#39;s personal site as long as it has an RSS feed. Sweet!\u003C/p>\n\n\n    \u003Ccite>Break:\u003C/cite>\n    \u003Cp>\u003C/p>\n\n\n    \u003Ccite>Jerod Santo:\u003C/cite>\n    \u003Cp>That&#39;s the news for now, but also scan the companion newsletter for all the links and more, including: Google served Go backdoor to devs for 3+ years, Wireshark for Docker containers, and A year of uv: pros, cons, and should you migrate\n\nScroll back in your feed for some awesome pods: last week we spoke with David Crawshaw all about his experinece programming with LLMs and on Friday Adam and I discussed the dev opinions we have and have NOT changed our mind on over the years.\n\nComing up this week: Anurag Goel from Render on Wednesday and Kaizen 18 with Gerhard Lazu on Friday.\n\nHave a great week! Leave us a 5-star review if you dig our work, and I&#39;ll talk to you again real soon.\u003C/p>\n\n\u003C/body>\n\u003C/html>\n","text/html; charset=utf-8",1771793547171]