Topic: podcasts
SE Podcast #19 – John Sheehan
Everyone’s back in their home towns this week (Sorry for the audio quality last week. It was Joel’s fault [actually, it was TechCrunch's fault]). And joining Jeff & Joel this week is John Sheehan, Developer Evangelist for Twilio.
- Jeff and Joel are bored of board meetings. How do you make them productive or even useful? Brad Feld says you should give out a document beforehand. Joel does this, and nobody reads it, but they at least pretend they did. Maybe Joel should plant money under the attendees’ chairs?
- Joel launched Trello at TechCrunch Disrupt last week, and they did not have adequate monitors onstage! It was representative of the general A/V “screw-uppedness” of the whole conference. Cool story, bro.
- Let’s talk about John Sheehan! He’s a developer evangelist at Twilio and doesn’t have enough Stack Overflow reputation. He travels around trying to make developers be more awesome.
- The future of phones is in things like BBM, iMessage, etc – alternatives to SMS. Voice is a whole ‘nother medium, for when emoticons just aren’t cutting it anymore. Text is useful for transmitting pieces of information, but for more nuanced conversations voice or video is necessary. How fortunate for this conversation that we have someone from Twilio on the line!
- New in the SE Universe: Linguistics! Joel’s dad thinks it’s full of amateurs. We also have a site on Christanity now. It is less technical than Judaism… which isn’t good. Our engine works better on more technical applications. Jeff: “I’m not 100% sure Christianity is working.” It’s still early, and it is getting more fact-based as it gets older, though.
- Bitcoin is low on activity until it gets a new question. It’s not what we call a healthy or growing site, but maybe that’s okay for a site like Bitcoin. There is no defined formula, and it is still being figured out.
- Now private beta participants will be able to invite others to the site while it’s still private. This devalues committing to a proposal slightly, but the private betas sometimes need a little help.
- John was at the BUILD conference in Anaheim last week. It was like Disney World, but with middle-aged dudes with questionable hygiene! Windows 8 had a developer preview, but it’s probably a year away from launch. John got to play with one of their tablets and says they’ve taken touch and made it completely un-intuitive. The longer he used it, the less he liked it. John is giving it away to the developer of the coolest Twilio app that uses some of the new WinRT or Metro stuff announced.
- Scrolling is a thing that many people have many feelings about. We got onto the subject through talking about Windows 8 merging its mobile and desktop systems, and how Apple is doing the same thing with iOS and OS X.
- John asks: Does anyone have any faith in a PC manufacturer making a tablet you would actually want to buy? Joel says no. Alex says no. Everyone keeps doing things like putting stickers about the component brands on a sports car.
- Totally hot right now: Trello t-shirts.
- DevDays failed because we did not promise a thousand dollar piece of hardware to every attendee, like developers at BUILD got.
- Jeff has not been to Burning Man. He likes the idea, but does not like the idea of being in the desert for so long. Joel did that in the army (cross that off your Podcast Bingo cards!), and it isn’t pretty.
- The Stack Exchange API 2.0 is baking! Take a look at the spec, and provide some feedback if you like. It’ll be released by the end of the year. Stats on the API will maybe be released in a blog post or something. Jeff uses the API as much as anyone that doesn’t work here, rather than using things a special, sneaky way. (You can read about past mistakes with the API on Kevin Montrose’s blog. Jeff, Joel, and John share their opinions on APIs and company/developer relations in general.
- New changes to the site are in the works. For example, no more duplicate title, and no more “Here code. You fix.” questions will be allowed.
- If you’re a programmer, and you want a better job, check out all the great new profile features at Stack Overflow Careers 2.0.
Join us next week at the normal time when our guest will be John Siracusa from Ars Technica (or as Joel likes to refer to him: “he wrote that really amazing review of Lion”).
Stack Exchange Podcast – Episode #19 w/ John Sheehan by Stack Exchange
SE Podcast #18
No guest this week as Joel calls in to the show live from the TechCrunch Disrupt Conference in San Francisco since he’s there launching Trello for Fog Creek Software (also why his audio isn’t quite as good as usual, it’s pretty loud there). There’s still a full hour of Jeff & Joel goodness though so make sure to check it out!
- Joel gives rundown of what he’s seen at the TechCrunch Disrupt conference in San Francisco so far. A discussion about differences between East Coast and West Coast tech startups leads Jeff and Joel to talk about how important centralized locations are for modern day companies.
- The recent Facebook deal has led to a recent influx of general Facebook support emails. This leads to a discussion about user support and how other companies rate against Stack Exchange.
- The merits of paying for internet services comes up, specifically thefreemium and 37signals models. Jeff discusses the merits of 37signals and Joel recounts his time using that model.
- The Most Valued Super User contest is discussed, specifically how this contest gets people to do “the right thing for the right reasons.” Mention of the contest’s prizes spur a discussion about merchandising (and inadvertently, whose head looks best on a plush Buddha).
- Jeff announces that Stack Overflow and Stack Exchange are getting Nerd Merit Badges.
- The Bitcoin site launched recently and is proving to be very popular. In other site news, Jeff mentions that enhancements are underway for the SE language sites.
- Jeff addresses the problem of duplicate questions, specifically on Meta. A little later on, Jeff goes into detail about the defense mechanisms being put in place to block duplicate questions.
- User interface proves to be a hot topic today between Jeff and Joel. What starts as a discussion about search engine functionality leads to a full-on talk about the ins and out and future of user interface. Listen to find out which user interface Jeff thinks is like a canker sore!
- Many sites have launched in the last week, opened recently. The new targeted method of advertising proposals may be the cause of this. As new sites open, Jeff and Joel discuss the new sites with overlap of existing questions. This is currently an issue with the existing Physics site and the soon-to-launch Theoretical Physics site.
- CHAOS member Sam brought up the idea of regional Stack Exchanges. Jeff and Joel support their differing opinions on the necessity of localized Stacks (also known as the “let your freak flag fly” theory vs. the “Hurricane Irene” defense).
Tune in next week at the normal time and with our normal in-studio setup (really, promise) for another episode as Jeff & Joel are joined by John Sheehan, developer evangelist for Twilio.
See you then!
Stack Exchange Podcast – Episode #18 by Stack Exchange
SE Podcast #17 – Kyle Brandt & George Beech
Jeff & Joel are back with guests this week – joining them are Kyle Brandt and George Beech, our very own sysadmins/ops guys/[insert your own term here]
After a brief test of the emergency broadcast system, we plunge right into the podcast, including:
- Joel is late because he had to go up to AOL HQ to pick up some more floppy disks for the office
- We recently launched Blog Overflow - which was actually a pretty substantial engineering and technical background to making it happen.
- A huge discussion of the the SE infrastructure setup and why we host our own instead of relying on Amazon or another outside provider. Hint: not only can we roll our own better, but its a lot cheaper too.
- In the department of little tweaks with big effect, check out our “network apocalypse”: at one point, Stack reconfigured to separate different types of network traffic due to microbursting overloading the network – this simple upgrade greatly increased the throughput and efficiency of the existing infrastructure.
- In the good news department: Jeff talks about the expanding user cards just introduced and based on a conversation from our podcast a few weeks ago with Michael Natkin
- In the bad news department: we’ve decided to cancel Stack Overflow DevDays due to low ticket sales – you can read Joel’s full blog post for all the details.
- Finally, we welcome our newest engineering hire – Demis!
That’s it! Tune in next week at the usual time for another episode with more guests!
Stack Exchange Podcast – Episode #17 w/ Kyle & George by Stack Exchange
SE Podcast #16
So it’s been a couple weeks since our last podcast, but Jeff & Joel are back and ready to catch up on everything they missed. There’s no guest this week, just 60+ minutes of that Jeff & Joel banter that (we hope) you’ve grown to love.
- Jeff and Joel discuss “Zombie Poke,” aka facebook.stackoverflow.com deal in depth and dispel rumors of receiving a “dump truck of money.” Details of the deal are discussed, from what the new feature accomplishes and how it came about.
- Jeff also discusses the state of online identity and the issues that arise with having multiple logins.
- Joel explains why he thinks Facebook might be the new AOL.
- Jeff relays a story about a Stack Exchange user who devised a clever way to get his dad involved in the Bicycles Stack Exchange. Joel wonders if this, or something similar, should be undertaken by CHAOS.
- The duo discusses which Stack Exchange sites don’t meet their personal expectations. The hit list includes Super User, Writing, and Gaming. Jeff goes into depth about his issues with Gaming.SE, even though it’s the fifth most trafficked site.
- Joel talks about the myth that reputation affects programmers’ career opportunities.
- A question from the chat room about the Publicist badge spurs discussion about sharing questions on the internet and how it relates to Stack Overflow.
- We discuss the state of Community Wiki. If you’re looking for a good example of a community wiki answer, look no further than How do I diagnose not being able to reach a specific website as an end user?
- And of course, if you enjoy the Stack Exchange podcast, make sure to check out the Ask Different Podcast – hosted by our Ask Different (aka apple.stackexchange) moderators!
We’re back on our regular schedule now, so tune in next week for another great episode!
Stack Exchange Podcast – Episode #16 by Stack Exchange
The SE Podcast Setup
We’ve gotten quite a few questions from people about how we go about recording and producing the Stack Exchange podcast from people interested in everything from the hardware to the software and even the process. Given the recent revamp of the entire setup (which has been happening during our recent break from live shows), I figured this was the perfect time to do it.
Our setup is massively more complex than what is normally needed for a podcast (since its normally 2 people sitting in a room talking into mics). We generally have 2-3 people live in studio (Joel, Alex and maybe 1 guest), plus an additional 2-3 (Jeff, the guest, and sometimes a second guest) who all need to be mixed and recorded separately. Because of that, we can’t do one big Skype call and just record that, everyone has to be called individually and then mixed through our audio board.
The Equipment
Audio Mixer: Yamaha 01v96 w/ MY8-DA96 Card - the heart of the entire setup – the v96 is a 12 input digital board with all of our DSP, FX and routing built right into it. The MY8 card gives us an additional 8 outputs so we can generate enough mix-minus feeds to send to all of the hosts and guests.
Studio Mic’s: EV RE-20, Audio-Technica AT-4040, AKG C1000S - We keep several different mics in the studio for different applications (there’s a rationale behind all of them) but generally speaking Joel uses the RE-20, Alex uses the C1000S and the AT-4040 is for guests
Headphones: Sony MDR-7506 – The workhorse headphones of audio engineers and studios – you can literally go into any studio in the world and find at least one pair of these
Audio Interfaces: Focusrite Saffire Pro24 - 16 ins and 8 outs means this guy has more than enough I/O for all our applications. Its got great build quality though and the number of I/O options (XLR, 1/4″, SPDIF, ADAT, MIDI) means we can buy multiples of this one unit and use it for all our applications
Remote Computers: Mac Mini – amazing computers for a variety of reasons, but given their size, integrated power supplies, dual video outputs, and firewire ports, they fit the bill perfectly
Streaming Computer: Dell Desktop – stocked with a quad-core processor and 8 gigs of RAM, it’s got plenty of power for creating our live stream and misc. other production tasks
Recording Computer: Mac Pro – An extra computer we had around the office that was re-purposed for recording. It’s spec’d similarly to the Dell desktop and takes all the inputs from the mixer to record for later editing
Camera: Microsoft LifeCam Cinema – Small, easy to place and 720p capable
Monitors: Various Dell UltraSharp LCDs – Great quality and well priced make these monitors a great choice, but the main thing is that we had a few extras laying around the office
The Setup
There’s 2 main areas that make up the podcast, the remote connections and the production section
Remote
The computers that pull in Jeff and any of our remote guests. To be ready for situations where everyone is remote (such as Episode 5) we needed capability for 4 remote callers. The entire setup consists of four mac minis, four audio interfaces, a network switch, and KVM all crammed into a 4u rack. Each mac-mini is linked to an audio interface which then connects to the mixer.
There’s also a headphone amp that sits on top of the rack, but that’s just because its convenient – it’s technically part of the production section and serves to feed the guest’s headphones along with anyone watching live in studio.

Production
The center of the production section is obviously the 01v96 mixer. It takes inputs from the three studio mixes and four remote feeds, creates mix-minus feeds for everyone, and then distributes those feeds. The program audio is then fed via SPDIF to the streaming computer (through an M-Audio Fastrack Pro) and direct feeds for each of the speakers is fed via optical ADAT to the Mac Pro (via a Focusrite unit) for individual recording and later editing.
The streaming computer also has the Microsoft LifeCam connected to it and is running Livestream Procaster which encodes the audio and video into three separate feeds (a 300 kbps low/mobile, a 700 kbps medium, and an 1800 kbps HD). Amazingly, generating these three feeds consumes most of the computer’s resources with CPU utilization often topping 80% (despite being a 3.2ghz quad-core machine).
The recording computer runs Reaper. a highly flexible and very affordable DAW program. We originally started using Reaper when we needed something that could create mix-minus feeds in software and then output them (it was the only thing we found that would) and loved it so much that we’ve stuck with it. The eight inputs are fed in and recorded for later editing before being posted.
The Process
The first step for every show is booking a guest – we have a big list of possible guests who we regularly keep in touch with and add to the schedule whenever they’re available. In advance of every show, we send guests a Plantronics Audio 655 headset – it’s a solid (and affordable) headset with great sound. Most importantly, its consistent, so we know that there won’t be headset problems the day of the show. We also typically do an audio test several days in advance to make sure everything is working and sounding good.
The day of the show, setup starts about 2pm – gear is checked over and we start up the live stream around 2:30 or 3:00. We do a final audio check with the guests 30 minutes before show and then we’re live! After the show ends, the clean recordings are dumped onto my computer where they are processed and edited into the final episode. That file is uploaded to our distribution points (SoundCloud & IT Conversations) on Wednesday mornings along with the show notes (which are typically written Tuesday evening after the show). The full posts are then published Wednesday @ 3pm ET / 12pm PT.
If you’ve got any questions that weren’t covered in this post, go ahead and add them in the comments and I’ll do my best to answer them and add them to the post.






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