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The Programming Languages Podcast with Fexingo: Python, Rust, JavaScript, and Modern Coding
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The Programming Languages Podcast with Fexingo: Python, Rust, JavaScript, and Modern Coding

Hosted by Unknown Host · EN · 5 episodes

Where this show ranks

Episodes
5
Last ep.
15 days ago
Avg length
10m
Booking Probability™
34
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Listen Score
11
Niche reach.
Virality (30d)
42
Steady cadence.

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About this podcast

Every line of code is a decision, and every programming language encodes a philosophy. In The Programming Languages Podcast, Lucas and Luna move past syntax flame wars to examine the actual trade-offs behind Python, Rust, JavaScript, and the modern coding stack. Each episode dissects a specific language feature, framework choice, or ecosystem shift — from Rust's borrow checker and memory safety guarantees to JavaScript's type system evolution with TypeScript, and Python's dominance in machine learning versus its performance bottlenecks. They ground every discussion in real-world benchmarks, open-source projects like Deno and PyPy, and case studies from companies that bet on one language over another. Lucas brings the reporter's instinct for clarity and hard numbers; Luna tests those findings with the engineer's skepticism and hands-on experience. You will walk away understanding not just what a language does, but why it was designed that way, and when you should — or shouldn't — use it. What does Rust's ownership model teach us about concurrency? Is JavaScript's flexibility a feature or a bug for large-scale systems? Can Python ever overcome the GIL? This is the podcast for developers who are tired of cargo-culting and want to think critically about the tools they use every day.

About the host

Unknown Host hosts The Programming Languages Podcast with Fexingo: Python, Rust, JavaScript, and Modern Coding, a general show with 5 episodes published.

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Recent episodes

Our AI reads these to draft pitches

How Kubernetes Forced a New Generation of Programming Languages

Jun 5, 20268mEp. 33S1

Kubernetes changed how we deploy software, but few people talk about how it changed the languages we write that software in. This episode explores Kubernetes as a language forcing function — why Go became the lingua fran

Why Gleam Is the Language Bringing Erlang to the Masses

Jun 5, 202610mEp. 32S1

Gleam is a statically typed language that compiles to Erlang's BEAM virtual machine, bringing the reliability of Erlang and Elixir to developers who prefer a Rust-like type system. In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore

How SQLite Became the Hidden Database Powering Everything

Jun 4, 202611mEp. 31S1

SQLite is the most deployed database engine on earth, running on billions of devices from smartphones to airplanes. Yet most developers barely think about it. In this episode of The Programming Languages Podcast with Fex

Why Formal Verification Is Entering Mainstream Development

Jun 4, 202612mEp. 30S1

Episode 30 of The Programming Languages Podcast explores formal verification — the practice of mathematically proving code correctness — and why it's moving beyond aerospace and academia into everyday development. Lucas

How Developers Are Fighting Supply Chain Attacks in 2026

Jun 3, 20268mEp. 29S1

Software supply chain attacks hit a new record in Q1 2026, with the number of malicious packages discovered on public registries up 80 percent year-over-year. Lucas and Luna break down how a single compromised npm packag

Why Kotlin Multiplatform Is Winning in 2026

Jun 3, 20268mEp. 28S1

Lucas and Luna dive into the rise of Kotlin Multiplatform in 2026. They explain how JetBrains' language is enabling true code sharing across iOS, Android, and web, with a focus on practical adoption at companies like Net

Why Zig Is the Systems Language to Watch in 2026

Jun 2, 202612mEp. 27S1

Episode 27 of The Programming Languages Podcast explores Zig—a systems language that's gaining traction among embedded developers, game engine builders, and CLI tool authors. Lucas explains how Zig's compile-time executi

How Go Conquered Cloud-Native Infrastructure

Jun 2, 202613mEp. 26S1

Episode 26 of The Programming Languages Podcast explores why Go has become the default language for cloud-native infrastructure. Lucas and Luna trace Go's rise from a 2009 experiment at Google to powering tools like Dock

Why Rust Is Winning Over Python for Systems Programming in 2026

Jun 1, 20269mEp. 25S1

In this episode of The Programming Languages Podcast, Lucas and Luna explore why Rust is increasingly replacing Python for systems-level programming in 2026, focusing on a specific case: how a major fintech startup migra

Why TypeScript Is Eating JavaScript in 2026

Jun 1, 202610mEp. 24S1

In this episode of The Programming Languages Podcast, Lucas and Luna explore how TypeScript has become the dominant language for web development by June 2026, surpassing JavaScript in enterprise adoption. They break down

Why Python 4.0 Is Not Coming in 2026

May 31, 20269mEp. 23S1

In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore why the Python community is deliberately holding off on a Python 4.0 release despite increasing pressure from performance-hungry domains like AI inference and real-time data pipeli

Why Semantic Versioning Is Breaking Your Build Pipeline

May 31, 20268mEp. 22S1

Lucas and Luna dive into the quiet crisis of semantic versioning—how the 20-year-old convention of MAJOR.MINOR.PATCH is failing modern dependency management. They unpack the real-world example of the left-pad incident, e

Why GitHub Copilot Isnt Enough Anymore in 2026

May 30, 20267mEp. 21S1

Episode 21 of The Programming Languages Podcast digs into the rapidly shifting landscape of AI coding assistants. Lucas and Luna explore why GitHub Copilot — once the market leader — is facing real competition from tools

Why GraphQL Is Thriving in 2026 Beyond the Hype Cycle

May 30, 20269mEp. 20S1

Episode 20 dives into GraphQL's surprising second life. Five years after the backlash, GraphQL is quietly powering major architectures at GitHub, Shopify, and Netflix. Lucas and Luna unpack the real reason adoption rebou

Why Haskell Still Matters in 2026

May 29, 20269mEp. 19S1

Episode 19 explores Haskell's quiet but powerful role in 2026's software landscape. Lucas and Luna examine how this purely functional language, often seen as academic, is powering critical systems at companies like Faceb

How OCaml Powers Quantitative Finance Behind the Scenes

May 29, 202610mEp. 18S1

When you think of programming languages in finance, Python and C++ usually come to mind. But for decades, OCaml has quietly powered some of the most latency-sensitive and correctness-critical trading systems on Wall Stre

How Dart Is Winning the Cross-Platform App War in 2026

May 28, 202610mEp. 17S1

In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore why Dart—the language behind Google's Flutter—has become the dominant force in cross-platform mobile and desktop development in 2026. They trace its unexpected rise from a niche we

How WebAssembly Is Reshaping Edge Computing in 2026

May 28, 202611mEp. 16S1

Lucas and Luna dive into WebAssembly’s unexpected second life: powering edge computing. They trace how a technology originally designed to bring native-speed code to browsers is now running server-side functions at the e

How Elixir Solved Twitter Scale Problems

May 27, 20267mEp. 15S1

In this episode, Lucas and Luna dive into the origin story of Elixir—a language born from José Valim's frustration with Ruby's concurrency limits. They unpack how Elixir's actor model, built on the Erlang VM, powers faul

Why Carbon Could Be C Plus Plus Successor

May 27, 202610mEp. 14S1

In this episode of The Programming Languages Podcast, Lucas and Luna explore Carbon, the experimental language from Google designed as a successor to C++. They unpack why Carbon was created, how it aims to fix C++'s lega

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Audience demographics

Age
25-54
Consumer type
General audience

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Who is the host of The Programming Languages Podcast with Fexingo: Python, Rust, JavaScript, and Modern Coding?

The Programming Languages Podcast with Fexingo: Python, Rust, JavaScript, and Modern Coding is hosted by Unknown Host. The show is categorised under General and has published 5 episodes.

How many episodes does The Programming Languages Podcast with Fexingo: Python, Rust, JavaScript, and Modern Coding have?

The Programming Languages Podcast with Fexingo: Python, Rust, JavaScript, and Modern Coding has published 5 episodes.

Is it hard to get booked on The Programming Languages Podcast with Fexingo: Python, Rust, JavaScript, and Modern Coding?

The Programming Languages Podcast with Fexingo: Python, Rust, JavaScript, and Modern Coding is accessible for guests with genuine general expertise. A personalised, episode-aware pitch will still outperform a generic one every time.

Is The Programming Languages Podcast with Fexingo: Python, Rust, JavaScript, and Modern Coding currently accepting guest pitches?

The Programming Languages Podcast with Fexingo: Python, Rust, JavaScript, and Modern Coding hasn't explicitly signalled guest openness in recent episodes. That doesn't rule out pitching. your hook just needs to be especially compelling and relevant to their recent content.

How long are The Programming Languages Podcast with Fexingo: Python, Rust, JavaScript, and Modern Coding episodes?

Episodes of The Programming Languages Podcast with Fexingo: Python, Rust, JavaScript, and Modern Coding average 10 minutes. a focused format where a clear narrative arc and tight preparation matter most.

What guest credentials does The Programming Languages Podcast with Fexingo: Python, Rust, JavaScript, and Modern Coding typically look for?

Our data rates The Programming Languages Podcast with Fexingo: Python, Rust, JavaScript, and Modern Coding's guest bar at 80/100 (Premium tier). Established thought leaders with verified media credentials. Sign in to PitchCentric to see how your own Pod Score compares against this show.

Methodology. Booking Probability™ blends Listen Score, 30-day Virality, open-to-guests detection, and Apple ratings. Data refreshed every 60 minutes. Listen Score and Booking Probability are calculated by PitchCentric. Last enriched 9 days ago.

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