Fredrik chats with Steve Klabnik about Rust, why the lucky stiff, Closure and Webassembly.

What does Steve do, how is Rust coming along and how does the process work?

Who was why the lucky stiff and why does his publication later named Closure matter to people?

Finally: Webassembly, making the web good for applications in general and why Steve thinks it will be the biggest thing since Javascript was added to browsers.

Recorded on stage at Øredev 2017.

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Links Libsyn - one of the “classic” podcast hosting services Steve Klabnik and on Twitter Mozilla - where Steve works Rust Ruby on rails Mac OS 9 Øredev Jon Moore gave a talk on hypermedia in 2010 The “No balloons” sign Epics or epochs in Rust The Rust programming language No starch press ? in Rust crates.io - the Rust package registry Cargo - the Rust package manager Ashley Williams intermezzOS - the operating system Steve and Ashley are writing in Rust Redox LLVM Servo Closure - the book why the lucky stiff why’s (poignant) guie to Ruby Hackety hack - and on Wikipedia Shoes Steve’s Madison Ruby talk about Closure The blog post, as linked above Keving Brock Imogen Heap and her gloves Webassembly Nacl Dart asm.js Pnacl LLVM-IR Ethereum RokuThe WebUSB specification The birth and death of Javascript Dan Callahan compiling Dosbox Dosbox Netscape 1.0 Titles Hi, I’m Steve Straight to Linux Building a commons People over companies Could be rich by being miserable An empathetic thing Words that weren’t going out of date Safety, performance and ergonomics People don’t build bridges on sand My job is all English, not code Picking up someone else’s life work None of this makes any sense, Steve Compile Rust in Rust in the browser

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