IBM Developer Podcast

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The IBM Developer podcast is the place to hear about open topics and technologies.

  1. Linux for Health | Dixon Whitmire, Lead Coding Architect, Watson Health

    03/10/2022

    Linux for Health | Dixon Whitmire, Lead Coding Architect, Watson Health

    In this episode, we’re excited to bring you a conversation with Watson Health’s Lead Coding Architect, Dixon Whitmire. Dixon is here to give us the details on the open source project Linux For Health, the aim of which is to be the reference implementation for healthcare transactions. Dixon digs into healthcare transaction technology, how patients and healthcare workers interact with health data, and how an open source project like Linux for Health breaks down the silos of different standards and organizations. Along the way, he describes how changes to the software can have immediate real world benefits for anyone who needs access to health records, a requirement that has only grown in urgency in the shadow of a global pandemic. If you’re working in — or thinking of using — an open source environment and you have an interest in the way health records are accessed and shared, you won’t want to miss this discussion. Links related to this episode Linux for HealthIBM Watson Health Takeaways: 00:01 - 00:27 Episode Intro01:15 - 01:52 Introduction to Dixon02:08 - 04:12 Dixon's role at IBM, and Linux For Health04:30 - 05:48 Why go all the way down to the OS?06:06 - 07:34 Problems in the industry: Data is siloed12:06 - 14:33 What ASC X12 and HL7 both are17:34 - 19:01 Security in Linux For Health19:33 - 20:50 EDI: What is it and why it's important26:35 - 29:32 For Developers: Where to start if you want to play around and work on projects34:33 - 36:17 Linux for Health in relation to Watson Health49:29 - 50:22 Final Thoughts by Dixon

    52 min
  2. Open Source Security Foundation | Interview with Brian Behlendorf, GM, OpenSSF

    02/23/2022

    Open Source Security Foundation | Interview with Brian Behlendorf, GM, OpenSSF

    Brian Behlendorf is the General Manager of the Open Source Security Foundation. Brian has dedicated his career to connecting and empowering the free software and open source community to both solve difficult technology problems and have a positive impact on society. From startup company founder, to advisor to the U.S. government, to non-profit board member and employee of the World Economic Forum, he's been at the forefront of the open source software revolution.  Join hosts Luke Schantz and Joe Sepi as they get Brian's take on the latest open source software developments. As the recent Log4J vulnerability has shown, open source software is not immune to security breaches and attack. Brian shares his views on the Log4J scramble, his recent White House meetings on software security, the costs of security and threat mitigation, and future challenges and opportunities in open source software.  Join us for a look back at Brian Behlendorf's unique career and see what's next for him and the movement he helped launch, this time on In the Open with Luke & Joe. Key Takeaways: [00:04 - 00:24] Intro to the episode[02:00 - 02:49] Intro to Brian Behlendorf[02:59 - 08:04] Brian's role with the Open Source Security Foundation[08:46 - 14:16] The importance and newer focus on security[15:29 - 18:27] How to more folks, importantly the US Government, involved in Node.Js[18:52 - 21:43] SBOM[21:48 - 26:17] The Alpha Omega Project[27:28 - 30:58] Getting money and support for security[31:46 - 35:02] The Best Practices badge[35:12 - 38:44] Project Sigstore[39:29 - 41:04] How to get involved in Open SSF Resources: Brian Behlendorf bio: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brian_Behlendorf Open Source @ IBM: https://www.ibm.com/opensource/ Learn in-demand skills. Build with real code. Connect to a global development community: http://ibm.biz/IBMdeveloperYT Follow IBM Developer on social: Twitter: https://twitter.com/IBMDeveloper Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/IBMDeveloper/ More from IBM Developer: Community: https://developer.ibm.com/community/ Blog: https://developer.ibm.com/blogs/ Call for Code: https://developer.ibm.com/callforcode/ #opensource #Developer #Coding #IntheOpen #IBMDeveloper

    50 min
  3. The Open Source Cloud Guide Episode

    12/14/2021

    The Open Source Cloud Guide Episode

    In this podcast, Steve Martinelli, Dr. Max, and Emily Mitchell talk about a new Open Source Cloud Guide created to show what open source technology underpins today’s major cloud offerings.They chat about :         ⁃        Why the guide was created         ⁃        Specific topic areas within the guide         ⁃        Ways you can contribute or enhance the guide An O’Reilly survey that IBM commissioned in late 2020 pointed out that developers who want to build cloud applications should work on honing their open-source skills instead of only focusing on developing skills for a proprietary cloud.The survey highlighted that the most desired of the open-source skills are around Linux (containers), artificial intelligence and machine learning, and data storage.This got us thinking: How do those skills translate exactly to developing for hybrid cloud environments, inclusive of the major cloud providers? What open-source technologies are most used? The purpose of the Open Source Cloud Guide is to answer those questions.This Open Source Cloud Guide seeks to inform developers about what open source technology is important to contribute to. And, because it’s open sourced itself, you can contribute about the technology that’s included in other clouds. Use and contribute to the Open Source Cloud Guide Key Takeaways: [00:00 - 00:30] Intro to the episode[01:11 - 03:27] Intro to guests Emily, Dr. Max, and Steve[03:37 - 05:44] What is the Open Source Cloud Guide?[06:12 - 10:27] What to expect in terms of AI, APIs, big data containers, etc.[18:06 - 19:41] Emily's involvement in the project Resources: The Open Source Cloud Guide: open-cloud-guide.dev/Read & developer.ibm.com/blogs/contribute-to-a-new-open-source-cloud-guide IBM Developer In the era of open hybrid cloud, open source skills matter more than proprietary software skills O'Reilly survey highlights that open source cloud skills set devs apart for career prospects (40 kB) https://developer.ibm.com/blogs/oreilly-open-source-skill-survey-blog/

    22 min
  4. Emerging Technology and Open Source Software at Red Hat | Parul Singh

    09/16/2021

    Emerging Technology and Open Source Software at Red Hat | Parul Singh

    Please join us for a conversation with Parul Singh, a Senior Software Engineer in Red Hat’s Emerging Technology team. We will be discussing the ChRIS Project, volsync, microshift and OpenShift’s Quantum Operators. Parul Singh, Sr. Software Engineer, Emerging Tech, Red Hat  Joe Sepi, Open Source Engineer & Advocate, @joe_sepi  Luke Schantz, Quantum Ambassador, @IBMDeveloper, @lukeschantz Key Takeaways: [00:04 - 00:24] Intro to the episode[02:12 - 02:46] Intro to Parul Singh[03:03 - 05:25] Parul's work developing the IBM and OpenShift quantum operators[08:09 - 10:24] Where can quantum be applied?[10:43 - 13:16] The ChRIS Project, and how Parul got involved[16:20 - 21:11] VolSync: Overview of what it is, and what Parul is working on[25:58 - 29:23] What you need to know about MicroShift[31:49 - 34:46] Living as sustainable as possible[35:48 - 37:28] QUESTION: "How can a company earn money from OpenSource software?"[42:16 - 43:50] QUESTION: "Do you get to choose the topics that you[Parul] like to work on, and the tech stacks as well?" Resources: The ChRIS Project: http://chrisproject.org/ VolSync: https://github.com/backube/volsync Microshift: https://github.com/openshift/microshift OpenShift Quantum Operators: https://github.com/qiskit-community/openshift-quantum-operators CubeSat Space Mission "ENDURANCE": https://www.ibm.com/cloud/blog/cubesat-space-mission-endurance-democratizing-access-to-space

    49 min
  5. Linux for Health, Project Alvearie & Watson Health | Ted Tanner and Adam Orentlicher

    09/01/2021

    Linux for Health, Project Alvearie & Watson Health | Ted Tanner and Adam Orentlicher

    In this episode of In the Open, Please join us for a conversation with Ted Tanner and Adam Orentlicher. Ted is the Global CTO and Chief Architect of Watson Health.  And Adam is the VP of Development for Watson Health.  We will be discussing the open source projects Linux for Health, Project Alvearie and more. Theodore Tanner, Global CTO & Chief Architect, Watson Health, @tctjr Adam Orentlicher, VP of Development, Watson Health, @thisisadamo Joe Sepi, Open Source Engineer & Advocate, @joe_sepi  Luke Schantz, Quantum Ambassador, @IBMDeveloper, @lukeschantz Key Takeaways: [00:00 - 00:22] Intro to the episode[01:47 - 03:05] Intro to Ted and Adam[04:18 - 09:26] Experience with orienting things for the developer[10:24 - 12:49] What a fire server is, and a use case[18:46 - 26:17] The Linux for Health project[35:05 - 36:27] Advice for where a developer should start and get involved in Linux for Health[42:06 - 45:50] Does healthcare care about open source? Linux for Health: github.com/LinuxForHealth Project Alvearie:  alvearie.io Project Alvearie on GitHub: github.com/Alvearie Project Alvearie on IBM.com: ibm.com/watson-health/project-alvearie Project Alvearie Slack: alvearie.slack.com FHIR Repo: github.com/IBM/FHIR IBM FHIR server: ibm.com/products/fhir-server Paul Bastide's FHIR Workshop (Track 5) 9/21/21: developer.ibm.com/conferences/digital-developer-conference-hybrid-cloud LF Public Health: lfph.io IBM Watson Health: ibm.com/watson-health CATB: wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Cathedral_and_the_Bazaar

    51 min

Ratings & Reviews

3.8
out of 5
5 Ratings

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The IBM Developer podcast is the place to hear about open topics and technologies.