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This Developer's Life
Rob Conery and Scott Hanselman
29 episodes
6 months ago
Stories about developers and their lives.
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Technology
Personal Journals,
Business,
Society & Culture,
Careers
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All content for This Developer's Life is the property of Rob Conery and Scott Hanselman and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
Stories about developers and their lives.
Show more...
Technology
Personal Journals,
Business,
Society & Culture,
Careers
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1.1.5 Revolt
This Developer's Life
45 minutes
14 years ago
1.1.5 Revolt
In this special episode we explore the Egyptian revolution. We talk to Remon Zakaria about his experience writing software for a day job and overthrowing the government at night. Big thanks to Ahmed Remy and Reem Ahmed for their help. We recorded hours and hours of content to bring you this show. We wish we could have used everyone's story - there were so many. * Remon Zakaria [http://dashsoft.com/] works at DashSoft, a software consultancy in downtown Cairo specializing in turnkey solutions for offshore companies. Music The music this week, aside from the very last song, is from a single composer: Jami Sieber (Lush Mechanique) [http://itunes.apple.com/us/album/the-darkening-ground/id80069641?i=80069637]. If you've listened to this show for any significant amount of time - you know that music is a big part of it. This week is no exception: Jami's music is evocative, wonderful, compelling and simply a joy to listen to. Go download these things. All of them. They're wonderful. The final track is a song from Ramy Essam [http://www.npr.org/2011/03/15/134538629/ramy-esam-the-singer-of-the-egyptian-revolution] - an Egyptian folk musician who became the "Singer of the Revolution" and led the masses in Tahrir Square in song. The track we ended with is a remix of his famous song, found on YouTube. [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=107hC7cXxTM]
This Developer's Life
Stories about developers and their lives.