Practical Applications for DuckDB (with Simon Aubury & Ned Letcher)

DuckDB's become a favourite data-handling tool of mine, simply because it does so many small things well. It can read and write a huge number of data formats; it can infer schemas automatically when you just want to move quickly; and it can interface with most languages, run like lightning on the desktop or be embedded into a webpage. I'm a huge fan. But I'm not nearly as knowledgeable as this week's two fans, Simon Aubury and Ned Letcher, who've just written a book on all the many ways you can use DuckDB and all the hidden tricks and tips that help you make the most of this. So in this episode we're taking a practical look at DuckDB, what problems it can solve at work, and how to start getting the most out of it. – Getting Started with DuckDB (book): https://packt.link/byKYt DuckDB episode with Hannes Mühleisen: https://youtu.be/pZV9FvdKmLc DuckDB: https://duckdb.org/ dplyr, the data-manipulation language: https://dplyr.tidyverse.org/ duckplyr, DuckDB's 'native' version: https://github.com/duckdblabs/duckplyr Substrait: https://substrait.io/ Observable (Markdown+DuckDB=Reports): https://observablehq.com/framework/ DuckDB's "friendly" SQL: https://duckdb.org/docs/sql/dialect/friendly_sql.html Community Extensions: https://community-extensions.duckdb.org/ DuckCon #5: https://duckdb.org/2024/08/15/duckcon5.html Support Developer Voices on Patreon: https://patreon.com/DeveloperVoices Support Developer Voices on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@developervoices/join Simon on Twitter: https://x.com/SimonAubury Ned on Twitter: https://x.com/nletcher Kris on Mastodon: http://mastodon.social/@krisajenkins Kris on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/krisjenkins/ Kris on Twitter: https://twitter.com/krisajenkins

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Deep-dive discussions with the smartest developers we know, explaining what they're working on, how they're trying to move the industry forward, and what we can learn from them. You might find the solution to your next architectural headache, pick up a new programming language, or just hear some good war stories from the frontline of technology. Join your host Kris Jenkins as we try to figure out what tomorrow's computing will look like the best way we know how - by listening directly to the developers' voices.