The origins of the Progressive JavaScript Framework
Vue.js hardly needs an introduction. It’s one of the most popular JavaScript frameworks around, up there with Google’s Angular and Facebook’s React.
This Honeypot production tells the story of Vue.js from the perspective of some of the most prominent names in the community. You’ll meet Evan Yu the creator of Vue.js, Sarah Drasner, Taylor Otwell (of Laravel), Thorsten Lünborg, and follow the filmmakers to China where Vue has some of its most passionate fans.
This documentary has over 1 million views on YouTube — it’s by far Honeypot’s most popular documentary. So even if you’re firmly on the side of React or Angular, I encourage you to check it out, and see what all the fuss is about 😉
You compromise your internet privacy willing
When was the last time you read the user license agreements of your favourite website or service? If you’re like me, you just click ‘agree’ and continue scrolling. Well, according to this doc, that’s not the best idea. Who’d have thought?
Filmmaker Cullen Hoback explores internet privacy in this chilling documentary, exposing how large corporations are gathering and sharing your most personal information around the world — all with your consent. It’s scary what’s buried deep within these 100-page long user agreements, and as you’ll in this documentary, it’s all designed to protect large tech companies while undermining your privacy.
The eye-opening facts presented in this documentary will make you seriously consider (if you don’t already) the repercussions of using your favourite services, like Facebook, Google, and YouTube.
Solving Facebook’s internal API problem
GraphQL: The Documentary tells the story of three former Facebook employees who were obsessed with solving an internal API problem. Lee Byron, Dan Schafer, and Nick Schrock created the software now known as GraphQL back in 2012, and have since open-sourced it and released it to the wider community.
This documentary traces the rise and rise of GraphQL from initial success all the way through to solving complex problems faced by some of the biggest names in tech. From Airbnb to Twitter to Github, you’ll see how this tool has grown over the past 9 years and how it continues to grow through the support of a thriving community of developers.
The ups and downs of indie game development
Video games are and have been a major point of interest for young programmers and developers. For some, it sparked was their introduction to software engineering and for others, it has been a hobby or a favorite pastime.
Indie Game: The Movie gives you an intimate look at indie game development, following the lives of four passionate artists struggling to recognize their gaming dreams, staking everything for a chance at success.
Directors Lisanne Pajot and James Swirsky have paired stylistic editing with raw and powerful real-life stories and the combination makes for a gripping film laced with obsessive but loveable characters while exposing the unforgiving pursuit of creativity.
The origins of the Elixir programming language
This mini-doc about the popular programming language Elixir centers around some of the leading figures in the Elixir community and the creator of the language himself, Jose Valim. As the filmmakers explore its origins, functions, and how it has grown since its initial creation back in 2011.
While it’s only a short watch (under thirteen minutes runtime), the documentary captures the excitement the Elixir community has toward the promising future of this programming language.
Exploring the internet hacktivist group Anonymous
Finally! – something about hacking! In We Are Legion we hear about the politically motivated hacker group, Anonymous, who, as you’ll see, has played a major role in re-defining digital disobedience.
Filmmaker Brian Knappenberger takes a deep dive into the radical “hacktivist” collective, exploring the groups’ beliefs and origins as well as how it has shaped the global environment.
The experts in this documentary show us how online collaboration is a force to be reckoned with. Knappenberger introduces the major events with ties to the Anonymous group, from the Occupy movements to toppled governments. There is effectiveness to online democracy as seen with Anonymous and their pursuit of global justice.
Reddit’s co-founder killed by the government?
This documentary explores the life of programming prodigy Aaron Swartz, co-founder of Reddit, a major internet information activist, and his passion for internet freedoms. If only he could see CCP Reddit now and the dumpster fire it’s become…
It’s a true David versus Goliath story for the internet age. With Director Brian Knappenberger at the helm, the film traces Swartz from entrepreneur in Silicon Valley to online activist in Washington before his untimely death in 2013.
An intimate take on the life of the man behind so many controversies and conspiracy theories which I didn’t know about until watching this documentary. The film certainly answers many questions but left me wanting to know more (especially about his untimely death).
What made this three-part series especially fun for me was witnessing non-technical people meeting the everyday problems of developers. The constant problem solving and frustration of application development. There are funny moments and plenty of interesting characters, so even if you’re an anti-bootcamper you’ll appreciate the authenticity of this documentary.
The dot com gold rush
Documenting the birth and inevitable failure of govWorks.com, this intensely personal documentary examines the internet startup revolution. It follows a group of young entrepreneurs with big dreams of success as they navigate investment communities and personal relationships.
Texans launch a cool computer in the 80s
It’s a rise and fall business tale but with the suspense of a thriller, keeping you hooked from start to finish. Set in the ’80s, Silicon Cowboys documents three unorthodox innovators as they launch the Compaq Computer, and take on one of the world’s largest software companies, IBM.
Netscape’s last year as an independent company
If you have ever pulled an all-nighter to finish a project, then you know a thing or two about deadlines and how dreadful they can be. This documentary is one big stressful deadline.
Netscape, the company behind Mozilla, has been given the deadline of March 31, 1998, to finalize the Mozilla source code before the company’s acquisition by AOL. However, it’s already March 25th, and they still haven’t even tested it. This documentary shows us the last-minute rush to get things done and save the company from disaster, placing a close lens on the developers and their personal responses.
Steve Jobs vs Bill Gates
The together framework
From Amber to Ember, this is the story of Yehuda Katz and Tom Dale (co-creators of Ember.js), two developers who brought frontend code to the next level through their open-source technology.
Most engineers know about “The Container Orchestrator Wars’’ but most people would not be able to explain exactly what happened, and why it was Kubernetes that ultimately came out on top.
Most engineers know about “The Container Orchestrator Wars’’ but most people would not be able to explain exactly what happened, and why it was Kubernetes that ultimately came out on top.