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.
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.
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.
Indie Game: The Movie gives you an intimate look at indie game development, following the lives of four passionate artists struggling to recognise their gaming dreams, staking everything for a chance at success.
This mini-doc about the popular programming language Elixir centres 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.
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.
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…
Everyone’s got their story, but that’s not really the point of this documentary series. While I think it might help grow your perspective on coding bootcamps, the documentary series is more about following the people in these courses and documenting the experience.
In this fly-on-a-wall documentary, you’ll glimpse behind the many layers of the dot com gold rush to see the very real financial and personal struggles of those scrambling to the top. It’s a sobering insight into startup culture whilst showing the harsh realities that entrepreneurs faced in the dot com era.
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.
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.
In Pirates of Silicon Valley, we see Apple Computer Corporation and Microsoft in a battle for corporate supremacy. You’ll see the parallel lives of Bill Gates and Apple co-founders Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak as they race to the top.
The film is a wild tragedy based on the final chapters of Fire in the Valley: The Making of the Personal Computer (1984). I was captivated by the stylistic way it portrayed the computer revolution and maybe it’ll inspire your own technology revolution — hell it’s about time we had something that wasn’t Apple or Microsoft.
Now 10 years on, the documentary sees how the Ember.js community has developed, through early adopters to collaborative efforts and how the risks of an open-source code pushed software development in a new direction
We released this documentary in January 2022. It’s a two-part series, so make sure you put aside some time to watch it all the way through. In it, you’ll hear from Kubernetes giants like Kelsey Hightower and Brian Grant, plus countless other names in the Google community.