Nice, I'm always looking for new things to listen to during my too-long commute. Just one problem, unless I'm missing something, there's no RSS feed - a critical feature for a podcast series.
CompuCast[0] is by some folks at the University of Edinburgh. They cover mostly academic research, but do a good job of making it accessible for people with a basic background in CS.
You might like this one, its not pure Computer Science but there is a lot of it. Its by the ThinkRelevance guys, of known for clojure, datomic and pedastal. The also talk about company organisation and things like that.
They had Rich Hickey on multiple times, most recently to talk about core.async the new CSP library.
http://nodeup.com/ - My personal favorite, great if you are into Node or interested in learning. Lots of interesting podcast topics (promises, performance, scaling websockets, leveldb are some recent ones).
http://thechangelog.com/ - Member support podcast that covers a broad range of popular open source projects and their main contributors.
On a side note, realtalk.io looks interesting as well, I'll have to check that one out too (in addition to thinkdistributed) for my long commutes :)
Another (js-specific) one is [0]JavaScript Jabber. Full disclosure: I am one of the co-hosts of the show, but we usually have much smarter people come on and talk.
Oh dear, can't listen to that on headphones. Built-in microphones and VoIP quality make my ears hurt. Listening to sophisticated podcasters definitely spoils you.
Nice to see a podcast about this.
I'd love more technical/scientific podcasts... nowadays most of podcasts are either very "work" related (HanselMinutes and such) or web/mobile relates (Which I'm not interested about).
I just learned about Realtalk, which looks really nice.
Great idea. This could be part of a larger trend. MOOCS are covering topics in undergraduate education, but there isn't an equivalent for graduate education. Podcasts/Webcasts discussing relevant papers could be a way to solve this.