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From Carnegie Mellon classrooms to a global cultural phenomenon, this episode of The Morning Brief traces the journey of Luis von Ahn, math prodigy, inventor of CAPTCHA, and now the CEO and co-founder of Duolingo. Hosts Anirban Chowdhury and ET’s Deputy news editor Himani Kothari explore how Luis’s early work fighting bots evolved into a business to democratize education through gamified language learning. What began with a Spanish course and a German prototype has grown into a plus 500-million-user platform, driven by Duolingo’s bite-sized lessons, quirky owl mascot, and irreverent marketing strategy. The conversation delves into the company’s expansion into math, music and chess, its partnership with OpenAI, and the creative freedom that powers its viral success. As AI becomes central to the future of learning, Luis weighs its potential to enhance not replace human education. Can platforms like Duolingo balance fun, function, and cultural impact in a world increasingly shaped by algorithms?Tune in: You can follow Anirban Chowdhury on his Linkedin, Twitter profiles and read his Newspaper Articles. You can follow Himani Kothari on her Linkedin, Twitter profiles and read his Newspaper Articles. If you like this episode, check out more Corner Office Conversations from the podcast: Adar Poonawalla, Sandip Patel, The Mega Listing Of Vishal Retail, Antonoaldo Neves, Rajesh Jejurikar, Srikanth Velamakanni, and more!Catch the latest episode of ‘The Morning Brief’ on ET Play, The Economic Times Online, Spotify, Apple Podcasts, JioSaavn, Amazon Music and Youtube.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Hello Interactors,This week, I've been reflecting on the themes of my last few essays — along with a pile of research that's been oddly in sync. Transit planning. Neuroscience. Happiness studies. Complexity theory. Strange mix, but it keeps pointing to the same thing: cities aren't just struggling with transportation or housing. They're struggling with connection. With meaning. With the simple question: what kind of happiness should a city make possible? And why don't we ask that more often?STRANGERS SHUNNED, SYSTEMS SIMULATEDThe urban century was supposed to bring us together. Denser cities, faster mobility, more connected lives — these were the promises of global urbanization. Yet in the shadow of those promises, a different kind of city has emerged in America with growing undertones elsewhere: one that increasingly seeks to eliminate the stranger, bypass friction, and privatize interaction.Whether through algorithmically optimized ride-sharing, private tunnels built to evade street life, or digital maps simulating place without presence for autonomous vehicles, a growing set of design logics work to render other people — especially unknown others — invisible, irrelevant, or avoidable.I admit, I too can get seduced by this comfort, technology, and efficiency. But cities aren't just systems of movement — they're systems of meaning. Space is never neutral; it's shaped by power and shapes behavior in return. This isn't new. Ancient cities like Teotihuacan (tay-oh-tee-wah-KAHN) in central Mexico, once one of the largest cities in the world, aligned their streets and pyramids with the stars. Chang'an (chahng-AHN), the capital of Tang Dynasty China, used strict cardinal grids and walled compounds to reflect Confucian ideals of order and hierarchy. And Uruk (OO-rook), in ancient Mesopotamia, organized civic life around temple complexes that stood at the spiritual and administrative heart of the city.These weren't just settlements — they were spatial arguments about how people should live together, and who should lead. Even Middle Eastern souks and hammams were more than markets or baths; they were civic infrastructure. Whether through temples or bus stops, the question is the same: What kind of social behavior is this space asking of us?Neuroscience points to answers. As Shane O'Mara argues, walking is not just transport — it's neurocognitive infrastructure. The hippocampus, which governs memory, orientation, and mood, activates when we move through physical space. Walking among others, perceiving spontaneous interactions, and attending to environmental cues strengthens our cognitive maps and emotional regulation.This makes city oriented around ‘stranger danger' not just unjust — but indeed dangerous. Because to eliminate friction is to undermine emergence — not only in the social sense, but in the economic and cultural ones too. Cities thrive on weak ties, on happenstance, on proximity without intention. Mark Granovetter's landmark paper, The Strength of Weak Ties, showed that it's those looser, peripheral relationships — not our inner circles — that drive opportunity, creativity, and mobility. Karl Polanyi called it embeddedness: the idea that markets don't float in space, they're grounded in the social fabric around them.You see it too in scale theory — in the work of Geoffrey West and Luís Bettencourt — where the productive and innovative energy of cities scales with density, interaction, and diversity. When you flatten all that into private tunnels and algorithmic efficiency, you don't just lose the texture — you lose the conditions for invention.As David Roberts, a climate and policy journalist known for his systems thinking and sharp urban critiques, puts it: this is “the anti-social dream of elite urbanism” — a vision where you never have to share space with anyone not like you. In conversation with him, Jarrett Walker, a transit planner and theorist who's spent decades helping cities design equitable bus networks, also pushes back against this logic. He warns that when cities build transit around avoidance — individualized rides, privatized tunnels, algorithmic sorting — they aren't just solving inefficiencies. They're hollowing out the very thing that makes transit (and cities) valuable and also public: the shared experience of strangers moving together.The question isn't just whether cities are efficient — but what kind of social beings they help us become. If we build cities to avoid each other, we shouldn't be surprised when they crumble as we all forget how to live together.COVERAGE, CARE, AND CIVIC CALMIf you follow urban and transit planning debates long enough, you'll hear the same argument come up again and again: Should we focus on ridership or coverage? High-frequency routes where lots of people travel, or wide access for people who live farther out — even if fewer use the service? For transit nerds, it's a policy question. For everyone else, it's about dignity.As Walker puts it, coverage isn't about efficiency — it's about “a sense of fairness.” It's about living in a place where your city hasn't written you off because you're not profitable to serve. Walker's point is that coverage isn't charity. It's a public good, one that tells people: You belong here.That same logic shows up in more surprising places — like the World Happiness Report. Year after year, Finland lands at the top. But as writer Molly Young found during her visit to Helsinki, Finnish “happiness” isn't about joy or euphoria. It's about something steadier: trust, safety, and institutional calm. What the report measures is evaluative happiness — how satisfied people are with their lives over time — not affective happiness, which is more about momentary joy or emotional highs.There's a Finnish word that captures this. It the feeling you get after a sauna: saunanjälkeinen raukeus (SOW-nahn-yell-kay-nen ROW-keh-oos) — the softened, slowed state of the body and mind. That's what cities like Helsinki seem to deliver: not bliss, but a stable, low-friction kind of contentment. And while that may lack sparkle, it makes people feel held.And infrastructure plays a big role. In Helsinki, the signs in the library don't say “Be Quiet.” They say, “Please let others work in peace.” It's a small thing, but it speaks volumes — less about control, more about shared responsibility. There are saunas in government buildings. Parents leave their babies sleeping in strollers outside cafés. Transit is clean, quiet, and frequent. As Young puts it, these aren't luxuries — they're part of a “bone-deep sense of trust” the city builds and reinforces. Not enforced from above, but sustained by expectation, habit, and care.My family once joined an organized walking tour of Copenhagen. The guide, who was from Spain, pointed to a clock in a town square and said, almost in passing, “The government has always made sure this clock runs on time — even during war.” It wasn't just about punctuality. It was about trust. About the quiet promise that the public realm would still hold, even when everything else felt uncertain. This, our guide noted from his Spanish perspective, is what what make Scandinavians so-called ‘happy'. They feel held.Studies show that most of what boosts long-term happiness isn't about dopamine hits — it's about relational trust. Feeling safe. Feeling seen. Knowing you won't be stranded if you don't have a car or a credit card. Knowing the city works, even if you don't make it work for you.In this way, transit frequency and subtle signs in Helsinki are doing the same thing. They're shaping behavior and reinforcing social norms. They're saying: we share space here. Don't be loud. Don't cut in line. Don't treat public space like it's only for you.That kind of city can't be built on metrics alone. It needs moral imagination — the kind that sees coverage, access, and slowness as features, not bugs. That's not some socialist's idea of utopia. It's just thoughtful. Built into the culture, yes, but also the design.But sometimes we're just stuck with whatever design is already in place. Even if it's not so thoughtful. Economists and social theorists have long used the concept of path dependence to explain why some systems — cities, institutions, even technologies — get stuck. The idea dates back to work in economics and political science in the 1980s, where it was used to show how early decisions, even small ones, can lock in patterns that are hard to reverse.Once you've laid train tracks, built freeways, zoned for single-family homes — you've shaped what comes next. Changing course isn't impossible, but it's costly, slow, and politically messy. The QWERTY keyboard is a textbook example: not the most efficient layout, but one that stuck because switching systems later would be harder than just adapting to what we've got.Urban scholars Michael Storper and Allen Scott brought this thinking into city studies. They've shown how economic geography and institutional inertia shape urban outcomes — how past planning decisions, labor markets, and infrastructure investments limit the options cities have today. If your city bet on car-centric growth decades ago, you're probably still paying for that decision, even if pivoting is palatable to the public.CONNECTIONS, COMPLEXITY, CITIES THAT CAREThere's a quote often attributed to Stephen Hawking that's made the rounds in complexity science circles: “The 21st century will be the century of complexity.” No one's entirely sure where he said it — it shows up in systems theory blogs, talks, and books — but it sticks. Probably because it feels true.If the last century was about physics — closed systems, force, motion, precision — then this one is about what happens when the pieces won't stay still. When the rules change mid-game. When causes ripple back as consequences. In other words: cities.Planners have tried to tame that complexity in all kinds of ways. Grids. Zoning codes. Dashboards. There's long been a kind of “physics envy” in both planning and economics — a belief that if we just had the right model, the right inputs, we could predict and control the city like a closed system. As a result, for much of the 20th century, cities were designed like machines — optimized for flow, separation, and predictability.But even the pushback followed a logic of control — cul-de-sacs and suburban pastoralism — wasn't a turn toward organic life or spontaneity. It was just a softer kind of order: winding roads and whispered rules meant to keep things calm, clean, and contained…and mostly white and moderately wealthy.If you think of cities like machines, it makes sense to want control. More data, tighter optimization, fewer surprises. That's how you'd tune an engine or write software. But cities aren't machines. They're messy, layered, and full of people doing unpredictable things. They're more like ecosystems — or weather patterns — than they are a carburetor. And that's where complexity science becomes useful.People like Paul Cilliers and Brian Castellani have argued for a more critical kind of complexity science — one that sees cities not just as networks or algorithms, but as places shaped by values, power, and conflict. Cilliers emphasized that complex systems, like cities, are open and dynamic: they don't have fixed boundaries, they adapt constantly, and they respond to feedback in ways no planner can fully predict. Castellani extends this by insisting that complexity isn't just technical — it's ethical. It demands we ask: Who benefits from a system's design? Who has room to adapt, and who gets constrained? In this view, small interventions — a zoning tweak, a route change — can set off ripple effects that reshape how people move, connect, and belong. A new path dependence.This is why certainty is dangerous in urban design. It breeds overconfidence. Humility is a better place to start. As Jarrett Walker puts it, “there are all kinds of ways to fake your way through this.” Agencies often adopt feel-good mission statements like “compete with the automobile by providing access for all” — which, he notes, is like “telling your taxi driver to turn left and right at the same time.” You can't do both. Not on a fixed budget.Walker pushes agencies to be honest: if you want to prioritize ridership, say so. If you want to prioritize broad geographic coverage, that's also valid — but know it will mean lower ridership. The key is not pretending you can have both at full strength. He says, “What I want is for board members… to make this decision consciously and not be surprised by the consequences”.These decisions matter. A budget cut can push riders off buses, which then leads to reduced service, which leads to more riders leaving — a feedback loop. On the flip side, small improvements — like better lighting, a public bench, a frequent bus — can set off positive loops too. Change emerges, often sideways.That means thinking about transit not just as a system of movement, but as a relational space. Same with libraries, parks, and sidewalks. These aren't neutral containers. They're environments that either support or suppress human connection. If you design a city to eliminate friction, you eliminate chance encounters — the stuff social trust is made of.I'm an introvert. I like quiet. I recharge alone. But I also live in a city — and I've learned that even for people like me, being around others still matters. Not in the chatty, get-to-know-your-neighbors way. But in the background hum of life around you. Sitting on a bus. Browsing in a bookstore. Walking down a street full of strangers, knowing you don't have to engage — but you're not invisible either.There's a name for this. Psychologists call it public solitude or sometimes energized privacy — the comfort of being alone among others. Not isolated, not exposed. Just held, lightly, in the weave of the crowd. And the research backs it up: introverts often seek out public spaces like cafés, libraries, or parks not to interact, but to feel present — connected without pressure.In the longest-running happiness study ever done, 80 years, Harvard psychologist Robert Waldinger found that strong relationships — not income, not status — were the best predictor of long-term well-being. More recently, studies have shown that even brief interactions with strangers — on a bus, in a coffee shop — can lift mood and reduce loneliness. But here's the catch: cities have to make those interactions possible.Or they don't.And that's the real test of infrastructure. We've spent decades designing systems to move people through. Fast. Clean. Efficient. But we've neglected the quiet spaces that let people just be. Sidewalks you're not rushed off of. Streets where kids can safely bike or play…or simply cross the street.Even pools — maybe especially pools. My wife runs a nonprofit called SplashForward that's working to build more public pools. Not just for fitness, but because pools are public space. You float next to people you may never talk to. And still, you're sharing something. Space. Water. Time.You see this clearly in places like Finland and Iceland, where pools and saunas are built into the rhythms of public life. They're not luxuries — they're civic necessities. People show up quietly, day after day, not to socialize loudly, but to be alone together. As one Finnish local told journalist Molly Young, “During this time, we don't have... colors.” It was about the long gray winter, sure — but also something deeper: a culture that values calm over spectacle. Stability over spark. A kind of contentment that doesn't perform.But cities don't have to choose between quiet and joy. We don't have to model every system on Helsinki in February. There's something beautiful in the American kind of happiness too — the loud, weird, spontaneous moments that erupt in public. The band on the subway. The dance party in the park. The loud kid at the pool. That kind of energy can be a nuisance, but it can also be joyful.Even Jarrett Walker, who's clear-eyed about transit, doesn't pretend it solves everything. Transit isn't always the answer. Sometimes a car is the right tool. What matters is whether everyone has a real choice — not just those with money or proximity or privilege. And he's quick to admit every city with effective transit has its local grievances.So no, I'm not arguing for perfection, or even socialism. I'm arguing for a city that knows how to hold difference. Fast and slow. Dense and quiet. A city that lets you step into the crowd, or sit at its edge, and still feel like you belong. A place to comfortably sit with the uncertainty of this great transformation emerging around us. Alone and together.REFERENCESCastellani, B. (2014). Complexity theory and the social sciences: The state of the art. Routledge.Cilliers, P. (1998). Complexity and postmodernism: Understanding complex systems. Routledge.David, P. A. (1985). Clio and the economics of QWERTY. The American Economic Review.Granovetter, M. (1973). The strength of weak ties. American Journal of Sociology.Hawking, S. (n.d.). The 21st century will be the century of complexity. [Attributed quote; primary source unavailable].O'Mara, S. (2019). In praise of walking: A new scientific exploration. W. W. Norton & Company.Roberts, D. (Host). (2025). Jarrett Walker on what makes good transit [Audio podcast episode]. In Volts.Storper, M., & Scott, A. J. (2016). Current debates in urban theory: A critical assessment. Urban Studies.Waldinger, R., & Schulz, M. (2023). The good life: Lessons from the world's longest scientific study of happiness. Simon & Schuster.Walker, J. (2011). Human transit: How clearer thinking about public transit can enrich our communities and our lives. Island Press.West, G., & Bettencourt, L. M. A. (2010). A unified theory of urban living. Nature.Young, M. (2025). My miserable week in the ‘happiest country on earth'. The New York Times Magazine. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit interplace.io
YZBH 28 konular:1. Microsoft, Elon Musk'ın Grok 3 AI modelini Azure'da barındırmaya hazırlanıyor2. Gemini Gemler herkese açık ve ücretsiz oldu. Deneyin.3. Deepseek R2 ve Grok 3,5 gene gelemedi
No Priors: Artificial Intelligence | Machine Learning | Technology | Startups
On this episode of No Priors, Sarah talks to Luis von Ahn, founder and CEO of Duolingo, the world's most popular education app with over 116 million monthly users and a market cap of approximately $17 billion. Controversially, it has recently committed to being “AI-first.” They discuss why motivation is the biggest challenge in education, how Duolingo harnesses game mechanics and behavioral insights to keep learners engaged, and the company's efforts to leverage AI to personalize education at scale. Luis also shares thoughts on the Duolingo brand, courses beyond language (chess and math), and the broader impact of AI on content creation. Sign up for new podcasts every week. Email feedback to show@no-priors.com Follow us on Twitter: @NoPriorsPod | @Saranormous | @EladGil | @LuisvonAhn Links: Duolingo is now AI-First: http://bit.ly/3RQzny3 Show Notes: 0:00 Introduction 4:01 Optimizing learning behavior through tech 11:20 Adopting AI at Duolingo 17:25 AI's threat to content companies 18:34 An unhinged corporate brand 21:28 How do people learn? 25:16 What people misunderstand about Duolingo? 26:24 How AI is transforming learning at scale 30:28 Leveraging AI across the business
Ranjan Roy from Margins is back for our weekly discussion of the latest tech news. We cover 1) What an 'AI-First Company' is 2) Aaron Levie's AI-first memo to Box. 3) Luis von Ahn's AI-first memo to Duolingo 4) Tobi Lutke's AI-first memo to Shopify 5) Can non-tech company be AI-first? 6) Apple earnings 7) Apple's federal government issues 8) Microsoft earnings 9) Amazon earnings 10) Meta Earnings 11) NVIDIA vs. Anthropic 12) More on AI consciousness 13) The very handy Mag2 --- Enjoying Big Technology Podcast? Please rate us five stars ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ in your podcast app of choice. Want a discount for Big Technology on Substack? Here's 25% off for the first year: https://www.bigtechnology.com/subscribe?coupon=0843016b Questions? Feedback? Write to: bigtechnologypodcast@gmail.com
Two new cookbooks take different approaches – one modern and one more traditional – to Korean cuisine. First, Roy Choi is the co-founder of Los Angeles' Kogi BBQ food trucks, which put Korean-Mexican fusion on the map. He rose to fame cooking meat, but his first full cookbook The Choi of Cooking focuses on vegetables. In today's episode, Choi speaks – and cooks – with NPR's Ailsa Chang. Over breakfast burritos, they discuss the chef's quest to elevate vegetables and break what Choi calls an addiction to junk food. Then, Sarah Ahn became social-media-famous for posting videos of her mother's traditional Korean recipes. Now, the two women are out with Umma, a cookbook that focuses on preserving identity through recipes. In today's episode, Ahn speaks with Here & Now's Lisa Mullins about collaborating with her mom, the cultural history of kimchi, and the difference between Korean and Southern fried chicken.To listen to Book of the Day sponsor-free and support NPR's book coverage, sign up for Book of the Day+ at plus.npr.org/bookofthedayLearn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
Duolingo co-founder Luis von Ahn joins Guy on the Advice Line to answer questions from three early-stage founders. Plus, Luis shares insights on how data can help entrepreneurs understand what their customers really want.First, Steph in Chicago wonders how to manage expansion opportunities for her art-filled vending machines. Then Blair from Atlanta discusses his challenge of selecting which products to focus on with his tech accessories brand. And finally, Stephanie in Indiana considers the best way to fund more employees for her growing business designing living plant walls. Thank you to the founders Good Things Vending, Bair, and Naturspire for being a part of our show.If you'd like to be featured on a future Advice Line episode, leave us a one-minute message that tells us about your business and a specific question you'd like answered. Send a voice memo to hibt@id.wondery.com or call 1-800-433-1298.And be sure to listen to Duolingo's founding story as told by Luis on the show in 2020.This episode was produced by Katherine Sypher with music by Ramtin Arablouei. It was edited by Casey Herman. Our audio engineer was Cena Loffredo.You can follow HIBT on X & Instagram and sign up for Guy's free newsletter at guyraz.com and on Substack.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
In Episode 75, Kelly Sopak returns to the Mic is Ahn Podcast. Fresh off a 2025 State Championship with his Carondelet Cougars Girls Basketball Team, and having been named Girls Basketball Coach of the Year in California, we needed to talk about everything. We start by talking about the feeling of winning his first state championship as a coach and how it came about. But, the rest of the interview is spent talking about in-depth coaching questions that he did a great job of answering. Questions include 3 things people don't understand about coaching girls high school basketball, what is the hardest thing about it, and the biggest differences nowadays between high school programs and clubs. I also got Kelly to talk about specific players that he has had the opportunity to coach that made a lasting impression. Kelly is a phenomenal coach, person, father and friend. We talk about it all, and even get to some great Northgate memories at the end. Those of you not familiar with Kelly will be fans by the end of this episode. Enjoy your time, and come back for more...on The Mic is Ahn!Kelly Sopak Instagram: kellysopakPodcast email: themicisahn@gmail.comPodcast Instagram: ahniebpe
At the height of his Wall Street career, Ken Ahn walked away from finance completely. The Harvard MBA quickly found a new home at Sotheby's, a high-end auction house, and helped established one of the premier names in collector car auctions. Now, he's leading the charge at Broad Arrow Auctions. This week, Ahn stops by the Never Stop Driving studio to chat with host Larry Webster about his origin story, the classic car market, and upcoming projects. Join the Hagerty Drivers Club! https://www.hagerty.com/drivers-club/ About the pod: the Never Stop Driving podcast is available on Itunes, Spotify, and YouTube. Like this newsletter, it's free to everyone because one of Hagerty's goals is to spread car passion. On the show, we'll cover a wide range of automotive topics, including interviews with the people doing the most interesting work in the car world. I expect it to evolve over time so your feedback is welcome. Please give it a listen and help us spread the word with a positive rating and share it.
Duolingo enseñará ajedrez desde cero, con lecciones interactivas y partidas contra Oscar. El curso estará en iOS desde mayoPor Félix Riaño @LocutorCoDuolingo, la popular app para aprender idiomas, sorprendió al anunciar que va a enseñar ajedrez. Sí, el clásico juego de estrategia. Será el tercer curso no lingüístico de la app, después de música y matemáticas. Comenzará como beta en iOS a mediados de mayo y estará disponible primero en inglés. Los usuarios aprenderán desde lo más básico, como mover un alfil, hasta jugar partidas completas. El sistema de enseñanza es similar al de sus otros cursos: lecciones cortas, interactivas, con personajes simpáticos y ayudas visuales. ¿Será posible que una app que antes nos enseñó francés, ahora nos convierta en jugadores de ajedrez?Aún no podrás jugar contra otros humanosLa aplicación Duolingo fue lanzada en 2012 y cuenta con más de 37 millones de usuarios activos diarios. Desde 2022, ha empezado a ampliar su oferta más allá de los idiomas, incorporando cursos de matemáticas y música. Ahora el turno es para el ajedrez, un juego milenario que muchos consideran difícil de aprender. La nueva función incluirá lecciones sobre cómo se mueven las piezas, patrones tácticos y estrategias básicas. El curso está diseñado principalmente para principiantes y jugadores de nivel medio, una población que suele quedar desatendida por las plataformas especializadas. Los desarrolladores prometen un enfoque visual, interactivo y amigable con el usuario, donde todo se aprende jugando.El ajedrez tiene fama de ser complejo. La mayoría de las herramientas que existen para aprenderlo están diseñadas por jugadores avanzados para jugadores avanzados. Eso excluye a quienes sienten curiosidad pero no saben por dónde empezar. ¿Qué pasa si nunca has jugado una partida? ¿Cómo te enfrentas a un tablero con piezas que no entiendes? Ahí entra Duolingo. Según Edwin Bodge, gerente de producto, detectaron una oportunidad clara: hacer que aprender ajedrez sea tan accesible como aprender inglés. El reto es enorme: hay millones de combinaciones posibles en una partida. No siempre es evidente por qué una jugada es mala. Y aunque Duolingo planea usar inteligencia artificial en el futuro para explicar errores, por ahora no habrá retroalimentación detallada como la que ofrece en sus cursos de idiomas.El curso está estructurado de forma similar a las lecciones de idiomas. Comienza con una pregunta: ¿cuánto sabes de ajedrez? Dependiendo de tu respuesta, se adapta el contenido. Si eres completamente nuevo, te enseña cómo se mueve cada pieza: el caballo en forma de L, la torre en línea recta, el alfil en diagonal. Luego vienen los mini-puzzles: desafíos cortos donde debes capturar una pieza específica en pocos movimientos. Por ejemplo, capturar una torre con tu caballo en tres movimientos. Si fallas varias veces, aparece una flecha para guiarte. Pero no hay penalización dura ni juicio. En vez de un maestro severo, tendrás a Oscar, el personaje virtual que jugará partidas contra ti. Oscar sube o baja de nivel según tu progreso, lo que hace que el aprendizaje sea gradual y menos intimidante. Duolingo promete que más adelante habilitará partidas entre usuarios, pero por ahora el foco está en jugar contra Oscar. Y sí, perderás si juegas mal. Oscar no tiene piedad si dejas tu reina desprotegida.El curso fue desarrollado en tiempo récord. Según Fast Company, el equipo presentó la idea al CEO, Luis von Ahn, en agosto de 2024. En noviembre ya tenían un ingeniero trabajando y ahora, en abril de 2025, están listos para lanzar la beta en iOS. Aunque por ahora solo está disponible en inglés y en dispositivos Apple, Duolingo confirmó que en los próximos meses llegará a Android y se traducirá a otros idiomas. Esto amplía su alcance global, especialmente en regiones donde el ajedrez es muy popular. Además, cada bloque de lecciones se asocia con una franja del sistema Elo, el mismo que usan las federaciones de ajedrez para clasificar a los jugadores. A medida que avanzas, tus retos aumentan en dificultad, igual que pasar de nivel A1 a C2 en un idioma. Y aunque el curso no incluye la función “Explica mi respuesta” que sí tienen los cursos de idiomas, Duolingo está explorando formas de implementar IA para ofrecer mejores explicaciones en el futuro.Duolingo entra al mundo del ajedrez con un curso amigable y accesible para quienes quieren aprender desde cero. Las lecciones están gamificadas, adaptadas a tu nivel y disponibles pronto en iOS. ¿Te animas a intentarlo? Comenta tu opinión y sigue el pódcast Flash Diario en Spotify:Flash Diario en Spotify
How do you get someone to learn everyday? Make it addictive… in a good way. Luis von Ahn has mastered engagement with Duolingo, transforming it into the largest education app on earth with over 40M daily users. And in our exclusive interview, Duolingo CEO announces the next product: Chess.In this episode, you'll hear…Why the CEO (proudly) calls Duolingo “addictive”Why he will never open an office in Silicon ValleyThe psychology behind push notifications, streaks, and the unhinged owlDuolingo's viral super bowl commercial (aka “The Growing Butt”)Using fire to fire fight in the fight against social media “If it's not fun, it won't work”Why “screen-time” isn't a problem — it's inevitableWhy artists will beat nerds in the age of AIHow millionaires on Duolingo subsidize migrantsWhy Duolingo employees didn't want to make money (at first)Watch the extended version on Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/@tboypod —-----------------------------------------------------Subscribe to our new (2nd) show… The Best Idea Yet: Wondery.fm/TheBestIdeaYetLinksEpisodes drop weekly. It's The Best Idea Yet.GET ON THE POD: Submit a shoutout or fact: https://tboypod.com/shoutouts FOR MORE NICK & JACK: Newsletter: https://tboypod.com/newsletter Connect with Nick: https://www.linkedin.com/in/nicolas-martell/ Connect with Jack: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jack-crivici-kramer/ SOCIALS:Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/tboypod TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@tboypodYouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@tboypod Anything else: https://tboypod.com/ See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Director Andrew Ahn is back for a three-peat with his new film The Wedding Banquet, a re-imagining of Ang Lee's 1993 classic. We chat with Ahn about his updates to the original to capture the new nuances of queer lives today, get behind the scenes tidbits of his time working with his incredible AAvengers cast, and see how the original and his remake have shaped him on a personal level. The Wedding Banquet is currently premiering in the United States, get tickets in the cinema! Get married at our FREE patreon, discord server, and our socials @ www.deepcutpod.comTimestamps:(00:00:00) Intro(00:02:13) Film Synopsis(00:03:00) General Reactions (spoiler-free)(00:05:42) Spoiler warning (for both films)(00:06:21) Interview begins(00:12:45) Reimagining The Wedding Banquet(00:13:38) Ahn's first encounter with the original(00:15:19) Adapting with James Schamus(00:17:14) Ahn's updates to the original(00:23:05) Stylistic shifts(00:26:13) New concerns for an evolving queer audience(00:27:48) The films' endings(00:33:07) New families(00:34:06) The original being more subversive(00:36:00) Watching Ahn's version before Ang's(00:36:54) Connection between Ahn's features(00:38:40) Giving actors their due(00:41:29) Casting the ensemble(00:46:32) Good acting vs most acting(00:48:54) Directing a scene(00:52:01) Editing(00:53:41) Modern gay rom coms(00:55:28) Landscape and location(00:58:44) Coincidences(01:01:49) Has Ang Lee seen the remake?(01:03:19) Eat Drink Man Woman Sidebar(01:05:36) Cinematography(01:08:34) Favorite moment on set(01:11:23) Artmaking as personal diary(01:15:36) The artwork in the film(01:16:19) Directing Youn Yuh-jung(01:18:09) Good filmmaking(01:19:58) Wrap-up
Andrew Ahn's remake of "The Wedding Banquet" had its world premiere at the 2025 Sundance Film Festival, where it received positive reviews for its performances from its delightful cast, sharp writing, and sensitive direction. A remake of the 1993 film, it tells the familiar story, but this time primarily from the women's perspective, thus updating the film for modern times. Cast members Lily Gladstone, Kelly Marie Tran, Han Gi-chan, and Joan Chen were all kind enough to spend some time talking with Ema Sasic about their experience working on the film, while Cody Dericks spoke separately with Ahn, which you can listen to below. Please be sure to check out the film, which will open in theaters from Bleecker Street on April 18th. Thank you, and enjoy! Check out more on NextBestPicture.com Please subscribe on... Apple Podcasts - https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/negs-best-film-podcast/id1087678387?mt=2 Spotify - https://open.spotify.com/show/7IMIzpYehTqeUa1d9EC4jT YouTube - https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCWA7KiotcWmHiYYy6wJqwOw And be sure to help support us on Patreon for as little as $1 a month at https://www.patreon.com/NextBestPicture and listen to this podcast ad-free Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Full article: Prognostic Implications of the Volume Doubling Time of the Solid Component in Lung Adenocarcinomas Manifesting as Part-Solid Lesions on Chest CT Aisha Alam, DO, discusses the AJR article by Ahn et al. exploring the importance of the volume doubling time of the solid component in lung cancers appearing as part-solid nodules.
In this conversation, Christine Ahn discusses the influences that shaped her worldview, including her experiences with systemic inequality and the necessary ingredients for achieving peace on the Korean Peninsula. Ahn highlights the founding of Women Cross DMZ, a transnational feminist movement aimed at promoting peace between North and South Korea, and reflects on the challenges and successes of this initiative. This conversation also delves into the broader implications of the Korean War and the role of the military-industrial complex in perpetuating conflict. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.baddestchaplain.com/subscribe
Happy April Fools! To celebrate the spirit of first day of April, Jim welcomes to the show one of Duo the Owl's best friends, Emmanuel Orssaud, the Chief Marketing Officer of Duolingo, one of the hottest growth brands in the world with one of the hottest mascots in the world. Duolingo is the most downloaded education app in the history of the App Store and in 2019 became the top-grossing education app worldwide. Duolingo's purpose is to develop the best education in the world and make it universally available; its core service today is in language learning. Duolingo is only a 14-year old brand, founded in Pittsburgh by Luis van Ahn and Severine Hacker, who met at Carnegie Mellon. It is publicly traded, with a market cap of about $14 billion. Emmanuel, or Manu, has been at Duolingo nearly five years, CMO since August 2023. Prior to Duolingo, Manu worked about five years at Spotify and nine years at Playstation. Tune in for a conversation around growth marketing & more with a bi-lingual CMO (French and English) who is learning Japanese on Duolingo!This week's episode is brought to you by StrawberryFrog and Deloitte.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
When America's Test Kitchen social media manager Sarah Ahn started her website Ahnest Kitchen to showcase her mother's cooking via real-time videos of their home life, her work resonated with millions on Instagram and TikTok. Ahn's experience living at home with her immigrant parents, reconnecting to her heritage, experiencing her mom's love through her cooking, and the recipes that reflect the heart of Korean cuisine had a deep impact on her followers. Sarah's online videos, showcasing her mother's authentic Korean cooking, resonated with millions, offering a glimpse into her heritage and the love embedded in each dish. Now, in Umma, Sarah and her mother, Nam Soon, share over 100 approachable recipes, from simple banchan and savory soups to comforting rice and noodle dishes, kimchi, street food, and desserts. Each recipe is accompanied by a personal story, weaving together memories of growing up in Southern California with the rich culinary history of Korea. Umma: A Korean Mom's Kitchen Wisdom and 100 Family Recipes stands out for its unique blend of rigorously tested recipes and intimate, candid storytelling. It's a testament to the idea that every step in cooking is an expression of love. Sarah Ahn joins New Books Network to discuss her deeply personal journey in writing the book. Hear her talk about her relationship with her parents, her mother's dedication to creating delicious meals, and her own path to embracing and sharing her love for Korean cuisine. This interview offers a fascinating look behind the scenes of this extraordinary cookbook and the cultural connection it celebrates. Interview by Laura Goldberg, longtime food blogger at Vittlesvamp.com. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/new-books-network
When America's Test Kitchen social media manager Sarah Ahn started her website Ahnest Kitchen to showcase her mother's cooking via real-time videos of their home life, her work resonated with millions on Instagram and TikTok. Ahn's experience living at home with her immigrant parents, reconnecting to her heritage, experiencing her mom's love through her cooking, and the recipes that reflect the heart of Korean cuisine had a deep impact on her followers. Sarah's online videos, showcasing her mother's authentic Korean cooking, resonated with millions, offering a glimpse into her heritage and the love embedded in each dish. Now, in Umma, Sarah and her mother, Nam Soon, share over 100 approachable recipes, from simple banchan and savory soups to comforting rice and noodle dishes, kimchi, street food, and desserts. Each recipe is accompanied by a personal story, weaving together memories of growing up in Southern California with the rich culinary history of Korea. Umma: A Korean Mom's Kitchen Wisdom and 100 Family Recipes stands out for its unique blend of rigorously tested recipes and intimate, candid storytelling. It's a testament to the idea that every step in cooking is an expression of love. Sarah Ahn joins New Books Network to discuss her deeply personal journey in writing the book. Hear her talk about her relationship with her parents, her mother's dedication to creating delicious meals, and her own path to embracing and sharing her love for Korean cuisine. This interview offers a fascinating look behind the scenes of this extraordinary cookbook and the cultural connection it celebrates. Interview by Laura Goldberg, longtime food blogger at Vittlesvamp.com. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/food
When America's Test Kitchen social media manager Sarah Ahn started her website Ahnest Kitchen to showcase her mother's cooking via real-time videos of their home life, her work resonated with millions on Instagram and TikTok. Ahn's experience living at home with her immigrant parents, reconnecting to her heritage, experiencing her mom's love through her cooking, and the recipes that reflect the heart of Korean cuisine had a deep impact on her followers. Sarah's online videos, showcasing her mother's authentic Korean cooking, resonated with millions, offering a glimpse into her heritage and the love embedded in each dish. Now, in Umma, Sarah and her mother, Nam Soon, share over 100 approachable recipes, from simple banchan and savory soups to comforting rice and noodle dishes, kimchi, street food, and desserts. Each recipe is accompanied by a personal story, weaving together memories of growing up in Southern California with the rich culinary history of Korea. Umma: A Korean Mom's Kitchen Wisdom and 100 Family Recipes stands out for its unique blend of rigorously tested recipes and intimate, candid storytelling. It's a testament to the idea that every step in cooking is an expression of love. Sarah Ahn joins New Books Network to discuss her deeply personal journey in writing the book. Hear her talk about her relationship with her parents, her mother's dedication to creating delicious meals, and her own path to embracing and sharing her love for Korean cuisine. This interview offers a fascinating look behind the scenes of this extraordinary cookbook and the cultural connection it celebrates. Interview by Laura Goldberg, longtime food blogger at Vittlesvamp.com. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/korean-studies
Había una vez una niña mexicana apasionada por la comunicación, que soñaba con contar historias a través del cine. Lo que nunca imaginó es que un día se convertiría en la voz latina de una de las startups educativas más innovadoras del mundo. Así comienza la historia de Rebeca Ricoy y su camino hacia Duolingo.Hoy, Rebeca es directora regional de marketing para Latinoamérica y Europa en Duolingo, una plataforma que nació en 2012 con una visión ambiciosa: democratizar el aprendizaje de idiomas y hacerlo divertido. Con más de 35 millones de usuarios activos, Duolingo no solo enseña idiomas, también educa en matemáticas y música, convirtiéndose en una referencia mundial en aprendizaje gamificado. Pero detrás de esa historia verde y viral, hay retos, decisiones arriesgadas y una pasión inquebrantable por educar.El salto que cambió su vidaUno de los momentos clave de la entrevista en el podcast Cuentos Corporativos es cuando Rebeca relata su cambio radical: dejar un cargo directivo en Estée Lauder para unirse a Duolingo, que en ese entonces era una startup pequeña, sin oficinas en México y con poca estructura. La decisión fue considerada por muchos como una locura. Sin embargo, fue el paso que cambió su vida.Ese salto al vacío, como ella lo describe, fue posible por su deseo de estar en una empresa que no tuviera que ser convencida de que lo digital era el camino. Buscaba estar a la vanguardia, experimentar, crear sin fricción. Duolingo le ofreció eso: libertad, velocidad, una cultura abierta y una misión con sentido.Gamificación, rachas y un búho intensoEl segundo punto clave que destaca Rebeca es el enfoque único de Duolingo en retención de usuarios. Aprender jugando no es un eslogan, es una estrategia basada en datos y en psicología del usuario. Rachas diarias, personajes como Duo el búho, ligas competitivas y experiencias personalizadas son algunos de los ingredientes que mantienen a millones de personas regresando a la app.La reciente campaña donde "mataron" a Duo generó revuelo en redes sociales. Según Rebeca, la idea surgió espontáneamente tras un cambio experimental en el ícono de la app. En 48 horas, el equipo de marketing construyó una narrativa que llevó a millones a hacer su lección para “revivir” al personaje. Así funciona Duolingo: estrategias ágiles, humor, cultura pop y datos en tiempo real. “Nuestro marketing es entretenimiento con propósito”, afirma Rebeca.Luis von Ahn: un CEO con alma latinaEl tercer gran punto que deja huella en la conversación es el testimonio sobre Luis von Ahn, cofundador de Duolingo. Lejos del estereotipo del CEO inalcanzable, Luis es cercano, recuerda los nombres y roles de gran parte del equipo, y mantiene una conexión auténtica con los valores de la empresa. Rebeca asegura que su liderazgo es tan esencial que, si él se fuera, probablemente ella también lo haría. “Luis es un genio, pero sobre todo, un humano con visión”, dice.El legado de Luis, creador de tecnologías como CAPTCHA y reCAPTCHA, no solo ha transformado el internet; ahora también impacta la forma en que millones acceden a la educación. Junto con su socio Severin Hacker, imaginó una herramienta que no solo enseñara, sino que retara, entretuviera y cambiara vidas.Una historia aún sin finalHoy, Rebeca sigue expandiendo la presencia de Duolingo en nuevos mercados, liderando un equipo pequeño pero poderoso, compuesto por una persona por país. Su meta: “conquistar el mundo”, como en el juego Catan, pero con educación.Esta historia, que comenzó con una niña que no quería ser académica, hoy inspira a miles de personas en el mundo corporativo a seguir su intuición, arriesgar por lo que aman y a creer que aprender puede ser tan adictivo como cualquier videojuego.Duolingo es prueba de que cuando se combinan datos, empatía y creatividad, la educación se convierte en una aventura diaria.Te invitamos a estar pendientes de nuestros canales y a suscribirte para que no te pierdes ningún episodio:* Canal Whatsapp Amigos de Cuentos Corporativos* Blog / Newsletter: www.cuentoscorporativos.substack.com* Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/Cuentoscorporativos* Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/cuentos_corporativos/* X (Twitter): https://x.com/CuentosCorp* Email: adolfo@cuentoscorporativos.com This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.cuentoscorporativos.com
AP correspondent Charles de Ledesma reports The death toll from the 7.7 magnitude earthquake that hit Myanmar has passed 1,700 as more bodies have been pulled from the rubble. ((Myanmar is pronounced mee-AHN'-mar))
Nos adentramos en la red de Archivos Estatales con nuestros dibujantes Carla Berrocal, Julio Rey, Mauro Entrialgo y José María Pérez 'Peridis'. Sumamos a la conversación a Ana López Cuadrado, subdirectora general de los Archivos Estatales; Berta García, jefa del Departamento de Conservación, Restauración y Digitalización del AHN; y Enrique Pérez, subdirector del Archivo Histórico Nacional.
Duolingo's creator Luis von Ahn learns the word for "learning" in Chinese and shares his incredible vision for enabling millions of people all over the world to learn languages for free. ✨ BIG NEWS ✨ Our brand new Talk Chineasy App, is now live on the App Store! Free to download and perfect for building your speaking confidence from Day 1. portaly.cc/chineasy Visit our website for more info about the app.
Ahn ahn, no sausage? Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
GDP Script/ Top Stories for March 11th Publish Date: March 11th From The BG AD Group Studio, Welcome to the Gwinnett Daily Post Podcast. Today is Tuesday, March 11th and Happy Birthday to James Taylor ***03.11.25 - BIRTHDAY – JAMES TAYLOR*** I’m Peyton Spurlock and here are your top stories presented by KIA Mall of Georgia Registration open for Gwinnett Police Department's Multicultural Festival Brookwood grad Robert T Cunningham part of the Broadway cast of 'Stranger Things: The First Shadow' Lakeside Zip Line Course to Debut at Stone Mountain Park All of this and more is coming up on the Gwinnett Daily Post podcast, and if you are looking for community news, we encourage you to listen daily and subscribe! Break 1: Kia MOG (07.14.22 KIA MOG) STORY 1: Registration open for Gwinnett Police Department's Multicultural Festival The Gwinnett County Police Department is accepting applications for exhibitors and performers for its annual Multicultural Festival on May 17 at Gwinnett Place Mall. This free, family-friendly event celebrates Gwinnett’s cultural diversity with traditional performances, face painting, bounce houses, and touch-a-trucks. It also serves as a government open house, connecting residents with County services. Performer applications are open until March 28, and exhibitor applications close on April 18. For more details, contact the Police Community Affairs Section or visit GwinnettCounty.com/MulticulturalFestival. STORY 2: Brookwood grad Robert T Cunningham part of the Broadway cast of 'Stranger Things: The First Shadow' Brookwood High School alum Robert T. Cunningham is set to make their Broadway debut in "Stranger Things: The First Shadow," playing Charles Sinclair, the father of a key character. A 2014 graduate, Cunningham credits their theater roots to Brookwood Theatre and the Lindahl family, who inspired their love for the arts. With a background in film, TV, and writing, Cunningham is thrilled to originate a role in this highly anticipated production, opening in April at the Marquis Theatre. A longtime fan of "Stranger Things," they describe the experience as surreal and a full-circle moment in their career. STORY 3: Lakeside Zip Line Course To Debut At Stone Mountain Park Stone Mountain Park's new Lakeside Zip Line Adventure Course opens March 15 at Adventure Outpost, featuring six zip lines, including two over the lake, and 14 aerial obstacles. With zip lines up to 400 feet long, it promises thrilling treetop views and excitement. This addition joins other Adventure Outpost activities like kayaking, paddleboats, hydro bikes, and pontoon boat tours. We have opportunities for sponsors to get great engagement on these shows. Call 770.874.3200 for more info. We’ll be right back Break 2: STORY 4: Buford Resident Wins Record-Breaking $1.16 Million Jackpot Playing Georgia Lottery Diggi Game A Buford player won a record-breaking $1,161,177 jackpot on the Cats Jackpot Diggi Game via the Georgia Lottery app on March 4, the largest Diggi jackpot in state history. Other notable wins that day include $15,000 in Flovilla (Bank a Bit Game Show) and $10,000 in Atlanta (Elephant King Jackpots). Diggi Games, available online and on the app, support Georgia education programs. STORY 5: 'Spirit Guides' Exhibit Set To Open March 29 at Fernbank Museum Fernbank Museum’s “Spirit Guides: Fantastical Creatures from the Workshop of ( "hah-KOH-bo" and "mah-REE-ah AHN-heh-les") Jacobo and María Ángeles” opens March 29, running through August 3 in WildWoods. This exhibit showcases towering, vibrant sculptures inspired by (ZAH-poh-tek") Zapotec culture, blending contemporary and folk art. Featuring hybrid animals like deer-butterflies and coyote-fish, the pieces symbolize aspects of (ZAH-poh-tek" )Zapotec life, such as happiness and community. Created by artists ( hah-KOH-bo and "mah-REE-ah AHN-heh-les") Jacobo and María Ángeles, the sculptures involve a detailed process and highlight Indigenous traditions. Included with general admission, the exhibit is also featured during special museum events like “Fernbank After Dark.” Break: Ingles Markets 9 ***Guide Weekly Health Minute*** 10.15.24 GUIDE HEALTH MINUTE_FINAL*** Break 4: Signoff – Thanks again for hanging out with us on today’s Gwinnett Daily Post Podcast. If you enjoy these shows, we encourage you to check out our other offerings, like the Cherokee Tribune Ledger Podcast, the Marietta Daily Journal, or the Community Podcast for Rockdale Newton and Morgan Counties. Read more about all our stories and get other great content at www.gwinnettdailypost.com Did you know over 50% of Americans listen to podcasts weekly? Giving you important news about our community and telling great stories are what we do. Make sure you join us for our next episode and be sure to share this podcast on social media with your friends and family. Add us to your Alexa Flash Briefing or your Google Home Briefing and be sure to like, follow, and subscribe wherever you get your podcasts. Produced by the BG Podcast Network Show Sponsors: www.ingles-markets.com www.kiamallofga.com #NewsPodcast #CurrentEvents #TopHeadlines #BreakingNews #PodcastDiscussion #PodcastNews #InDepthAnalysis #NewsAnalysis #PodcastTrending #WorldNews #LocalNews #GlobalNews #PodcastInsights #NewsBrief #PodcastUpdate #NewsRoundup #WeeklyNews #DailyNews #PodcastInterviews #HotTopics #PodcastOpinions #InvestigativeJournalism #BehindTheHeadlines #PodcastMedia #NewsStories #PodcastReports #JournalismMatters #PodcastPerspectives #NewsCommentary #PodcastListeners #NewsPodcastCommunity #NewsSource #PodcastCuration #WorldAffairs #PodcastUpdates #AudioNews #PodcastJournalism #EmergingStories #NewsFlash #PodcastConversations See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Would you practise your Chinese with a robot?! Luis von Ahn reveals to ShaoLan how the future of language learning is quickly becoming a reality and that new AI to help us learn will soon be available. Learn Mandarin for Chabot in the process! ✨ BIG NEWS ✨ Our brand new Talk Chineasy App, is now live on the App Store! Free to download and perfect for building your speaking confidence from Day 1. portaly.cc/chineasy Visit our website for more info about the app.
With over 300 million users, Duolingo is the worlds biggest language learning platform. Its founder Luis von Ahn chats to ShaoLan about how it all started, and he also learns how to say "language" in Chinese. A hugely inspiring episode! ✨ BIG NEWS ✨ Our brand new Talk Chineasy App, is now live on the App Store! Free to download and perfect for building your speaking confidence from Day 1. portaly.cc/chineasy Visit our website for more info about the app.
In today's episode ofThe Eric Ries Show, I am joined by Luis von Ahn, CEO and co-founder of Duolingo. With Duolingo, his mission was simple: make language learning accessible to everyone—not to build a for-profit company. Fast forward to today, and Duolingo has grown into a $17 billion business with a reported 90% of the online daily active users in the language learning market. In our conversation today, we discuss the following topics: • How hiring an intern led to Duolingo's viral mascot • Duolingo's revenue strategy that helped their stock be up over 100% in the past year• How only 10% of users pay but make about 30% of the revenue in the education app category• The newly published Duolingo Handbook and its critical role within the company• How turning learning into a game changed everything • Why Duolingo spent the first five years focusing on improving retention • Duolingo's unique approach to experimentation and how to apply it • Why Duolingo isn't focused on market investors but on building a 100-year company • And much more!—Brought to you by:• Wilson Sonsini – Wilson Sonsini is the innovation economy's law firm.Learn more.—Where to find Luis von Ahn:• LinkedIn:https://www.linkedin.com/in/luis-von-ahn-duolingo/• X:https://x.com/luisvonahn—Where to find Eric:• Newsletter:https://ericries.carrd.co/ • Podcast:https://ericriesshow.com/ • YouTube:https://www.youtube.com/@theericriesshow —In This Episode We Cover:(00:00) Intro(03:10) How Duolingo's passive-aggressive mascot, Duo, became an internet sensation(09:21) Why Luis took a chance on the Duo campaign—despite his doubts(11:30) Take the long view: Duolingo's principle to build a lasting brand(12:52) Duolingo's commitment to excellence (14:54) Luis's journey to entrepreneurship (18:28) Luis's MacArthur Fellowship “genius” award (20:13) The inspiration behind Duolingo's mission and how they stay in alignment with it(26:16) Early learnings that shaped Duolingo into a fun product (29:14) How Duolingo gained an edge over Rosetta Stone(32:45) How a company with no revenue can be worth a billion dollars (33:10) The VC who pushed Luis and Severin to monetize (36:05) How Duolingo stays focused on long-term sustainability (40:12) A mistake Duolingo made by focusing on the quarter rather than long term (42:15) The importance of trust and “the cultural bank”(44:11) Duo class shares and ways Duolingo resists hyper-monetization (46:30) A case for staying under-monetized (48:23) Why Duolingo wrote a handbook, and the process of creating it(54:00) The cadence of evaluating the relevance of the handbook (55:01) Eric's “two-way reviews” (58:34) An explanation of Duolingo's “green machine” (1:01:42) Product reviews and a/b testing at Duolingo (1:06:32) Why Duolingo takes a stance against MVPs in their handbook(1:10:07) How Duolingo's v1 meets Eric's definition of MVP(1:11:45) Duolingo's early strategy focused on retention (1:16:22) Duolingo's testing philosophy (1:18:13) Lightning round—You can find the transcript and references athttps://www.ericriesshow.com/—Production and marketing byhttps://penname.co/.Eric may be an investor in the companies discussed.
Join Dr. Ron Ehrlich as he sits down with Dr. Andrew Ahn, a Harvard Medical School Assistant Professor, Chief Medical and Science Officer at Labfront, and a leader in integrative medicine. Dr. Ahn bridges the gap between cutting-edge technology and holistic health, sharing insights on the electrical properties of the human body, heart rate variability, and the power of wearables in monitoring and improving health. In this episode, they explore the role of chaos theory and quantum biology in understanding health, discuss the potential of citizen science, and address how personalised health data empowers individuals to take control of their well-being. Discover how Labfront is revolutionizing healthcare by enabling researchers to gather and analyze data from wearables like Garmin devices. Whether you're curious about integrative medicine, fascinated by the science of wearables, or simply seeking actionable tips to enhance your health, this episode has something for everyone. Show notes are available at CLICK HERE CONNECT WITH DR RON & UNSTRESS HEALTH Join the Unstress Health Community: CLICK HERE INSTAGRAM: CLICK HERE YOUTUBE: CLICK HERE FACEBOOK: CLICK HERE EMAIL: admin@unstresshealth.com DISCLAIMER: This podcast provides general information and discussion about medicine, health and related subjects. This content is not intended and should not be construed as medical advice or as a substitute for care by a qualified medical practitioner. If you or any other person has a medical concern, he or she should consult with an appropriately qualified medical practitioner. Guests who speak in this podcast express their own opinions, experiences and conclusions. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
AHN's High School Hoops podcast this week looks at the Central Valley Warriors at the Avonworth Antelopes. Plus Gateway is at Uniontown, Deer Lakes visits Knoch and Waynesburg Central gos to Southmoreland. Check out all of our coverage at TribLIVE HSSN! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
During this episode, Dr. Roianne Ahn shares some of the things she has learned through her lived experiences and in her 30 years as a therapist, coach, and researcher. She addresses ways in which we can better understand our wounded neural pathways (and those of our partner) and give each other grace. She shares the importance of finding your North Star as a couple and how neurotoxins may be impacting you as you and your partner react to stress through a flight or fight response. Dr. Ahn also talks about the importace of accessing your joy individually and as a couple and the value of managing a separation or divorce with grace. You can learn about Roiann's therpay and coaching practice at www.ahnpsychology.com or you can email her at ahn@ahnpsychology.com
Also: is there such a thing as too much science?Plus, our special guest, Luis von Ahn, an inventor of CAPTCHA and a pioneer of free online language learning. This episode originally aired on June 14, 2020.
Episode 74 brings us Heather Thompson Day, a speaker, author, educator and podcaster. Heather is someone that is very well known in the Christian media world and I have been looking forward to having her on this podcast for quite some time. I have wanted to talk to her ever since I initially found her on Twitter, talking about students and education. Once I became more familiar with her, it became a goal to get her to The Mic is Ahn. As most of you know, my goal with the podcast is to interview people who I believe are interesting and need to be heard by everyone. Heather fits that bill completely. We talked about her writing career, how she began speaking, what led her to education in the first place, and everything in between. Many of you who listen to this episode may already know Heather and want to hear what she is up to. For those of you who are just meeting her here, you are in for a treat!Heather Thompson Day is an impressive person, and you are about to hear all about her. We also touch on parenting, her new book, what her future looks like....and we even sneak in some food talk. I'm so happy to bring this to you, because Heather is someone that truly makes a difference. Sit back and enjoy...and start the year off with Heather Thompson Day on The Mic is Ahn!Heather Thompson Dayheatherthompsonday.comInstagram: heatherthompsondayPodcast email: themicisahn@gmail.comInstagram: ahniebpe
In this episode, Alyssa Abina returns to talk all about eating and TikTok. Alyssa has over half-a-million TikTok followers, and we focus on her foray into the Mukbang and ASMR world over the last year-and-a-half. We get into how she decided to start shifting her focus to Mukbangs and ASMR, what exactly they are, and how things have skyrocketed since she made that adjustment. I also ask her questions about the uniqueness of filming mostly from her vehicle, and when she first got comfortable eating on camera. Other topics focus on her followers, how she gets contacted by restaurants who want to work with her, and how she got to go to Bottlerock for free!We also talk a bit about being paid on TikTok, the future of TikTok, and how she has been recognized out in public. Yes, most of the episode is about food....but it's interesting and Alyssa really explains her thought process and what all of this has meant to her. Come for the food...enjoy the conversation....and get acquainted with Alyssa, and The Mic is Ahn!Let your family and friends know that they can listen wherever they get their podcasts!Alyssa Abina TikTok: alyssaabinaInstagram: alyssa.abinaPodcast email: themicisahn@gmail.comInstagram: ahniebpe
Luis von Ahn - que nasceu e foi criado na Guatemala e hoje é o CEO de aplicativo que ensina línguas - revela método que atrai 34 milhões de pessoas todos os dias.
If you believe the hype, translators will all soon be out of work. Luis von Ahn, CEO and co-founder of the language learning app Duolingo, doesn't think AI is quite there... yet. In this interview, Greg Rosalsky talks with Luis about AI and how it's reshaping translation jobs and the language learning industry. We also ask him about headlines earlier this year suggesting Duolingo laid off some of its workers and replaced them with AI.This is one of Greg's Behind The Newsletter conversations where he shares his interviews with policy makers, business leaders, and economists who appear in The Planet Money Newsletter.This episode was first released as a bonus episode for Planet Money+ listeners earlier this year. We're sharing it today for all listeners. To hear more episodes like this one and support NPR in the process, sign up for Planet Money+ at plus.npr.org. We'll have a fresh bonus episode out in two weeks!You can sign up for the The Planet Money Newsletter and check out past editions here:https://www.npr.org/planetmoneynewsletterLearn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
Join us this month as Dr. Enrique Enguidanos chats with John Whigham about his experience as a community health worker—and how his history of homelessness, food insecurity, and addiction have allowed him to find both empathy and empowerment in his street medicine work today. JOHN WHIGHAM:John Whigham is a dedicated Community Health Worker (CHW) specializing in street medicine at AHN's Center for Inclusion Health. John has faced many of the same challenges as the populations he serves, including homelessness, food insecurity, and battling addiction. As a former alcoholic and addict. John Whigham draws on his lived experience to connect with individual struggling with similar issues, providing a unique blend of empathy, authenticity, and hope.A former United States Marine, John learned the value of resilience, teamwork and discipline -- qualities that now define his approach to community health work. After leaving the military, he successfully ran his own personal training business before transitioning to CHW work without formal outreach experience. Driven by a deep desire to give back and help others navigate the barriers he once faced, he quickly excelled in his role, becoming known for his ability to build trust and offer holistic support to people in need.Today, John is a strong advocate for meeting people where they are, using his personal journey to inspire and empower others on their path to stability and recovery. His story is one of perseverance and transformation, making him an invaluable asset to the community and a powerful voice for those seeking change.
Doug Henry, PhD, Vice President and Medical Director of Enterprise Behavioral Health at Highmark Health, and Mari Vandenburgh, Vice President of Health Programs and Solutions at Highmark Health, join Eric to share Highmark's innovative approaches to transforming care delivery through digital and hybrid solutions. Topics include: Post-Acute Care Innovations: AHN At-Home Care program's multidisciplinary approach integrates mental health support to reduce readmissions and save $600 PMPM in total care costs. Addressing Network and Access Gaps: Highmark's strategic initiatives to expand access through geo-analysis, virtual-first strategies, and enhanced provider partnerships. Virtual Mental Health: A closer look at Highmark's partnership with Spring Health to provide personalized, outcome-driven mental health care, achieving symptom remission in six weeks or less for 70% of patients with moderate to severe conditions. Living Health Strategy: Leveraging personalized nudges and integrated digital platforms to boost member engagement, with 79% receiving their first mental health care through the program. Innovation for Loneliness and Beyond: Doug shares groundbreaking grant projects, such as using technology and social prescriptions to address loneliness and improve senior care outcomes. This episode is packed with actionable insights for health plans seeking to close access gaps, enhance member experience, and drive measurable outcomes in mental health and beyond. Tune in to learn from Highmark's bright spots and discover strategies to replicate their success. About Doug and Mari Doug is a clinical psychologist licensed in Pennsylvania and California and brings over 20 years of experience in professional applied psychology, including inpatient, outpatient, and administrative assignments. Attracted by the integrated payer-provider model and emphasis on patient-centered treatment, he joined the Allegheny Health Psychiatry and Behavioral Health Institute in 2017 as vice president. In addition to his role at the enterprise, he continues to serve as a leadership dyad for the Institute. Before joining AHN, Dr. Henry served as clinical administrator at Western Psychiatric Institute and Clinic for UPMC Child and Adolescent Behavioral Health Services, the UPMC Center for Autism and Developmental Disorders, and the UPMC Center for Eating Disorders. Mari is responsible for identifying and managing best-in-class healthcare solutions to improve Quadruple Aim outcomes related to chronic and episodic clinical conditions and validating multi-year business case value drivers and ROI. She has been with Highmark in various roles since 2005. Mari has a Bachelor of Science from Duquesne and a Master of Health Administration from the University of Pittsburgh. About Highmark Health Highmark Health is a $27 billion national, blended health organization with one of America's largest Blue Cross Blue Shield insurers and a growing regional hospital and physician network. Based in Pittsburgh, Pa., Highmark Health's 44,000 employees serve millions of customers nationwide through the nonprofit organization's affiliated businesses, including Highmark Inc., Allegheny Health Network, HM Insurance Group, United Concordia Dental, enGen, and Helion. We'd love to hear from you! Send your comments, suggestions and ideas to hello@brightspotsinhealthcare.com Visit our website to learn more about the show! www.brightspotsinhealthcare.com
Jackson Shuttleworth is a Group PM at Duolingo, where he leads the retention team and the powerful streak feature. The streak feature, which gamifies consecutive days of learning, has been Duolingo's most important and innovative growth lever and a key driver of their growth to a $14 billion business with almost 600 million users. In our conversation, we dive deep into the history and lessons of this feature:• The evolution of the streak feature• Biggest insights from over 600 streak-related experiments• Biggest specific wins and misses along the way• Key principles for building effective streak mechanics• How to operate a high-velocity product team• Tips for building engaging notification systems• Much more—Brought to you by:• Pendo—The only all-in-one product experience platform for any type of application• Vanta—Automate compliance. Simplify security• Coda—The all-in-one collaborative workspace—Find the transcript at: https://www.lennysnewsletter.com/p/behind-the-product-duolingo-streaks—Where to find Jackson Shuttleworth:• LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jackson-shuttleworth/—Where to find Lenny:• Newsletter: https://www.lennysnewsletter.com• X: https://twitter.com/lennysan• LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/lennyrachitsky/—In this episode, we cover:(00:00) Jackson's background and an overview of Duolingo's streak feature(06:00) The impact of streaks on Duolingo's success(09:58) The origin and evolution of streaks(14:50) Key experiments and insights(24:38) User psychology and engagement strategies(28:36) Duolingo's product review structure(33:07) Designing for clarity and adaptability(46:59) Developing the Streak Freeze feature(50:47) Balancing monetization and retention(54:08) Notification strategies(58:15) The Perfect Streak feature(01:00:40) Enhancing the user experience (01:04:47) Team operations and experimentation(01:18:57) Who can benefit from streaks(01:21:00) Lightning round—Referenced:• Duolingo streaks: https://duolingo.fandom.com/wiki/Streak• How to make learning as addictive as social media: https://www.ted.com/talks/luis_von_ahn_how_to_make_learning_as_addictive_as_social_media?subtitle=en• Luis von Ahn on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/luis-von-ahn-duolingo/• FarmVille: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/FarmVille• Royal Match: https://www.dreamgames.com/games/royal-match• How Duolingo reignited user growth: https://www.lennysnewsletter.com/p/how-duolingo-reignited-user-growth• You're on fire! Or, how we brought the streak milestone to life: https://blog.duolingo.com/streak-milestone-design-animation/• Duolingo Doubles Down on Design and Animation with Acquisition of Hobbes: https://investors.duolingo.com/news-releases/news-release-details/duolingo-doubles-down-design-and-animation-acquisition-hobbes• Hobbes: https://www.hobbes.work/• Jira: https://www.atlassian.com/software/jira• Atlassian: https://www.atlassian.com/• Bing Gordon on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/binggordon/• Peloton: https://www.onepeloton.com/• Bluey on Disney+: https://www.disneyplus.com/series/bluey/1xy9TAOQ0M3r• Emily in Paris on Netflix: https://www.netflix.com/title/81037371• Multi-position ladders at Home Depot: https://www.homedepot.com/b/Building-Materials-Ladders-Multi-Position-Ladders/N-5yc1vZasew—Recommended books:• A Guide to Midwestern Conversation: https://www.amazon.com/Guide-Midwestern-Conversation-Taylor-Phillips/dp/1984861336• Fate Is the Hunter: A Pilot's Memoir: https://www.amazon.com/Fate-Hunter-Ernest-K-Gann/dp/0671636030—Production and marketing by https://penname.co/. For inquiries about sponsoring the podcast, email podcast@lennyrachitsky.com.—Lenny may be an investor in the companies discussed. Get full access to Lenny's Newsletter at www.lennysnewsletter.com/subscribe
Marjorie von Ahn conversa con Samuel Pérez sobre el año legislativo y las condiciones que están asfixiando al bloque legislativo ¿Lograrán recuperar el partido?
Episode 72 of The Mic is Ahn Podcast talks about the importance of class reunions, memorial services, and answering the question of how students have changed over time. This episode is all my voice (exciting!), talking about attending a recent class reunion as a teacher and what the experience was like. I felt compelled to talk about how I think that reunions and memorials are meaningful to seeing old friends and acquaintances and the opportunity to reconnect with former parts of your life. I touch on the fact that I don't have very many friends that live near to me and how that might not be abnormal...but that only means we have to treasure times we have with those who are close to us. I finish off by answering a question that I have been asked by many former students: What are the biggest changes in students nowadays?You might be surprised by the answer....but no matter what...check the episode out and let me know what you thought! The Mic is Ahn....4 years strong.....unreal.Podcast email: themicisahn@gmail.comInstagram: ahniebpe
Welcome to Protecting Your Nest with Dr. Tony Hampton. In this episode of Protecting Your NEST, Dr. David Ahn, Chief of Diabetes Services at Hoag and creator behind TikTok's @diabetesdoc, dives into the realities of managing and reversing diabetes. We discuss the role of low-carb and ketogenic diets, cutting-edge diabetes technologies, and the steps to achieving remission for type 2 diabetes. Dr. Ahn shares his expertise on empowering patients and debunking common myths about diabetes care. In this discussion, Drs. Tony and David talk about: (02:34) What led Dr. Ahn to study endocrinology and, in particular, diabetes (06:36) What Dr. Ahn does in his role as Chief of Diabetes Services at his healthcare system, Hoag (09:07) Dr. Ahn's perspective on keto, low-carb, and carnivore as lifestyle interventions for diabetes patients (13:18) Using terms like ‘remission' and ‘reversal' when referring to diabetes (19:04) How Dr. Ahn incorporates CGMs into his patient care (23:06) Dangerous diabes myths (27:54) GLP1 and SGLT2 drugs and the risks/benefits of each (32:06) Lifestyle versus pharmaceutical interventions for treating diabetes (38:00) The emotional/relational aspects of treating metabolic disfunction and how doctors can use a tactful approach to help their patients reclaim their health in the midst of hard personal circumstances (44:53) A particularly interesting ketogenic patient success story (47:51) The U.S. Dietary Guidelines and ADA Guidelines (55:32) How Dr. Ahn uses TikTok to share information about diabetes Thank you for listening to Protecting Your Nest. For additional resources and information, please see the links below. Links: Dr. David Ahn: Instagram X Linktree TikTok Hoag Diabetes Center Dr. Tony Hampton: Linktree Instagram Account LinkedIn Account Ritmos Negros Podcast Q Med Symposium for Metabolic Health Lectures How Waking Up Every Day at 4:30 Can Change Your Life Keto Mojo
Duolingo has fundamentally changed the landscape of self-guided education, starting with language learning. It is now a $9B publicly traded company in a space where everyone thought you could never build a large and exciting company. We're joined by Duolingo founder and CEO, Luis von Ahn. Luis dives into how learning English was transformative in his personal trajectory and opportunities in his life, inspiring him to create the most successful EdTech product of all time. A few topics in this episode:How Duolingo became a leader in the gamification and mobile-first movements in the early 2010sHow the company balances rigorous experimentation with gut instinct to build an app with customer experience at its coreThe backstory of Duolingo's “unhinged, yet wholesome” green owl mascot trending on your TikTok feedSponsors:Vanta
Today, we're talking about work. Specifically, where we work, how our expectations of working remotely were radically changed by the pandemic, and how those expectations feel like they're on the verge of changing yet again. For many people, the pendulum has swung wildly between working fully remote and now a push to return to the office from their bosses, and there are a lot of theories about what might really be motivating big companies to try and bring everyone back. To explain it, I caught up with two experts on the subject: Stephan Meier, a professor of business strategy at Columbia Business School, and Jessica Kriegel, the chief strategy officer at workplace culture consultancy Culture Partners. We dive into what's been happening to the nature of work today, and whether Amazon, which just announced a major return to the office five days a week, is part of a bigger trend. Links: Amazon is making its employees come back to the office five days a week | The Verge Amazon CEO denies 5-day office mandate is a ‘backdoor layoff' | CNBC Bob Iger tells Disney employees they must return to the office four days a week | CNBC A quarter of bosses admit return-to-office mandates meant to make staff quit | Fortune More Americans now prefer hybrid over fully remote work, survey finds | Axios Google tells staff: stay productive and we'll stay flexible | BI The list of major companies requiring employees to return to the office | BI Thinking Inside the Box: Why Virtual Meetings Generate Fewer Ideas | Columbia Duolingo CEO Luis von Ahn wants you addicted to learning | Decoder Sundar Pichai on managing Google through the pandemic | Vergecast Credits: Decoder is a production of The Verge and part of the Vox Media Podcast Network. Our producers are Kate Cox and Nick Statt. Our editor is Callie Wright. Our supervising producer is Liam James. The Decoder music is by Breakmaster Cylinder. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Today, we'll be discussing Episode 1 of Season 2 of Kingdom, the hit K Drama on Netflix starring Ju Ji-hoon as Crown Prince Yi Chang, Bae Doona as Seo-bi, Ryu Seung-ryong as Cho Hak ju, Kim Sang-ho as Mou Young, Kim Sung-kyu as Yeong shin, and Kim Hye-jun as the Queen Consort. We discuss:The Kingdom wiki that Joanna discovered!How we start to learn what happened in Sangju three years earlier and the roles that Cho Hak ju and Lord Ahn played. We wonder if Lord Ahn has regrets over his decisions at the time.Deok Sung's act of sacrifice and how Young shin gave him his dignity by killing him.The Crown Prince's suspicion that Mu Young is the traitor working for Cho Hak ju.The moral dilemmas in this show that ask us just how far we'll go to save our loved ones.How Seo bi and Cho Beom Pal make it to Mungyeong Saejae and are given shelter because Cho Beom Pal is a member of the Haewo Cho clan. We also find out that Cho Beom Pal is now the heir to the clan.The palace guards are on to the Queen's evil plot to get a baby boy, but she's counting on her baby boy to protect her.How the Crown Prince has decided to travel to Mungyeong Saejae and kill Cho Hak ju. Cho Hak ju is in Sangju to kill the Crown Prince.How extreme crisis can push people to do extreme things they didn't know was possible.The actress Kim Hye-jun, who plays the Queen Consort.ReferencesKingdom wikiCrash Landing On You wikiJapanese invasions of Korea (1592–1598) - WikipediaAbout - Aftermath of the East Asian War of 1592-1598
This episode is the 4th in a series following the college careers of Paige Davis and Lexi Miloradovitch. Better known on this podcast as the college girls, we have followed Lexi and Paige all the way through their 4 years of higher education. What started in 2020 with an idea to see what it would be like to document two good friends going through completely different college situations, we now get to talk about them being College Grads! Both Lexi and Paige graduated in the summer of 2024 and now we are here to talk about it all. We hit their final year from all angles. What was their final year like? What were their graduation experiences (remember, they didn't get a normal high school graduation)? We talk about their next stops before diving into their final views on college. What will they miss the most about college? What will they miss about their college cities? What will they not miss? We also touch on what they miss about high school and a whole bunch of other college related topics. I am so proud of both of these young women for being willing to share their thoughts and feelings with me and you, the listeners, as they followed their collegiate paths. As you will hear, they are all grown up now, and they have plenty to say about what this experience meant to them.As their former teacher, I could not be more proud of their growth, maturity, and ability to be introspective at such a high level. Take a listen to Lexi and Paige here on the Mic is Ahn, as we close the book on The College Girls...year 4....College GRADS!Paige Davis Instagram: paigedavis54Lexi Miloradovitch Instagram: lexi.miloLexi's year in Spain Instagram: lexisvidalindaPodcast Email: themicisahn@gmail.comPodcast Instagram: ahniebpe
Luis von Ahn is the co-founder and CEO of Duolingo. There are lots of opportunities to enhance a product like Duolingo with AI, and we talk about all that — but I also wanted to talk to Luis about learning, generally. Duolingo is a global product, and there are a lot of tech tensions there, dealing with different user needs worldwide. We talk about it all in a pretty direct way... including all those unhinged things the owl does on social media. Links: Duolingo Introduces AI-Powered Innovations at Duocon 2024 (Duolingo) Video Call with Lily (Duolingo / YouTube) AI Boosts Duolingo As Company Posts First Profit (Nasdaq) Foreign Language Training (US State Department) Exploring My Villain Origin Story (Duolingo / TikTok) Duolingo cuts workers as it relies more on AI (The Washington Post) Why Silicon Valley Is Talking About Founder Mode (The New York Times) Duolingo's Math and Music lessons finally hit Android a year after iOS (Android Police) Airbnb CEO Brian Chesky on taking it back to basics (Decoder / The Verge) How Duolingo is using its 'unhinged content' with Duo the Owl (Digiday) How we turned Duo's butt into a viral Super Bowl commercial (Duolingo) A Duolingo employee has apologised for joking about Amber Heard (The Tab) Credits: Decoder is a production of The Verge, and part of the Vox Media Podcast Network. Our producers are Kate Cox and Nick Statt. This episode was edited by Xander Adams. Our supervising producer is Liam James. The Decoder music is by Breakmaster Cylinder. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Will Doctor gives you the sharpest card for all five Thursday Fourball matches for the Presidents Cup. Follow Doc on X @drmedia59 for more on the world of golf Introduction and Overview In the podcast's introduction, Will Doctor sets the stage by bringing his sharpest predictions for the PGA Tour event, the Presidents Cup (0:15–0:42). His energy and focus immediately engage listeners, promising a detailed breakdown of Thursday's Fourball matches. The matchups feature top golfers from both the USA and international teams, with Doctor providing his take on the betting odds and insights. Match 1: Xander Schauffele & Tony Finau vs. Jason Day & Byung-hun Ahn (0:42–14:57) Doctor starts with the first match, where Schauffele and Finau are favorites at -180 on DraftKings. He questions U.S. captain Jim Furyk's decision to split Schauffele and Patrick Cantlay, who have a strong history together, but he supports the flexibility of pairing Schauffele with Finau. Despite Finau's driving accuracy issues earlier in the season, Doctor believes Finau has improved and will excel on the greens at Royal Montreal. For the opposition, Jason Day's recent struggles—finishing 33rd at the BMW Championship and failing to qualify for the Tour Championship—are highlighted. Doctor is not confident in Day's current form, pointing out his ongoing issues with driving accuracy. Ben Onn, too, has limited success in the Presidents Cup, which makes Doctor strongly favor Schauffele and Finau. Statistical Insight: Day has underperformed in the Presidents Cup, and his driving accuracy has been problematic in 7 of his last 11 events. Schauffele and Finau, on the other hand, are in good form with Finau showing late-season improvement. Prediction: Schauffele & Finau to win. Match 2: Collin Morikawa & Sahith Theegala vs. Adam Scott & Min Woo Lee (14:57–24:30) Morikawa and Theegala are slight favorites at -135. Doctor praises Theegala's performance in the 2024 FedEx Cup and Morikawa's solo second place at the Tour Championship. Morikawa's consistency, with 8 top-ten finishes in 2024, makes him one of the top players in the world. Doctor, however, acknowledges Adam Scott's determination to improve his Presidents Cup record, which currently stands at a disappointing 18-25-6. Statistical Insight: Despite Scott's veteran status, his poor Presidents Cup record weighs heavily, while Morikawa's consistent high-level play positions him as a key player. Theegala's form in recent events further strengthens their chances. Prediction: Morikawa & Theegala to win. Match 3: Scottie Scheffler & Russell Henley vs. Sungjae Im & Tom Kim (24:30–32:00) Scheffler and Henley are -142 favorites. Doctor supports Furyk's decision to pair Henley with Scheffler, noting Henley's stellar driving accuracy (5th on the PGA Tour) and top performances in major events. On the other hand, Tom Kim's form is questioned, as his recent performances have been underwhelming, finishing 52nd in the FedEx Cup standings. Statistical Insight: Scheffler, ranked number one in the world, paired with Henley's accuracy, makes them formidable. Conversely, Tom Kim's struggles this season raise doubts about his ability to perform at Royal Montreal. Prediction: Scheffler & Henley to win. Match 4: Wyndham Clark & Keegan Bradley vs. Taylor Pendrith & Christiaan Bezuidenhout (32:00–38:30) Clark and Bradley are favored at -112. Doctor criticizes Mike Weir's decision to pair Pendrith with Bezuidenhout, citing Bezuidenhout's poor form in recent tournaments. He points to Bezuidenhout's struggles with his driver and short game, which make the pairing less competitive against the sharp form of Clark and Bradley. Statistical Insight: Bezuidenhout's loss of shots in four consecutive starts is a red flag. Clark and Bradley's more consistent recent performances make them the stronger pairing. Prediction: Clark & Bradley to win. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
As Spain fights for the extradition of a former U.S. Marine for his attempt to aid North Korean embassy workers in defecting in Madrid, correspondent Sharyn Alfonsi interviews the man at the center, Christopher Ahn, in Southern California. Ahn details his 2019 mission with Cheollima Civil Defense to free the North Koreans and the legal hurdles he's now facing at home and abroad as the FBI warns his life is in danger. This is a double-length segment. At 37-years-old, Novak Djokovic is one of the most dominant athletes in professional sports, having captured 24 major tennis singles titles, more than his longtime rivals Rafael Nadal and Roger Federer. He is now considered the greatest men's tennis player of all time. Correspondent Jon Wertheim goes inside the mind of the record-breaking star in his hometown of Belgrade, Serbia and speaks with him about his vaccination controversy at the Australian Open, his work promoting tennis player equity and the reason why he plans to stay on the court.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Do you see yourself the same way others see you? What's the difference between self-perception and self-awareness? And why do Mike and Angela both hate fishing? SOURCES:Luis von Ahn, co-founder and C.E.O. of Duolingo; former chair of the board at Character Lab.Paul DePodesta, chief strategy officer of the Cleveland Browns; former baseball executive.Daniel Kahneman, professor emeritus of psychology and public affairs at Princeton University.Michel de Montaigne, 16th-century French philosopher.Barbara Tversky, professor emerita of psychology at Stanford University and professor of psychology and education at Teachers College, Columbia University. RESOURCES:"What Makes a 360-Degree Review Successful?" by Jack Zenger and Joseph Folkman (Harvard Business Review, 2020)."Self-Other Agreement in Personality Reports: A Meta-Analytic Comparison of Self- and Informant-Report Means," by Hyunji Kim, Stefano I. Di Domenico, and Brian S. Connelly (Psychological Science, 2019)."Don't Let a Lack of Self-Awareness Hold You Back," by Tim Herrera (The New York Times, 2018)."Self-Discipline Outdoes IQ in Predicting Academic Performance of Adolescents," by Angela Duckworth and Martin E.P. Seligman (Psychological Science, 2005). EXTRAS:"Personality: The Big Five," series by No Stupid Questions (2024).Big Five Personality Inventory, by No Stupid Questions (2024)."Remembering Daniel Kahneman," by People I (Mostly) Admire (2024)."How Much Personal Space Do You Need?" by No Stupid Questions (2023).Moneyball, film (2011).Moneyball: The Art of Winning an Unfair Game, by Michael Lewis (2003).