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ESPHome dev dishes on device updates, Immich license drama heats up, Alex's DIY server fix, and Chris reports on mobile tech trip test. Special Guest: Keith Burzinski.
Welcome episode 227 of the Cloud Pod podcast - where the forecast is always cloudy! This week your hosts are Justin, Jonathan, Matthew and Ryan - and they're REALLY excited to tell you all about the 161 one things announced at Google Next. Literally, all the things. We're also saying farewell to EC2 Classic, Amazon SES, and Azure's Explicit Proxy - which probably isn't what you think it is. Titles we almost went with this week:
Síguenos en: Estamos tan centrados en nuestro día a día y en compartirlo con vosotros que se nos ha pasado una fecha muy importante: ¡Cumplimos 4 años de podcast! Quién nos iba a decir que después de tanto tiempo seguiríamos al pie del cañón y, sobretodo, que seguiríamos con tantas ganas como cuando empezamos. ¡A por 4 años más! ¿Qué tal la semana? Semana esther Investigando temas CSS / theme.json en WordPress moderno: Per-block CSS with theme.json Creando topbar con CTA sólo con CSS por restricciones acceso archivos theme. Events Calendar muestra incorrectamente la fecha/hora del evento por error en ajustes de WP Footer en header por etiqueta font dentro del contenido con Elementor. Semana Nahuai RCP expiró/activó a un par de suscriptores del mismo nivel de membresía. Preparando las diapositivas para la WordCamp Barcelona 2023. Posibilidad de que OsomPress aumente su porfolio de plugin... Reunión de sostenibilidad de WordPress donde hablamos de los pasos para convertirnos en un equipo oficial y de estar presentes en mesas del contributor day de las WordCamps. Meetup Barcelona Contenido Nahuai 2 nuevos tutoriales en Código Genesis de los cuales destaca: El siguiente post sobre mi experiencia con la beca de The Green Web Foundation https://nbadiola.com/4-aprendizajes-impartir-taller-sostenibilidad-digital-mozfest/ https://www.thegreenwebfoundation.org/news/4-lessons-learned-from-facilitating-digital-sustainability-workshop-mozfest/ Menciones Miguel nos recomienda a su amigo Alex Ávalos que ofrece VPS administrados y ha trabajado Mautic con clientes. Usa AWS y para el envío de email les recomiendo usar Amazon SES, esto por la capa gratuita y si salen los emails de una instancia EC2 de AWS la capacidad de envío gratis se vuelve muy generosa. También menciona el servicio autohospedado es listmonk que está un poco más orientada a envío de newsletter. Draftpage, constructor visual que funciona de forma similar a Notion (también se conecta). FastPages, plantillas pensadas para crear landing pages asociadas embudos de venta.
Síguenos en: Estamos tan centrados en nuestro día a día y en compartirlo con vosotros que se nos ha pasado una fecha muy importante: ¡Cumplimos 4 años de podcast! Quién nos iba a decir que después de tanto tiempo seguiríamos al pie del cañón y, sobretodo, que seguiríamos con tantas ganas como cuando empezamos. ¡A por 4 años más! ¿Qué tal la semana? Semana esther Investigando temas CSS / theme.json en WordPress moderno: Per-block CSS with theme.json Creando topbar con CTA sólo con CSS por restricciones acceso archivos theme. Events Calendar muestra incorrectamente la fecha/hora del evento por error en ajustes de WP Footer en header por etiqueta font dentro del contenido con Elementor. Semana Nahuai RCP expiró/activó a un par de suscriptores del mismo nivel de membresía. Preparando las diapositivas para la WordCamp Barcelona 2023. Posibilidad de que OsomPress aumente su porfolio de plugin... Reunión de sostenibilidad de WordPress donde hablamos de los pasos para convertirnos en un equipo oficial y de estar presentes en mesas del contributor day de las WordCamps. Meetup Barcelona Contenido Nahuai 2 nuevos tutoriales en Código Genesis de los cuales destaca: El siguiente post sobre mi experiencia con la beca de The Green Web Foundation https://nbadiola.com/4-aprendizajes-impartir-taller-sostenibilidad-digital-mozfest/ https://www.thegreenwebfoundation.org/news/4-lessons-learned-from-facilitating-digital-sustainability-workshop-mozfest/ Menciones Miguel nos recomienda a su amigo Alex Ávalos que ofrece VPS administrados y ha trabajado Mautic con clientes. Usa AWS y para el envío de email les recomiendo usar Amazon SES, esto por la capa gratuita y si salen los emails de una instancia EC2 de AWS la capacidad de envío gratis se vuelve muy generosa. También menciona el servicio autohospedado es listmonk que está un poco más orientada a envío de newsletter. Draftpage, constructor visual que funciona de forma similar a Notion (también se conecta). FastPages, plantillas pensadas para crear landing pages asociadas embudos de venta.
On this episode of The Cloud Pod, the team discusses Amazon Pi Day, Google's upcoming I/O conference, the agricultural data manager by Microsoft, and the downturn in net profits of Oracle. They also round up cloud migrations by highlighting tools from different cloud service providers that are useful for the process. A big thanks to this week's sponsor, Foghorn Consulting, which provides full-stack cloud solutions with a focus on strategy, planning and execution for enterprises seeking to take advantage of the transformative capabilities of AWS, Google Cloud and Azure. This week's highlights
למאמר בבלוג שוב נמאס לכם מהביצועים של מערכת הדיוור שלכם? אולי זו הפעם האחרונה שתצטרכו להחליף מערכת דיוור... דור חדש של מערכות דיוור מאפשר למדוורים שליטה מוחלטת על העבירוּת שלהם. העבירוּת של רוב מערכות הדיוור נמדדת לפי החוליה החלשה שלהן – שרתי הדיוור (שרתי SMTP) השולחים בפועל את האימיילים. דור חדש של מערכות דיוור Multi SMTP מאפשר למדוורים שליטה מוחלטת על העבירוּת ומבטל את התלות בתשתית הדיוור של מערכת הדיוור. Music from Uppbeat https://uppbeat.io/t/all-good-folks/blue-planets License code: E3YTXRLVOGE2N5KK See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Links: Qtorque.io: https://qtorque.io A disturbing article: https://doublepulsar.com/the-hard-truth-about-ransomware-we-arent-prepared-it-s-a-battle-with-new-rules-and-it-hasn-t-a93ad3030a54 Kaspersky's Amazon SES token: https://www.bleepingcomputer.com/news/security/kasperskys-stolen-amazon-ses-token-used-in-office-365-phishing/ Twitch breach: https://www.esecurityplanet.com/cloud/twitch-breach-shows-difficulty-cloud-security/ Implement OAuth 2.0 device grant flow by using Amazon Cognito and AWS Lambda: https://aws.amazon.com/blogs/security/implement-oauth-2-0-device-grant-flow-by-using-amazon-cognito-and-aws-lambda/ Systems Manager Parameter Store: https://docs.aws.amazon.com/systems-manager/latest/userguide/systems-manager-parameter-store.html TranscriptCorey: This is the AWS Morning Brief: Security Edition. AWS is fond of saying security is job zero. That means it's nobody in particular's job, which means it falls to the rest of us. Just the news you need to know, none of the fluff.Corey: Writing ad copy to fit into a 30-second slot is hard, but if anyone can do it the folks at Quali can. Just like their Torque infrastructure automation platform can deliver complex application environments anytime, anywhere, in just seconds instead of hours, days, or weeks. Visit Qtorque.io today, and learn how you can spin up application environments in about the same amount of time it took you to listen to this ad.Corey: It's a pretty quiet week on the AWS security front because I'm studiously ignoring Robinhood's breach. There's nothing to see here.So, Ransomware sucks and it's getting worse. Kevin Beaumont wrote a disturbing article earlier this summer—that I just stumbled over, so it's new to me—about how we effectively aren't prepared for what's happening in the ransomworld space. It's a new battle with new rules, and we haven't seen the worst of it by far. Now look, alarmism is easy to come by, but Kevin is very well respected in this space for a reason; when he speaks, smart people listen.If you do nothing else for me this week, please, please, please be careful with credentials. Don't embed them into apps you ship other places; don't hardcode them into your apps; ideally for those applications you run on AWS itself you use instance or function or whatever roles that have ephemeral credentials. Because if you don't, someone may steal them like they did with Kaspersky's Amazon SES token and use it for Office365 phishing attacks.And I found analysis that I rather liked about the Twitch breach—although I believe they pronounce it ‘Twetch'. It emphasizes that this stuff is hard, and it talks about the general principles that you should be considering with respect to securing cloud apps. Contrary to the narrative some folks are spinning, Twitch engineers were neither incompetent nor careless, as a general rule.Corey: This episode is sponsored in part by something new. Cloud Academy is a training platform built on two primary goals: having the highest quality content in tech and cloud skills and building a good community that is rich and full of IT and engineering professionals. You wouldn't think those things go together, but sometimes they do. It's both useful for individuals and large enterprises, but here's what makes this something new—I don't use that term lightly—Cloud Academy invites you to showcase just how good your AWS skills are. For the next four weeks, you'll have a chance to prove yourself. Compete in four unique lab challenges where they'll be awarding more than $2,000 in cash and prizes. I'm not kidding: first place is a thousand bucks. Pre-register for the first challenge now, one that I picked out myself on Amazon SNS image resizing, by visiting cloudacademy.com/corey—C-O-R-E-Y. That's cloudacademy.com/corey. We're going to have some fun with this one.There was an AWS post: Implement OAuth 2.0 device grant flow by using Amazon Cognito and AWS Lambda. Awkward title but I like the principle here. The challenge I have is that Cognito is just. So. Difficult. I don't think I'm the only person who feels this way.Objectively, using Cognito is the best sales pitch I can imagine for FusionAuth or Auth0. I'm hoping for a better story at re:Invent this year from the Cognito team, but I've been saying that for three years now. The problem with the complexity is that once it's working—huzzah, at great expense and difficulty—you'll move on to other things; nobody is going to be able to untangle what you've done without at least as much work in the future, should things change. If it isn't simple, I question its security just due to the risk of misconfiguration.And this is—I don't know if this is a tool or a tip; it's kind of both. If you're using AWS, which I imagine if you're listening to this, you probably are, let me draw your attention to Systems Manager Parameter Store. Great service, dumb name. I use it myself constantly for things that are even slightly sensitive. And those things range from usernames to third-party credentials to URL endpoints for various things.Think of it as a free version of Secrets Manager. The value of that service is that you can run arbitrary code to rotate credentials elsewhere, but it'll cost you 40¢ per month per secret to use it. Now contrasted with that, Parameter Store is free. The security guarantees are the same; don't view this as being somehow less secure because it's missing the word ‘secrets' in its name. Obviously, if you're using something with a bit more oomph like HashiCorp's excellent Vault, you can safely ignore everything that I just said. And that's what happened last week in AWS security. If you've enjoyed listening to this, tell everyone you know to listen to it as well. Become an evangelist and annoy the hell out people, to my benefit. Thanks for listening and I'll talk to you next week.Corey: Thank you for listening to the AWS Morning Brief: Security Edition with the latest in AWS security that actually matters. Please follow AWS Morning Brief on Apple Podcast, Spotify, Overcast—or wherever the hell it is you find the dulcet tones of my voice—and be sure to sign up for the Last Week in AWS newsletter at lastweekinaws.com.Announcer: This has been a HumblePod production. Stay humble.
On The Cloud Pod this week, AWS releases OpenSearch and EKS Anywhere, Google Cloud is now available in the Toronto region, and Microsoft deals with two critical security issues. A big thanks to this week's sponsors: Foghorn Consulting, which provides full-stack cloud solutions with a focus on strategy, planning and execution for enterprises seeking to take advantage of the transformative capabilities of AWS, Google Cloud and Azure. JumpCloud, which offers a complete platform for identity, access, and device management — no matter where your users and devices are located. This week's highlights
One Swift and a few more SwiftUI articles this week. Also a nice keyboard combo for Xcode and how to get started with doc comments in your Swift code.Links in my episode:Using Variadic Parameters in Swift – SerialCoder.devHow to Animate Gradients in SwiftUIConditional compilation within Swift expressions | Swift by SundellExploring SwiftUI map custom annotations | Kristaps GrinbergsView clipping in SwiftUI | FIVE STARSThe Contextual Action Menu | dasdomMaking Documentation that is pleasant to read in SwiftDonny's tweet.Please rate me on Apple Podcasts.Send me feedback on SpeakPipeOr contact me through twitterNewsletter, sign up!My book: Being a Lead Software DeveloperLead Software Developer Learn best practices for being a great lead software developer. Practical Combine by Donny Wals Buy Donny' book on combine and support my podcast. Now that's a great deal.Practical Core Data by Donny Wals Learn Core Data from the ground up using new and modern techniques.Sendy, send newsletters, 100x cheaper A self hosted email newsletter, send emails via Amazon SES without sacrificing deliverability.Support the show (https://pod.fan/appforce1)
Esto es Apps Para Emprendedores, mi nombre es Jorge Diaz. De Lunes a Sábado te recomiendo una nueva app cada día para incrementar tus ingresos. La App de hoy es https://enlac.ee/sendsimple No te pierdas Apps Para Emprendedores y recibe las apps en tu Email. Envía un email en blanco a recibe@AppsParaEmprendedores.com y suscríbete hoy. Vuelve mañana por más Apps Para Emprendedores.
The end is in sight. Roof is almost done. Meanwhile things keep on progressing. CocoaHeadsNL, Core Data workshop, new articles. An Apple event.In this week's episode:JavaScriptCore and Swift • Andy IbanezHow to Manage Photo Library Permission in iOS - Swift SenpaiBlur Effect in SwiftUI – SerialCoder.devWhat’s the difference between a singleton and a shared instance in Swift? – Donny WalsiOS Feeds - Latest articles from the iOS communityWriting your App’s Privacy Policy – Get On The StorePlease rate me on Apple Podcasts.Send me feedback on SpeakPipeOr contact me through twitterMy website appforce1.netNewsletter, sign up!My book: Being a Lead Software Developer Lead Software Developer Learn best practices for being a great lead software developer.Support the show (https://pod.fan/appforce1)Practical Core Data by Donny Wals Learn Core Data from the ground up using new and modern techniques.Practical Combine by Donny Wals Buy Donny’ book on combine and support my podcast. Now that’s a great deal.Sendy, send newsletters, 100x cheaper A self hosted email newsletter, send emails via Amazon SES without sacrificing deliverability.
I launched. Wow! Also created a sweet little CLI util I am going to use on the next Swift Weekly Brief. After my book launch it is time to gather feedback and iterate a few times. Oh and let's not forget to also mention that rotten roof.Filip's Němeček iOS chat with me.Donny monday morning tweetChat with Jeroen Leenarts | iOS Chats by Filip NěmečekUsing pipes in Swift scripts · Jesse SquiresXcode UI testing reliability tips for iOS · Jesse SquiresCreating a Siri Shortcut | Swiftjective-CAutolayout vs Autoresizing Masks in SwiftHow to show and hide content with DisclosureGroup using SwiftUI | Kristaps GrinbergsThis CLI util I wrotePlease rate me on Apple Podcasts.Send me feedback on SpeakPipeOr contact me through twitterMy website appforce1.netNewsletter, sign up!My book: Being a Lead Software DeveloperCore Data Workshop by Donny Wals Gain practical experience with Core Data from the author of Practical Core Data. Support the show (https://github.com/sponsors/AppForce1)Sendy, send newsletters, 100x cheaper A self hosted email newsletter, send emails via Amazon SES without sacrificing deliverability.
An announcement about another newsletter this week. A few interesting articles. Lets not forget aSync/aWait. But most of all… a whole lot of people are launching things this week.GraphQL in Swift | Swift with MajidCustom HUDs in SwiftUI | Five StarsHow-to: Create a zip file on iOS using Swift without 3rd party dependencies | RecoursiveCorner Radius, Shadows, and Borders [View, Button, Image Examples]Swift Weekly BriefFuture of iOS App Development, Live!Donny monday morning tweetPlease rate me on Apple Podcasts.Send me feedback on SpeakPipeOr contact me through twitterMy website appforce1.netNewsletter, sign up!Podcast PartyMy book: Being a Lead Software DeveloperCore Data Workshop by Donny Wals Gain practical experience with Core Data from the author of Practical Core Data. Support the show (https://github.com/sponsors/AppForce1)Practical Core Data by Donny Wals Learn Core Data from the ground up using new and modern techniques.Sendy, send newsletters, 100x cheaper A self hosted email newsletter, send emails via Amazon SES without sacrificing deliverability.
Chris Vasselli is the perfect example of the one thousand fans principle. A subscription based income from a niche product. How cool is that, doing what you love for a small group of dedicated end-users.Nihongo app - A modern Japanese dictionary and study tool.Demo of the OCR feature in NihongoChris Vasselli on TwitterPlease rate me on Apple Podcasts.Send me feedback on SpeakPipeOr contact me through twitterMy website appforce1.netNewsletter, sign up!Podcast PartyMy book: Being a Lead Software DeveloperCore Data Workshop by Donny Wals Gain practical experience with Core Data from the author of Practical Core Data. Support the show (https://github.com/sponsors/AppForce1)Sendy, send newsletters, 100x cheaper A self hosted email newsletter, send emails via Amazon SES without sacrificing deliverability.
最新情報を "ながら" でキャッチアップ! ラジオ感覚放送 「毎日AWS」 おはようございます、火曜日担当パーソナリティの加藤です。 今日は 2/13 に出たアップデートをピックアップしてご紹介。 感想は Twitter にて「#サバワ」をつけて投稿してください! ■ UPDATE PICKUP Amazon SES が新しいコンソール画面を提供開始 Amazon RDS for MySQL と MariaDB がレプリケーションフィルターをサポート Amazon EKS クラスタが OpenID Connect 互換の ID プロバイダによるユーザー認証をサポート AWS WAF が JSON の解析と検査をサポート Amazon SageMaker Studio が AWS CloudFormation に対応 AWS CloudFormation StackSets が大阪リージョンで提供開始 ■ サーバーワークスSNS Twitter / Facebook ■ サーバーワークスブログ サーバーワークスエンジニアブログ
Another week, another weekly news episode. Extra content around Sam's journey to becoming a paid iOS developer. Great updates from community members like Paul Hudson, John Sundell and Antoine van der Lee. You should try Hindenburg.What’s new in Swift 5.4? – Hacking with SwiftIntegrating SwiftUI Bindings and Combine – RhonabwyXCTExpectFailure: Expected test failures explained with code examplesCreating an iOS bar chart in code using SwiftPassing methods as SwiftUI view actions | Swift by SundellNavigation in SwiftUI | SarunwDonny's monday morning tweet I had to skip this week due to time constraints.Please rate me on Apple Podcasts.Send me feedback on SpeakPipeOr contact me through twitterMy website appforce1.netNewsletter, sign up!Podcast PartyMy book: Being a Lead Software DeveloperCore Data Workshop by Donny Wals Gain practical experience with Core Data from the author of Practical Core Data. Support the show (https://github.com/sponsors/AppForce1)Sendy, send newsletters, 100x cheaper A self hosted email newsletter, send emails via Amazon SES without sacrificing deliverability.Practical Core Data by Donny Wals Learn Core Data from the ground up using new and modern techniques.
Chris is the sole developer of SuperMegaUltraGroovy. Maker of Capo. A utility to learn music by ear, without tabs or sheet music.2 months ago he released version 4. It contains a big change in business model. Together Chris and I dig into his history and why Capo was created.00:22 About SuperMegaUltraGroovy02:07 What does Capo do?05:26 Digging into some tech behind Capo.14:35 Switching to a subscription based model.17:02 CapoApp.com17:41 About Chris 27:50 SuperMegaUltraGroovy origins28:59 Getting ready to focus on his own company39:11 SuperMegaUltraGroovy creates Capo48:07 OutroSuperMegaUltraGroovyCapoChris on TwitterCore Data Workshop by Donny Wals Gain practical experience with Core Data from the author of Practical Core Data. Support the show (https://github.com/sponsors/AppForce1)Sendy, send newsletters, 100x cheaper A self hosted email newsletter, send emails via Amazon SES without sacrificing deliverability.Remotely.fm Record remote interviews that sound & look great. Record remote interviews in studio quality.
This monday has been a long day with a start that set me back the entire day. With minutes to spare I was able to record and publish this episode.Please rate me on Apple Podcasts.Send me feedback on SpeakPipeOr contact me through twitterMy website appforce1.netNewsletter, sign up!Podcast PartyMy book: Being a Lead Software DeveloperNewsUnderstanding Basic Data Structures in Swift: Dictionaries in Depth | Andy IbanezWhat is intrinsic content size and why care? | Filip NěmečekHow to create grid with Compositional Layout | Filip NěmečekLazy navigation in SwiftUI | Swift with Majidinessential: URLSession’s Delegate Queue Should Be the Main QueueHow to show text inside a circle with SwiftUI | Kristaps GrinbergsGetting Started with Tuist | SarunwOur path to microframeworks with Tuist.io, by Jeroen Leenarts (English) - YouTubeMonday tweet Donny WalsDonny Wals
Daniel works at Spotify. Specifically on the Spotify Kids app. He has written a book on accessibility for iOS. Daniel took a very deliberate approach to where he wanted to work in his career.Please rate me on Apple Podcasts.Send me feedback on SpeakPipeOr contact me through twitterMy website appforce1.netNewsletter, sign up!Podcast PartyMy book: Being a Lead Software DeveloperDeveloping Accessible iOS apps (related code samples)Daniel on TwitterDaniel on MediumCore Data Workshop by Donny Wals Gain practical experience with Core Data from the author of Practical Core Data. Support the show (https://github.com/sponsors/AppForce1)Sendy, send newsletters, 100x cheaper A self hosted email newsletter, send emails via Amazon SES without sacrificing deliverability.
Leo is BrightDigit. He runs the podcast Empower Apps. Leo appears on my episode and I appear on his. Have a listen to his episode featuring me. I was able to listen to a preview and I think it turned out great.Please rate me on Apple Podcasts.Send me feedback on SpeakPipeOr contact me through twitterMy website appforce1.netNewsletter, sign up!Podcast PartyMy book: Being a Lead Software DeveloperI will be on Leo's feed on January 8.Direct link to Leo's episode with me:https://www.empowerapps.show/76Empowered Apps podcastBright DigitMistKitOrchardNestHeartwitchSpeculidCore Data Workshop by Donny Wals Gain practical experience with Core Data from the author of Practical Core Data. Support the show (https://github.com/sponsors/AppForce1)Buzzsprout Start your own podcast and get a $20 Amazon Gift Card (sent after 2nd paid invoice)Sendy, send newsletters, 100x cheaper A self hosted email newsletter, send emails via Amazon SES without sacrificing deliverability.
A bit of a different special today. I wanted something a bit less technical.New year is upon us. And with that new year resolutions are a thing. Mine is to further improve my public speaking. In my search for content I came acros Brenden. And he has an awesome collection of helpful videos on YouTube.Brenden coaches clients individually as Master Talk, but he brings all his experience in coaching to his videos on YouTube.Please rate me on Apple Podcasts.Send me feedback on SpeakPipeOr contact me through twitterMy website appforce1.netNewsletter, sign up!Podcast PartyMy book: Being a Lead Software Developerhttps://www.youtube.com/c/MasterTalkshttps://www.mastertalk.ca/Core Data Workshop by Donny Wals Gain practical experience with Core Data from the author of Practical Core Data. Support the show (https://github.com/sponsors/AppForce1)Sendy, send newsletters, 100x cheaper A self hosted email newsletter, send emails via Amazon SES without sacrificing deliverability.Backblaze Cloud Backup Never Lose a File Again with the World's Easiest Cloud Backup. Back up your Mac or PC just $6/month.Remotely.fm Record remote interviews that sound & look great. Record remote interviews in studio quality.
Coaching is taking off in 2021. Till that day, let's relax and learn as much as we can. About Swift language features for example. Enjoy the company we can have and let's look forward to a great new year. Free of restrictions and global troubles like we had in 2020.Please rate me on Apple Podcasts.Send me feedback on SpeakPipeOr contact me through twitterMy website appforce1.netNewsletter, sign up!Podcast PartyMy book: Being a Lead Software DeveloperNews:Big Nerd Ranch: PLCrashReporter / PLCrashReporter: Part 1 / PLCrashReporter: Part 2Launching an Indie AppUnderstanding @inlinable in SwiftGetting started with associated types in Swift ProtocolsHow to monitor system calendar for changes with EventKitHow to set default values in Swift compiler-generated initializersSwiftUI Layout Explained: Free to watch!Swift mocks without protocolsMonday morning tweetiOS Conf SGCore Data Workshop by Donny Wals Gain practical experience with Core Data from the author of Practical Core Data. Support the show (https://github.com/sponsors/AppForce1)Buzzsprout - Let's get your podcast launched! Start for FREEBackblaze Cloud Backup Never Lose a File Again with the World's Easiest Cloud Backup. Back up your Mac or PC just $6/month.Sendy, send newsletters, 100x cheaper A self hosted email newsletter, send emails via Amazon SES without sacrificing deliverability.Disclaimer: This post contains affiliate links. If you make a purchase, I may receive a commission at no extra cost to you.
A big shoutout to #iOSdevhappyhour. I had a great time and it resulted in a big idea with me. I hope it all works out and that I can actually do my planned coaching sessions.Please rate me on Apple Podcasts.Send me feedback on SpeakPipeOr contact me through twitterMy website appforce1.netNewsletter, sign up!Podcast PartyMy book: Being a Lead Software DeveloperNews:Apple: App Clips now availableBook: Thinking in SwiftUIBook: Yuri's GumRoadDevUtils.appAWS Amplify and SwiftUIGithub Actions to compile Xcode projectsDI in SwiftExpressibleBy-Loops in SwiftDonny' monday morning tweetCore Data Workshop by Donny Wals Gain practical experience with Core Data from the author of Practical Core Data. Support the show (https://github.com/sponsors/AppForce1)Sendy, send newsletters, 100x cheaper A self hosted email newsletter, send emails via Amazon SES without sacrificing deliverability.
And we are already on my ninth regular episode. I'm now getting the hang of podcasting more and more. Next step is voice profiling and using some filtering to make myself sound better. Another packed episode with some great updates. Enjoy!Please rate me on Apple Podcasts.Send me feedback on SpeakPipeOr contact me through twitterMy website appforce1.netNewsletter, sign up!My book: Being a Lead Software DeveloperDID Conf200 weeks of SwiftNews:Practical Core DataXcode 12.3Apple Silicon Mac mini CIShowing Maps in WidgetsDynamic dark mode images at runtimeLarge Title UINavigationBar GlitchesBook: Junior to SeniorMonday morning tweetCore Data Workshop by Donny Wals Gain practical experience with Core Data from the author of Practical Core Data. Support the show (https://github.com/sponsors/AppForce1)Practical Combine by Donny Wals Buy Donny’ book on combine and support my podcast. Now that’s a great deal.Sendy, send newsletters, 100x cheaper A self hosted email newsletter, send emails via Amazon SES without sacrificing deliverability.
Ellen… Ball of energy. I did my best to keep our interview on track. But Ellen has so much to say. We talk about work, lessons learned. Going to LA, Europe and Wisconsin. All because of the code, love and why wouldn't you? It was great talking with Ellen, partly due to that... Boy the edit was a beast.Please rate me on Apple Podcasts.Send me feedback on SpeakPipeOr contact me through twitterMy website appforce1.netNewsletter, sign up!Podcast PartyMy book: Being a Lead Software DeveloperBook: The Manager's PathSpot HeroBakken & BeckApolloGoals at Apollo GraphQLraywenderlich.comWorking in publicCore Data Workshop by Donny Wals Gain practical experience with Core Data from the author of Practical Core Data. Support the show (https://github.com/sponsors/AppForce1)Sendy, send newsletters, 100x cheaper A self hosted email newsletter, send emails via Amazon SES without sacrificing deliverability.Backblaze Cloud Backup Never Lose a File Again with the World's Easiest Cloud Backup. Back up your Mac or PC just $6/month.
A episode on the shorter side. Very busy with wrapping up the year at work, editing episodes, writing a book and staying healthy. Enjoy this week's episode and make sure to sign up for the newsletters I mentioned.Please rate me on Apple Podcasts.Send me feedback on SpeakPipeOr contact me through twitterMy website appforce1.netNewsletter, sign up!Podcast PartyMy book: Being a Lead Software DeveloperNewsApple: Mac available on AWS EC2Reducing Memory Footprint When Using UIImageApp Launch Time: 7 tips to increase performanceObserving Combine publishers in SwiftUI viewsThe lifecycle and semantics of a SwiftUI viewUnderstanding the Limited Photo Library in iOS 14Implementing loading/shimmer with Diffable Data SourceVincent Pradeilles on YouTubeCocoaHeadsNLDO iOSWhere's the monday tweet?Article from Donny mentioned related to his new book . Core Data Workshop by Donny Wals Gain practical experience with Core Data from the author of Practical Core Data. Support the show (https://github.com/sponsors/AppForce1)Practical Combine by Donny Wals Buy Donny’ book on combine and support my podcast. Now that’s a great deal.Sendy, send newsletters, 100x cheaper A self hosted email newsletter, send emails via Amazon SES without sacrificing deliverability.
Book, lots of books this week. Daniel Steinberg interview live on thursday and a big list of twitter mentions this week. Some great articles. And I think I am getting less nervous now. :)Please rate me on Apple Podcasts.Send me feedback on SpeakPipeOr contact me through twitterMy website appforce1.netNewsletter, sign up!Podcast PartyGo go Craig Clayton: SwiftUI ProjectsMy book: Being a Lead Software DeveloperMy Book: Pre order on GumroadHassan Osman: Writer on the sideNews:Apple: App privacy questionsWhat It Took to Get FoodNoms ReadySwiftUI’s Grid ViewsEvent-driven generic hooks for SwiftFormatted Localizable StringsDonny' monday morning tweetConnectKit by Josh HoltzCoaching for free: emailCocoaHeadsNL Dec. MeetupCore Data Workshop by Donny Wals Gain practical experience with Core Data from the author of Practical Core Data. Support the show (https://github.com/sponsors/AppForce1)Backblaze Cloud Backup Never Lose a File Again with the World's Easiest Cloud Backup. Back up your Mac or PC just $6/month.Practical Combine by Donny Wals Buy Donny’ book on combine and support my podcast. Now that’s a great deal.Sendy, send newsletters, 100x cheaper A self hosted email newsletter, send emails via Amazon SES without sacrificing deliverability.
最新情報を "ながら" でキャッチアップ! ラジオ感覚放送 「毎日AWS!」 おはようございます、サーバーワークスの加藤です。 今日は 10/29 に出たアップデート10件をご紹介。 感想は Twitter にて「#サバワ」をつけて投稿してください! ■ UPDATE ラインナップ Amazon SES が連絡先リストに対応 Application Load Balancer が gRPC に対応 API Gateway はデフォルトのREST API エンドポイントの無効化をサポート Jira Service Desk を利用して AWS リソースに関する運用アイテムを追跡できるように Amazon Kendra が HIPAA に準拠 AWS Service Catalog がコンソールをアップデート、ワンページプロビジョニングを提供開始 Amazon DocumentDB が変更ストリーム機能を強化 Amazon Neptune が Apache TinkerPop 3.4.8 に対応 AWS サイト間 VPN が冗長性を担保する通知機能を発表 AWS Server Migration Service が Amazon CloudWatch Applications Insights を用いたアプリケーション監視に対応 ■ サーバーワークスSNS Twitter / Facebook ■ サーバーワークスブログ サーバーワークスエンジニアブログ
Mautic 3.1 Released https://github.com/mautic/mautic/releases/tag/3.1 (Be careful – some regressions exist. You may want to wait for 3.1.1 🙂 In-depth Amazon SES setup guide By Joey Keller; includes good general advice on Cron jobs etc: https://forum.mautic.org/t/matching-ses-send-rate/6783 Enhancements in Community Infrastructure https://www.mautic.org/blog/community/building-sustainable-infrastructure-mautic-community Google Season of Docs – Welcome Favour and Swati! https://forum.mautic.org/t/two-projects-selected-to-work-with-mautic-in-the-google-season-of-docs-project/15700 (Favour Kelvin – Knowledge Base, Swati Thacker – End-User Documentation) Interview Ruth Cheesley: MautiCon Call for Speakers Call For Papers: https://sessionize.com/mauticon-2020/ Slack Channel: https://mautic.slack.com/archives/C010N8EHKFY Upcoming Mautic Sprints and Release dates https://app.slack.com/docs/T02GEN0Q6/F018HSBEWB1 3.1.1 Sprint: 18-19 September 2020 Release Candidate: 21 September 2020 General Availability: 28th September 2020 Release Lead: Mohammed Abu Musa (@Abu Musa on Slack, @mabumusa1 on Github) Release Deputy: Dennis Ameling (@DennisAmeling) 3.1.2 Sprint: 16-17 October 2020 Release Candidate: 19th October 2020 General Availability: 26th October 2020 Release Lead: Norman Pracht (@npracht) Release Deputy: Dennis Ameling (@DennisAmeling) 3.2 (given the proximity to Mauticon we may choose to shift the dates around) Sprint: 13-14 November 2020 Release Candidate: 16th November 2020 General Availability: 23rd November 2020 Release Lead: TBC Release Deputy: TBC 3.2.1 Sprint: 18-19 December 2020 Release Candidate: 21 December 2020 General Availability: 28th December 2020 Release Lead: TBC Release Deputy: TBC 3.2.2 Sprint: 15-16 January 2021 Release Candidate: 18th January 2021 General Availability: 25th January 2021 Release Lead: TBC Release Deputy: TBC 3.3 Sprint: 12-13 February 2021 Release Candidate: 15 February 2021 General Availability: 22 February 2021 3.3.1 Sprint: 12-13 March 2021 RC: 15th March 2021 General Availability: 22nd March 2021 Release Lead: TBC Release Deputy: TBC 3.3.2 Sprint: 16-17 April 2021 Release Candidate: 19th April 2021 General Availability: 26th April 2021 Release Lead: TBC Release Deputy: TBC 4.0 Sprint: 14-15 May 2021 Release Candidate: 17th May 2021 General Availability: 24th May 2021 Release Lead: TBC Release Deputy: TBC
最新情報を "ながら" でキャッチアップ! ラジオ感覚放送 「毎日AWS!」 おはようございます、サーバーワークスの加藤です。 今日は 8/19 に出たアップデート5件をご紹介。 感想は Twitter にて「#サバワ」をつけて投稿してください! ■ UPDATE ラインナップ Amazon Interactive Video Service が視聴者の認証機能をサポート Amazon Personalize が素早く変更される新しい製品やコンテンツのカタログに対応し、レコメンデーションを最大50%改善 Amazon SES がサプレッションリストへのメールアドレス一括追加・削除機能を追加 AWS Controllers for Kubernetes がプレビューに AWS Storage Gateway が Tape Gateway にデータ保護機能を追加 ■ サーバーワークスSNS Twitter / Facebook ■ サーバーワークスブログ サーバーワークスエンジニアブログ
最新情報を "ながら" でキャッチアップ! ラジオ感覚放送 「毎日AWS!」 おはようございます、サーバーワークスの加藤です。 今日は 7/1 に出た 9件のアップデートをご紹介。 感想は Twitter にて「#サバワ」をつけて投稿してください! ■ UPDATE ラインナップ AWS App2Container を発表 - アプリケーションのコンテナかとAWSへの移行ツール AWS DataSyncエージェントが Linux KVM と Microsoft Hyper-Vハイパーバイザーをサポート Amazon MQ が ActiveMQ Version 5.15.12 をサポート Amazon SES が東京リージョンで利用可能に AWS DataSync がAmazon CloudWatchLogs の設定を自動で行えるように Windows インスタンスを簡単にカスタマイズできる EC2 Launch v2 を発表 AWS AppSync がサーバーサイドAPIキャッシュ機能に12xlarge サイズのインスタンスを追加 Porting Assistant for .NET が利用可能に Amazon Comprehend Medical が関係抽出機能を病状に適用できるように ■ サーバーワークスSNS Twitter / Facebook ■ サーバーワークスブログ サーバーワークスエンジニアブログ
Disponible también en: Google Podcast Spotify Apple Podcast Google Podcast Spotify Apple Podcast Qué es Amazon Simple Email Service, es el tema de este episodio del Podcast, donde hablamos del envió masivo de correos y como este es uno de los servicios más poco conocidos de la nube. Siempre has existido servicios de terceros como Mandrill, que ahora es parte de Mailchimp, pero el servicio de Amazon SES es sencillo de usar y de un costo muy reducido. ¿Qué ventajas ofrece Amazon SES? Escúchalo acá. Mi correo: jonatan@simplementenube.com Para más información puedes visitar: https://jonatanchinchilla.com/podcasts/
Qué es Amazon Simple Email Service, es el tema de este episodio del Podcast, donde hablamos del envió masivo de correos y como este es uno de los servicios más poco conocidos de la nube. Siempre has existido servicios de terceros como Mandrill, que ahora es parte de Mailchimp, pero el servicio de Amazon SES es sencillo de usar y de un costo muy reducido. ¿Qué ventajas ofrece Amazon SES? Escúchalo acá. Mi correo: — jonatan@simplementenube.com Para más información puedes visitar: — https://jonatanchinchilla.com/podcasts/
Estoy probando Amazon SES, hace unos episodios hablaba de Sendgrid, y tengo mucho tiempo usando Mailgun. En el episodio de hoy herramientas para enviar mails
Estoy probando Amazon SES, hace unos episodios hablaba de Sendgrid, y tengo mucho tiempo usando Mailgun. En el episodio de hoy herramientas para enviar mails
Coinbase strives to be the most trusted digital currency exchange, making reliability and security top priorities. However, this doesn't mean that Coinbase is incident-free. As the cryptocurrency space evolves, the company inevitably faces new engineering challenges. In this talk, Coinbase walks you through the way the infrastructure team uses AWS Lambda functions and Amazon SES to build Misato, the incident bot that helps coordinate, monitor, and improve incident response in the organization. Learn how Coinbase made incident processing as user-friendly as possible-from creating an incident to reviewing a postmortem document.
Companies in many industries use AWS to send millions of emails every day, including Amazon.com. In this session, learn how to build applications using the highly scalable, highly reliable, and multi-tenant-capable email infrastructure of Amazon Simple Email Service (Amazon SES). You also learn how to monitor delivery rates and other important metrics, and how to use this data to improve deliverability. Members of the Amazon.com team discuss the architecture of their multi-tenant email-sending platform, the historical challenges they faced, and the ways Amazon Pinpoint and Amazon SES helped them meet their goals around Prime Day, Cyber Monday, and other retail events.
In today’s episode, we are joined by one of our former guests, Travis Ketchum who is known for creating Contest Domination and is now running his most recent program, Campaign Refinery. After getting frustrated with the lack of proper services to test deliverability options, Travis decided to create one himself. You are in for a treat as Travis talks about the amazing split testing that his tool can do on multiple levels, which not only saves you time but the annoyance of having to switch on the front end from one carrier to another, as it’s done on the backend of his software. We also dive into the key things everyone should be doing to make sure their list has the highest quality threshold and the best chances for high open rates. Plus to set yourself apart, we talk about some other cool ways to get your readers excited about hearing from you such as gamifying your list. Lastly, we get into some real talk about a subject we continue to discuss which is anxiety, depression, and becoming stuck in comparison mode and how to combat those things to keep you on track. After you are finished, be sure to listen to our previous episode with Travis as he discusses how to build a list with contests and giveaways along with our episode with Wilco de Kreij on how to build your list exponentially. “If your compass was one-tenth of one degree off it’s not a big deal for the first mile, but you do that path forever and you end up in a wildly different spot.” - Travis Ketchum Some Topics We Discussed Include: How to clean up your list for maximum deliverability results Why you want to split test everything on the backend How to add gamification to your email list-building model The different levels of split testing How to keep things in perspective when things go wrong How Travis’ new podcast is a platform about the frustrations with running a subscription business The evergreen flash sale Tips and dealing with anxiety and comparisons with other entrepreneurs when using social media Best practices for when someone hits the offer page after it’s over And much, much more! Contact Travis Ketchum: Contest Domination Campaign Refinery The Automation Blueprint References and Links Mentioned: Are you ready to be EPIC with us?! Then grab our EGP Letter here where you’ll get not only all of the notes for everything episode we’ve done and will do in the mail, a private forum community, plus new training videos all the time with us and our guests. This episode is sponsored by our go-to SEO research tool, Ahrefs.com. We use this amazing tool pretty much daily, and if you listen back to some of our most recent episodes, we breakdown some of the tactics we use in our intros, such as website audits, looking at our competitors’ websites, and finding low hanging fruit keywords for easy Google rankings. It’s like having cheat codes for business. As of this episode, they have a 7 day $7 trial, so be sure to check it out. Our previous episode with Travis Ketchum Our episode with Mike Dillard Our episode with Wilco de Kreij One Nation Under Stress, a documentary on HBO Sendgrid Amazon SES Sparkpost
In this podcast, we’re going to cover some essential points to send your first email using Amazon SES. After that, we’re going to give you some detailed information about verifying your email address and sending email using the Amazon SES console. We hope it will be beneficial for your marketing efforts!In this article, we’re going to cover some essential points to send your first email using Amazon SES. After that, we’re going to give you some detailed information about verifying your email address and sending email using the Amazon SES console. We hope it will be beneficial for your marketing efforts!
Veja as correções no Sparkpost, Sendgrid, MailJet e Amazon SES e diversos outros recursos que entraram nessa semana no Mautic --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/powertic/message
In this Hasty Treat, Scott and Wes are back for another edition of Stumped! where they try to stump each other with interview questions. Today’s questions are from Flashcards for Developers. EmailOctopus - Sponsor Email marketing for less, via Amazon SES. EmailOctopus sends your emails through Amazon’s Simple Email Service (SES), saving money without sacrificing deliverability. With simple setup and all the features you would expect, EmailOctopus is as flexible as you need it to be. Get started today at emailoctopus.com/syntax and get your first three months free. Show Notes 4:03 What’s the difference between synchronous and asynchronous code? 5:56 What’s the difference between .call and .apply? 7:08 How do you share code between files? 8:18 What’s the difference between double equals and triple equals? 10:40 What’s the difference between null, undefined, and undeclared? 14:18 What is the event loop? Philip Roberts - What the heck is the event loop anyway? 16:02 Why is extending built-ins never a good idea? Tweet us your tasty treats! Scott’s Instagram LevelUpTutorials Instagram Wes’ Instagram Wes’ Twitter Wes’ Facebook Scott’s Twitter Make sure to include @SyntaxFM in your tweets
W tym odcinku opowiadam, jak niewielkim kosztem (lub nawet i za darmo) rozpocząć swoje cyfrowe życie. Prowadzić stronę, kupić domenę, hostować serwis, wysyłać mailing itp. Niektórych z tych rozwiązań możesz nie znać. Linki do których odwołuję się w nagraniu: Darmowa domena .TK - http://dot.tk Polecani sprzedawcy domen: - OVH - https://www.ovh.pl/domeny/ - AfterMarket - https://aftermarket.pl Polecani dostawcy VPSów: - https://buyvm.net - http://arubacloud.pl [4zł/msc!] Tanie serwery dedykowane: - https://www.kimsufi.com/pl/serwery.xml - http://scaleway.com/pricing/ Lista TANICH ofert na VPSy: https://lowendbox.com Generatory STATYCZNYCH stron internetowych: - https://jekyllrb.com - https://gohugo.io Hostingi statycznych stron: - https://pages.github.com Hosting DNS + ochrona przed DDoS + antyspam (0zł/msc) - https://cloudflare.com Tani newsletter: - Amazon SES - https://aws.amazon.com/ses/pricing/ - Sendy (nakładka na AWS) - http://bit.ly/sendySoftware ($59) - Feedburner RSS - https://feedburner.com Darmowe komentarze na stronę: - Disqus - https://disqus.com - Facebook https://developers.facebook.com/docs/plugins/comments/ Tanie backupy: - AWS S3 - https://aws.amazon.com/s3/pricing/ - AWS Glacier - https://aws.amazon.com/glacier/pricing/ Darmowe boty na Facebooku: - http://chatfuel.com [do 5000 userów] - http://manychat.com [bez limitu userów, ale z limitem funkcji]
Après 4 mois d'attente l’HomePod est enfin disponible en France. Apple en-a-t-elle profité pour corriger les défauts que nous avions pointé du doigt ? La version française de Siri peut-elle rivaliser avec à Google Home ou Alexa d’Amazon ? Ses fonctions stéréo, multiroom, indisponibles lors de nos premiers tests sont-elles à la hauteur d’un Sonos. Bref, faut-il craquer pour HomePod ? Notre verdict ! Nos coups de cœur : - Stéphane : Stephane Zibi Logojoy : https://logojoy.com/ Keren Ann avec le Quatuor Debussy dont le 2 juillet prochain à la Philarmonie de Paris https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ASnJhOPmVao Didier : L'AirPower Mini Sararoom Chargeur sans fil https://amzn.to/2KfXMeX Olivier : Sonos Beam https://www.sonos.com/fr-fr/home
Après 4 mois d'attente l’HomePod est enfin disponible en France. Apple en-a-t-elle profité pour corriger les défauts que nous avions pointé du doigt ? La version française de Siri peut-elle rivaliser avec à Google Home ou Alexa d’Amazon ? Ses fonctions stéréo, multiroom, indisponibles lors de nos premiers tests sont-elles à la hauteur d’un Sonos. Bref, faut-il craquer pour HomePod ? Notre verdict ! Nos coups de cœur : - Stéphane : Stephane Zibi Logojoy : https://logojoy.com/ Keren Ann avec le Quatuor Debussy dont le 2 juillet prochain à la Philarmonie de Paris https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ASnJhOPmVao Didier : L'AirPower Mini Sararoom Chargeur sans fil https://amzn.to/2KfXMeX Olivier : Sonos Beam https://www.sonos.com/fr-fr/home
Business Automation - https://www.automationlinks.com/how-my-hockey-career-relates-to-automation/ In this video and blog Brad Smith teaches different examples that prove the benefit of setting up automation in your business. Remember, once you have a set system in place your results will increase dramatically. Use our Automation Framework to use Relationships + Automation + Followup to equal Results. 1. Monitor leads 2. Create emails and build lists 3. Landing pages 4. Lead nurturing 5. A/B Tests 6. Automated Drip Marketing 7. CMS Integration - WordPress, Drupal, Joomla, Typo3, Concrete5 etc. 8. CRM Integration - Salesforce, SugarCRM, vTiger, HubSpot, Zoho CRM etc. 9. Email Integration - Mandrill, SendGrid, Amazon SES, MailChimp, iContact 10. eCommerce Integration 11. Email Marketing 12. Event Management 13. Landing Page & Form Creator 14. Lead Analysis 15. Lead Management 16. Lead Scoring 17. List Management 18. Multiple Email Service Providers 19. Smart Lead Capture Forms --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/automationlinks/support
Добрый день уважаемые слушатели. Представляем новый выпуск подкаста RWpod. В этом выпуске: Ruby Rails 5.2 sets Ruby version in Gemfile and adds .ruby-version file by default, Increase reliability of background job processing using super_fetch of Sidekiq Pro и 4 Reasons Why I Think Google Cloud Will Take Over Cloud Computing Space Rails Testing Antipatterns: Models, Email with Amazon SES from Rails on EC2 и TensorStream - a reimplementation of TensorFlow for ruby JavaScript Real-time Human Pose Estimation in the Browser with TensorFlow.js, Optimizing React: Virtual DOM explained и Introducing Guess.js - a toolkit for enabling data-driven user-experiences on the Web Isomorphic-git - a pure JavaScript implementation of git for node and browsers, ScrollHint - a JS library to suggest that the elements are scrollable horizontally, with the pointer icon и GraphQL Full Course - Novice to Expert
Mike is starting the show extremely amped. He says he loves the way the show goes when he is this way. Torya asks when it was considered OK to live with a bunch of people, create a mess and then complain about ants. Who created those ants? Mike says he might want to abstain from the discussion. He says there is no degree to this. You either do or do not, you don't try. Trying doesn't exist. Mike equates this to how disgusting people can be when they are living alone. If they can't live cleanly with others, how can they live cleanly when alone? Everyone decides how much mess they can accept, but if your standard of living causes roaches or rats, that's on you. You need to fix it, not anyone else. Nobody cares as long as you fix these things yourself. This is why Mike has the theory that apartments are treated poorly. It appears that people complain just to complain. They have no good reason. The campaign sent out an email push. Torya was surprised with how many people reply with "Please remove me from your list." They discuss how people register to vote because after seeing the voter data, Torya has questions about why people are complaining. Despite opting in to the email list, people still complain and Amazon SES acts as though they are being spammed. Mike once again (as he likes to do) talks about how the free market should handle unethical businesses. Torya brings up the "sandwich wars" and how the free market handled that situation. Apparently a local sandwich shop was publishing fake Yelp reviews of local restaurants. The owner is unethical, yet they've remained in business. Apparently the free market doesn't see it the same way or they have not heard about the issue. Both Mike and Torya prefer letting people know about problems experienced with businesses. They believe that any dishonest complaint will be exposed. Complaining about a poor experience should be allowed and anyone lying should be called out. The bottomline is people should be adults and handle their own business. Torya then discusses her irritation with people who bash millenials. She doesn't like the labels. She gets offended by the labels.
Many companies use Amazon Simple Email Service (Amazon SES) to build applications that enable their users to send millions of emails every day. In this session, you learn how to build applications using the scalable, reliable Amazon SES infrastructure. You also learn how to monitor email sending and enforce compliance rules on individual accounts without impacting other accounts. Zendesk discusses the architecture of its multitenant email sending platform, the historical challenges it faced, its phased approach to platform migration, and the ways Amazon SES helped them meet their goals.
Mautic é uma ferramnta de código aberto, tipo WordPress. Isso significa que você pode baixar, instalar e usar à vontade.Não chega a ser uma opção de custo zero. Mas é bem mais batatas que as ferramentas Premium como Hubspot, Marketo, SharpSpring, Act-On e outras. É mais barata que as versões mais simplezinhas do mercado também, como a americana MailChimp ou a brasileira RD Station.Com o Mautic, você vai ter basicamente dois custos. O primeiro é hospedagem. Mas um bom servidor não vai custar mais do que 5 dólares. Eu recomendo a Digital Ocean.O outro é o disparo de emails em massa. Para empresas que possuam mailing relativamente pequeno, uma boa opção é o Sparkpost. Ele disponibiliza até 100 mil disparos de emails por mês gratuitamente, independentemente do tamanho da base. Há alternativas com limites gratuitos inferiores, como Amazon SES e MailChimp.Se mandarmos menos de 100 mil emails por mês, o custo anual usando Mautic não chega a R$ 300 por ano. Numa ferramenta paga, o mesmo volume não daí por menos de 9 mil por ano.Se tivermos por exemplo 100 mil cadastros na nossa base, no Mautic vamos gastar em um ano o equivalente a um mês em ferramentas pagas. Do ponto de vista técnico, o Mautic tem as seguintes vantagens:* Fornece relatórios e dados como ninguém.* É bem simples de usar.E tem desvantagens também:* Por ser código aberto, nos precisamos de ajuda de alguém de TI.* Falta uma funcionalidade ridiculamente básica: agendamento de email.O meu takeaway de hoje é o seguinte:Mautic vale a pena para quem quer gastar pouco e tem alguém de TI para auxiliar. Se bem que o sujeito fuçador consrigue se virar.http://takeaways.com.br/029
Mautic é uma ferramnta de código aberto, tipo WordPress. Isso significa que você pode baixar, instalar e usar à vontade.Não chega a ser uma opção de custo zero. Mas é bem mais batatas que as ferramentas Premium como Hubspot, Marketo, SharpSpring, Act-On e outras. É mais barata que as versões mais simplezinhas do mercado também, como a americana MailChimp ou a brasileira RD Station.Com o Mautic, você vai ter basicamente dois custos. O primeiro é hospedagem. Mas um bom servidor não vai custar mais do que 5 dólares. Eu recomendo a Digital Ocean.O outro é o disparo de emails em massa. Para empresas que possuam mailing relativamente pequeno, uma boa opção é o Sparkpost. Ele disponibiliza até 100 mil disparos de emails por mês gratuitamente, independentemente do tamanho da base. Há alternativas com limites gratuitos inferiores, como Amazon SES e MailChimp.Se mandarmos menos de 100 mil emails por mês, o custo anual usando Mautic não chega a R$ 300 por ano. Numa ferramenta paga, o mesmo volume não daí por menos de 9 mil por ano.Se tivermos por exemplo 100 mil cadastros na nossa base, no Mautic vamos gastar em um ano o equivalente a um mês em ferramentas pagas. Do ponto de vista técnico, o Mautic tem as seguintes vantagens:* Fornece relatórios e dados como ninguém.* É bem simples de usar.E tem desvantagens também:* Por ser código aberto, nos precisamos de ajuda de alguém de TI.* Falta uma funcionalidade ridiculamente básica: agendamento de email.O meu takeaway de hoje é o seguinte:Mautic vale a pena para quem quer gastar pouco e tem alguém de TI para auxiliar. Se bem que o sujeito fuçador consrigue se virar.http://takeaways.com.br/029
Join host Dr Pete in the latest episode of AWS TechChat, as he shares the information and updates around VMware on AWS, improvements to signing into your AWS Account, Amazon Route 53, Elastic Load Balancing, Amazon VPC, Amazon EC2, Amazon SES, Amazon RDS, Amazon CloudWatch, AWS CloudFormation, AWS Elastic Beanstalk, Amazon Lex, New Quick Starts on deploying IBM MQ on AWS and deploying NGNIX Plus on the AWS Cloud.
RR 324: Developer Horror Stories The panel for this episode of Ruby Rogues is Dave Kimura, Eric Berry, and Charles Max Well. They are telling developer horror stories this week. Tune in to listen to their stories! [00:01:40] Eric’s Story Eric tells a story that happened today. He was working on a report on live data at work. While doing this, he sent texts to hundreds of people that shouldn’t be getting them. The moral of the story is that everyone makes mistakes, even seasoned developers. [00:02:58] How could that have been avoided? Eric has a fail-safe that has to override with an environment variable so that it won’t truncate the tables. Once that happens, no messages will be sent. He works at a company, which is a B to C texting platform that allows customer retention through mass, etc. He commented out stuff, not realizing that it would start sending messages. He needed live data to generate reports so he did not truncate the data. His advice is not to comment out code until you know why you are doing so. Dave says that same thing can also happen with an email service. Instead of commenting out code, make sure they are set up to a mail server or mail dev to where it actually never sends out to the real world but stays in a send box environment. Amazon SES has a way to do this where things stay internally. [00:05:10] Dave’s Story Around seven years ago Dave needed to store some images. He did not want to use a storage on the local computer because he would have multiple web servers and he did not want to use external storage because he was “lazy.” So he stored the images in the database. It worked for years until one day he saw that the table was 30 GB, which was much larger than it should have been. He had to extract and rewrite because any test to undo it would be substantial. It would be a long running process because 30 GB is a lot of data. In hindsight, Dave’s advice is that you don’t have to prematurely optimize but you also don’t have to make bad decisions. Do not store globs of binary data in your database. If it can be stored as a jpeg, do that. [00:08:04] Charles’ Story Charles’ story focuses on time zones. He was working on test first development. He wrote tests for a feature and his coworker checked them. The database was running in UTC and doing checks in Mountain Time, so the checks would fail from 6pm until midnight. The CI server would show that tests were not passing for a chunk of the day. It was a simple fix. He learned that you can write a test that passes but may be overlooking something simple that may change when in a different place or a different time. [00:11:05] Errors Errors are hard to track down. The hardest ones to find are the ones that only happen occasionally. The worst ones are those that are critical errors that only happen occasionally. Because they only happen sometimes, it is hard to know how to fix them. [00:19:13] Using a Technology Too Soon Eric used a technology too soon, which was Rails. Nobody could take over once he left the company. He had to go back to the company and rebuild it in PHP so that others could use it. The lesson from this mistake is that when you chose a technology you have to choose one that supports the buzz factor. Everyone has a responsibility to the people they are working for to add value. If you leave them with a maintenance nightmare you are not helping, you are hurting. Make sure you are locking things down. [00:22:35] Gems and Poll Requests Dave watches Gems to see what and how often they are updating. He checks to see if his poll request was accepted and reverts back to the original gem. He calls it “free maintenance from other people.” He doesn’t think you should deviate from it too much. An option is to use a proxy as well. [00:27:41] Have you ever had to make patches in your Rails app knowing that those patches were coming in a future release? Eric has had to in the past. His mentor had to patch Rails, apply it, but every time it ran it said, “if you upgrade rails, upgrade me.” It was a reminder to make sure everyone stays in sync. [00:29:30] Migration Dave and Charles have both had problems with migration. Take snapshots of database before you use migrations. The moral of story is if you’re going to migrate data, make sure you back up your database before you change the data. And don’t do data modifications in your migrations. Also set up a replica of your database. There is no excuse except for laziness or inexperience. [00:32:10] Materialized views. Eric used to work for social media company that had a lot of data coming in from various forms of social media. Helped build sub products that handled intake of data. Decided to use materialized views. It is a view that self updates as data changes in the database. In other words, it creates a fake table and can simplify the application side of things. It got a little messy and they had no idea what was updating things when. Because of this, they had to convert the materialized views to stored procedures. The materialized views killed the database because it triggered things when it shouldn’t be. [00:37:23] Caching Caching is a big problem with development. There are complex cache keys built around different queries and combinations of objects. There is a value with using caches but there is a caution with not using caches too early. A lot of problems have resulted from caching wrong results. The moral is to measure and make sure that you are working on the right problems. Sometimes premature optimization does not matter. Sometimes caching is just not needed and messes programs up rather than helping them. [00:40:34] How do you populate data with unrealistic data? It depends on how big the application is, but larger ones generate ten to twenty thousand records. For these, Dave uses Active Record Import. He used the Faker Gem to create fakes names. Without using Active Record Import it would take ten to fifteen minutes to 50,000 but instead it took two minutes with using it, saving a lot of time. Picks Dave: Gem in a box Active Record Import Eric: udemy – Stephen Grider Code Sponsor Charles: Audible Meditation app Find something that helps you re-center Ruby Dev Summit
RR 324: Developer Horror Stories The panel for this episode of Ruby Rogues is Dave Kimura, Eric Berry, and Charles Max Well. They are telling developer horror stories this week. Tune in to listen to their stories! [00:01:40] Eric’s Story Eric tells a story that happened today. He was working on a report on live data at work. While doing this, he sent texts to hundreds of people that shouldn’t be getting them. The moral of the story is that everyone makes mistakes, even seasoned developers. [00:02:58] How could that have been avoided? Eric has a fail-safe that has to override with an environment variable so that it won’t truncate the tables. Once that happens, no messages will be sent. He works at a company, which is a B to C texting platform that allows customer retention through mass, etc. He commented out stuff, not realizing that it would start sending messages. He needed live data to generate reports so he did not truncate the data. His advice is not to comment out code until you know why you are doing so. Dave says that same thing can also happen with an email service. Instead of commenting out code, make sure they are set up to a mail server or mail dev to where it actually never sends out to the real world but stays in a send box environment. Amazon SES has a way to do this where things stay internally. [00:05:10] Dave’s Story Around seven years ago Dave needed to store some images. He did not want to use a storage on the local computer because he would have multiple web servers and he did not want to use external storage because he was “lazy.” So he stored the images in the database. It worked for years until one day he saw that the table was 30 GB, which was much larger than it should have been. He had to extract and rewrite because any test to undo it would be substantial. It would be a long running process because 30 GB is a lot of data. In hindsight, Dave’s advice is that you don’t have to prematurely optimize but you also don’t have to make bad decisions. Do not store globs of binary data in your database. If it can be stored as a jpeg, do that. [00:08:04] Charles’ Story Charles’ story focuses on time zones. He was working on test first development. He wrote tests for a feature and his coworker checked them. The database was running in UTC and doing checks in Mountain Time, so the checks would fail from 6pm until midnight. The CI server would show that tests were not passing for a chunk of the day. It was a simple fix. He learned that you can write a test that passes but may be overlooking something simple that may change when in a different place or a different time. [00:11:05] Errors Errors are hard to track down. The hardest ones to find are the ones that only happen occasionally. The worst ones are those that are critical errors that only happen occasionally. Because they only happen sometimes, it is hard to know how to fix them. [00:19:13] Using a Technology Too Soon Eric used a technology too soon, which was Rails. Nobody could take over once he left the company. He had to go back to the company and rebuild it in PHP so that others could use it. The lesson from this mistake is that when you chose a technology you have to choose one that supports the buzz factor. Everyone has a responsibility to the people they are working for to add value. If you leave them with a maintenance nightmare you are not helping, you are hurting. Make sure you are locking things down. [00:22:35] Gems and Poll Requests Dave watches Gems to see what and how often they are updating. He checks to see if his poll request was accepted and reverts back to the original gem. He calls it “free maintenance from other people.” He doesn’t think you should deviate from it too much. An option is to use a proxy as well. [00:27:41] Have you ever had to make patches in your Rails app knowing that those patches were coming in a future release? Eric has had to in the past. His mentor had to patch Rails, apply it, but every time it ran it said, “if you upgrade rails, upgrade me.” It was a reminder to make sure everyone stays in sync. [00:29:30] Migration Dave and Charles have both had problems with migration. Take snapshots of database before you use migrations. The moral of story is if you’re going to migrate data, make sure you back up your database before you change the data. And don’t do data modifications in your migrations. Also set up a replica of your database. There is no excuse except for laziness or inexperience. [00:32:10] Materialized views. Eric used to work for social media company that had a lot of data coming in from various forms of social media. Helped build sub products that handled intake of data. Decided to use materialized views. It is a view that self updates as data changes in the database. In other words, it creates a fake table and can simplify the application side of things. It got a little messy and they had no idea what was updating things when. Because of this, they had to convert the materialized views to stored procedures. The materialized views killed the database because it triggered things when it shouldn’t be. [00:37:23] Caching Caching is a big problem with development. There are complex cache keys built around different queries and combinations of objects. There is a value with using caches but there is a caution with not using caches too early. A lot of problems have resulted from caching wrong results. The moral is to measure and make sure that you are working on the right problems. Sometimes premature optimization does not matter. Sometimes caching is just not needed and messes programs up rather than helping them. [00:40:34] How do you populate data with unrealistic data? It depends on how big the application is, but larger ones generate ten to twenty thousand records. For these, Dave uses Active Record Import. He used the Faker Gem to create fakes names. Without using Active Record Import it would take ten to fifteen minutes to 50,000 but instead it took two minutes with using it, saving a lot of time. Picks Dave: Gem in a box Active Record Import Eric: udemy – Stephen Grider Code Sponsor Charles: Audible Meditation app Find something that helps you re-center Ruby Dev Summit
RR 324: Developer Horror Stories The panel for this episode of Ruby Rogues is Dave Kimura, Eric Berry, and Charles Max Well. They are telling developer horror stories this week. Tune in to listen to their stories! [00:01:40] Eric’s Story Eric tells a story that happened today. He was working on a report on live data at work. While doing this, he sent texts to hundreds of people that shouldn’t be getting them. The moral of the story is that everyone makes mistakes, even seasoned developers. [00:02:58] How could that have been avoided? Eric has a fail-safe that has to override with an environment variable so that it won’t truncate the tables. Once that happens, no messages will be sent. He works at a company, which is a B to C texting platform that allows customer retention through mass, etc. He commented out stuff, not realizing that it would start sending messages. He needed live data to generate reports so he did not truncate the data. His advice is not to comment out code until you know why you are doing so. Dave says that same thing can also happen with an email service. Instead of commenting out code, make sure they are set up to a mail server or mail dev to where it actually never sends out to the real world but stays in a send box environment. Amazon SES has a way to do this where things stay internally. [00:05:10] Dave’s Story Around seven years ago Dave needed to store some images. He did not want to use a storage on the local computer because he would have multiple web servers and he did not want to use external storage because he was “lazy.” So he stored the images in the database. It worked for years until one day he saw that the table was 30 GB, which was much larger than it should have been. He had to extract and rewrite because any test to undo it would be substantial. It would be a long running process because 30 GB is a lot of data. In hindsight, Dave’s advice is that you don’t have to prematurely optimize but you also don’t have to make bad decisions. Do not store globs of binary data in your database. If it can be stored as a jpeg, do that. [00:08:04] Charles’ Story Charles’ story focuses on time zones. He was working on test first development. He wrote tests for a feature and his coworker checked them. The database was running in UTC and doing checks in Mountain Time, so the checks would fail from 6pm until midnight. The CI server would show that tests were not passing for a chunk of the day. It was a simple fix. He learned that you can write a test that passes but may be overlooking something simple that may change when in a different place or a different time. [00:11:05] Errors Errors are hard to track down. The hardest ones to find are the ones that only happen occasionally. The worst ones are those that are critical errors that only happen occasionally. Because they only happen sometimes, it is hard to know how to fix them. [00:19:13] Using a Technology Too Soon Eric used a technology too soon, which was Rails. Nobody could take over once he left the company. He had to go back to the company and rebuild it in PHP so that others could use it. The lesson from this mistake is that when you chose a technology you have to choose one that supports the buzz factor. Everyone has a responsibility to the people they are working for to add value. If you leave them with a maintenance nightmare you are not helping, you are hurting. Make sure you are locking things down. [00:22:35] Gems and Poll Requests Dave watches Gems to see what and how often they are updating. He checks to see if his poll request was accepted and reverts back to the original gem. He calls it “free maintenance from other people.” He doesn’t think you should deviate from it too much. An option is to use a proxy as well. [00:27:41] Have you ever had to make patches in your Rails app knowing that those patches were coming in a future release? Eric has had to in the past. His mentor had to patch Rails, apply it, but every time it ran it said, “if you upgrade rails, upgrade me.” It was a reminder to make sure everyone stays in sync. [00:29:30] Migration Dave and Charles have both had problems with migration. Take snapshots of database before you use migrations. The moral of story is if you’re going to migrate data, make sure you back up your database before you change the data. And don’t do data modifications in your migrations. Also set up a replica of your database. There is no excuse except for laziness or inexperience. [00:32:10] Materialized views. Eric used to work for social media company that had a lot of data coming in from various forms of social media. Helped build sub products that handled intake of data. Decided to use materialized views. It is a view that self updates as data changes in the database. In other words, it creates a fake table and can simplify the application side of things. It got a little messy and they had no idea what was updating things when. Because of this, they had to convert the materialized views to stored procedures. The materialized views killed the database because it triggered things when it shouldn’t be. [00:37:23] Caching Caching is a big problem with development. There are complex cache keys built around different queries and combinations of objects. There is a value with using caches but there is a caution with not using caches too early. A lot of problems have resulted from caching wrong results. The moral is to measure and make sure that you are working on the right problems. Sometimes premature optimization does not matter. Sometimes caching is just not needed and messes programs up rather than helping them. [00:40:34] How do you populate data with unrealistic data? It depends on how big the application is, but larger ones generate ten to twenty thousand records. For these, Dave uses Active Record Import. He used the Faker Gem to create fakes names. Without using Active Record Import it would take ten to fifteen minutes to 50,000 but instead it took two minutes with using it, saving a lot of time. Picks Dave: Gem in a box Active Record Import Eric: udemy – Stephen Grider Code Sponsor Charles: Audible Meditation app Find something that helps you re-center Ruby Dev Summit
Companies around the world are using Amazon Simple Email Service (Amazon SES) to send millions of emails to their customers every day, and scaling linearly, at cost. In this session, you learn how to use the scalable and reliable infrastructure of Amazon SES. In addition, Netflix talks about their advanced Messaging program, their challenges, how SES helped them with their goals, and how they architected their solution for global scale and deliverability.
This time out we had PHP community icon Cal “Doesn’t Follow Chris On Twitter” Evans on to discuss the traveling minstrel show known as NomadPHP, the awesomeness of Day Camp 4 Developers, his thoughts on how Mailchimp handled The Mandrill Issue, and helped trigger Chris in to an epic rant. Chris also hopes that Cal has not noticed he hadn’t finished that thing he was supposed to do for him yet. It will be done really soon! We’ll be giving away 4 free tickets to the Day Camp 4 Developers on Modern PHP on April 22, 2016! Sign up for our mailing list now to enter the drawing! Don’t forget about our special offer for listeners! Get 50% off Backup Pro’s CMS plugins by using the promo code devhell! And get trials of Backup Pro for ExpressionEngine 2, ExpressionEngine 3, Craft, WordPress, PrestaShop, and Concrete5! Do these things! Check out our sponsors Backup Pro, Roave and WonderNetwork Get 50% off Backup Pro’s services by using the promo code devhell Buy stickers at devhell.info/shop Follow us on Twitter here Rate us on iTunes here Listen Download now (MP3, 59.9MB, 1:23:23) Links and Notes One of Sean Connery’s finest scenes Chris' favourite movie Guy who harpooned the FedEx pilots NomadPHP Day Camp 4 Developers Box Lunch Josh Holmes Josh Lockhart Josh’s Lockhart’s Modern PHP Book The SlimPHP microframework Lorna Jane’s website Rob Allen (who took a very popular picture of Chris) New Zealand developer Chris Pitt Aaron Piotrowski Icicle Sara Golemon The 12th Man I can’t wait to use HHJVM Patrick McKenzie MailChimp’s thought-provoking post about the future of Mandrill Amazon SES Mailgun SendGrid SparkPost Feedbin Feedly
Дайджест: http://habrahabr.ru/post/263261 Обсуждаемые темы: http://www.daymuse.com/blogs/drupal-admin-theme-mobile-modules-menu-tutorial DrupalVM http://www.midwesternmac.com/blogs/jeff-geerling/major-improvements-drupal-vm Cointrib vs custom http://www.webomelette.com/go-custom-or-use-contributed-module Multilingual hacks http://www.drupal8multilingual.org/hacks BackDrop https://drupalwatchdog.com/volume-5/issue-1/build-it-backdrop Paragraphs as concept, and http://www.paulrowell.com/my-thoughts/repeatable-fieldsets-drupal-paragraphs Drupal as rest backend, http://fourword.fourkitchens.com/article/twittv-launches-content-api-and-headless-drupal-site http://www.erpal.info/blog/blog/how-were-building-our-saas-business-with-drupal TFA https://www.drupal.org/node/2536034 Mandrill vs Amazon SES https://www.drupal.org/project/mandrill A-camp http://a-camp.ru Подписаться на дайджест: http://eepurl.com/bhCjRb .
DKSpeaks Podcast: Internet Marketing, Blogging and Social Media Tips
Pinterest0 Facebook 0 Twitter 0 LinkedIn WhatsApp 0Shares “The Money is in the List” is something that you hear the moment you jump into internet marketing and it follows you whenever and wherever you go. And the fact that every experienced internet marketer tells you that the money is indeed in the list, goes to establish the fact that your list is your biggest asset and that it is the most important thing in your business. When I started my business, I never really cared about a list. Traffic generation was simple and Google Adwords and other ads networks were also very cheap. I built a lot of micro niche websites and I was able to generate huge amounts of traffic to these sites. I made and these sites did extremely well. But the biggest mistake that I did was – not build and email list. I never really cared about the “Money is in the list” thing because I was making money and that was all I cared. The next couple of years saw a lot of things change on the internet. The traffic to my sites dropped because they were not optimized and some of them did not even follow the guidelines from Google. Some got penalized and yet others dropped of the rankings. As traffic dropped, the money went down. And finally one day, by the time I could realize what was happening, pretty much all my sites were down. I am sure you don’t want to be in that situation. With the changing internet marketing world and the difficulty in generating traffic and visitors to your content and offers, the efforts that you are putting into generating every single visitor is huge. At the same time, the value of every single visitor coming to your website has increased. If you are not able to capture this visitor in the form of an email address, then you are losing a lot of money. If you haven’t yet started building your list, then start right away. Don’t waste time on planning and designing. Just launch it. Keep in mind that you will need some good and reliable tools in your list building efforts. I recommend using Aweber for your auto-responder. If you are looking for a self-hosted solution, you can use IMSC rapid mailer and use Amazon SES services to send your email. For building beautiful and high converting optin pages and landing pages, I recommend, Thrive Content Builder and Thrive leads. They are cost-effective and has a lot of features as well. Now, you have built your list. What next? Email Marketing Best Practices Building your list is important. It is equally important to manage it as well. One of the biggest mistakes that most people do is to ignore the list after you have built it. You don’t want a dead list where your subscribers don’t respond at all. Neither do you want to be building a list where your subscribers are unsubscribing faster than the rate at which they are subscribing. These 4 email marketing best practices that we are going to discuss today will help you build and manage an email list that is responsive and at the same time profitable. The Confirmation pages – I see a lot of people using the default subscription confirmation pages, which we also call the “thank-you” page, for the optin forms. These pages are hosted by the auto-responder services and have nothing but a message to the subscribers to confirm their email. This is sheer waste of a chance to better interact with you new subscribers. Build a custom thank-you page and give it your branding. You might want to personalize it while telling them who you are are. You might want to add a photograph of yours so that they know who you are. I prefer using this same photograph in almost all of my emails. People digest things better if presented visually. Rather than remembering my name, it will be easier for them to relate to my photograph. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/dkspeaks/message
Today we talk about PaywithaTweet.com an interesting idea that I could get to work (see video below) and we start a discussion on leaving aweber manage your email list(s) using Wordpress abd Raoid Mailer plugin. Pay With a Tweet This is an interesting idea. It seems simple to use, except when I tweeted it, I got an error message and never got my download. http://youtu.be/t8RedefjnDY Rapid Mailer - Gain Complete Control of Your Mailing List Rapid Mailer is a Wordpress plugin that allows you to: Rapid-Mailer-ReviewChoose Between using your hosting mail system or a third party like Amazon SES You can have a mailing list that people have to pay to subscribe Powerful importing of existing subscribers from any other Autoresponder in just a few clicks Real-time “At-a-Glance” statistics and tracking of your email marketing campaigns Integrated click tracking and shortlink support for rapid tracking of who clicks what… Direct social media integration to increase viral spread for all your emails… The offline version of any email for easy html viewing offline by the reader Easy segmenting lists into groups for rapid management and sorting Use Host, Gmail, or third party services like Amazon SES, SendGrid, Mandril, MailJet and more… Easy double optin or single option configuration, no forced options here… Simple integration into OptimizePress2, Leadpages, ListRocket or any other system Avoid expensive monthly fees and use your own host's mailing capabilities Full autoresponder setup and broadcast management, ready to go in a few clicks… Quick, the responsive dashboard shows you everything you need to know quickly… Can be managed from your phone, tablet or desktop, email marketing on the go… Create pre-made “Content” templates for rapid creation of amazing email Easily customize and import themes for branded mailing… Ultimate flexibility Click Here for More Information