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Welcome to the SLT “You Got Next” series This series is dedicated to the athlete/actor/entrepreneur who doesn't ask for any recognition but continues to push themselves to limits that many didn't think they had. We see you and we want to let the world know who you are... we present to you the SLT next series and Amy Ingram @CoachIngram10 has "Got Next" Make sure you subscribe, like and follow us on IG, Twitter and Facebook @sportlifetalk. You can watch the live streamed show on our Sportslifetalk Facebook page and on our YouTube channel. She is the lego master of basketball because she loves rebuilding programs. Join us as we welcome Kaufman's Girl's basketball Head Coach Amy Ingram to the SLT family.
Welcome to the 29th episode. This episode I spoke with I would say a big inspiration on my work ethic and ideas when it comes to the theatre scene here in Australia. Amy Ingram. Amy is a director, actor, producer, and kind of all-around theatre maker. If any of those professions interest you then stick around. I found Amys perspective on the industry one of hustling and keeping a level of realism while also maintaining a clear passion for it. As always if you'd like to get in touch with the podcast then send an email to anactorandamic@gmail.com or swing a message to the Facebook page.
Anxiety is a normal response to rising tensions, but there an abnormal responses far more helpful. Dan and Akin squeeze a research paper that investigates the 'paradox mindset' and its benefits. - Research Paper: 'Microfoundations of Organizational Paradox: The Problem is How We Think about the Problem' by Ella Miron-Spektor, Amy Ingram, Joshua Keller, Wendy K. Smith and Marianne W. Lewis
BKS Pod | Cut the Crap | Episode 2 It’s Okay to Fail Four business leaders, colleagues, mothers, and friends have decided to Cut the Crap and discuss what it means to be genuine in business. Hard-working and well-recognized insurance professionals Laura Sherman, Elizabeth Krystyn, Kelly Nash and Amy Ingram team up and get real […] The post BKS Pod | Cut the Crap | Episode 2 appeared first on BKS-Partners.
BKS Pod | Cut the Crap | Episode 3 Don’t Doubt Yourself Four business leaders, colleagues, mothers, and friends have decided to Cut the Crap and discuss what it means to be genuine in business. Hard-working and well-recognized insurance professionals Laura Sherman, Elizabeth Krystyn, Kelly Nash and Amy Ingram team up and get real […] The post BKS Pod | Cut the Crap | Episode 3 appeared first on BKS-Partners.
"Amy Ingram is a former Disney World entertainer who presently teaches high school. Originally from Kissimmee, Flordia, she now resides in Indiana with her two teenagers and two amazing doggies." Amy is amazing when it comes to anyone, as it turns out. Good thing two. Special thanks to the White Stallion Bisrto.
Eメールを使ったパーソナルアシスタントサービスのX.AIを紹介します。 https://x.ai/ X.AIは、Eメールを使うだけで最適なスケジューリングをしてくれるAIパーソナルアシスタントサービスです。AIパーソナルアシスタントには 「Amy Ingram」(エイミー・イングラム)という名前が付いています。「エイミー」と呼ばれています。 専用のアプリをインストールする必要もないです。Eメールだけで利用できるサービスです。
The interview with Jim Palmer was recorded (length: 51 minutes) on May 23, with the Ringr app. During our conversation, we talk about Jim's new book, Just Say Yes, his coaching business, and the new floating home. You could say it is a small world when you find out that Jessica Rhodes of InterviewConnections.com, is Jim's daughter. Her colleague, Sue Morton (expert podcast matchmaker, client happiness), reached out to me through the service called PodcastGuests.com. After my personal assistant of X.ai, Amy Ingram (powered by artificial intelligence), got confused about the scheduling of the interview, Jim's wife, Stephanie Palmer, picked up the conversation thread and coordinated the booking. Another tidbit: After the interview, I connected with Jim on LinkedIn and saw that he had studied at the same university (Southern New Hampshire University) as yours truly. Here are some links to books, resources, and sites, mentioned during the first half of the show: Jim Palmer on Twitter @getjimpalmer John Jantsch of Duct Tape Marketing The Referral Engine: Teaching Your Business to Market Itself Just Say Yes: Create Your Dream Business and Live Your Dream Lifestyle Expert Secrets: The Underground Playbook for Finding Your Message, Building a Tribe, and Changing the World Trader Principle - The Ayn Rand Lexicon You will find more show notes on the blog in July, after I am back on track with the backlog of recorded interviews.
The interview with Jim Palmer was recorded (length: 51 minutes) on May 23, with the Ringr app. During our conversation, we talk about Jim's new book, Just Say Yes, his coaching business, and the new floating home. You could say it is a small world when you find out that Jessica Rhodes of InterviewConnections.com, is Jim's daughter. Her colleague, Sue Morton (expert podcast matchmaker, client happiness), reached out to me through the service called PodcastGuests.com. After my personal assistant of X.ai, Amy Ingram (powered by artificial intelligence), got confused about the scheduling of the interview, Jim's wife, Stephanie Palmer, picked up the conversation thread and coordinated the booking. Another tidbit: After the interview, I connected with Jim on LinkedIn and saw that he had studied at the same university (Southern New Hampshire University) as yours truly. Here are some links to books, resources, and sites, mentioned during the first half of the show: Jim Palmer on Twitter @getjimpalmer John Jantsch of Duct Tape Marketing The Referral Engine: Teaching Your Business to Market Itself Just Say Yes: Create Your Dream Business and Live Your Dream Lifestyle Expert Secrets: The Underground Playbook for Finding Your Message, Building a Tribe, and Changing the World Trader Principle - The Ayn Rand Lexicon You will find more show notes on the blog in July, after I am back on track with the backlog of recorded interviews.
Lisa Picarille, Jim Kukral, Shawn Collins, and Sam Harrelson reunite for an episode of Cast of Geeks. This month, they discuss the future(s) of affiliate marketing, influencer marketing, engagement and Facebook Pages, the rise of messaging, Amazon’s Kindle Store policies, and whether or not augmented reality will catch on with the general public. Meet Amy | x.ai x.ai on Product Hunt A Year in the Life of Amy | x.ai Review of Amy Ingram | Business Insider Amy’s War Chest | TechCrunch Affiliate Summit Author Marketing Club Izea Dude Perfect Amazon Kindle Unlimited Facebook Pages Engagement | KISS Metrics Snapchat and Marketing | Social Media Examiner HTC Vive | HTC The post Cast of Geeks 58: Small Wonders appeared first on Thinking.FM.
Dr. Thomas J. Whitley and Rev. Sam Harrelson discuss the gender politics of Sam’s new personal assistant, language as a power mechanism, a listener question about Paul’s Gospel, and what in the world The Donald is thinking. Show Notes Meet Amy | x.ai x.ai on Product Hunt A Year in the Life of Amy | x.ai Review of Amy Ingram | Business Insider How virtual assistants could change home and life | CBS This Morning In Women We Trust? | Silicon Angle Bible Verses Where “Behold” Has Been Replaced With “Look, Buddy” | The Toast The Emoji Bible and Bourgeois Legitimation | Marginalia Galatians 4 The post Thinking Religion: An Eclectic Text appeared first on Thinking.FM.
The Twenty Minute VC: Venture Capital | Startup Funding | The Pitch
Matt Turck is Managing Director of FirstMark Capital where he invests across a broad range of early-stage enterprise and consumer startups. Prior to FirstMark, he was a Managing Director at Bloomberg Ventures, the investment and incubation arm of Bloomberg LP. Previously, Matt was the co-founder of TripleHop Technologies, a venture-backed enterprise search software startup that was acquired by Oracle. Matt organizes two large monthly events, Data Driven NYC (focuses on Big Data and AI) and Hardwired NYC(focuses on IOT, AR/VR, drones). At Firstmark, Matt has made investments in the likes of Sketchfab, Sense 360 and the much loved X.ai with Amy Ingram as your personal secretary. In Today’s Episode You Will Learn: 1.) How did Matt make his way into the world of VC? 2.) What does big data really mean? With the cool kids in the data world moving on to obsessing over AI, is big data still a ‘thing’ in 2016? 3.) Why is now the time for big data? What has enabled big data to have sudden mass utility across a variety of applications? 4.) How does Matt view the integration of big data and AI? Is AI helping big data deliver it’s promise? 5.) How can we combat the incumbency advantage of large companies owning the majority of datasets? How can startups access similar datasets? Items Mentioned In Today’s Episode: Matt’s Fave Blog: AVC, Chris Dixon, Brad Feld, Wait But Why Matt’s Most Recent Investment: Hyperscience As always you can follow The Twenty Minute VC, Harry and Matt on Twitter here! If you would like to see a more colourful side to Harry with many a mojito session, you can follow him on Instagram here! The Twenty Minute VC is brought to you by Leesa, the Warby Parker or TOMS shoes of the mattress industry. Lees have done away with the terrible mattress showroom buying experience by creating a luxury premium foam mattress that is order completely online and ships for free to your doorstep. The 10 inch mattress comes in all sizes and is engineered with 3 unique foam layers for a universal, adaptive feel, including 2 inches of memory foam and 2 inches of a really cool latex foam called Avena, design to keep you cool. All Leesa mattresses are 100% US or UK made and for every 10 mattresses they sell, they donate one to a shelter. Go to Leesa.com/VC and enter the promo code VC75 to get $75 off!
Today's show features the creator of the landmark Javascript framework, AngularJS. I spoke to Misko Hevery about the rise of Angular in our current, "Good Parts JS" ECMAScript 5 world, how it evolved, and his focus on the next chapter, Angular 2.0. My second guests, Alex Poon and Matt Casey, have created the AI-based digital assistant, Amy Ingram, for coordinating meeting schedules by reading and responding to real email texts and learning your preferences. The post TechCast #84 – AngularJS creator Misko Hevery on Angular 2.0 and x.ai team on Amy Ingram, A/I calendar assistant appeared first on Chariot Solutions.
Imagine a world where everyone could have a personal assistant to schedule meetings for them. Checking in with your team? Ask for it by next Friday and it shows up on your calendar a few minutes later. Drinks with friends? Handled. This is no longer the luxury of executives. Human assistants, even outsourced to foreign countries, are still pretty costly. But a robot, one that lives inside your email and calendar, that's cheap and could catch on. If it works. "I think it is inevitable that we will reach that point in time where we simply cannot allow you to do a task as simple as this," Dennis Mortensen, CEO of X.AI In this episode, we test out a new breed of personal assistant. Her, or its, name is Amy Ingram. She's plucky, tenacious, and loves arranging meetings. In contrast to Apple's Siri, Google Now or Microsoft's Cortana, Amy is specialized on one thing and one thing only: scheduling. A new and increasingly common type of software, Amy isn't a program you download, or an app you install. "I'm just really grateful that I can have that time back to be productive.... I've been in heaven honestly," Jonathan Lehr, Co-Founder of Workbench and user of Amy the robot assistant. You simply email her a request like you would a human—she has her own email address—and Amy comes to understand your natural language. Then she takes over the email ping pong with your friends and colleagues and hashes out the details until a meeting is set. Sound like salvation? In theory. We put her to the test. And also had a little fun using Amy as a daft Turing test on our friends to see if they would know the difference between a robot and a person. Along the way we found out a few dirty secrets about human nature that pop up when you are trying to program a robot helper. Like when our producer Alex tried to break Amy's will. "For some reason when you know it is a machine the impulse is: I am going to make her cry," Dennis Mortensen. Next week on the podcast, we'll cover the human cost of automation from job loss to craving that human touch. Subscribe on iTunes, or on Stitcher, TuneIn, I Heart Radio, or anywhere else using our RSS feed. And follow us on Twitter @NewTechCity. * A note: Since the taping of this podcast, Amy and X.AI can now interface with more than just Google Calendar.