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Take the 2026 AI Engineering Survey and get >$2k in credits and AIE WF tickets!On the product side, everyone is getting Computer - Perplexity, Manus, Cursor, and so on. Meanwhile on the research side, agentic evals like TerminalBench and GDPVal are also assuming computer (Harbor). On both ends, the consolidating LLM OS stack has become a standard toolkit, and Daytona is one of a small set of AI Infra companies that are booming because of it.“The end of localhost” has been Ivan Burazin's obsession for more than a decade.Something that is all too familiar…Long before agents became the default way people talked about software development, Ivan was already chasing the idea that development should not depend on a fragile local machine. CodeAnywhere, one of the first browser-based IDEs, was an early attempt at that future: move the development environment into the cloud, make setup reproducible, and free developers from the endless “works on my machine” tax.The thesis was directionally right, but the market wasn't ready yet.However, agents changed that. They do not care about a laptop, desk setup, or favorite editor. They need a computer they can access through an API: something stateful enough to keep working, fast enough to spin up instantly, flexible enough to resize, isolated enough to be safe, and composable enough to run the messy real-world workflows that real software engineering actually requires.Daytona isn't just selling “sandboxes” in the narrow code-execution sense. It is the latest version of Ivan's original localhost thesis.In this episode, Daytona's CEO joins swyx to explain why AI agents need more than code execution boxes: they need composable computers, stateful sandboxes, instant startup, dynamic resources, and infrastructure that can survive workloads going from zero to 100,000 CPUs.We go deep on the new agent compute market: Daytona's hard pivot from human dev environments to AI sandboxes, the New Year's Eve MVP that customers begged for, why Daytona runs on bare metal with its own scheduler, how one customer runs almost 850,000 sandboxes a day, and why RL/eval workloads went from 0% to roughly 50% of usage in just months. Ivan also explains why agents need Windows and macOS machines, why CLI may matter more than MCP, why Kubernetes is painful for this workload, and why the future AI cloud may look more like Stripe than AWS.We discuss:* How Daytona grew out of CodeAnywhere, Shift, and the “end of localhost” thesis* Why Daytona pivoted from human dev environments to AI sandboxes* Why agents need composable computers instead of disposable code execution boxes* The New Year's Eve MVP that customers chased API keys for* Why Daytona chose bare metal, stateful snapshots, and its own scheduler* How Daytona spins up one sandbox in ~60ms and 50,000 sandboxes in ~75 seconds* Why Daytona's biggest customer runs ~850,000 sandboxes a day* How RL/eval workloads create zero-to-100,000 CPU spikes* Why RL workloads went from 0% to roughly 50% of Daytona usage* Why customers compare Daytona against EKS/GKS and say they're “never going back”* Why every AI agent may need a computer, including Windows and macOS environments* The Apple licensing constraints that make macOS sandboxes hard* Why CLI gives agents more power than MCP* How open source helps agents integrate Daytona* Why agent-generated PRs may break today's CI/CD assumptions* Why AI SaaS companies reselling tokens may face a cold shower* Why the AI cloud may look more like Stripe than AWSIvan Burazin* LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/ivanburazin* X: https://x.com/ivanburazinDaytona* Website: https://www.daytona.io* X: https://x.com/daytonaioTimestamps* 00:00:00 Hook* 00:01:12 Introduction* 00:03:15 CodeAnywhere, Shift, and the end of localhost* 00:05:58 What Daytona is: composable computers for AI agents* 00:08:07 The pivot from dev environments to AI sandboxes* 00:10:17 The New Year's Eve MVP and customers begging for API keys* 00:12:56 Bare metal, stateful sandboxes, and Daytona's scheduler* 00:17:28 60ms startup, 50,000 sandboxes, and 850K daily runs* 00:21:53 Spiky RL/eval workloads and the new agent infra problem* 00:28:12 RL workloads, Kubernetes pain, and dynamic resizing* 00:33:31 Why every AI agent needs a computer* 00:38:48 macOS sandboxes and Apple's licensing problem* 00:44:28 Why CLI may matter more than MCP* 00:48:11 Open source, GitHub stars, and agent integration* 00:53:11 Git, CI/CD, and agent collaboration bottlenecks* 00:58:15 Founder life and building a 25-person infra company* 01:02:44 AI SaaS, token resale, and API-first business models* 01:06:10 GPU sandboxes, data centers, and compute growth* 01:09:48 Why the AI cloud may look more like Stripe than AWS* 01:11:26 Closing thoughtsTranscriptIntroduction: Daytona, CodeAnywhere, and the End of LocalhostSwyx [00:00:02]: Okay, we're in the studio with Ivan Burazin, CEO of Daytona. Welcome.Ivan [00:00:07]: Thanks for having me, man.Swyx [00:00:08]: Ivan, you and I go back.Ivan [00:00:10]: Way back.Swyx [00:00:11]: How I don't even know how, you found, did you reach out or, for Shift.Ivan [00:00:17]: I reached out to you. The reason was you - we were just - we were thinking about I was one of the co-founders of CodeAnywhere, the first browser-based IDE, and so we were thinking a long time of, localhost should die. And you had this article.Swyx [00:00:29]: End of localhost.Ivan [00:00:30]: Then I reached out to you because of that, and then we talked, and I was actually at a different job and learning about I was the head of, developer experience, and you were quite well-versed in that, and I actually reached out to you, among other people, how do we go about that? What are the key things and whatnot at this point in time? And you were nice enough to take the call, and I remember I was late on your call with you.Swyx [00:00:51]: I don't remember.Ivan [00:00:52]: I remember because I was with my then I'm thinking of a girlfriend or wife at that point in time, I'm not sure. It's the same person, so that's great, and I was late ‘cause we were, in, Italy on, vacation, and then I was late for something. I felt so bad, and you were so nice to be, good about.Swyx [00:01:10]: The reason I'm nice is because I'm also late to other people, so it's like, who's, who's without sin here, yeah, so I have to, for those who don't know, InfoBip Shift, there's this whole thing that, you did in the past, and, and that was basically one of the inspirations for me starting AI Engineer, which is like, I have to thank you for giving me that push to be like, “Oh, you can, you can build and sell conferences?”Ivan [00:01:34]: I remember you asked you asked me at the beginning to give me advisory shares, and I was so focused on what we were doing, I said no, and I should've took the advisory shares. So I'm sorry, dude. But anyway.Swyx [00:01:43]: We're not, we're not venture backed.Ivan [00:01:44]: No, it doesn't matter.Swyx [00:01:45]: It's Yeah, anyway, so I think what's impressive about you is that CodeAnywhere is the thing that you've been trying to build, and, you kind of put it on hold and then came back after InfoBip. Just give us the story, do you - the story and the origin story, going into Daytona.From CodeAnywhere and Shift to DaytonaIvan [00:02:05]: Sure. Like, really way back, me and my co-founder have been together. I say this, I've said this multiple times, it's like we were married and divorced and married. Some people actually ask me is my co-founder my partner. they thought it literally. It's not literally, but we have done multiple companies together, and to your point, we had this shift where we went from the CodeAnywhere to the conference called Shift, and then back to, Daytona. We originally started stacking servers, doing like virtualization in the early 2000s and, routers and doing basically all these things, at a foundational level, and that was a services company which we sold to focus on what my co-founder actually invented, which was the very first browser-based IDE, right, I say the first. Before us was actually Heroku. They did it for a very short time until they became Heroku. But outside of them, we were the only one, and it was called.Swyx [00:02:55]: There was Cloud9.Ivan [00:02:57]: Cloud9 came out slightly after us. There was Replit, which came out when we stopped doing it, Replit came out, and they have been successful since then, which is great. There was Nitrous.io. There was quite a few that existed at the time, but it was like too early. But the interesting part is that we, at that point in time, because there was no VS Code, there was no Kubernetes, and Docker had just started when we Or I'm not sure if it was even public at that point in time. And so we had to build everything to the whole stack ourselves and that was the key learning that we brought into and that we've been using in Daytona today. So it was super early. There's about 3 million people used CodeAnywhere. It was slightly, it was angel-backed more than venture-backed. We ended up paying everyone back because it didn't have that sort of scale. But, three years ago, we started something similar with Daytona, which is not what we are today, but it was automating dev environments for human engineers, the basically the underlying stack of CodeAnywhere. And then we did a hard pivot last January to sandboxes. And so here we are.Swyx [00:04:01]: Historic pivot, yeah, and, it's one of those things where, I had independently invested in CodeAnywhere, but also in E2B, and then both of you pivoted into the same thing, and I'm like, “F**k.”Ivan [00:04:12]: You invested, you invested in Daytona. You invested in Daytona. But you were the first If we had not got your check, we wouldn't have done it.Swyx [00:04:18]: No way.Ivan [00:04:19]: No, it was like, “We have to get him on board first,” and you were that kicker that we, that got us off the ground.Swyx [00:04:23]: No, because you were putting me on your pitch deck, man. I was like, “Man, this is like a good trip if I don't invest.”Ivan [00:04:29]: That's because it was your quote. It's like we.Swyx [00:04:30]: Yeah. It's the end of localhost.Ivan [00:04:31]: Did a bunch of research about end of localhost and who was interested in that,.Swyx [00:04:34]: No, that's like, I put, I wrote that blog post, and every single company in that field reached out to me, and then every VC who was receiving those pitches then also had to call me and, talk it, talk through it with me.Ivan [00:04:47]: It's finally happening though.Swyx [00:04:48]: It was really super interesting.Ivan [00:04:48]: It's finally happening.Swyx [00:04:49]: It's finally happening.Ivan [00:04:49]: Yeah, it's finally.Swyx [00:04:49]: It's finally happening, with maybe sort of non-human users. Yeah, so what is Daytona today? Let's get like a quick description. I'm wearing the shirt.What Daytona Is Today: Composable Computers for AI AgentsIvan [00:04:58]: You're wearing the shirt. Yes,.Swyx [00:04:59]: It says, I think your branding is very good. Like, it's very consistent. It runs AI code. Like, it cannot be simpler.Ivan [00:05:05]: Exactly, but we're gonna probably have to change that.Swyx [00:05:07]: Oh, s**t.Ivan [00:05:07]: It's also a subset of what we do. Unfortunately, we really love this, Run AI Code is super simple. People interpret it different ways. I think we've given out 5,000, 6,000 of these shirts. People wear them with pride because it doesn't really market about us.Swyx [00:05:21]: Yeah, Daytona's on the back.Ivan [00:05:22]: It markets the back. It markets to the person itself, so I think we did a really good job on that one. But it is also a subset of what we do, because people, when they think about Run AI Code, they just think about these small, let's call it isolates, code execution boxes that, you send some code, you get an output. Whereas what Daytona is today is essentially composable computers for AI agents. It is, the market calls them sandboxes which can be misleading.Swyx [00:05:44]: All these things. All these things on.Ivan [00:05:45]: Yeah, exactly, ‘cause it can be misleading ‘cause people usually think about sandboxes as a demo or a test environment versus a production-grade environment. But what Daytona does, if you think of the laptop that you have in front of you or the computer that's over there, or, my wife is an architect, so she has like a Windows with a 3D graphics card inside to do 3D rendering. Like, as humans, we have different computers or different compositions of computers. And our belief is strongly that agents today and going forward will need all these different compositions of computers to do different types of tasks. And so we offer that basically through an API.Swyx [00:06:19]: Yeah, to give people - I'm trying to sort of front-load all the aha moments or the wow moments so that people can, stay engaged and click like and subscribe. the market is exploding, right? Like, you have been reporting 74% month-on-month growth, and it also, it's just been growing for a while. Like, it's been going like this. And every single - It's not just you guys. It's every single.Ivan [00:06:41]: Everyone, yeah.Swyx [00:06:42]: Sort of, compute provider. I don't know if you agree with me saying compute provider or not.Ivan [00:06:48]: It's fine.Swyx [00:06:48]: Yeah. So like organically PLG-driven growth, but also enterprise is doing super well, I think I wanna rewind to January of last year when you did the pivot. Like, so you obviously called this market early, and you were positioned for it, and you are now one of the market leaders. But what was the insight that made you do the pivot?The Pivot: From Human Dev Environments to Agent SandboxesIvan [00:07:06]: The insight that made us do this pivot is the quarter before that, so end of 2024, when we had - Basically, we did a demo with - I don't I think we discussed this as well, Devin was not public. You actually gave me access to Devin at that time. So Devin.Swyx [00:07:25]: I did?Ivan [00:07:26]: Yeah, you gave me access.Swyx [00:07:26]: I don't think I was supposed.Ivan [00:07:27]: Yeah, exactly.Swyx [00:07:28]: Yeah, I.Ivan [00:07:28]: So it doesn't matter. You.Swyx [00:07:29]: Yeah. I gave like three friends access.Ivan [00:07:31]: Yeah, or it was a call and you showed it to me. It doesn't matter. but OpenDevin was available, which is now called OpenHands. And so we're like, “Oh, this seems to be a thing. This is not public. Let's take our for human automation of dev environments and take, OpenDevin and launch that as a SaaS.” And we did that. Not very many people signed up and used it, but a lot of people reached out that were building agents, and they were like, “Hey, my agent needs a compute sandbox runtime,” whatever you wanna call it. I forgot what it was called at that point. And then we were like, “Oh, amazing. This is a new market. Here is our infrastructure. Here's our product, and go.” And what we found really fast, soon, was that people did not like what we had built. It didn't work. And I remember talking to people at the beginning when we're doing this, the sandbox we're building for agents. People were like, “Oh, why is it different? It's the same thing. We have like EC2, we have VMs, we have all these things.” But we saw that everyone we gave it to, it was like 20, 30 people, they all said, “No.” Like, “This is not what we need. This sort of breaks.” And basically, me and my co-founder not knowing a lot about - ‘cause we're infra people. We're not AI people. So I basically took it upon myself to like watch every single podcast that exists, including all of, all of these and all that, and sort of get up to date, read all the blogs, like get, understand what's going on.Swyx [00:08:45]: Do you wanna shout out who else was useful, just in case people are also looking.Ivan [00:08:49]: Generally we -, I looked at There's a few of podcast, different segments and different types. So there's you guys, No Priors, Bill Gurley's was great while.Swyx [00:09:04]: VG2, yeah.Ivan [00:09:05]: Yeah, while it was around. So there's a few. 20VC is interesting from a different dynamic, and some are different dynamic. But there was, also Red Points.Swyx [00:09:14]: We're not really about the compute market.Ivan [00:09:15]: It was also already - Sorry?Swyx [00:09:16]: You're, you want - You're looking at the agent infra market.Ivan [00:09:19]: I was looking at the agent market and the AI market in general and sort of understanding who are the players, what the perception, and how that goes. And like obviously you complement this with like going to conferences, going to events, going to meetups, reading white papers, like doing all the things that you have to do to understand what's happening. And so when we figured, when we sort of had an idea of what we had to build, literally over the New Year's Eve, literally on New Year's Eve, I half vibe coded the first MVP, first minimal viable product of what Daytona is today. And I went to sleep at like 3:00 AM or something like that. I was doing - I just put my like baby daughter and wife to sleep and, Happy New Year's, and go back to just, doing this. And I sent it to my co-founder, my CTO, and he saw it in the morning. He's like, “This is absolute garbage.” “Do not show this to anybody at all, but the idea is good.” And so he took two weeks, and he rebuilt it.Swyx [00:10:09]: Did it like look like that? Listen, I - It was rough idea.Ivan [00:10:12]: Oh, not even, not even close. Like it was it was way worse. But it was like a very - It was a simplistic view of what it should be. Like, it worked, but it was not ideal. And so he went, we went down the whole, which is his job as CTO, to go, and he came back with this version. We then called all the people that had said like, “This is garbage,” a quarter ago. And we set up these calls, and we gave it to - We just demoed it to everyone. And all the calls went long, every single one. They were 15-minute calls, and they all went to like 25, 30 minutes or whatnot. And everyone said, “We need, we want access.” There was no login, just an API key, ‘cause it was just a beta or an alpha. And they said, “Oh, we want access.” And we're like, “Sure, yeah. Okay, thank you very much.” But after like the next day, if we'd not send it, every single one, like every call that we did, everyone came back, “Where is my API key?” Like everyone wanted it. We're like, “S**t.” Like this is it. Like I've never felt So one, the understanding to your point was like most people thought it was the same infrastructure for humans and agents. We understood a quarter ago it's not. We just didn't know what was the right primitive. And then when we came, and we can talk about what that is, and we gave it to these people, I've never seen, I've never experienced - I've done multiple companies in my life. I've never experienced this, that people literally call you if you do not give them access. Like they want access right now. And so it's like, okay, they don't want this. the thing that they want doesn't seem to exist, or they have not found it, and they really want what we want. And then when we understood that we're onto something, and then when you think about the size of the market, like the market for human engineers and enterprise is a very large market, so think GitLab or whatnot. But the market for every single agent that will exist ever in the future is just like, what is that market? How big is that? And we're like, “We are all in on this.” And so that is where we made sort of the cut between the old product and the new one.Bare Metal, Stateful Sandboxes, and the Lambda + EC2 ModelSwyx [00:12:02]: Yeah. But it wasn't composable at the time?Ivan [00:12:05]: It was very - It was basically just a Linux box that you could change, that you could define number of CPUs, disk, and RAM. Like that is what you could do, but you couldn't have multiple operating systems, you couldn't resize it on the fly, you couldn't add a GPU, you couldn't do like all the things. It was just the, just the first sort of variation of that, yeah.Swyx [00:12:22]: Was it bare metal from the start?Ivan [00:12:24]: It was bare metal from the start. And so the interesting thing that we thought about right away, so our.Swyx [00:12:29]: Which, give people the background, what is the normal path?Ivan [00:12:32]: Yeah, so, basically most providers run this on top of VMs. And also.Swyx [00:12:37]: Firecracker.Ivan [00:12:38]: Yeah, they run on Firecracker and VM. And so we also fire - We can get - We have multiple isolation layers and we can do that. But the common way to do it is that they, one, that the state of the machine, or the hard disk is not part of the sandbox itself. And the other thing is they're not meant to last forever. So most of them are preemptible, like they can There's a time that they can live. And so our thought was when we were going into this is, agents will be like humans in the sense of you don't want your laptop to be shut down until you're done with work. Like, and you want to close the lid and open the lid, it's the same state. So you - Agents would want that, like the pause and come back. They want those two things. But also agents really want speed, right? Can they get it? So when we thought about it's like we need something insanely fast, how to make it fast, how to make it long-running, and stateful. And so those two things, it's like combining a Lambda and an EC2, right? Those two things together. And so we didn't have an idea how others did it, ‘cause we didn't know too that there was a market around this. It was more like, okay, this is what we need, what they need. And we looked at Kubernetes, it wasn't wasn't good enough for that. We looked at Nomad, it didn't enable that. And so our history in rewriting our own scheduler at CodeAnywhere is basically what my CTO came up with. Like, he's like, “Oh, the learnings from there,” and he brought it. And the funny thing is, our third co-founder, when he saw it, he's like, “Dude, what is this? This is like 2008.” Like, we went back in time, and he's like, “Exactly.” And so the reason why Daytona is like super fast, and you see this on benchmarks, is we essentially, we run on bare metal. We have our own scheduler, we use the underlying, disk, CPU, and RAM of the underlying machine, which means your IOPS are insanely fast because there's no, there's no network between an EBS or something like that. But also the snapshot, the point in time, the templates, are also preloaded on the bare metal machines. So when you fire off a sandbox from a template or a snapshot, you're essentially directed to the bare metal machine where that snapshot is based on that NVMe drive, and then it literally just turns on that machine, and it's local. There's no network latency, anything on there. And so that is sort of the specificities that we, when we're thinking from first principles, what a computer would look like for an agent, that is what we came up with, and that's what we created.Benchmarks, 60ms Startup, and 50,000 SandboxesSwyx [00:15:02]: Yeah. I should maybe, I don't know if you endorse this, but there's someone that does compute SDK, you guys do very well on there, with like the TTI, right? I. is this a, is this a is this a relevant benchmark for you guys? I don't know.Ivan [00:15:16]: I don't know, and it changes every day. So today RKL is.Swyx [00:15:18]: I don't know what RKL is. Never heard of it.Ivan [00:15:20]: Yeah. RK, yeah, so it is there.Swyx [00:15:22]: You are, at least a third of the next tier of performance, and then, there's a lot of other better-known names that are very slow to start.Ivan [00:15:31]: Yeah. We've been the number one by far for a long time, and now there's different, there's different definitions also of sandboxes, different isolation patterns, different other things. So RKL runs it literally on the S3, the data, so it's very different, and they spin up a sandbox, spin up a container for that, so it's a different type of thing. So the definition of a sandbox is something that we can all, we all need to get along with. But yeah, we're insanely fast on getting these things, up and running. And so you can see even there that it's a zero point 0.10 to 0.11, so.Swyx [00:16:03]: Close enough. Yeah. what else do you need, right?Ivan [00:16:05]: Yeah. So the benchmarks itself, so, in this, in I don't think the benchmarks equate to market ownership or revenue or anything like that. and I've seen this with multiple benchmarks, not just in sandboxes, but in general benchmarks around.Swyx [00:16:20]: It's table stakes. It's just like.Ivan [00:16:21]: Exactly. But it doesn't hurt.Swyx [00:16:22]: Just roughly check.Ivan [00:16:22]: Like you definitely have to be up there and you have to be competing so that people know that, oh, this is definitely one of the top. Because this is only one dimension of what customers look for. There's other things like how many can you spin up consecutively? There's a feature set, there's support, there's like all different things that people look at, but you definitely have to be there, on the benchmarks.Swyx [00:16:40]: How many people do people spin up consecutively?Ivan [00:16:43]: So we have.Swyx [00:16:43]: Or concurrently, is the Concurrency, right?Ivan [00:16:45]: There's three metrics that we look at. And so one is like time to spin up one, and so our time to spin up one is 60 milliseconds with network latency. So request, spin up, reply, 60, the whole thing, 60 milliseconds. That is one. But if you wanna spin up 50,000 at once, we are now at about 75 seconds. So it takes about 75 seconds to spin up concurrently 50,000. Some others, there's public data around this, like take 2,000 seconds, which is 30 minutes. Like there's different variations of that. And then there is the so it is speed of one, speed of like multiple, and then how many can you consistently have up and running. And so we basically have right now no limit to how much we can add because we basically own our own metal. But the biggest customer of ours does like about 850,000 every single day is sort of where they're, where they're just shy of a million every single day that they're running, we do have a request for half a million concurrent, which is literally half a million CPUs somewhere running. So that's an interesting.Swyx [00:17:44]: They pay by like vCPU seconds.Ivan [00:17:47]: By seconds, yeah.Swyx [00:17:47]: Or whatever. Yeah. Okay, and so and then, and the other thing is, the sleeping and the resuming, ‘cause it's all the stateful resumption of all these things, how, what kind of workload are people putting through this, right? Like how is it Do we measure by gigabytes in memory, gigabytes in storage? I don't In like network attached storage. I, what are the costly ones of, out of all these features?Workload Economics: CPU, RAM, Network, and StorageIvan [00:18:15]: The most expensive thing are CPU.Swyx [00:18:18]: Okay. Yeah, of course.Ivan [00:18:18]: The second one, yeah Then it's RAM, then it's disk. We actually don't charge.Swyx [00:18:22]: Which is snapshotting, right?Ivan [00:18:23]: No, it's actually the, snapshotting's part of it, but basically the size of your hard disk, of your machine. So do you have 10 gigabytes, do you have 20, do you have 50, do you have whatever? And then the transference of that. Right now, currently we don't charge for, network at all at Polychron.Swyx [00:18:37]: Oh, you gotta, yeah, you gotta fix.Ivan [00:18:38]: Yeah. It is very much a it's a larger and larger part of our bill, so we're working around, that part there. Obviously, that is the least, expensive, so the hard disk is the least expensive, so it's basically CPU, RAM, for us network, ‘cause we don't charge the customer, and then hard disk, is how it's split up. But there's also different types of workloads, so we basically split it up into two types of workloads in Daytona. One is what we call background agents or long-running agents. and the other is, basically RLs and evals, which I put sort of together. And so they have very different patterns of usage, and if you look at the usage of a background And I'll just name names of companies, not specifically.Background Agents vs. RL/Evals: Two Usage ShapesSwyx [00:19:21]: Yeah, open, all hands.Ivan [00:19:23]: Yeah. So like a background agent's a Cognition, a Lovable, a like all these things are Harvey. These are all long-running, background agents. And so if you look at their usage patterns, their usage patterns are similar to human, which is like follow the sun. Basically, the usage patterns of that is like noon is probably the highest, and the midnight is the lowest, and then weekends are lower. weekday is higher.Swyx [00:19:42]: Yeah, that's a fun question. How global is it? Is it very US-centric or?Ivan [00:19:46]: The US is a large part, but we have currently, we have Asia, Europe, and the US regions.Swyx [00:19:52]: So it's quite global.Ivan [00:19:53]: Yeah, it's quite global. We have it all over. It's interesting that our I talked to you a bit about this. Our number one city by user.Swyx [00:20:01]: Hmm.Ivan [00:20:02]: Is Singapore.Swyx [00:20:04]: Oh, wow. Amazing.Ivan [00:20:05]: Which is an interesting one, right? Not by revenue, just by just like by individual head count.Swyx [00:20:09]: Really?Ivan [00:20:09]: Just like an interesting thing.Swyx [00:20:10]: Singapore is, Singapore is weirdly high in the adoption charts of AI for the population. It's like an, seven, eight million population. And it's like keeps showing up.Ivan [00:20:20]: No, it's quite interesting. We were quite shocked, and I was like, “Oh, this is interesting.” And also one that's up there.Swyx [00:20:24]: There's a reason I'm doing AI using Singapore. it's because I'm from there.Ivan [00:20:27]: We're there. We're gonna, we're gonna be there as well. and it's interesting that Japan is in the top or like Tokyo's in the top, which is in all the tech cycles it has never been. It has never been, so it's quite interesting that they're.Swyx [00:20:39]: I think the Japanese just love AI. Yeah. It's that, and then it's Brazil. That's it.Ivan [00:20:44]: Brazil has always been in.Swyx [00:20:45]: I think.Ivan [00:20:46]: Even when I look, if you look at like GitHub's data and ask historically with CodeAnywhere, it was always like US, Western Europe, and then you'd have like India, Brazil, China, like that would be there. But like Singapore was not in, specifically Japan was never in sort of that top, that top.Swyx [00:21:01]: Yeah. Weird pockets.Ivan [00:21:01]: Weird. Yeah, so it's very global.Swyx [00:21:02]: Okay, so actually that, but that's helps you to distribute your load through, all time?Ivan [00:21:08]: The interesting thing is like we have those kind of loads, but if you look at the researcher loads, they're quite different. So what they are is like if you give them concurrency of 10,000 or 50,000 or 100,000 CPUs at ARMb, when they fire off a run, it's just 100%. And then it just runs, and then it stops. So it's very, the usage pattern is squares basically, right? And it's also not follow the sun, because people will fire it off at midnight before they go to sleep but then wake up and so it's very unpredictable, so you don't know where that is. So the shapes of the usage are quite different than we have had before. And also what's interesting is when it's sort of a follow the sun, even if you have a high growth company, you can sort of predict your usage patterns and have enough capacity for that, because it's sort of, it grows in a, in a way you can project. When you have companies doing sort of like evals and RL, they're super spiky. So they're gonna come in, it's like, “We're gonna use nothing, then can we have 100,000?” Right? And then go back down. And then 100,000, go back down. So it's very different, right? And.Swyx [00:22:09]: Do you want to lock them into commits so.Ivan [00:22:11]: Yeah, we do.Swyx [00:22:12]: Yeah, okay.Ivan [00:22:12]: We so we have to lock them into some sort of commits to have that capacity, because we have to have, basically we have to have the capacity for peak. Right? And so right now, Daytona's mean utilization is 15%, 1-5.Swyx [00:22:25]: Oh my God.Ivan [00:22:26]: So it's very low.Swyx [00:22:27]: Because it's very spiky.Ivan [00:22:27]: It's very spiky, but we get up to 90%. so we have these things. And so what we're, what we're looking at right now as a company is similar to Cloudflare where you can like geo move things around, but that works really well for basically the background agent where it's follow the sun. But this, it's not. Like it's a very different shape. Obviously with scale you figure these things out, but that's an interesting new problem that we have, as a compute provider in the agent space. And when we were doing the conference recently, and so we talked to like Nikita from Neon and.Swyx [00:22:57]: I should bring it up.Ivan [00:22:58]: Parag from Parallel and whatnot, everyone has the same problem. Whereas the usage is super spiky, and this is something that has not happened before, that you have these types of like it was always, it the amplitudes were not this high, right? So it's quite interesting use case and problem solve.Compute Conference and Spiky Agent InfrastructureSwyx [00:23:12]: Yeah, I don't know if we're gonna bring this up again, but let's just talk about the conference, you had like 1,000 something people at the Warriors game, at the Sorry, where is it? What's.Ivan [00:23:22]: Chase Center.Swyx [00:23:23]: Chase Center.Ivan [00:23:23]: Chase Center.Swyx [00:23:24]: I went. It was, it was very impressive. Obviously, you can, how to throw a conference, what did you learn? you put, you pulled together all these impressive names.Ivan [00:23:33]: What I.Swyx [00:23:34]: What were you looking for?Ivan [00:23:35]: My thesis behind the Compute Conference was let's bring together people that are building infrastructure for AI agents. Because when I think of what we're building, it is the agent is the primary user, what are the ergonomics and usage patterns of agents, and so we can do that. And what I found, this was a theory, it wasn't proven, is that we all have these problems, as I touched onto. And I was, as I was talking on stage, it was like we all have the same underlying infra problems, which is this spiky workloads, unpredictable workloads that we've never had before, in human, compute or human infrastructure. And it's, again, it's the same when I was talking to Parag or when I was talking.Swyx [00:24:20]: Lynn. Nikita.Ivan [00:24:21]: Lynn, Nikita. Lynn especially, I was talking to her the other day as well. Like the It is a very interesting type of problem to solve because I can touch on Cloudflare because there's a lot of like talk about that recently as to how they solve that, which is they have a bunch of geos, and basically, as users work in different places, and depending on your tier, they can move you around the geos. And so that how, that's how they get the higher utilization. But you can sort of predict these, and it's If it's something in You'll rarely get a spike that is 10 orders of magnitude. Like you'll get a like let's say one of your customers has some like an exponential curve. What is that to I'm using Cloudflare as an example. 10%, 20%, whatever it is. I don't, I don't have this data, I'm just assessing. It's surely not 10x, right? It's surely not something there. And so how do you go out and solve this problem? And we're all solving this in different ways. So we have.Swyx [00:25:11]: She also has the same thing.Ivan [00:25:12]: Yeah, I know specifically that like Neon had that issue as well. Like how are we solving these spiky loads and things like that ‘cause we talked about it. And so the interesting thing for me to actually internalize was, yes, everyone that's building for agents first is going through this, and we're all solving similar problems, which is quite.Swyx [00:25:28]: Let me let me double-click on this. Okay. So for example, Neon, I happen to know that they're very sort of S3 oriented, right? so they're just like fully bet on S3. And you get to benefit from S3's distribution and infrastructure. So I would imagine that Neon doesn't have to care, whereas Lynn maybe has to care a bit more because obviously she's doing GPU inference. And, for listeners, we did an episode with her, one and a half years ago. And you have to care. But like, right?Ivan [00:25:54]: Parag cares for sure, and Nikita.Swyx [00:25:58]: And Parag is C of, Parallel.Ivan [00:25:59]: Parallel, yeah.Swyx [00:26:00]: Former CTO of Twitter.Ivan [00:26:01]: Twitter, yeah.Swyx [00:26:02]: They are the search.Ivan [00:26:03]: Yeah, they're search, yeah.Swyx [00:26:03]: I You and I know but the listeners don't know.Ivan [00:26:08]: Yeah, we can put it down in the screen, and so ‘cause we, when we were talking.Swyx [00:26:11]: I'll put it up on the, on the screen.Ivan [00:26:12]: Yeah, right.Swyx [00:26:12]: People can look it up if they need.Ivan [00:26:14]: Look it up. And, yes, but they still have CPU and RAM, allocation that you have to have up and running. And so CPU and RAM, you have to allocate that and have that ready. And so there's basically two ways to do it. One is you either over-provision and you can handle the bursts, or two, you basically have, I don't know if this is a term, just-in-time compute, which is like as your load becomes, as your usage comes in, you can fire off requests for VMs or bare metals at other cloud providers and then get them up and running.Swyx [00:26:43]: This is if you go above 100%, right?Ivan [00:26:45]: Yeah, this is.Swyx [00:26:46]: Like your overflow.Ivan [00:26:46]: If your overflow, like spillage or whatever you do.Swyx [00:26:48]: You probably lose money on it, but it doesn't matter, right?Ivan [00:26:50]: It, not Well, you might, you might not That is a more cost-effective way to do it but it's a slower way to do it. Because basically what you have to do is you have to like queue your requests, spin up these just-in-time compute, get it all ready, provision it, and then get your workload there. And so if the time isn't important that much, that's fine, and you can do that. But if your customer, and especially for, let's say, the RL training runs, the reason why a lot of people come to us is because GPUs are more expensive than CPUs, right? So you want your GPU running at, what, 100% the entire time. And so when you're running runs on CPUs, when the when the CPU cycle is like down and spinning up the next one, you want that to be instantaneous so that your GPU doesn't go down, right? And if you then have to like go out and provision machines, you're essentially telling the GPU that it has to wait, and that's incurring our cost. So there's things that you have to try to solve for there.RL Workloads, Declarative Images, and Kubernetes ReplacementSwyx [00:27:43]: Yeah, let's talk about the different workload, right? You said that, what was it? A few months ago, you had zero RL workload and now it's 50%.Ivan [00:27:52]: It will be this one, 50%, yeah.Swyx [00:27:54]: Let's talk about how different it is, right? Like I imagine, for example, a lot less dynamic code generation of like arbitrary code. Like here, it's probably all the same code. You're just doing parallel runs or something, I don't know.Ivan [00:28:05]: Yeah. So you'll have multiple Depends on the like for each run, you'll have a snapshot. And they, for the most part, they actually do use our declarative image builder, which is like, “Oh, we, the agent wants these dependencies, these env vars.”Swyx [00:28:17]: These ones, yeah.Ivan [00:28:18]: Yeah, the declarative image builder, it.Swyx [00:28:20]: Which is a very modal like thing that they.Ivan [00:28:22]: Yeah. And so we build it on the fly and then we propagate that snapshot, and you can spin up as many sandboxes as you want against that snapshot. And then if you have to do changes, the model can, or like it could be also be automated. It's like, “Oh, now for the next run, we need to install these things or remove these things or whatever to get, a task done,” and then it goes off and runs that. So yes, that is something that it seems that they prefer. The number one reason I found, or should I say, let's take a step back. What we are competing against in that environment is essentially managed Kubernetes. So EKS, GKE, whatever. That is what the vast majority run on. And anyone that has tried Daytona versus GKE, EKS is like, “I'm never going back.” That has always been. There's a few reasons. One is the ergonomics. So if you have, if you're using Kubernetes to spin that up, you have to essentially manage the interface interactions with that. Daytona, although as a compute provider, it's more akin to a Twilio and Stripe from a consumption perspective than it is an AWS. Like you have an API, an SDK, it's quite like easy and seamless to get these things up and running, that's one. The other is the speed to which we spin up, which we mentioned earlier, which is much faster, and the scale to which we can go to. We haven't got into features, but an interesting feature is that it's very hard to OOM, or out of memory, our sandboxes, because we can dynamically on the fly.Swyx [00:29:48]: Resize.Ivan [00:29:49]: Resize, which is like impossible on almost any other thing. There are some technologies that enable you to do that, but it's like a very hard thing. And so we actually saw this when, the Terminal Revenge team is, brought us actually. So thank you, Alex and the team, that brought us into this whole space.Swyx [00:30:05]: It's just very rare that, a framework would just say, “Guys, just use Daytona.”Ivan [00:30:11]: Yeah, I think it says it somewhere. Yeah.Swyx [00:30:13]: Yeah. I was like, “What is this?”Ivan [00:30:15]: There's all, there's multiple there, but they also mention a few other places. and so Daytona specifically-We have, the, just jumping on themes here We, I don't know where it says Data Center.Swyx [00:30:27]: I, there.Ivan [00:30:27]: Doesn't matter.Swyx [00:30:28]: There's a very strong recommendation, which is, very unusual. Which is, it's.Ivan [00:30:33]: We do not pay them for this, just.Swyx [00:30:34]: I know, yeah. They just like you.Ivan [00:30:35]: Yeah, they like us. yeah, and also a thing, so, Data Center has multiple isolation sets underneath. The customer doesn't have to know what they are. But basically we have Docker, which is a container, that's hardened with Sysbox. So it's Docker's, isolation that is a security equivalent to a VM, but it's still a container. And that is the default, and they, especially in these training workloads, really like that as an interface to be able to use just a basic Docker container, and we enable Docker and Docker. Which for these RL runs, if you need to do a Docker compose or Kubernetes, you can spin up a K3S inside of these things, which unlocks a huge amount of workloads that you can do that you cannot do on other providers. So just on that part is much more interesting. And so we went that, through that. We showed them that we could do that, and they enjoyed that quite a bit. They being the general venture people.Swyx [00:31:28]: Those people, yeah.Ivan [00:31:29]: And Harbor people.Swyx [00:31:29]: Harbor people, do are they, are they a company yet?Ivan [00:31:33]: As far, I do not know.Customer Pull, Slack Connect, and the Computer Use BetSwyx [00:31:35]: Okay. All right. Yeah. It's like super obvious that like, there's a lot of excitement and success around these things, okay, so yeah, tell us more, right? Like, this is an exploding workload, Harbor adopted you, which helped speed things along. But what are you learning as this new workload comes online?Ivan [00:31:53]: There's a couple things that we learned, which we chat about in the beginning. We, and this has led our story, as we mentioned, we like talked to a lot of customers along the way, and we add more features and more tool sets as we talk to customers. And it's interesting that And I think it's that the ecosystem is so small and/or the models get smarter, where when we see one user come with a request, we know it goes on a roadmap if like three to five customers come with the same request in that week. It's like very bizarre. It happens so many times, which is.Swyx [00:32:27]: Because they're all friends.Ivan [00:32:28]: Sorry?Swyx [00:32:28]: They all, they're all friends. They're all in the same group chat.Ivan [00:32:30]: Yeah, probably, yeah. ‘Cause and they're like, “Oh, can you do this?” And I'm like, “Okay, this is interesting. We'll put it on a feature request.” And then the next one's like, “Oh, can you do this?” “Okay.” It's all the same, right? It's always the same. And so what we try to do, and I personally try to do, I try to be on as many call, quote-unquote “sales calls” I can. I'm in every Slack channel. We literally have about 1,000 Slack Connect channels, something like that. It's an interesting, there's so many interesting things you find out when you have all the Slack channels. You can also see where people, transfer between companies. You see leave Slack channel, enter Slack channel. It's an interesting thing. Also, just I digress, I feel that Slack Connect is literally LinkedIn what it should be. You have a list.Swyx [00:33:08]: LinkedIn charges you to, use your own connections, but Slack doesn't, right? Slack is like, do it for free. It's more lock-in. It's great.Ivan [00:33:15]: Yeah. It's amazing. Yeah. It's one of the reasons.Swyx [00:33:17]: You're gonna pay Slack for life.Ivan [00:33:18]: Exactly. You're there for life. So that's interesting. And so one of the things, the newer things we were talking about earlier is we made a big bet and put a lot of investment on computer use. that is not seen publicly the light of day. We haven't GA'd that yet, but we have.Swyx [00:33:32]: Is there a thing I can pull up?Ivan [00:33:33]: There is computer use there. It's right up a bit.Swyx [00:33:36]: Oh, yeah. Okay.Ivan [00:33:38]: What we have, what we talked about and what we've seen publicly is there's this theme now about, the human emulator where And Elon from XAI has talked about this publicly, and if you think about the models today, they're actually quite sophisticated and they can do a lot of work, but they still don't have access to all the tools. Like, I'm a strong believer that the most efficient way for an agent to work is essentially headless or through, terminal or whatnot. But if we, if we look at knowledge work in general, there's about 100 million knowledge workers in the US, about a billion in the world, and knowledge workers, and the salaries of them aggregate to 10 trillion in the US 50 trillion worldwide.Swyx [00:34:24]: Wow.Ivan [00:34:25]: Something like that. And if we look at, the five most important sectors of that, so like healthcare and government and financial services and whatnot, that's about 56% of that. So let's say it's about half of that. So in the US it's about 25 trillion, and most of them, most of that work is actually still locked into legacy apps inside of Windows, which is not going anywhere for a very long time. Like, people just won't invest in that. How much of it? our assumption is the following: if, in the RPA market, which is similar market, well, not the same 25% of, these white collar, workers', work is automated. If an agent is more sophisticated, can go through more runs, figure stuff out, let's say it's, 40%, right? And so if you take 40% of that, you get to essentially, $10 trillion a year.Swyx [00:35:17]: That's a TAM.Ivan [00:35:18]: That is a that is a TAM. So that's the TAM of the models, right? That's not our, essentially ours. But you get to that size, and to be able to do that, you essentially have to give agents these computers with the legacy. So computer use, either Mac or Windows or Linux. Linux we also obviously have and others have. But Windows specifically is something very new, and the only option right now is an EC2 with, Windows or on Azure. Both of them take anywhere from three to five minutes to spin up. We've created an actual sandbox, so it's a second instead of milliseconds, but you have, point in time snapshots, you have, forking, you have all the things that you have from a sandbox, but essentially enables you to hopefully unlock all this value. And so that's been our big push and bet, but we've sort of, kept our ear to the ground. What is sort of the next things in the market?RPA Returns: Why Agents Still Need ComputersSwyx [00:36:06]: Yeah, knowledge work, and building, and sort of RPA, the next wave of RPA. I got very excited about RPA kind of during COVID times. The UI path was IPO-ing. And it was, a very hot Isn't it, Eastern European?Ivan [00:36:20]: It is, Romanian.Swyx [00:36:21]: Romanian?Yeah, it might be the only Romanian, big unicorn okay, yeah. This I don't I don't, I don't have like a I think there's, I think there's a stage being set for the resurgence of RPA, ‘cause everyone understands that, yeah, no one wants to deal with these shitty apps and no one's gonna rewrite them. Like, you just have to do, a remote operation and programmatic operation of them.Ivan [00:36:45]: If you wanna unlock it, my own setup was basically the following. So I was doing a board deck recently, last month, whatever, and I'm like, “Okay, let's just, let's just do automated.” So, all our data's in, ClickHouse and PostHog and QuickBooks, where everyone else's is, and I'm basically, connected that all to, my Cloud code, like go off and go Cloud code whatever. Go off and, here's the integrations, go do that. It pulled out the first report, which was great. It connected to Brex and all these things, pulled it, which was great, and then I say, “Okay, now pull out this, and this,” and I kept getting, really well McKinsey-style design reports, but the data said partial data. all the missing data, partial data. Like, it can't access all the things, and I got so frustrated, and so I got, I got, my Mac Mini virtual sandbox with OpenClaw. I gave it its own account in our company, and then I went to all these services and created a read-only account, so literally like an intern in your company. And so I would say, “Now go and do this report,” and it would get the same, or like, “I can't via the MCP or the API or whatever. I can't get all the information.” I'm like, “Go log in.” And it will log into the website, then go in, export the data. It'll export the data and do the thing end to end. So even for things that have today APIs, not all of it is exposed, and I to get value, I get immense value right now, but it has to be a computer usage, unfortunately, and so I spend a bunch of tokens just on that, but I get the job done. And so if even a startup like ours, and using all the hottest tools, still needs a computer agent what hope does, Goldman have to have a headless, right?Swyx [00:38:22]: Yeah, what a - Why isn't Microsoft doing this?Ivan [00:38:27]: I'm pretty sure, Satya had a post yesterday.Swyx [00:38:29]: Oh, okay. I see.Ivan [00:38:29]: Which was like, “Every agent needs a computer.”Swyx [00:38:31]: I see, I see.Ivan [00:38:32]: So they have launched something recently.Swyx [00:38:34]: Yeah, they have Microsoft Power Automate, I'm sure, I'm sure, they're gonna have their version.macOS Sandboxes, Apple Constraints, and the Windows OpportunityIvan [00:38:39]: Version of that, yeah.Swyx [00:38:39]: You're gonna try to do yours, and it - I always know there's always demand for Mac, but I know it's, tricky to host, macOS sandboxes.Ivan [00:38:49]: We will have macOS sandboxes fairly soon. The problem with macOS, OS sandboxes is, I'm deep in this, I don't know how much interesting is.Swyx [00:38:55]: No, it's.Ivan [00:38:56]: MacOS has this problem.Swyx [00:38:57]: It's a licensing thing, right?Ivan [00:38:58]: Licensing thing. So one, you're allowed to run only two parallel VMs per machine, so that's one. Two, you can only license to a different user every 24 hours. So if you come in and theoretically, if I wanna charge you per second and I charge you one second, I have to have it idle for the rest of the day. I can't have anyone else doing that. So the pricing will be different in the sense that I will have to - we would have to charge for 24 hours, and that's not even, that's not even the most difficult thing. But the, thing above that is, from a security perspective, they enable you to do memory snapshot, pause, resume, but only on the same physical drive, physical machine. And so what you can do in, Windows world or Linux world is that I can move in the background, your snapshot from one to the other and manage load, right? Here, if you wanna do that, you essentially have to have your.Swyx [00:39:49]: Yeah, snapshots. Yeah.Ivan [00:39:50]: Your.Swyx [00:39:51]: It's like.Ivan [00:39:51]: Physical machine.Swyx [00:39:52]: You can't break it up.Ivan [00:39:53]: You can't, you can't move things around that, and all of that is, that part is, from a security standpoint, if it is written. Like, I understand the security aspect of that, but it disables you from doing these agentic, like really scalable agentic workloads.Swyx [00:40:08]: You need to do a vibe-coded, clean room implementation on macOS that you can then - That's like Clean OS or something. I don't know.Ivan [00:40:17]: So. We have.Swyx [00:40:18]: ‘cause like Linux was originally like a clean room rewrite of Unix.Ivan [00:40:21]: Okay. Yeah.Swyx [00:40:21]: Or something like that, right? Like same thing to macOS. Someone needs to do it.Ivan [00:40:25]: Someone will do that, and someone will have some long-running agents for a few days to figure this stuff out. But yeah. So definitely we - we're really close to offering something ‘cause people do want it, but the pricing will be different, and the feature set will be sort of stringent.Swyx [00:40:38]: Yeah, nobody's gonna use this. like, the labs, the labs will because they want to automate macOS.Ivan [00:40:42]: They have to do RL. They have to do RL again. But even if you The - So the point is with the RL part, if you, if you do RL on macOS, then the next iteration of the model comes out, it will be able to use these tools significantly. Then you actually need to run those, that somewhere. So you're gonna have to have that, later on. And from, if anyone at Apple is listening, I very much feel that they are shooting themselves in the foot of the scale of the revenue of compute or licensing they could get if they would just enable a concurrency model similar to what you can get on a Windows and a, and Linux.Swyx [00:41:17]: Yeah. Yeah. And I'm sure they've heard this before. They just don't care. Yeah, it's And maybe they will change their mind with the new CEO.Ivan [00:41:24]: Yeah. We'll see.Swyx [00:41:25]: We'll see.Ivan [00:41:25]: High hopes.Swyx [00:41:26]: High hopes.Ivan [00:41:26]: High hopes.Swyx [00:41:27]: Okay. But I, it's very clear the market opportunity is huge in Windows, and you can go for a long time on just Windows, but your customers are gonna want both. and I think, it is interesting to me that, this is the sort of God application of agents, right? Like, I don't It was - How big was OpenClaw for you guys? Like, was it, was there, a significant bump.OpenClaw, Agent Labs, and the B2B2C Sandbox MarketIvan [00:41:54]: Not for us because we.Swyx [00:41:54]: Because you already.Ivan [00:41:55]: We're kind of positioned differently. Whereas although it's completely PLG and we have individual developers that use it, most of the users that use Daytona are sort of a B2B2C. Sort of it's either B2B or B2B2C. So, in the researcher world, it's B2B, so you're selling to, labs and neo labs and things like that. But on the long-running agents, it's mostly, from a scale revenue perspective, it's mostly B2B2C, where you have a app layer agent that uses you at a big scale.Swyx [00:42:26]: Like a Manus. Yeah.Ivan [00:42:28]: Like a Manus Lovable type of thing.Swyx [00:42:31]: Yeah. I think that's the question of, well how, um-Uh, yeah, B2B to C is basically to me what I've been calling an agent lab, which is kind of like you're not in a model lab, but you're making a very good wrapper that is a platform that other people can sign up so they don't have to code those things. Yeah, it sound, it sounds like a much better market than the direct OpenClaw market.Ivan [00:42:56]: I've like - We I've done multiple things. So the CodeAnywhere's part of our career path R in the calendar, was very much an end user developer product. And so that is great. It You can get a lot of developer love, and I feel that we do as a company have a bunch of developer love. But it's a different type, where it's people building these things. Again, it's more akin to a Twilio because you don't really run - As a person, you wouldn't run Twilio. I don't know how many people remember. It was like ask your developer billboard and whatnot. And people really love Twilio, but they only used it inside of like, “Oh, I'm building this app or service for thing.” And so we're very much directly to that. And you also know that I used to work for a competitor for Twilio, so it's kind of ingrained, in my DNA.Swyx [00:43:35]: People don't know InfoBip is that big.Ivan [00:43:38]: Yeah, it's.Swyx [00:43:39]: Because.Ivan [00:43:40]: It's a billion euro.Swyx [00:43:40]: They're all American. They're like, “Whatever's in Europe doesn't matter to me.” But like it's the, it's the same size or bigger? Same size?Ivan [00:43:46]: It's about half the size.Swyx [00:43:47]: Half the size?Ivan [00:43:48]: Yeah, about half the size.Swyx [00:43:48]: It's like, yeah.Ivan [00:43:48]: Still huge. Multiple billions a year. Yes.Swyx [00:43:51]: That's crazy.Ivan [00:43:51]: Exactly, and so that - These are like really interesting and large revenue-generating, very sticky businesses. Whereas when you're selling to the - When your focus is the end developer, it is a very hard sell because they're very price sensitive, very price conscious, very around that. And there's very It's very hard to scale. Your cap is the number of people that are willing to spin up - First of all, wanna spin that up, and then spin up multiple of these. Whereas if you're in the enterprise one, like we know everyone's talking about like how many tokens they're spending, I'm spending. Like a lot of companies today are like, “If this is our company, spend as much as you can.” Like basically that is where we're going. And so if you think about that paradigm, where you're selling to companies that say, “Spend as much as you can to generate, productivity,” versus, “Oh, I'm a single person. I have this much budget, and I'm doing this thing because it's fun or it's helping me out or whatever.” Like it is a different, it's a different go-to-market, I think, strategy.MCP, CLIs, and Sandboxes as the Agent RuntimeSwyx [00:44:50]: Yeah, there's a lot of discussion. I'm just kind of going through like the mental list of things that are in your favor, which is, for example, MCP versus CLI. Like obviously you want CLI. It's been very good for you. I feel like it's maybe a drop in the bucket or maybe it's huge. I'm just checking whether it's like these are big trends.Ivan [00:45:10]: Those things you - work well in our favor, to your point just because every.Swyx [00:45:13]: They're kind of drop in the bucket, right?Ivan [00:45:15]: I think it's like sort of all the things come together. And so there's so many things that impact that. To your point, like OpenClaw wasn't huge for us, but like having the agent SDK, from Anthropic, so or Cloud Claude Code was very interesting. The reason why it was interesting is that a lot of, let's call them app I don't know what to call them, app layer agent companies, essentially they are like, “Oh, I can create this new app, this new agent. All I need, I just use Claude Code, and I throw it into a sandbox, and then I have my interface to the human to that.” And so that enabled so many more companies to actually offer this, and then they would pull on sandbox. So that was, that was interesting. And to your point, like MCP, versus the CLI, the MCP is an interface against an API, whereas the CLI is like you can actually go do things. Like this is it. The difference between integrations and actually running scripts or data or analysis against a thing. So being able to use a CLI very well enables the agent to do more things, and it's because that people will invoke a sandbox, they'll run it in the CLI, and but it'll do anal-analysis on that data and then give you an actual result versus just, pulling data from an API source.Swyx [00:46:29]: Yeah, it's a layer of indirection basically, it's the same thing as agentic search versus RAG, which where you're.Ivan [00:46:34]: Exactly, yeah.Swyx [00:46:34]: Just like you just win whenever people put more agents into their workflow. And so like it doesn't really matter, but I'm just kinda teasing out like what else have people heard about that like it's sort of, “Oh yeah, this is another sandbox use case. Oh yeah, that's another one.” Am I, am I missing any big ones?Ivan [00:46:51]: The thing, the thing that people, which is the computer use stuff, which I think is probably the most interesting one, is, and to your point, we've talked to so many people over the last year. It's like, “Oh, like why do you need a sandbox? Why do you need this? Why this?” And to your point, it's like, “Oh, I need sandbox for this. I need sandbox for that. I need sandbox-” It's like, “Oh, I need it for every single thing.” And so basically what I, what I - and it sounds like a broken record, it's like you use a laptop every single day, right? And you are n of one. It's just you. But now imagine how And by the way, the laptop, the computer PC market, the PC market is about equal to the cloud market in total. So it's about 150, 180 billion a year. Something like that. It's about roughly the three cloud hyperscalers is about equal to like Apple, HP, Lenovo, whatever, It's a little bit less, but it's sort of like that. And now imagine And that's just like, so how big is the addressable market? What, how many people are there in the world now? What's the last data?Swyx [00:47:45]: Let's call it eight billion.Ivan [00:47:46]: Eight billion. And so let's say you can have two computer, like you have one personal and one business, whatever. Like so it's double that, right? and so that's 16 billion, right? How many agents are gonna be running in two years, in 10 years, in 100 years? Like And for every single task, they will need one of these. And so how big is that? That market is essentially quote unquote “infinite”. You will get to the point, and Dylan Patel was at the conference talking about, from SemiAnalysis, that talks usually about GPUs, was also talking about how CPUs will now be a bottleneck because it will be the constraint. You won't be able to grow, or we won't be able to have enough of these because there won't be enough CPUs to basically do.Swyx [00:48:23]: Yeah. Well, I actually had a really good podcast with Doug Oliphant, who, which was his president at SemiAnalysis, where they've basically been like, yeah, it's been a GPU shortage first, but then it's cascaded down to memory and now to CPUs.Ivan [00:48:35]: CPU, yeah.Swyx [00:48:35]: It-What's next? So networking. So, networking actually has been in shortage for a while if you're looking at, just GPU networking. But, yeah, it's really crazy the amount of computer use that's going on, yeah, cool. I, other questions are, just the one very big part is the open sourceness which you didn't have to do, your competitors don't do, like it's not, a lot of people are worried about keeping their projects open source because some competitor can just slot fork it. I don't know if there's any reflections on just being an open source company.Open Source, Trust, and Enterprise ProcurementIvan [00:49:15]: Yeah. There's a bunch. So we the original product that we did was open source.Swyx [00:49:19]: Yeah. CodeAnywhere.Ivan [00:49:20]: So doing that was actually very good for us. There's basically a saying of, What's the saying? Like, companies that are, that are doing really well, measure themselves against, free cashflow, that are kinda okay, it's EBITDA, then, it's, it goes all the way down.Swyx [00:49:36]: The worst is like GitHub stars.Ivan [00:49:37]: GitHub stars. GitHub stars are the worst, yeah. So you go all the way down to GitHub stars. And so our original one was GitHub stars. That's what we talked about, we're at the point we're talking about revenue, so we're we've gone up the stack on that. And so we started.Swyx [00:49:47]: No, profit.Ivan [00:49:48]: Yeah. We haven't, we're, we'll get there. We'll get there. But basically at that point we did stars and GitHub and it was useful, and the original variation that we did, it we split the core into its own repo and it was Apache 2.0, so very, permissive. And then we basically would bundl
Heute ist Eri zum 2. Mal in meinem Podcast. Wir werden über das Thema Longevity sprechen. Bryan Johnson hat vor 3 Jahren den Ball ins Rollen gebracht. Plötzlich sind alle zum Biohacker geworden und tragen Schlafringe oder Armbänder. Wie du Longevity für dich nutzen kannst, auch wenn du keine 10 Millionen investieren kannst, erfährst du in diesem Podcast! Viel Spaß bei Zuhören! Hier kannst du Eri finden: https://eritrostl.de/
- Erfolgreicher denn je: Apple legt neue Rekordzahlen vor - Lieber sicher gehen: EFF formuliert Wünsche an Apple - Viel intelligenter: Xcode 26.3 öffnet KI-Agenten die Tür - Über die Schulter geschaut? Webcam-App-Entwickler verklagt Apple - Schwer durchschaubar: Apples Website-Umbau erschwert Mac-Preisübersicht - Umfrage der Woche - Zuschriften unserer Hörer === Anzeige / Sponsorenhinweis === Diese Folge wird präsentiert von Incogni. Nutze den Code APFELFUNK unter dem unten aufgeführten Link, um einen exklusiven Rabatt in Höhe von 60% auf dein Incogni-Abo zu erhalten: https://incogni.com/apfelfunk === Anzeige / Sponsorenhinweis Ende === Links zur Sendung: - Six Colors: Apples Quartalszahlen - https://sixcolors.com/post/2026/01/apple-announces-all-time-quarterly-record-of-143-8b/ - Apfelfunk News: Apple erreicht Meilenstein von 2,5 Milliarden aktiven Geräten - https://apfelfunk.com/apple-erreicht-meilenstein-von-25-milliarden-aktiven-geraeten/ - Apfelfunk News: EFF-Kampagne fordert mehr Ende-zu-Ende-Verschlüsselung von Apple - https://apfelfunk.com/eff-kampagne-fordert-mehr-ende-zu-ende-verschluesselung-von-apple/ - heise developer: KI-Agenten wie Claude und Codex direkt in der Entwicklungsumgebung von Xcode - https://www.heise.de/news/Xcode-26-3-KI-Agenten-wie-Claude-und-Codex-direkt-in-der-Entwicklungsumgebung-11164243.html - Apfelfunk News: Apple nutzt intern Anthropic-Claude für Produktentwicklung - https://apfelfunk.com/apple-nutzt-intern-anthropic-claude-fuer-produktentwicklung/ - Mac & i: Camo-Entwickler verklagt Apple wegen Sherlocking - https://www.heise.de/news/Funktion-uebernommen-Camo-Entwickler-verklagt-Apple-wegen-Sherlocking-11164832.html - Mac & i: Apple baut Shopping-Website um - https://www.heise.de/news/Apple-baut-Shopping-Website-um-schlechtere-Preisuebersicht-beim-Mac-11162948.html Kapitelmarken: (00:00:00) Begrüßung (00:19:08) Werbung (00:23:07) Begrüßung (00:28:48) Themen (00:29:28) Erfolgreicher denn je: Apple legt neue Rekordzahlen vor (00:54:45) Lieber sicher gehen: EFF formuliert Wünsche an Apple (01:01:20) Viel intelligenter: Xcode 26.3 öffnet KI-Agenten die Tür (01:11:39) Über die Schulter geschaut? Webcam-App-Entwickler verklagt Apple (01:19:11) Schwer durchschaubar: Apples Website-Umbau erschwert Mac-Preisübersicht (01:28:37) Umfrage der Woche (01:30:59) Zuschriften unserer Hörer
こんにちハ~。今年も残りわずかとなりました!皆さまいかがお過ごしでしょうか?今日は2025年に「買って正解だった」と思えたものをまとめてご紹介します。日用品、美容アイテム、食料品、家電まで、実際に使って良かったものだけを、あんずさんと共にお話しています。また今回もリスナーさんに参加していただき、みそ友さんのベストバイもシェアしています。誰かの買ってよかったものを聞いて、買い物の失敗を減らしたり、日常の満足度を少し上げられたらいいなと思っています。今年も番組を聴いて下さり、またお便りやご感想などたくさん送っていただき三十路女子研究所を支えて下さり本当にありがとうございました。来年も引き続き、どうぞよろしくお願いします。▼番組内で話していた商品たち(一部)・COCOSILK 遮光 シルク100% アイマスクhttps://item.rakuten.co.jp/shizenshop/silk_eyemask/?scid=wi_ich_iphoneapp_item_share・グリルフライパンhttps://item.rakuten.co.jp/s-zakka-show/10002043/?scid=wi_ich_iphoneapp_item_share・象印 シームレスセン 水筒https://amzn.asia/d/1yLYfVU・ユニクロ ウォッシャブルニットリブパンツhttps://www.uniqlo.com/jp/ja/products/E470173-000/00・松山油脂 肌を潤す保湿スキンケアシリーズhttps://store.matsuyama.co.jp/pages/hadauru・SHISEIDO コンシーラーブラシhttps://www.shiseido.co.jp/sw/onlinestore/products/E43901.html?sweb_shohin_cd=4514254970775・NARIS UP クレメ クレンジングクリームhttps://www.narisup.com/shop/g/g6P58000/・創健社の黒米https://sokensha.co.jp/products/product_detail/130213・オリーブリーフサプリメントhttps://jp.iherb.com/pr/now-foods-olive-leaf-extract-500-mg-120-veg-capsules/744・海の精 にがりhttps://www.uminosei.com/shouhin/nigari/kaisei/・無印 壁掛けCDプレイヤーhttps://www.muji.com/jp/ja/store/cmdty/detail/4548076475613・象印スチーム式加湿器https://www.zojirushi.co.jp/syohin/life/humidifier/lineup/・とろける布団https://www.kaimin-hakase.com/collections/%e3%81%a8%e3%82%8d%e3%81%91%e3%82%8b%e3%81%b5%e3%81%a8%e3%82%93・4万円越えのイタリア製のパジャマhttps://onlinestore.e-maam.jp/shopdetail/000000003566/・トリガーポイントのストレッチボールhttps://amzn.asia/d/g8hXyJl・スリーコインズのアームバンドhttps://www.palcloset.jp/display/item/2411-ARMB-00000/・ダイソーのシリコーン潤マスクhttps://jp.daisonet.com/products/4979909961957・あずきのチカラ(目元用/首用)https://www.kobayashi.co.jp/seihin/ka_m/
In dieser Folge sprechen wir darüber, was sogenannte "Wearables" für die Gesundheit bringen. Welche gibt es, was können sie uns gesundheitlich und sportlich nutzen? Wie ist die Qualität der erhobenen Daten und welche technischen Grenzen gibt es? Gibt es nur Vorteile oder auch Nachteile, wie ist es mit dem Thema Datenschutz und letztlich die Frage: Für wen sind sie sinnvoll und für wen eher nicht? ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Dominiks Buch zur pflanzenbasierten Sporternährung im UTB-Verlag: https://www.utb.de/doi/book/10.36198/9783838560328 Dominiks Gesundheitscommunity: www.gsundes-hannover.de Dominiks Online-Knie-Kurs: https://gsundes-hannover.de/knieschmerzen/ Dominiks Online-Rücken-Kurs: https://copecart.com/products/34bd5abb/checkout Marcs veganes Online-Fitness-Coaching: https://vegainer-academy.com/ Marcs Online-Kurs: https://www.copecart.com/products/a50f88f2/checkout ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Dieser Podcast wird unterstützt von der Firma Watson Nutrition. Die Firma bietet als einzige umfassend laborgeprüfte Nahrungsergänzungsmittel für eine optimierte Nährstoffversorgung. Zum Angebot zählen Multi-Supplemente, Mono-Supplemente, Sportsupplemente wie Kreatin oder auch Proteinriegel, Shakes und essenzielle Aminosäuren Mit dem Code veganperformance erhältst du 5 % Rabatt auf deine Bestellung. Mit dem Code veganperformance10 erhältst du sogar einmalig 10 % Rabatt auf eine Bestellung. Zur Firmenwebseite: Watson Nutrition Vergleich der Apple Watch Ultra 3 mit der Garmin Fenix 8 Pro: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WwFLosyWErU Literaturliste:
Hinter Türchen Nr. 7 versteckt sich eines der persönlichsten Style-Elements überhaupt: Charms. Ob an Ketten, Armbändern, Taschen oder sogar Sneakers – Charms erzählen Geschichten, setzen Akzente und bringen eine individuelle Note in jeden Look. Wir sprechen darüber, warum Charms ein Comeback erleben, wie Designer sie neu interpretieren und weshalb sie das perfekte Tool sind, um Outfits subtil – oder sehr bewusst – aufzuwerten. Let's unwrap Türchen Nr. 7.
Euer eigenes Couplegoal bei einer Live-Show, mit den ETCtis connecten, Armbändchen aufgeladen mit Johanna-Energy und natürlich ein tiefer Einblick in unsere Beziehung - das gibts bei unseren Live-Shows in Köln (10.12.) und Berlin(11.12.)
In dieser Episode der Hundestunde Quicktipps gibt euch Conny einen Einblick in mögliche Weihnachts-Geschenke, mit denen ihr eurer Familie, Freund:Innen, oder euch selbst Freude machen könnt. Viel Spaß! Links zur FolgeHundestunde Merchandising: http://shop.hundestunde.live & https://hundundherrl.shop/collections/stundiAurimi Anhänger, Armbänder, Halsketten: aurimi.comGutscheine Hundeschulen: https://www.martinruetter.com/hundeschulen/angebote/gutschein Schlittenhunde Schweden: northern-moments.com/Thule: https://thule.com/de-at/gift-guide/holiday-gift-guideMartin Rütter Live + Fachseminar in Wolfsburg: https://shop.martinruetter.com/pages/martin-ruetter-live The Heat Company (Rabattcode "Hunde25" -10%) Hand Fußwärmer, Handschuhe: theheatcompany.com Tractive: Rabattcode "Hundestunde" -40%: www.tractive.com/gen/pd/gps-tracker-dog?utm_source=connysporrer&utm_medium=link&utm_campaign=connysporrer&utm_content=hundestunde Pfotenherz Tierschutz Kalender: https://pfotenherz-tierschutz.com/blog/12877/ Packerllotterie Paulis für Wiener:innen: paulis-hundeausstatter.at▶️ FANSHOPSHUNDESTUNDE Fan ShopHund und Herrl▶️ Social MediaHUNDESTUNDE Facebook-GruppeHUNDESTUNDE Instagram AccountConnys Instagram AccountConnys Youtube Kanal▶️ HundeschulenConnys Online Hundeschule Spezial-Rabattcode für Stundis: "Stundi"Connys Hundeschule in Wien▶️ SonstigesPlaylistHUNDESTUNDE Spotify Playlist▶️ KontaktFragen für die Fragestunde bitte an:E-mail: podcast@hundestunde.liveDieser Podcast wurde bearbeitet von:Denise Berger https://www.movecut.at
Schon seit Ende des 19 Jahrhunderts stellt das Pforzheimer Familienunternehmen Wellendorff Schmuck aus Gold her. Das Unternehmen arbeitete für Adlige und Königshäuser und spezialisierte sich auf 18-karätiges Gold – einen Werkstoff, der aktuell immer teurer wird. Der Nachfrage tut das bisher offenbar keinen Abbruch. „Unsere Kunden kaufen den Schmuck mit der Idee, ihn ein Leben lang zu tragen“, sagt Christoph Wellendorff, Co-Chef des Unternehmens im Wirtschaftspodcast von Capital. „Damit relativiert sich das, was ich heute dafür bezahle.“ Überhaupt ist Wellendorff überzeugt, dass sein Unternehmen von den aktuellen Krisen und wirtschaftlichen Verwerfungen eher profitiert. „Je turbulenter die Zeiten draußen sind, desto mehr sehnt man sich nach Ruhe, Idylle und Sicherheit“, sagt er. „Schmuck kann so etwas geben, wenn es Schmuck ist, der für ein Leben lang bleiben soll.“ Selbst die zunehmenden Handelsbarrieren mit den USA sind aus Sicht des Unternehmens ein vorübergehendes Problem. „Da gibt es jetzt einen kurzen Schock, und danach nivelliert sich das“, so Wellendorff. „Alle führenden Schmuckhersteller aus Europa haben ja die gleichen Bedingungen. Und die amerikanische Schmuckindustrie ist auf Masse und nicht auf Klasse ausgelegt. Deswegen haben wir dort keine Konkurrenz.“ +++Eine Produktion von RTL+ Podcast.Hosts: Nils Kreimeier und Martin Kaelble.Redaktion: Lucile Gagnière.Produktion: Andolin Sonnen. +++Weitere Infos zu unseren Werbepartnern finden Sie hier: https://linktr.ee/diestundenull +++60 Tage lang kostenlos Capital+ lesen - Zugriff auf alle digitalen Artikel, Inhalte aus dem Heft und das ePaper. Unter Capital.de/plus-gratis +++Unsere allgemeinen Datenschutzrichtlinien finden Sie unter https://datenschutz.ad-alliance.de/podcast.html +++ Wir verarbeiten im Zusammenhang mit dem Angebot unserer Podcasts Daten. Wenn Sie der automatischen Übermittlung der Daten widersprechen wollen, klicken Sie hier: https://datenschutz.ad-alliance.de/podcast.html +++Unsere allgemeinen Datenschutzrichtlinien finden Sie unter https://art19.com/privacy. Die Datenschutzrichtlinien für Kalifornien sind unter https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info abrufbar.
Eine Einigung soll es für die Pensionsanpassung für nächstes Jahr geben // Rene Benko soll Uhren, Armbänder und Bargeld vor seinen Gläubigern verstecken
Sponsor dieser Folge ist BIOGENA ONE. Wir danken BIOGENA ONE für die Unterstützung. Die Podcast-Inhalte bleiben aber stets unabhängig, das ist uns wichtig. ___________________________________________________________________________Heute spreche ich mit Dr. Lutz Graumann, Sport- und Ernährungsmediziner, der seit den Anfängen der Wearables ganz vorne mit dabei ist – ob bei Jetpiloten, Spitzensportlern oder in seiner Praxis in Rosenheim. Im Gespräch mit Nina Ruge erklärt er, wie Smartwatches, smarte Ringe und Armbänder heute schon zuverlässig Daten wie Herzfrequenzvariabilität, Schlafqualität oder Stresslevel erfassen – und welche Werte man besser mit Vorsicht genießen sollte. Wir sprechen über sinnvolle Nutzung im Alltag, den Umgang mit den Daten und einen Ausblick auf kommende Technologien wie Cortisol-Messung per Sensorpflaster. In dieser Folge sprechen wir u.a. über folgende Themen: - Wie sinnvoll sind Wearables wie smarte Ringe, Uhren oder Armbänder für die Gesundheitsüberwachung im Alltag? - Welche Biomarker lassen sich mit Wearables heute schon zuverlässig messen – und welche nicht? - Warum ist die Herzfrequenzvariabilität (HRV) ein so wertvoller Indikator für Stress und Regeneration? - Inwiefern kann der VO₂max-Wert Aussagen über unsere Langlebigkeit und Fitness treffen? - Wie zuverlässig sind Schlafphasenanalysen über Wearables im Vergleich zu medizinischer Diagnostik? - Welche Rolle spielt der persönliche Biorhythmus für gesunden Schlaf und Leistungsfähigkeit? - Warum messen Wearables den Ruhepuls oft unterschiedlich – und woran liegt das? - Können kontinuierliche Glukosemesssysteme (CGMs) künftig auch Cortisol und Entzündungswerte erfassen? - Wie verändert Alkohol am Abend nachweislich unsere nächtliche Erholung – messbar per Wearable? - Welche Fehlerquellen gibt es bei der Nutzung von Wearables – und wie lassen sie sich vermeiden? - Welche Wearable-Hersteller gelten als besonders zuverlässig in Bezug auf Datenschutz und Datenqualität? - In welchen Ländern sind Wearables im Alltag deutlich stärker etabliert als in Deutschland? - Wie können Wearables Menschen helfen, ihr Körpergefühl wiederzuentdecken und gesündere Entscheidungen zu treffen? Weitere Informationen zu Dr. Lutz Graumann findest du hier: https://sportmedizin-rosenheim.de/ Du interessierst dich für Gesunde Langlebigkeit (Longevity) und möchtest ein Leben lang gesund und fit bleiben, dann folge mir auch auf den sozialen Kanälen bei Instagram, TikTok, Facebook oder YouTube. https://www.instagram.com/nina.ruge.official https://www.tiktok.com/@nina.ruge.official https://www.facebook.com/NinaRugeOffiziell https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCOe2d1hLARB60z2hg039l9g Disclaimer: Ich bin keine Ärztin und meine Inhalte ersetzen keine medizinische Beratung. Bei gesundheitlichen Fragen wende dich bitte an deinen Arzt/deine Ärztin. STY-220
In der morgigen Podcastfolge widmen wir uns dem spannenden Thema Wearables und Gesundheit. Ich spreche mit Dr. Lutz Graumann, Sport- und Ernährungsmediziner, der seit den Anfängen smarte Geräte wie Ringe, Armbänder und Uhren testet – unter anderem bei der Bundeswehr und im Profisport. Wir klären, welche Werte wirklich zuverlässig sind, warum Herzfrequenzvariabilität oft aussagekräftiger ist als der Ruhepuls und wie Wearables helfen können, Schlaf, Stress und Regeneration besser zu verstehen – oder sogar die Langlebigkeit zu fördern. Du möchtest tiefer in das Thema einsteigen? Dann verpassen ab morgen nicht mein Podcast-Interview mit Dr. Lutz Graumann: https://link.stayoung.de/STY-220SPEBDu interessierst dich für Gesunde Langlebigkeit (Longevity) und möchtest ein Leben lang gesund und fit bleiben, dann folge mir auch auf den sozialen Kanälen bei Instagram, TikTok, Facebook oder YouTube. https://www.instagram.com/nina.ruge.official https://www.tiktok.com/@nina.ruge.official https://www.facebook.com/NinaRugeOffiziell https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCOe2d1hLARB60z2hg039l9g Disclaimer: Ich bin keine Ärztin und meine Inhalte ersetzen keine medizinische Beratung. Bei gesundheitlichen Fragen wende dich bitte an deinen Arzt/deine Ärztin. STY-220
Einfach leben! Mit Handysucht, verheirateten Männern, selbstgeklöppelten Armbändern, viel Kaffee und ohne Consens. Und wie geht's euch so?PS: AMI WARNING mit "schöne Stunden"
Reklam för Dbet. Här hittar ni våra andelsspel på Supertipsethttps://trk.affiliates.dbet.com/o/NRI1ix?lpage=vWZQ4d&site_id=7012722Fullständiga villkor gäller. +18. Spela ansvarsfullt. Stödlinjen stödlinjen.seStudio Allsvenskan finns även på Patreon, där du får ALLA våra avsnitt reklamfritt direkt efter inspelning. Dessutom får du tillgång till våra exklusiva poddserier där vi släpper avsnitt tisdag till fredag varje vecka. Bli medlem här!Följ Studio Allsvenskan på sociala medier: Twitter!Facebook!Instagram!Youtube!TikTok!Årets fotbollsdeal är här! TV4 och Studio Allsvenskan har just nu ett samarbete där du för endast 249 kr/månaden får TV4:s Sportpaket (Allsvenskan, Superettan, Serie A, LaLiga, Svenska Cupen plus massa mer). Ordinarie pris är 349 kr/månaden så detta erbjudande innebär 100 kr rabatt varje månad! Gå in på https://www.tv4play.se/kampanj/studioallsvenskan för att ta del av erbjudandet!Efter en promenad till GAIS-gården fick vi sätta oss ner tillsammans med Axel Henriksson i 60 minuter.Självklart hamnar den pågående säsongen i fokus – där han dragits med lite skador. Hur har det varit för personlig del?Vi pratar även om åren innan succén i GAIS. Hur har resan varit?Sedan kommer vi in på ryktet han har som spelare. Hur ser han på det? Är det positivt eller negativt?En intensiv timme med en av Allsvenskans mest underhållande spelare. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Stellen Sie sich vor, Sie stehen im Urlaub vor Ständen mit Schmuck, Sonnenbrillen, Kleidung, alles hübsche Sachen. Einer der Stände quillt geradezu über, die Auslage mit Ketten, Ohrringen und Armbändern ist proppevoll. Bei einem anderen liegen nur wenige Schmuckstücke, schön auf dunkelrotem Stoff platziert, manches auch schon so, wie man es gut kombinieren könnte. Wahrscheinlich bekommen diese wenigen Dinge mehr Aufmerksamkeit, man fragt vielleicht was nach und kauft eher was. Dazu mit einem guten Gefühl. Mir jedenfalls fallen Entscheidungen schwer, darum bin ich manchmal ganz froh, wenn es z.B. nicht 20 Sorten Mayonnaise oder Senf gibt, sondern nur zwei. Oder die tollen Brotsorten beim Bäcker oder Bioladen - von dem schönen Roggenbrot ist nur noch eines da? Zugegriffen! ‚Attraktivität durch Verknappung‘ heißt das Prinzip, das Wenige wirkt für uns attraktiver. Wer Reisen online bucht, kennt den nervigen Hinweis ‚nur noch 2 Zimmer für Ihre gewünschten Zeiten verfügbar‘ oder ‚120 Leute interessieren sich gerade für dieses Angebot‘. Macht schon Druck, auch wenn man längst die Erfahrung gemacht hat, dass das Angebot auch am nächsten und übernächsten Tag noch steht. Verknappung aber, also die begrenzte Verfügbarkeit eines Produkts oder eines Angebots, kann die Attraktivität erhöhen. Wir neigen dazu, Dinge, die schwer zu bekommen sind, als wertvoller anzusehen. Vielleicht nicht verkehrt, sich das zumindest immer mal wieder bewusst zu machen. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Handelsvertreter Heroes - Heldengeschichten aus dem B2B-Vertrieb
Han är toppjurist, professor i konstitutionell rätt och före detta justitieombudsman. Nu har Hans-Gunnar Axberger skrivit vad som verkar vara en nyckelroman i den juridiska maktens allra finaste palatskorridorer. Är det verkligen så här det går till? Lyssna på alla avsnitt i Sveriges Radio Play. ”Domstolen” skildrar hur ett lands högsta domstol kan fungera. Det är den första, fristående delen i en ny romanserie om svenskt samhälls- och rättsliv under hundra år.Hans-Gunnar Axbergers bok Statsministermordet nominerades till Augustpriset och belönades med Stora fackbokspriset. ”Domstolen” är hans skönlitterära debutverk.Programledare: Johar BendjelloulProducent: Estrid Holm
In dieser Folge wollen Lennox und Alea endlich was essen, doch ohne Geld ist das gar nicht so einfach, vor allem wenn man, wie Alea, keine Regeln brechen möchte. Als sie etwas aus der Mülltonne nehmen wollen, rastet der sehr komische Imbissbesitzer aus und sein Hund verfolgt die beiden. Die Situation wird ganz schön brenzlig, da kann wirklich nur noch ein (Fisch)Wunder helfen.... Unsere Social Media Kanäle findet ihr hier: https://linktr.ee/Am_Bug_der_Crucis?fbclid=PAAaY2nG-u5SM7MoeFrKlUDfQi9bAVRs_mwdBHyRULJGIJIb2k0Ix-stXJ6yA
Kathrin Yasmina Ibrahim-Keller liebt die offene und freundliche Art der Ägypter. Seit achtzehn Jahren lebt sie mit ihrem ägyptischen Mann in der Millionenmetropole Kairo. Die Stadt am Nil ist einzigartig, sagt die 59-Jährige: «Die Stadt pulsiert und trotzdem findet man hier seine Oase der Ruhe.» Kathrin Yasmina Ibrahim-Keller aus Bern, machte einst Urlaub im beliebten Touristenort Sharm el Sheikh in Ägypten und verliebte sich in den Hotelmanager «Magdy». Heute lebt das Paar inmitten von Kairo. Die Hauptstadt Ägyptens wirkt auf den ersten Blick wie ein schmutziger Moloch. Es ist laut und chaotisch. Der Verkehr und die Luftverschmutzung ist selbst auch für die Ägypter eine Herausforderung. Wer aber hinter die Fassade Kairos schaut, sieht die wahre Seele der orientalischen Stadt, sagt Yasmina Ibrahim: «Es gibt hier viele grüne Oasen mit Cafés, wo man sich entspannen kann.» Entspannen tut sich Yasmina auch auf dem eigenen Dachgarten mit Pavillon: «Hier oben fühlt man sich inmitten von Blumen und Pflanzen wie aus 1001-Nacht. Man taucht in die Märchenwelt ein.» «Yasminas Kofferladen» Die frühere Kindergärtnerin kreiert kunstvolle Halsketten und Armbänder. Vor allem aber näht sie seit geraumer Zeit mit viel Herzblut kleine Dinge für den Alltag. Kissenbezüge, kleine Teddybären, Elefanten oder Katzen aus Stoff. Ihr Markenzeichen sind aber ihre Hasen, die sie in den zahlreichen Bazaren verkauft. Schon bald wird die Bernerin ihr nächstes Herzensprojekt realisieren: «Ich eröffne einen Blumenladen im Herzen von Kairo.»
Matthias stellt Patrick diesmal TWO-HAND PATH vor, ein „Roll-and-Write“ Dungeon Crawler, den ihr solo spielt. Als Magier:in durchsucht ihr moderne Dungeons einer post-apokalyptischen Welt – Supermärkte, U-Bahnen, Hotels, Frachtschiffe und Kirchen. Die Spielmechanik kennen die meisten wahrscheinlich: Kniffel, aber mit einem Twist. Mit einem 4-, 6-, 8-, 10-, 12- und 20-seitigen Würfel müsst ihr Raum für Raum die besten Kombinationen erwürfeln, um Zaubersprüche zu sprechen und eure Gegner zu besiegen. Die große Besonderheit von TWO-HAND PATH kommt beim Aufleveln ins Spiel: Auf das aus zwei Händen bestehende Charakterblatt zeichnet ihr Tattoos (oder paust eine der 100 Vorlagen durch) sowie Armbänder, Ringe, Narben und Auren. Auf diese Weise beantwortet ihr Story-Fragen zu eurer Geschichte und erhaltet mechanische Boni, mit denen ihr eure Würfelergebnisse beeinflussen könnt. Das alles natürlich nur, wenn ihr nicht vorher von eurer außer Kontrolle geraten Magie in Stücke gerissen werdet. Viel Spaß beim Hören!
Die Firma Qi Blanco verkauft Kettenanhänger und Armbänder, die nicht nur schick aussehen sollen, sondern gleichzeitig angeblich die Gesundheit fördern, mehr Kraft im Alltag verleihen und sogar vor schädlicher Strahlung schützen. Nach eigener Aussage wurde das alles sogar in Studien bestätigt! Wirklich? Von Max Doeckel ;Jonathan Focke.
Nach einem Vorfall mit KO-Tropfen in der Silvesternacht plant die Basler Polizei die Abgabe von Test-Streifen in Form von Armbändern. Auch die Basler Politik beschäftigt sich mit dem Vorfall. Ausserdem: · Geplantes Luxus-Resort in Wengen: Bevölkerung wurde informiert · Rechtsstreit vor Bundesgericht um Zielankunft der WM in Crans Montana
Nordmark Pod får besök av livskonstnären Patrik Arve!Det samtalas om och att; Armbågen, fått ja int en korv, punken i England, juppie-eran, vilket var den bästa tiden, reggae, Yellow man,, blir hel muppvarning, rädda för monotoni, värdelös på gura, coola meningar på datorn, den direkta känslan, bajs, kuk, 20 bajskorvar, nihilism, oskönt läge, dyka ner i kaninhålet, tuffare o tuffare, osäker ungdom, Manson, profilering på massmördare, intervju med en mördare, provoserad av kristen, syndare, muppvarning, Aleister Crowley, Anton LaVei, Black Metal, det primitiva, vi lär ju inte få ett svar här, Hanoi Rocks, behövs ondskan i kulturen? Bränna kyrkor, äkthetsbegreppet, Miles Davis eller Milli Vanilli, Bob Marley med vit farsa, vanlig hårdrockare som älskar Kent och skilja konsten från konstnären går det? Och hur intressant är Skända flaggan utan kuken?Mäktigt! Produktion av NordmarkEditering av NordmarkMix av Nordmark
Breakfast at Midnights - Ein Taylor Swift Podcast von Swifties, für Swifties
Merch und Fanartikel - Wir alle lieben und besitzen sie. Als Fan liebt man es, sich über T-Shirts, Caps, Armbänder etc. zu identifizieren. Es macht einfach glücklich. Doch wie ethisch und moralisch Vertretbar sind Merchartikel? Wie produziert Taylor Swift ihren Merch und wie sieht es aus mit inoffiziellen Merch Itelms? Marleen und Alex schauen sich das in dieser Folge genau an. Frage der Woche: Was ist euer Traum Merch Item? Quellen: How ethical is Taylor Swifts Merch? The Wild History of Bootleg Band Merch (and how it operates today) The History of Merch: Who Invented Merchandise? Schreibt uns gerne: breakfastatmidnights@web.de Instagram: breakfastatmidnights Twitter/X: breakfastatpod TikTok: breakfast.podcast
#249 Flasher | Blitzlicht auf zwei Rädern | Dr. Ines Wöckls | FounderinVon der Grazer Straße in die Höhle der Löwen: Wie eine Physikerin den Verkehr sicherer machtTauche ein in die faszinierende Welt der Verkehrssicherheit 2.0 mit Dr. Ines Wöckl, der brillanten Gründerin von Flasher, in dieser erhellenden Folge des Startcast Podcasts. Erlebe, wie eine promovierte Physikerin aus Graz mit smarten Armbändern nicht nur Radfahrer sichtbar macht, sondern eine ganze Bewegung für mehr Sicherheit im Straßenverkehr ins Rollen bringt.In diesem packenden Gespräch enthüllt Ines:- Wie aus einer gefährlichen Radtour eine zündende Geschäftsidee wurde- Warum sie trotz Doktortitel lieber Schraubenschlüssel als Reagenzgläser schwingt- Wie Flasher den Weg von der Werkbank in die "Höhle der Löwen" meisterte- Weshalb manchmal "gut genug" besser ist als perfektErfahre aus erster Hand, wie Ines und ihr Team bei Flasher:- Die Chip-Krise mit Kreativität und europäischen Partnern meisterten- Durch Crowdfunding nicht nur Geld, sondern auch eine treue Community gewannen- Den Spagat zwischen B2C-Produkt und B2B-Lösungen schaffen- Mit smarter Technologie Leben retten und dabei Spaß habenLass dich inspirieren von Ines' unkonventionellem Weg von der Wissenschaft zum Unternehmertum und ihren wertvollen Erkenntnissen aus Jahren des Tüftelns, Scheiterns und Erfolgs. Entdecke, wie Flasher nicht nur ein Produkt, sondern eine Mission für mehr Sichtbarkeit und Sicherheit verfolgt.Highlights der Episode:- Einblicke in die Höhen und Tiefen eines Hardware-Startups in Zeiten globaler Lieferkettenprobleme- Die Magie des perfekten Pitches: Wie Flasher die "Löwen" überzeugte- Warum Meditation und Frustrationstoleranz zu den wichtigsten Gründer-Skills gehören- Die Bedeutung von "Made in Europe" für Qualität und NachhaltigkeitOb du Fahrrad-Enthusiast, Technik-Nerd oder angehender Gründer bist – diese Episode bietet dir einen exklusiven Blick hinter die Kulissen eines der innovativsten Mobility-Startups Österreichs. Erlebe, wie Dr. Ines Wöckl komplexe Technologie in ein lebensrettendes Produkt verwandelt und dabei stets mit Humor und Authentizität glänzt.Schalte ein und lass dich von Ines' ansteckender Begeisterung für eine sicherere Mobilität mitreißen. Ihre Geschichte hat bereits Tausende inspiriert – vielleicht bist du der Nächste, der mit einer zündenden Idee die Welt ein Stückchen besser macht!Bonus: Erfahre, warum Ines glaubt, dass echte Innovation oft aus persönlichen Erfahrungen entsteht und wie sie trotz aller Herausforderungen ihre Vision nie aus den Augen verlor. Von nächtlichen Lötaktionen bis hin zu Verhandlungen mit internationalen Investoren – Ines teilt offen ihre Erfahrungen und zeigt, dass Unternehmertum vor allem eines bedeutet: niemals aufzugeben.Diese Episode ist dein Weckruf für mehr Sicherheit und Innovation auf unseren Straßen, präsentiert von einer der authentischsten Stimmen der österreichischen Startup-Szene. Verpasse nicht die Chance, von Dr. Ines Wöckl zu lernen und vielleicht deine eigene leuchtende Idee zu entwickeln. Denn wie Flasher beweist: Mit der richtigen Vision kann man die Welt nicht nur sicherer, sondern auch ein bisschen heller machen!Citations:[1] https://www.deutsche-startups.de/2022/09/19/dhdl-flasher/ Get bonus content on Patreon Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Über die liebsten Devices der Biohacker: Vor- und Nachteile von klugen Ringen, schlauen Armbändern und smarten Watches, wie wir mit den Daten umgehen, was wir aus ihnen lernen.Gemeinsam Leben retten als Stammzellenspender? Hier könnt ihr euch für eine Typisierung anmelden.Entdecke BIOGENA ONE, den Premium Supplement Drink für dein Wohlbefinden. Probiere es jetzt und unterstütze mentale Fitness, Immunsystem und Verdauung. Bestelle deine Gratisprobe mit Code Gratis hier.Zum Ultrahuman-Ring geht es hier. (Dieser Link bringt Coaching-Klienten von Andreas verschiedene VIP-Vorteile.) Zum Oura-Ring geht es hier. Zum Whoop Band geht es hier. Zum Vimeo-Kanal des fantastischen Alexander Wunsch geht es hier. Zu Alexander Wunschs Buch „Die Kraft des Lichts“ geht es hier.Zum Glücksaffen geht es hier. Weil Andreas und Stefan so häufig gefragt werden, welche Produkte sie selbst verwenden, haben sie gemeinsam mit Julia Tulipan eine Seite eingerichtet, auf der sie ihre persönlichen Lieblingsprodukte (und aktuelle Rabattcodes) sammeln.Das Buch „Ab jetzt Biohacking“ von Andreas Breitfeld und Stefan Wagner erschien am 17. Mai beim Ecowing-Verlag. Bestellen kann man es hier.Das Buch „Viel Erfolg beim Misserfolg“ ist der Biohacking-Business-Ratgeber von Stefan Wagner, erschienen im Seifert Verlag, erhältlich hier.Andreas Breitfelds Website.Das ausführliche Porträt über Andreas Breitfeld in The Red Bulletin (Autor, übrigens: Stefan Wagner).Das Biohacking-Special, das Andreas Breitfeld und Stefan Wagner gemeinsam für The Red Bulletin INNOVATOR produziert haben.Stefan Wagners Biohacking-Kolumne im „carpe diem“.
Schmuck aus Klemmbausteinen? Das geht? Ja, in der Tat. In unserer heutigen Episode haben wir uns Nicholas eingeladen, der eigene Armbänder aus Minifiguren herstellt. Wer hätte das gedacht? Nicholas selbst klemmt eigentlich fast keine Sets sondern konzentriert sich fast ausschließlich auf seine Armbänder die eine Minifigur integriert haben, die als Verschluss fungiert. In der aktuellen Episode erzählt uns Nicholas, wie er auf diese Idee gekommen ist und ob man für die Armbänder eine spezielle Knot Technik benötigt.
It's Glowtime-Event / Hörgeräte / AirPods / Apple Watch 10 / Armbänder / iPhone 16 / Finewoven / Beats / Fazit / ThermoWhite / Listen Later / Miradore MDM
Urmaker Bjerke har åpnet dørene til Europas største klokkehus. Et steinkast unna har Swatch etablert egen butikk. Jon Henrik har kjøpt ny klokke, og deler sitt beste tips for avslapning uten skjerm og klokker.Kjøp boken «50 KLOKKER» hos Norli:https://www.norli.no/boker/hobby-og-fritid/kunst-og-kultur/design/50-klokkerBesøk Tidssonen – Norges største nettsted om klokker siden 2007:https://www.tidssonen.noSjekk også ut Tidssonen nettbutikk:https://shop.tidssonen.noFølg meg på:Instagram – https://www.instagram.com/tidssonenFacebook – https://www.facebook.com/tidssonenFacebook Groups – https://www.facebook.com/groups/tidssonen/ Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Hallo und lesbisch Willkommen in unserer FEMME:ILY Ab jetzt gibt es immer mal wieder Neuigkeiten aus dem FEMME:ILY Chat. Lou und Bine berichten freudig von drama-freien CSD Wochenenden aus den gaysten Städten Deutschlands. Kaum ist eine Red Flag abgehangen, kommt die nächste dunkelrote Flagge um die Ecke. Aber ein Glück gibt es an Lous Seite eine Green Flag, groß genug, für beide Femmes zusammen. Warum selbstgebastelte Armbänder leider nicht immer Grund zur Freude sind und wie ein fehlender Beamer und ein parkendes Auto für Aufregung sorgen, erfahrt ihr in der neuen Folge!FEMME:ILY auf den Ohren reicht dir nicht?Alle Infos & noch viel mehr findest hier:@femmeily_podcast@loucafee@enivanb Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
falls ihr uns sucht: WIR SIND AUF EINER BÜHNE! Also erst im September, aber wir sind schon jetzt aufgeregt und freuen uns doll, euch zu sehen. Marvin möchte euch nämlich unbedingt seine Tauchtalente und Handgriffe in der Küche zeigen, während Juli in einem Haufen herumstochert und ihren Tee nicht trinkt. Es wird also ein Fest, bei welchem Armbänder getauscht und Fußbälle mit der Hand abgewehrt werden. Mit spannendem Gnomcontent und neu angeeignetem Humor werden wir euch einen lampigen Abend bereiten, der von seiner Grandiosigkeit mindestens an einen perfekt zusammengestellten Himbeercookie erinnert und den Charme eines Schwimmlehrers mit sich bringt. Bitte vergesst alles, was ihr gerade gelesen habt. Es wird einfach eine prima Sache. ••• TICKETS ZUSATZSHOW: https://tickets.190a.de/event/lampenfieber-live-beim-poddifest-koln-zusatzshow-d0pvgp ••• Begleitmaterial zum Podcast !! https://www.instagram.com/lampenfieber.podcast/ • die Podcast Playlist "Holzkohle" https://open.spotify.com/playlist/4za8eAcsMUV6MEWOn261cA?si=be5172c382fc4d7b • julis WhatsApp Channel: https://whatsapp.com/channel/0029Va7zVmn5K3zWrlBGf80G marvs WhatsApp Channel: https://whatsapp.com/channel/0029VaEQ0Tp65yDFdMOKde1A • julis social-media: https://linktr.ee/julivoe marvs social-media: https://linktr.ee/marvtab • lasst gerne Liebe da :) ••• E-Mails an: lampenfieberpodcast@gmail.com
Fitness-Tracker boomen: Rund 20 Prozent der Deutschen überwachen mit Armbändern, Smartwatches und Apps ihre Blutwerte, zählen ihre Schritte oder wachen über ihren Schlaf, Tendenz steigend. Wie hilfreich und wie gesundheitsfördernd ist dieses sogenannte Self-Tracking? Überdeckt der ständige Blick auf Zahlen unsere eigene Wahrnehmung? Ist der Hang zur Selbstoptimierung vernünftig oder schiere Egozentrik? Und was passiert eigentlich mit den Daten? Bernd Lechler diskutiert mit Prof. Dr. Nikola Plohr – Mediensoziologin, Hochschule Fresenius Hamburg; Prof. Dr. Stefan Selke – Soziologe und Autor, Hochschule Furtwangen; Prof. Dr. Oliver Zöllner – Medienwissenschaftler, Hochschule der Medien Stuttgart
Es gibt unterschiedliche Arten von Freundschaftsbekundungen – seien es bunt bemalte Seiten im Poesiealbum, gute Gespräche oder Freundschaftsarmbändchen. Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart knüpfte seinen Freunden zwar keine Armbändchen, aber er zeigte seine Verbundenheit auf eine ganz besondere Weise: durch Musik. Das Klarinettenquintett in A-Dur KV 581 gehört zu diesen musikalischen Freundschaftsbekundungen.
Da Kong Frederik søndag vinkede fra balkonen på Christiansborg kom et shamballa-armbånd til syne på hans håndled. Vi ser på, hvilken symbolik, man kan tilskrive armbåndet og på, hvordan kongehuset tidligere har kommunikeret gennem smykker. Det gør vi med Nina Hald, smykkeskribent og forfatter til flere bøger om smykker og Thomas Thulstrup fra Kongernes Samling. Danske læsere brugte mere tid i litteraturens verden sidste år sammenlignet med tidligere. Det viser Saxos årlige rapport over danskernes læservaner. Saxo mener, at man kan tale om "streamingens triumf", fordi 58 procent af de mere end 12.000 adspurgte læsere definerer sig selv som bogstreamere. Vi ser tallene med Mads Rosendahl Thomsen, professor i litteraturhistorie ved Aarhus Universitet og forperson for Kulturministeriets Bogpanel. Værter: Jesper Dein og Chris Pedersen.
Willkommen zu einem neuen Format! Bei „Dear Diary…“ Folgen werde ich euch einfach ein bisschen Updaten
- Wonderlust, Lederfrust? Unsere finale Apple-Event-Vorschau - Gatekeeper: Die EU setzt das DMA-Brecheisen bei Apple an - Chromebook macht Schule: Billig-MacBook für den Bildungssektor? - Bildschirmzeit Realtime: Schlechtes Gewissen in Echtzeit - Umfrage der Woche - Zuschriften unserer Hörer === Anzeige / Sponsorenhinweis === Wir bei FERCHAU verstehen uns als eine der führenden europäischen Plattformen für erstklassige Technologie-Dienstleistungen. Wir sind an der Entwicklung vielfältiger zukunftsweisender Lösungen für alle technischen Branchen entscheidend beteiligt, indem wir kluge, ambitionierte Köpfe mit den Anforderungen unserer Kunden passgenau zusammenbringen. Unter dem Motto "Level up your mindset" gehen am 18.09.2023 die FERCHAU Live Talks in die nächste Runde. In jeweils 60-minütigen Vorträgen inklusive Q&A-Runde eröffnen euch u.a. Sascha Lobo und Steffi Jones neue Perspektiven für die Zukunft. Connecting People and Technologies for the Next Level. https://ferchau.com/go/livetalks === Anzeige / Sponsorenhinweis Ende === Links zur Sendung: - Mac & i: Details zu Apples neuem Gewebe für Hüllen und Armbänder - https://www.heise.de/news/FineWoven-Details-zu-Apples-neuem-Gewebe-fuer-Huellen-und-Armbaender-9293437.html - Mac & i: Wann Apple angeblich die Veröffentlichung von iPadOS 17 plant - https://www.heise.de/news/iPadOS-17-Wann-Apple-angeblich-die-Veroeffentlichung-plant-9294504.html - heise online: DMA-Gatekeeper sind Alphabet, Amazon, Apple, Bytedance, Meta und Microsoft - https://www.heise.de/news/Digital-Markets-Act-WhatsApp-und-Facebook-Messenger-muessen-interoperabel-werden-9296190.html - heise online: Bing und iMessage zu klein für DMA-Label? - https://www.heise.de/news/Gatekeeper-im-Digital-Markets-Act-Bing-und-iMessage-zu-klein-fuer-Label-9294702.html - MacRumors: Apple plant angeblich günstiges MacBook - https://www.macrumors.com/2023/09/05/apple-low-cost-macbook-rival-chromebook/ - Mac & i: Bildschirmzeit in Echtzeit: Diese iPhone-App geht weiter als Apple - https://www.heise.de/news/Bildschirmzeit-in-Echtzeit-Diese-iPhone-App-geht-weiter-als-Apple-9292765.html Kapitelmarken: (00:00:00) Begrüßung (00:06:14) Werbung (00:08:16) Themen (00:09:41) Wonderlust, Lederfrust? Unsere finale Apple-Event-Vorschau (00:32:55) Gatekeeper: Die EU setzt das DMA-Brecheisen bei Apple an (00:52:46) Chromebook macht Schule: Billig-MacBook für den Bildungssektor? (00:59:26) Bildschirmzeit Realtime: Schlechtes Gewissen in Echtzeit (01:14:47) Umfrage der Woche (01:20:01) Zuschriften unserer Hörer
Der kommer nye boller på universitetssuppen. En kandidat behøver for eksempel ikke længere nødvendigvis at vare to år. Det vækker ikke udelt begejstring. Virksomheden Chr. Hansen er kommet i stormvejr efter at trække al offentlig Pride-støtte. I dag begynder Roskilde Festivals officielle musikprogram - og samtidig kører debatten om, hvorvidt politikere må modtage gratis festivalarmbånd. Vært: Simon Stefanski. Medvirkende: Kevin Shakir, journalist. Louise Bøttcher, lektor i psykologi. Anna Bondo Nielsen, kommunalpolitiker i Roskilde Kommune.
Er besteigt 8.000m hohe Berge ohne Sauerstoff und Fremdhilfe. Als wäre das nicht beeindruckend genug, tut er das auch noch extrem schnell. Benedikt Böhm ist einer der besten Speed-Bergsteiger der Welt. Er ist auf den höchsten Bergen der Welt unterwegs, bezwingt 8000er in Rekordzeiten und legt unglaubliche Distanzen und Höhenmeter zurück. Seine persönliche Leidenschaft für den Bergsport bettet er auch im beruflichen Kontext ein. Seit über 20 Jahren ist er internationaler Geschäftsführer von Dynafit, einem renommierten Sportausrüstungshersteller. Diese Kombination macht ihn auch als Redner beliebt: Er spricht über die mentalen und körperliche Höchstleistungen bei Expeditionen aller Art. Ich möchte euch Benedikts Projekt Helping Band ans Herz legen. In Zusammenarbeit mit dem WWF bietet er Armbänder an, mit deren Einnahmen Natur- und Artenschutzprojekte unterstützt werden. Hier könnt ihr ein Band kaufen (Preis 4,99€). Ich trage auch eines und will es nicht mehr hergeben ;-) https://helpingband.com Wer mehr über Benedikt erfahre möchte, findet ihn auf Instagram oder über seine Website: Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/benediktboehm/?hl=de Website: https://www.benediktboehm.de __________________________________________ Alle Informationen zu meiner Arbeit findet ihr wie immer unter: www.hannah-panidis.de Und hier begegnet ihr mir meist tagesaktuell: Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/hannahpanidis LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/hannah-panidis-55141a145 Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/HannahPanidisKommunikation Seid herzlich gegrüßt von mir Eure Hannah
Folge 157 kommt mit etwas Verspätung, dafür aber mit einer vollen Ladung Inhalt! Und das alles trotz 0 Caljouwrien! Wir sprechen über den Sudirman-Cup, Kais Gefühle als kleiner Star und was an a China als Ausrichter so besonders ist. Außerdem: die BWF beleuchtet Kais Hobbys, Tobi berichtet über recycelte Armbänder und wir schmieden Pläne für eine Folge BWF Unlimited.
Aufreger der Woche: „Sign in with Apple“-Fuck-up Neues aus Cupertino: iPhone 15: Dynamic Island für alle Modelle? Und kastriert Apple den USB-C-Anschluss? +++ Neues iPhone 14/14 Plus in gelb. Yay. +++ Außerdem: Neue Hüllen und Armbänder (App zum Nachschlagen aller Armbändern: Bandbreite) Hardware: Stefan enthüllt sein Gesicht dank Wave Mic Arm LP von Elgato Apps: Abo-Erstattungen für Tweetbot und Twitterific +++ Wie kaputt machen uns AI-Filter in Tiktok und Co.? +++ SiriGPT: Siri plappert jetzt noch mehr Blödsinn via Kurzbefehl +++ Musik-Playlists mithilfe von AI erstellen: PlaylistAI +++ Finding Hannah + ein Interview mit den Gründerinnen des Entwicklungsstudios Streaming & Gaming: American … ehm. Norwegian Psychos in Serie: Exit in der ZDF-Mediathek +++ Gnadenbrot für Der Schwarm +++ Durchgespielt: Hogwarts Legacy Danke fürs Zuhören. Abonniert „Schleifenquadrat“ gerne im Podcatcher eurer Wahl (außer Spotify), hinterlasst uns ein paar Sterne und kommentiert die Folge bei Apple Podcasts!
Nachhaltiger Schmuck ist die Zukunft - wenn wir unseren Planeten nicht zerstören wollen. Denn unsere Ringe, Armbänder und Halsketten verschmutzen die Umwelt, finanzieren Kriege und fördern Kinderarbeit. Warum eine Brennnessel-Kette ein Gegenentwurf zu Blutdiamanten ist und wie nachhaltiger Schmuck aussieht, weiß Zündfunk-Reporterin Nicole Ficociello.
Business unplugged - Menschen, Unternehmen und Aspekte der Digitalisierung
Thu, 16 Feb 2023 23:00:00 +0000 https://businessunplugged.podigee.io/47-heidrunboeck-wearonize 1cb1253a72fc2b877f6f8bb896bad252 Liebe Zuhörer:innen heute geht es gleich weiter mit der nächsten Österreicherin, denn ich war bei Heidrun Böck zu Besuch. Heidi ist Co-Founderin und CMO von Wearonize, einem Start-up, das Wearables mit Payment-Funktion ausstattet. Sei es analoge Uhren, Armbänder, Kleidungsstücke oder was auch immer, der Fantasie sind dabei keine Grenzen gesetzt, soviel sei schon mal verraten. Im Gespräch gibt Heidi nicht nur Einblicke über die Komplexität, die dahintersteckt, sowie den Mehrwert, den sie u.a. zur Transparenz rund um das Thema Finanzen beitragen, sondern wir sprechen auch über die skandalgeschüttelte FinTech-Branche und die Verantwortung, die sie als FinTech-Unternehmen ihren Kunden gegenüber haben. Aber auch Ihr Blick auf die momentane Entwicklung in der Szene wird klar formuliert. Es war ein sehr entspanntes Gespräch in den Büroräumlichkeiten von Wearonize mit vielen Neuigkeiten bzw. Learnings und daher lehnt euch zurück und genießt die Folge. Mein Gast: Heidrun Böck (LinkedIn) Wearonize Feedback & Wunschgäste: podcast@peopex.de Über mich: LinkedIn XING Instagram PEOPEX GmbH 47 full no Start-up,FinTech,Wearables,Payment,Finance,Digitalisierung,Banking,Tokenisierung,München,Security Prof. Dr. Johannes Pohl, Heidrun Böck
Wie könnte es anders sein: Natürlich gibt's auch in diesem Jahr unseren sensationellen Halloween-Rückblick mit den imposantesten Promi-Kostümen. Neben Heidi Klum haben uns einige weitere Stars und Sternchen so manchen „What the f***-Moment'' beschert - und das muss natürlich ausdiskutiert werden! Außerdem sprechen wir über eine der unangenehmsten Fernsehwerbungen mit Lothar Matthäus und steigen hinab in die Hölle des wochenendlichen Trash-TV-Programms. Dank des sensationellen Formats „Achtung, Abzocke!“ wissen jetzt nämlich auch endlich wir, dass auf das Ehrenwort eines Armbändchenverkäufers in Athen leider nicht immer zu zählen ist…
Wie könnte es anders sein: Natürlich gibt's auch in diesem Jahr unseren sensationellen Halloween-Rückblick mit den imposantesten Promi-Kostümen. Neben Heidi Klum haben uns einige weitere Stars und Sternchen so manchen „What the f***-Moment'' beschert - und das muss natürlich ausdiskutiert werden! Außerdem sprechen wir über eine der unangenehmsten Fernsehwerbungen mit Lothar Matthäus und steigen hinab in die Hölle des wochenendlichen Trash-TV-Programms. Dank des sensationellen Formats „Achtung, Abzocke!“ wissen jetzt nämlich auch endlich wir, dass auf das Ehrenwort eines Armbändchenverkäufers in Athen leider nicht immer zu zählen ist…
Beißt du gerne mal in ein Lachs-Brötchen, weil Lachs ja sooo gesund ist? Falls ja, dann könnte es passieren, dass dir nach dieser Folge Fairquatscht der Appetit vergeht. Denn ich spreche mit Maja Löwedey und Madeleine von Hohental vom Podcast Oceancrime über die dunklen Seiten der Fischerei-Indsutrie. Und Trust me: Ihr werdet überrascht sein, was alles auf hoher See passiert! Falls ihr mehr Schauder-Geschichten hören wollt, dann hört mal in den Podcast der beiden rein. "Oceancrime" findet ihr überall dort, wo es Podcasts gibt. Die im Podcast erwähnten Links: Fischratgeber WWF: https://fischratgeber.wwf.de/ Dokumentation zum Lachs: https://www.zdf.de/dokumentation/dokumentation-sonstige/hannes-jaenicke-im-einsatz-fuer-den-lachs-100.html Fisch vom Kutter: https://www.fischvomkutter.de/ Mit "marisa10" erhaltet ihr außerdem 10% Rabatt auf euren Einkauf bei Bracenet. Die Firma verkauft Armbänder, die aus Geisternetzen produziert wurden und steckt hinter dem Oceancrime-Podcast. So löst du deinen Dr. Hauschka Gutschein ein: Ab einem Mindestbestellwert von 25 Euro bekommst du mit „fairquatscht5“ 5 Euro geschenkt! Einfach beim Check-Out auf www.drhauschka.de eingeben. Der Gutscheincode gilt bis zum 31.12.2022. Fairquatscht bei Steady unterstützen: https://steadyhq.com/de/fairquatscht/about
Aufreger der Woche: Kein Live-Stream nach der Keynote +++ Tim Cook: „Buy your mom an iPhone“ +++ Googles Kampagne, um Apple zu überzeugen +++ Apple-Fans fallen auf gefakten Livestream herein Neues aus Cupertino: Apple-Event +++ Apple Watch 8 +++ Alle neuen Armbänder +++ Apple Watch Series 3 ist tot +++ Apple Watch SE +++ Apple Watch Ultra +++ AirPods Pro +++ Neue Armbänder iPhone 14/14 Plus +++ iPhone 14 Pro/14 Pro Max +++ Satelliten-Anbindung +++ US-Modelle ohne SIM-Slot +++ Dynamic Island auf Youtube +++ iPhone 13 mini bleibt im Programm Hörer:innen-Feedback: Andreas zu Fake-AirPods +++ Harald zu AirPods-Ärger +++ Christian zu iPhone-Fotografie und iPhone-Entwicklung Hardware: iPhone als Wegwerfkamera: Later Cam Apps: TimeMachine Editor. (Danke an Malik) +++ Birthday Reminder Streaming & Gaming: Angespielt auf der PS5: Returnal +++ Big Little Lies bei Sky/Wow Danke fürs Zuhören. Abonniert „Schleifenquadrat“ gerne im Podcatcher eurer Wahl (außer Spotify), hinterlasst uns ein paar Sterne und kommentiert die Folge bei Apple Podcasts!
Für die neue Apple Watch Ultra fallen ganze 999 Euro an. Wer sich von diesem Preis nicht abschrecken lässt, möchte vielleicht an anderer Stelle etwas sparen. Das geht tatsächlich bei den Armbändern, denn ältere sind mit der Apple Watch Ultra kompatibel.
Sport liegt im Trend und ist gesund. Ausser man übertreibt es. Gerade Einsteiger überschätzen sich gerne und gehen unnötige Risiken für ihren Körper ein. «Puls» besucht einen Volkslauf, zeigt, wo die Grenze zu Überlastung liegt – und was sich tun lässt, damit man im gesunden Bereich bleibt. Ein Amateur geht ans Limit SRF-Moderator Tobias Müller will es wissen. Mit dem Gravel-Velo fährt er vom Boden- an den Genfersee in acht Tagen. Das Gepäck muss er selbst transportieren – und kommt dabei an körperliche und psychische Grenzen. Patrick Noack, Sportmediziner und Chefarzt Olympia, ordnet ein und sagt, dass es meist Männer sind, die an ihre Grenzen gehen. Sportsucht – Wenn es ohne Sport nicht mehr geht Auf Zwangspausen reagieren Sportsüchtige gereizt, sie vernachlässigen soziale Kontakte und ordnen dem Sport alles unter. Eine Betroffene spricht mit «Puls» über ihre Zeit als Sportsüchtige. Und eine Forscherin und Triathletin erklärt, warum Sportsucht als eigenständige Diagnose anerkannt werden sollte. Umstrittene Gadgets am Arm – Wie hilfreich sind Sport- und Fitness-Uhren wirklich? An Läufen sind sie allgegenwärtig: Sportuhren, Fitnesstracker, smarte Armbänder – sogenannte Wearables. Sie sollen zum Sport motivieren und das Training optimieren. Wer den Fokus aber nur noch auf die Daten der Uhr legt, läuft Gefahr, sein Körpergefühl zu verlieren. Eine Sportwissenschaftlerin spricht über Sinn und Unsinn solcher Hilfsmittel beim Sport. Amateure am Volkslauf – Die meisten haben es im Griff Zusammen mit der Sportmedizinerin und früheren Profi-Triathletin Sibylle Matter besucht Moderatorin Daniela Lager den Vogellisi-Berglauf in Adelboden. Die Läuferinnen und Läufer hier können sich gut einschätzen und doch kommen einige an ihre Grenzen. «Puls Kompakt» – Tipps, um gesund Sport zu treiben Worauf schauen, um sich beim Training nicht zu überfordern? «Puls» gibt drei Tipps für gesunden Sport. Puls-Chat – «Wie viel Sport ist noch gesund?» Wieso schmerzt meine Achillessehne beim Joggen? Reicht ein sportfreier Tag pro Woche zur Erholung? Mit welcher Herzfrequenz sollte ich trainieren? Fachleute aus Sportwissenschaft und Sportmedizin wissen Rat am Montag von 21 bis 23 Uhr – live im Chat. Fragen können im Vorfeld eingereicht werden.
Sofie og Wordfeud-familien / PROBLEM: Anstrengt forhold til mamma / Beholde neseringen, eller gi blod? / Gjester som inviterer seg selv / Kanintrøbbel / Øvelseskjøring til besvær / Armbåndet og stahet / Gutter som er slettet / Storbyen i USA funker ikke / EPILOG: 1t 56min. Hør episoden i appen NRK Radio
Seit einigen Jahren arbeitet Apple mit dem Luxus-Hersteller Hermes zusammen. Was mit Armbändern für Uhren begann, mündete kürzlich in Zubehör für die AirTags. Wo soll der Preis für Zubehör ein Ende nehmen? Offenbar gibt es eine nicht ganz geheime Apple-Hermès Grenze.